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Ragtime   Listen
noun
Ragtime  n.  (Mus.) A rhythm with a regular accompaniment in two-four time and a melody characterized by syncopation, first recognized in many negro melodies; also a style of American music in this rhythm.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Ragtime" Quotes from Famous Books



... York to San Francisco must be impressed by this contagious character of our dancing habits. But this means that the movement carries in itself the energy to spread farther and farther, and to fill the daily life with increased longing for the ragtime. We are already accustomed to the dance at the afternoon tea; how long will it take before we are threatened by the dance at ...
— Psychology and Social Sanity • Hugo Muensterberg

... that a few days before those same men had been carried into the hospital in most cases at their last gasp from loss of blood and exposure, for none but serious cases were admitted. The cheeriest man in the place was called Rasquinet, a wounded officer who had been christened "Ragtime" for short, and for affection. A week before he had been struck by a shell in the left side, and a large piece of the shell had gone clean through, wounding the kidney behind and the bowel in front. That man crawled across several fields, a distance of nearly a mile, on his hands and knees, ...
— A Surgeon in Belgium • Henry Sessions Souttar

... conclude from this that only the merits and excellences are the true causes of their success. A caustic critic would probably suggest that just the opposite traits are responsible. He would say that the average American is a mixture of business, ragtime, and sentimentality. He satisfies his business instinct by getting so much for his nickel, he enjoys his ragtime in the slapstick humor, and gratifies his sentimentality with the preposterous melodramas which fill the program. This is quite true, and yet it is not true ...
— The Photoplay - A Psychological Study • Hugo Muensterberg

... usual songs of the march and I noticed that the American ragtime was more popular among the boys than their own music. "Dixie" ...
— A Yankee in the Trenches • R. Derby Holmes

... the table. The men and women still sitting at the other tables saw nothing unusual about these four, indifferently dressed, indifferently conditioned. The hotel orchestra, playing ragtime in deafening concord, ...
— Miss Lulu Bett • Zona Gale



Words linked to "Ragtime" :   rag



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