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1. (v.i.) pulsate
to expand and contract rhythmically, as the heart; beat; throb.
2. pulsate
to vibrate; quiver.
Etymology: (1785–95; < L pulsātus, ptp. of pulsāre to batter, strike, make (strings) vibrate)
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| Definition of 'Pulsate' |
Princeton's WordNet |
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1. (verb) pulsate, throb, pulse
expand and contract rhythmically; beat rhythmically
"The baby's heart was pulsating again after the surgeon massaged it"
2. (verb) pulsate, beat, quiver
move with or as if with a regular alternating motion
"the city pulsated with music and excitement"
3. (verb) pulse, pulsate
produce or modulate (as electromagnetic waves) in the form of short bursts or pulses or cause an apparatus to produce pulses
"pulse waves"; "a transmitter pulsed by an electronic tube"
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| Definition of 'Pulsate' |
Webster Dictionary |
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1. Pulsate
to throb, as a pulse; to beat, as the heart
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Sense: to beat or throb.
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Afrikaans: pols, klop |
Arabic: يَنْبُض، يخْفِق |
Bulgarian: пулсирам |
Brazilian: pulsar |
Czech: pulsovat |
German: pulsieren |
Danish: slå; dunke |
Greek: πάλλομαι |
Spanish: latir, palpitar |
Estonian: tuksuma, pulseerima |
Farsi: تپیدن؛ زدن |
Finnish: sykkiä |
French: battre |
Hebrew: לְהַפעִים |
Hindi: धड़कना, फड़कना |
Hungarian: lüktet |
Indonesian: berdenyut |
Icelandic: slá |
Italian: pulsare, battere |
Japanese: 脈打つ |
Korean: 고동치다, 맥박 치다 |
Lithuanian: pulsuoti |
Latvian: pulsēt |
Malay: berdenyut |
Dutch: pulseren |
Norwegian: slå, pulsere, dunke |
Polish: pulsować |
Persian: تپیدن؛ زدن |
Pashto: دربيدل، وهل |
Portuguese: pulsar |
Romanian: a pulsa, a bate |
Russian: биться, пульсировать |
Slovak: pulzovať |
Slovenian: utripati |
Serbian: pulsirati |
Swedish: pulsera |
Thai: เต้นเป็นจังหวะ |
Turkish: atmak,çarpmak |
Taiwanese: (心臟)跳動 |
Ukrainian: пульсувати; вібрувати |
Urdu: دھڑکنا، پھڑکنا |
Vietnamese: đập |
Chinese: (心脏)跳动 |
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