Table of Contents
Rhymes with Baroque Period
- .period
- myriad
Sentences with baroque-period
1. Noun Phrase
This tour is filled with historical facts about saints, religion, statues and artists during the baroque period.
2. baroque
noun. ['bɝˈoʊk'] elaborate and extensive ornamentation in decorative art and architecture that flourished in Europe in the 17th century.
Synonyms
3. baroque
adjective. ['bɝˈoʊk'] of or relating to or characteristic of the elaborately ornamented style of architecture, art, and music popular in Europe between 1600 and 1750.
Antonyms
4. Baroque
adjective. of or relating to or characteristic of the elaborately ornamented style of architecture, art, and music popular in Europe between 1600 and 1750.
5. Baroque
noun. the historic period from about 1600 until 1750 when the baroque style of art, architecture, and music flourished in Europe.
Synonyms
6. period
noun. ['ˈpɪriːəd'] an amount of time.
Synonyms
- incubation period
- fundamental measure
- schooltime
- clotting time
- fortnight
- term
- reign
- usance
- hebdomad
- morning
- daytime
- night
- canicule
- rainy day
- time frame
- time of life
- time
- youth
- dog days
- Olympiad
- millenary
- prehistoric culture
- mid-April
- calendar month
- overtime
- drouth
- forenoon
- Indian summer
- decade
- quarter-century
- hours
- phase of the moon
- midwinter
- weekend
- life
- Platonic year
- indiction
- sleep
- bimillennium
- efflorescence
- mid-February
- lunar time period
- twelvemonth
- continuance
- dark
- tide
- morn
- wartime
- downtime
- work time
- week
- quarter
- duty tour
- nighttime
- peak
- run
- life-time
- prehistory
- years
- epoch
- mid-May
- mid-January
- stage
- term of enlistment
- hitch
- year
- quadrennium
- flush
- civil day
- noviciate
- enlistment
- eve
- bimillenary
- yr
- millennium
- time period
- honeymoon
- lustrum
- blossom
- evening
- running time
- mid-October
- question time
- time of year
- lifespan
- occupation
- period of time
- day
- semester
- air alert
- lease
- Saint Martin's summer
- prohibition
- dawn
- time limit
- bimester
- tour
- decennium
- mid-March
- half-century
- generation
- regulation time
- duration
- mid-December
- study hall
- daylight
- bronze age
- test period
- tour of duty
- long haul
- multistage
- silly season
- long time
- puerperium
- prime
- mid-November
- watch
- mid-August
- drought
- midweek
- two weeks
- trimester
- mid-September
- heyday
- time off
- calendar week
- lifetime
- era
- month
- uptime
- past
- bloom
- great year
- century
- phase
- quinquennium
- nap
- lactation
- window
- age
- season
- hour
- calendar day
- canicular days
- shelf life
- festival
- real time
- hospitalization
- morning time
- term of a contract
- flower
- prohibition era
- early days
- iron age
- fundamental quantity
- elapsed time
- school
- silver age
- bout
- half-life
- travel time
- long run
- novitiate
- field day
- half life
- mid-July
- Golden Age
- extra time
- peacetime
- trial period
- times
- school day
- decennary
Etymology
- periode (Middle English (1100-1500))
- periode (Middle French (ca. 1400-1600))
7. period
noun. ['ˈpɪriːəd'] the interval taken to complete one cycle of a regularly repeating phenomenon.
Synonyms
Etymology
- periode (Middle English (1100-1500))
- periode (Middle French (ca. 1400-1600))
8. period
noun. ['ˈpɪriːəd'] a punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations.
Antonyms
Etymology
- periode (Middle English (1100-1500))
- periode (Middle French (ca. 1400-1600))
9. period
noun. ['ˈpɪriːəd'] (ice hockey) one of three divisions into which play is divided in hockey games.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- periode (Middle English (1100-1500))
- periode (Middle French (ca. 1400-1600))