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batterie

American  
[bat-uh-ree, batuh-ree] / ˈbæt ə ri, batəˈri /

noun

Ballet.

plural

batteries
  1. a beating together of the calves or feet during a leap.

  2. (in tap dancing) a rapid succession of taps, often compared to drumming or to machine-gun fire.

  3. battery.


Etymology

Origin of batterie

From French, dating back to 1705–15; see origin at battery

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Electrochemistry is a pre-requisite for hydrogen production, and for batterie technology, and thus for sustainable chemistry.

From Science Daily • Apr. 11, 2024

It fluently covers a spectrum of dance idioms: jazz arm gestures, Cuban hip motion and the intricate petite batterie of ballet jumps are just three of the most unmistakable.

From New York Times • Dec. 7, 2011

The kitchen contains a batterie de cuisine that would flatter a cordon bleu chef.

From Time Magazine Archive

Now, at ten am, the whole mass is at furnace heat, kettles boiling, stewpots simmering, and frying-pans hissing—in short, a complete batterie de cuisine in stridulous activity.

From The Vee-Boers A Tale of Adventure in Southern Africa by Reid, Mayne

And therefore without all remorse lay batterie against mine own edifice: not sparing to shew how weak that is, that my self now deems not impregnably strong.

From Democritus Platonissans by More, Henry