Advertisement
Advertisement
double time
1noun
- U.S. Army. the fastest rate of marching troops, a slow jog in which 180 paces, each of 3 feet (0.9 meters), are taken in a minute.
- a slow run by troops in step.
- a rate of overtime pay that is twice the regular wage rate.
double-time
2[ duhb-uhl-tahym ]
verb (used with object)
- to cause to move in double time:
Double-time the troops to the mess hall.
verb (used without object)
- to move in double time.
double time
noun
- a doubled wage rate, paid for working on public holidays, etc
- music
- a time twice as fast as an earlier section
- two beats per bar
- a slow running pace, keeping in step
- army a fast march of 180 paces to the minute
verb
- to move or cause to move in double time
Word History and Origins
Origin of double time1
Origin of double time2
Example Sentences
“If I need to make something from scratch, I need to work double time before I finish the product,” she explains.
Whether she was running, talking, or pitching, she did everything double time.
"So all of you people feel underused now, get a good night's sleep, because next year you're going to be working double time," he said.
He describes the song as akin to a “slow reggae” with “a double time and a half time all strung together in ballad form, kind of.”
“He was on track to graduate early, and now he is falling behind and will have to work double time just so he can still graduate.”
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse