Jingle

Noun
jingle


 * 1) The sound of metal or glass clattering against itself.
 * He heard the jingle of her keys in the door and turned off the screen.
 * 1) A short tune or verse, especially one used to advertise something.
 * The Stay-Put Lipstick people came up with a catchy jingle to promote their product.
 * 1) a carriage drawn by horses

Verb

 * 1) To make a noise of metal or glass clattering against itself.
 * The beads jingled as she walked.
 * 1) To cause to make a noise of metal or glass clattering against itself.
 * She jingled the beads as she walked.

Adjectives for Jingle
petulant;  spasmodic; clear; discordant; pleasant; foolish.

Adverbs for Jingle
melodiously; musically; petulantly; spasmodically; discordantly; gaily; genially; pleasantly; propitiously.

Thesaurus
Alexandrine, English sonnet, Horatian ode, Italian sonnet, Petrarchan sonnet, Pindaric ode, Sapphic ode, Shakespearean sonnet, accent, accentuation, alba, alliterate, alliteration, amphibrach, amphimacer, anacreontic, anacrusis, anapest, antispast, arsis, assonance, assonate, bacchius, balada, ballad, ballade, beat, bucolic, cadence, caesura, canso, cap verses, catalexis, change ringing, chanson, chime, chiming, chink, chinking, chloriamb, chloriambus, clack, clang, clanging, clangor, clank, clanking, clatter, clerihew, clink, clinking, colon, counterpoint, cretic, dactyl, dactylic hexameter, diaeresis, dimeter, ding, ding-a-ling, dingdong, dinging, dingle, dipody, dirge, dithyramb, ditty, dochmiac, doggerel, dong, donging, drone, eclogue, elegiac, elegiac couplet, elegiac pentameter, elegy, emphasis, epic, epigram, epithalamium, epitrite, epode, epopee, epopoeia, epos, feminine caesura, foot, georgic, ghazel, gong, haiku, harping, heptameter, heptapody, heroic couplet, hexameter, hexapody, humdrum, iamb, iambic, iambic pentameter, ictus, idyll, ionic, jangle, jingle-jangle, jinglejangle, jingling, knell, knelling, lilt, limerick, lyric, madrigal, masculine caesura, measure, melody, meter, metrical accent, metrical foot, metrical group, metrical unit, metron, molossus, monody, monotone, monotony, mora, movement, narrative poem, near rhyme, numbers, nursery rhyme, ode, paeon, palinode, paronomasia, pastoral, pastoral elegy, pastorela, pastourelle, peal, peal ringing, pealing, pentameter, pentapody, period, pitter-patter, poem, proceleusmatic, prothalamium, pun, pyrrhic, quantity, rattle, repeated sounds, repetitiousness, repetitiveness, rhyme, rhythm, ring, ring changes, ringing, rondeau, rondel, roundel, roundelay, satire, scan, sestina, singsong, slant rhyme, sloka, song, sonnet, sonnet sequence, sound, sound a knell, spondee, sprung rhythm, stale repetition, stress, swing, syzygy, tanka, tedium, tenso, tenzone, tetrameter, tetrapody, tetraseme, thesis, threnody, ting, ting-a-ling, tingle, tingling, tink, tinkle, tinkling, tinnitus, tintinnabulate, toll, tolling, tribrach, trimeter, triolet, tripody, triseme, trochee, trot, troubadour poem, tune, unnecessary repetition, verse, verselet, versicle, villanelle, virelay

Noun

 * Czech: cinkání, cinkot
 * Finnish: ,


 * Serbo-Croatian: zveket, zveckanje


 * Czech:
 * Finnish: mainossävel,, laulelma


 * SerboCroatian:


 * Serbo-Croatian: kočija

Quotations

 * carriage
 * 1916: They drove in a jingle across Cork while it was still early morning and Stephen finished his sleep in a bedroom of the Victoria Hotel. - James Joyce, ''Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (Macmillan Press Ltd, paperback, 85)

Verb

 * Finnish: ,


 * Finnish: ,

Noun

 * 1) jingle (tune)
 * C'est l'heure d'envoyer le jingle.

Etymology
From jingle.

Pronunciation
/ˈʤɪŋgəl/