rattle

rattle
rattle1
/rat"l/, v., rattled, rattling, n.
v.i.
1. to give out or cause a rapid succession of short, sharp sounds, as in consequence of agitation and repeated concussions: The windows rattled in their frames.
2. to move or go, esp. rapidly, with such sounds: The car rattled along the highway.
3. to talk rapidly; chatter: He rattled on for an hour about his ailments.
v.t.
4. to cause to rattle: He rattled the doorknob violently.
5. to drive, send, bring, etc., esp. rapidly, with rattling sounds: The wind rattled the metal can across the roadway.
6. to utter or perform in a rapid or lively manner: to rattle off a list of complaints.
7. to disconcert or confuse (a person): A sudden noise rattled the speaker.
8. Hunting. to stir up (a cover).
n.
9. a rapid succession of short, sharp sounds, as from the collision of hard bodies.
10. an instrument contrived to make a rattling sound, esp. a baby's toy filled with small pellets that rattle when shaken.
11. the series of horny, interlocking elements at the end of the tail of a rattlesnake, with which it produces a rattling sound.
12. a rattling sound in the throat, as the death rattle.
[1250-1300; ME ratelen (v.), ratele (n.) (c. D ratelen, G rasseln); imit.]
Syn. 1. clatter, knock. 7. discompose. 9. clatter.
rattle2
/rat"l/, v.t., rattled, rattling. Naut.
to furnish with ratlines (usually fol. by down).
[1720-30; back formation from ratling RATLINE (taken as verbal n.)]

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      percussion instrument consisting of resonant objects strung together and set in a sliding frame or enclosed in a container such that when it is shaken the parts strike against each other, producing sounds. In many societies, rattles are associated with the supernatural and accompany religious rites. Slung rattles (shells, bones, hooves, or similar objects strung on a cord or tied in bunches and attached to a dancer's body) are among the earliest musical instruments, appearing, along with gourd and tube rattles, in prehistoric times. Gourd rattles are particularly prominent as ritual instruments. Where gourds are uncommon, similar rattles are made of basketry, wood, clay, or other material. Gourd rattles known from their use in popular Latin American dance bands are the cabaça (Portuguese for “calabash”), a gourd enclosed in a beaded mesh, and maracas. Rattles are widely considered to have magical power, from the turtle rattles of the Native Americans of the northeastern United States and the gourd rattles of Amazonian Brazil to the shaman accoutrements of Africa and Oceania.

      Pellet bells—a familiar variety is the metal jingle bell—are hollow vessels enclosing a single rattling object. In ancient or folk cultures they have frequently been considered to be protective and, as such, have been worn by priests and dancers, especially in ritual dance, and placed on animals. Their use as jewelry reflects their ancient role as protective amulets. Small suzu pellet bells play important roles in the Shinto dances of Japan..

      Other varieties of rattle include the sistrum, having sliding bars set in a frame, and the Javanese angklung, tuned bamboo tubes set in a bamboo frame. The word jingle refers to various types of rattles—e.g., slung rattles, pellet bells, and the sliding metal disks on many tambourines.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Rattle — Rat tle (r[a^]t t l), v. t. 1. To cause to make a rattling or clattering sound; as, to rattle a chain. [1913 Webster] 2. To assail, annoy, or stun with a rattling noise. [1913 Webster] Sound but another [drum], and another shall As loud as thine… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • rattle — index confuse (bewilder), discompose, perplex Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

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