Interval vs Cycle - What's the difference?
interval | cycle | Related terms |
A distance in space.
* Milton
A period of time.
(music) The difference (a ratio or logarithmic measure) in pitch between two notes, often referring to those two pitches themselves (otherwise known as a dyad).
(mathematics) A connected section of the real line which may be empty or have a length of zero.
(chiefly, British) An intermission.
(sports) half time, a scheduled intermission between the periods of play
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=November 12
, author=
, title=International friendly: England 1-0 Spain
, work=BBC Sport
(cricket) Either of the two breaks, at lunch and tea, between the three sessions of a day's play
An interval of space or time in which one set of events or phenomena is completed.
* Burke
A complete rotation of anything.
A process that returns to its beginning and then repeats itself in the same sequence.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-10, volume=408, issue=8848, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= The members of the sequence formed by such a process.
(music) In musical set theory, an interval cycle is the set of pitch classes resulting from repeatedly applying the same interval class to the starting pitch class.
A series of poems, songs or other works of art.
A programme on a washing machine, dishwasher, or other such device.
A pedal-powered vehicle, such as a unicycle, bicycle, or tricycle; or, motorized vehicle that has either two or three wheels, such as a motorbike, motorcycle, motorized tricycle, or motortrike.
(baseball) A single, a double, a triple, and a home run hit by the same player in the same game.
(graph theory) A closed walk or path, with or without repeated vertices allowed.
An imaginary circle or orbit in the heavens; one of the celestial spheres.
An age; a long period of time.
* Tennyson
An orderly list for a given time; a calendar.
* Evelyn
(botany) One entire round in a circle or a spire.
To ride a bicycle or other .
To go through a cycle or to put through a cycle.
(electronics) To turn power off and back on
(ice hockey) To maintain a team's possession of the puck in the offensive zone by handling and passing the puck in a loop from the boards near the goal up the side boards and passing to back to the boards near the goal
In lang=en terms the difference between interval and cycle
is that interval is the difference (a ratio or logarithmic measure) in pitch between two notes, often referring to those two pitches themselves (otherwise known as a dyad) while cycle is in musical set theory, an interval cycle is the set of pitch classes resulting from repeatedly applying the same interval class to the starting pitch class.As nouns the difference between interval and cycle
is that interval is a distance in space while cycle is an interval of space or time in which one set of events or phenomena is completed.As a verb cycle is
to ride a bicycle or other cycle.interval
English
(wikipedia interval)Noun
(en noun)- 'Twixt host and host but narrow space was left, / A dreadful interval .
- the interval between contractions during childbirth
citation, page= , passage=Spain made three substitutions at the interval , sending on former Arsenal captain Fabregas, Chelsea's Juan Mata and Liverpool keeper Pepe Reina for Xavi, David Silva and Casillas.}}
Hyponyms
* (mathematics) open interval, half-open interval, closed intervalExternal links
* * * ----cycle
English
(wikipedia cycle)Noun
(en noun)- the cycle of the seasons, or of the year
- Wages to the medium of provision during the last bad cycle of twenty years.
Legal highs: A new prescription, passage=No sooner has a [synthetic] drug been blacklisted than chemists adjust their recipe and start churning out a subtly different one. These “legal highs” are sold for the few months it takes the authorities to identify and ban them, and then the cycle begins again.}}
- the spin cycle
- (Milton)
- (Burke)
- Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.
- We present our gardeners with a complete cycle of what is requisite to be done throughout every month of the year.
- a cycle or set of leaves
- (Gray)
Usage notes
* (aviation sense) One take-off and landing of an aircraft is a (term), referring to a (term) which places stresses on the fuselage. * (baseball sense) As in the example sentence, one is usually said to (term). However, other uses also occur, such as (term) and (term).Derived terms
* cycle path * cyclic * acyclicVerb
(cycl)- Avoid cycling the device unnecessarily.
- They have their cycling game going tonight.
