chimes

listen to the pronunciation of chimes
English - English
plural of chime
third-person singular of chime
chime
An individual ringing component of such a set

Peter removed the C# chime from is mounting so that he could get at the dust that had accumulated underneath.

chime
A small bell or other ringing or tone-making device as a component of some other device

The professor had stuffed a wad of gum into the chime of his doorbell so that he wouldn't be bothered.

chime
To make the sound of a chime

I got up for lunch as soon as the wall clock began chiming noon.

chime
A musical instrument producing a sound when struck, similar to a bell (e.g. a tubular metal bar) or actually a bell. Often used in the plural to refer to the set: the chimes

Hugo was a chime player in the school orchestra.

chime
To agree; to correspond

The other lab's results chimed with mine, so I knew we were on the right track with the research.

wind chimes
A construction of small pieces of wood, glass, metal or ceramic suspended, outdoors, in such a way that they tinkle pleasantly when moved by the wind
chime
{n} a sound of bells, agreement, concord
chime
{v} to gingle, sound together, join, agree
wind chimes
(plural noun) Small decorative pieces of glass or metal suspended from a frame, typically hung near a door or window so as to tinkle in the draught
Chime
chimb
chime
To utter harmoniously; to recite rhythmically
chime
To make a rude correspondence of sounds; to jingle, as in rhyming
chime
A small hammer or other device used to strike a bell
chime
a percussion instrument consisting of vertical metal tubes of different lengths that are struck with a hammer
chime
(n ) Chained vector time, approximately equal to the vector length in a DO-loop The number of chimes required for a loop dominates the time required for execution A new chime begins each time a resource such as a functional unit, vector register or memory path, must be reused
chime
The sound of such an instrument or device
chime
To cause to sound in harmony; to play a tune, as upon a set of bells; to move or strike in harmony
chime
Center of Healthcare Information Management Executives
chime
A set of bells musically tuned to each other; 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
chime
To be in harmony; to agree; to suit; to harmonize; to correspond; to fall in with
chime
See Chine, n
chime
a percussion instrument consisting of vertical metal tubes of different lengths that are struck with a hammer emit a sound; "bells and gongs chimed
chime
The harmonious sound of bells, or of musical instruments
chime
When a bell or a clock chimes, it makes ringing sounds. He heard the front doorbell chime. as the Guildhall clock chimed three o'clock. a mahogany chiming clock
chime
To join in a conversation; to express assent; followed by in or in with
chime
Chimes are a set of small objects which make a ringing sound when they are blown by the wind. the haunting sound of the wind chimes. The rim of a cask
chime
A sequence of vector operations that can be chained into a single pipeline The limitation on such a sequence is that the same vector functional unit cannot be used twice in the same chain Therefore, a loop that contains two vector adds, for example, contains at least two chimes because there is only one vector add functional unit
chime
The expanded edge or rim of a barrel, pail, or drum
chime
bottom or top perimeter of the drum comprised of the edges of the combined thickness of the head and the body
chime
A chime is a ringing sound made by a bell, especially when it is part of a clock. The ceremony started as the chimes of midnight struck
chime
Pleasing correspondence of proportion, relation, or sound
chime
Early English term was chymme bells, from chymbals, an Anglicization of the Latin cymbala A set of bells usually numbering up to 16 (but not more than 22) and hung stationary They are played melodically-occasionally with simple harmony-either by automatic action, from an electric keyboard, or from a chime stand of wooden levers and sometimes pedals If sounded automatically, the chime may be set off by clock action or by controls which permit designated periods of play To chime refers to the automatic ringing of the bells of the chime In England it also refers to the ordinary swinging of a church bell in a limited arc (as opposed to the full circle of 360 degrees for bells in change ringing)
chime
emit a sound; "bells and gongs chimed"
chime
The bell-like sound made when a clock strikes on the hour, half-hour, etc Two familiar chimes traditionally found in clocks are the Westminster chime made by the famous Big Ben in London, and the bim-bam, a two-note chime
chime
Chained vector time A chime begins each time a resource gets reused in a Do loop
chime
{f} ring, make a bell-like sound; strike a bell, cause to ring; harmonize; be in harmony with; enter into a conversation
chime
{i} ring of a bell; harmony
chime
The lip around the opening of a paint can into which the lid is placed
chime
To sound in harmonious accord, as bells
wind chimes
a decorative arrangement of pieces of metal or glass or pottery that hang together loosely so the wind can cause them to tinkle
wind chimes
An arrangement of small suspended pieces, as of glass, metal, or ceramic, hung loosely together so that they tinkle pleasingly when blown by the wind. Also called wind-bells. long thin pieces of metal, wood etc hanging together in a group, that make musical sounds when the wind blows them against each other
chimes
Favorites