Synonym: beat, heart rate, heartbeat, impulse, pulsate, pulsation, pulse rate, pulsing, throb. Similar words: impulse, else, or else, elsewhere, pull, pull up, pull on, pull out. Meaning: [pʌls] n. 1. (electronics) a sharp transient wave in the normal electrical state (or a series of such transients) 2. the rhythmic contraction and expansion of the arteries with each beat of the heart 3. the rate at which the heart beats; usually measured to obtain a quick evaluation of a person's health 4. edible seeds of various pod-bearing plants (peas or beans or lentils etc.). v. 1. expand and contract rhythmically; beat rhythmically 2. produce or modulate (as electromagnetic waves) in the form of short bursts or pulses or cause an apparatus to produce pulses 3. drive by or as if by pulsation.
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151 Rhythmic pulse can be a very prominent and essential feature of the music.
152 Every so often, the stones would quieten while a doctor would check the women's pulse.
153 Different conductors have different pulse rates and their tempi are often mathematical proportions of this.
154 He was not sure whether the pulse which beat in their joined hands was hers or his.
155 Reaching for her favourite Givenchy perfume, she liberally sprayed the pulse spots, adding a dash at her elbows and knees.
155 Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and make good sentences.
156 The finger was removed almost immediately, but not before Isabel had felt the throbbing pulse against her lips.
157 A simple paired comparison of mean pulse rate data obtained immediately before and during the procedure was also carried out.
158 There was no electronic monitor, so Shelley would just have to check pulse and blood-pressure regularly.
159 To take your pulse all you need to do is to count it for 10 seconds and then multiply by 6.
160 He heard a footfall in the passage outside and felt his pulse quicken.
161 When data is fed into input, D1 and a clock pulse given(Sentencedict.com), the data moves along one place.
162 Far enough for the noise of the city to be a distant hum, near enough to hear its pulse beating.
163 We do not expect doctors to run an intensive care unit simply by measuring the pulse rates of their patients.
164 At no other time was the pulse of prayer so powerful in his parish.
165 Nuclear fusion reactions between deuterium ions produced between 10 5 and 10 6 neutrons per pulse.
166 But in the last pages Chailly slackens the pulse again, and instead of an ending to exhilarate and thrill we have anticlimax.
167 They keep us in jars like dead insects and fail to perceive the pulse of desire.
168 Stock brokers with a feel for Hong Kong's financial pulse were worried.
169 He took my right wrist and pressed his thumb tightly against my pulse and then spoke a sentence.
170 This may be detected either by using pulse timing techniques or by very-long-baseline interferometry.
171 Her rapid pulse, high blood pressure, irregular breathing, and bluish discoloration of the skin all called for life-saving measures.
172 We can think of radar signals as a series of pulses, but each pulse has a so-called carrier frequency.
173 Gingerly, Jack took his stepfather's wrist and felt the light fluttering of his pulse.
174 Doctors had been unable to find a pulse as they hurried to their next Medicash-insured mugging victim.
175 The arterial oxygen saturation and pulse rate of all patients were monitored by pulse oximetry before and during the procedure.
176 She knew Guy could feel the sudden acceleration of her pulse, but she could do nothing to stop the traitorous throbbing.
177 The next question is, what type of training routine do you use to increase pulse rate?
178 An impulse passing along a nerve fibre is in some respects similar to an electric pulse passing along a wire.
179 A few deep breaths to steady his racing pulse, and he was ready.
180 The patient's colour, face and body features as well as pulse and tongue will also come in for scrutiny.
More similar words: impulse, else, or else, elsewhere, pull, pull up, pull on, pull out, pull in, pull off, something else, pull down, social services, manipulate, popularity, population, pull through, pulchritude.