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heartbeat. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
heartbeat, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
heartbeat in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
heartbeat you have here. The definition of the word
heartbeat will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
heartbeat, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From heart + beat.
Pronunciation
Noun
heartbeat (plural heartbeats)
- One pulsation of the heart; especially an irregular one, hence the emotion which causes it.
The policeman waited for a heartbeat in vain.
He alone gives me such heartbeats.
- The rhythm at which a heart pulsates, a cardiac indicator.
- Synonym: pulse
If your heartbeat doesn't normalize soon, consult a doctor!
- A driving impulse or vital force; the vital center of something.
Music is the heartbeat of the people.
2022 May 11, Sandra E. Garcia, “Butt Lifts Are Booming. Healing Is No Joke.”, in The New York Times Magazine:Dream Body Recovery is just one of countless recovery houses that have cropped up in Miami, which has become the heartbeat of the B.B.L. boom in the United States. The average price of a B.B.L. nationwide is around $5,000, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
- A very short space of time; an instant.
The ambulance arrived in a heartbeat.
2014, “Bullet”, Robbie Williams et al. (lyrics):Cause I love you more than life Take a bullet for you I swear, I swear In a heartbeat
- (computing) A periodic signal generated by hardware or software to indicate normal operation or to synchronize other parts of a system.
Derived terms
Translations
one pulsation of the heart
- Arabic: نَبْض m (nabḍ), نَبْضُ القَلْب m (nabḍu l-qalb)
- Azerbaijani: ürək döyüntüsu
- Basque: taupada (eu)
- Belarusian: сэрцабі́цце n (sercabíccje), сэрцабіццё n (sercabiccjó), пульс m (pulʹs)
- Bulgarian: пулс (bg) m (puls)
- Catalan: batec m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 心跳 (zh) (xīntiào)
- Dutch: hartslag (nl)
- Finnish: sydämenlyönti
- French: pulsation (fr) f, battement (fr) m
- Galician: latexo cardíaco m
- Georgian: გულისცემა (guliscema)
- German: Herzschlag (de) m
- Greek: καρδιοπαλμός (el) m (kardiopalmós)
- Hindi: धड़कन (hi) (dhaṛkan)
- Hungarian: szívdobbanás (hu)
- Indonesian: detak jantung (id)
- Irish: buille an chroí m
- Italian: battito (it) m
- Japanese: 心拍 (ja) (しんぱく, shinpaku)
- Korean: 심박(心搏) (ko) (simbak)
- Limburgish: hertslaag (li)
- Maori: mokowhiti
- Nepali: धडकन (dhaṛkan)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: hjerteslag n
- Nynorsk: hjarteslag n
- Polish: bicie serca n, puls (pl) m
- Portuguese: batida de coração f
- Russian: бие́ние се́рдца n (bijénije sérdca), сердцебие́ние (ru) n (serdcebijénije), пульс (ru) m (pulʹs), се́рдца стук m (sérdca stuk) (poetic)
- Serbo-Croatian: otkucaj (sh) m
- Spanish: latido del corazón m, latido (es) m
- Swedish: hjärtslag (sv) n
- Ukrainian: серцебиття́ n (sercebyttjá), пульс m (pulʹs)
- Welsh: curiad calon m
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the rhythm at which a heart pulsates
Translations to be checked