资料来源 : pyDict
鸣,钟,和谐鸣,打,和谐敲出和谐的声音,打钟报时,重复说
资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Chime \Chime\, v. i.
1. To cause to sound in harmony; to play a tune, as upon a
set of bells; to move or strike in harmony.
And chime their sounding hammers. --Dryden.
2. To utter harmoniously; to recite rhythmically.
Chime his childish verse. --Byron.
Chime \Chime\, n. [See {Chimb}.]
See {Chine}, n., 3.
Chime \Chime\, n. [OE. chimbe, prop., cymbal, OF. cymbe, cymble,
in a dialectic form, chymble, F. cymbale, L. cymbalum, fr.
Gr. ?. See {Cymbal}.]
1. The harmonious sound of bells, or of musical instruments.
Instruments that made melodius chime. --Milton.
2. A set of bells musically tuned to each other; specif., in
the pl., the music performed on such a set of bells by
hand, or produced by mechanism to accompany the striking
of the hours or their divisions.
We have heard the chimes at midnight. --Shak.
3. Pleasing correspondence of proportion, relation, or sound.
``Chimes of verse.'' --Cowley.
Chime \Chime\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Chimed}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Chiming}.] [See {Chime}, n.]
1. To sound in harmonious accord, as bells.
2. To be in harmony; to agree; to suit; to harmonize; to
correspond; to fall in with.
Everything chimed in with such a humor. --W. irving.
3. To join in a conversation; to express assent; -- followed
by in or in with. [Colloq.]
4. To make a rude correspondence of sounds; to jingle, as in
rhyming. --Cowley
资料来源 : WordNet®
chime
n : a percussion instrument consisting of vertical metal tubes
of different lengths that are struck with a hammer [syn:
{bell}, {gong}]
chime
v : emit a sound; "bells and gongs chimed"