Rhythmic dance mostly applies to tap dance. Beginning tap normally stays on the beat that you would tap your foot to. But more advanced tap can go off the beat, make interesting rhythm, and is a lot more difficult. In music it is called syncopation but it is called rhythmic in dance.
It is rhythmic gymnastics. It is an Olympic sport that combines dance with gymnastics. In the sport you manipulate hand apparatuses (hoop, ball, clubs, ribbon, and rope). There is no tumbling allowed.
It's basically a movement or a procedure with uniform or patterned recurrence in a beat, accent, or the like. I got this from Google, just look it up. :D
Kinds of Social Dances are: § Ballroom dance § Club dance § Contra dance § Country and Western dance § English country dance § Folk dance (or Ethnic dance) § House dance § Scottish country dance § Irish and Scottish Céilidh § Square dance § Street dance § Swing dance § Tango § Tarantella
Excerpt from Wikipedia: Social dance / Participation dance * Social dance * Participation dance * Historical dance : see also Concert dance * Folk dance ** Bhangra ** Austrian folk dance ** International folk dance ** Ukrainian dance ** Country dance ** English folk dance *** English country dance *** Rapper sword ** Gidha ** Hungarian dance ** Scottish highland dance ** Russian country dance ** Chinese country dance ** Irish dance ** Square dance ** Contradance ** Country/western dance *** Line dance *** Western promenade dances ** Barn dance ** Round dance *** circular chain *** couples This style can incorporate all forms of dance to create visual effects primarily for entertaining at halftime shows. Poms is done with teams of 6 to 45 people and is one of the most public forms of dance. Competition is fierce in this field and performers are not only judged on form, but also on team uniformity, showmanship, precision and choreography. * Ballroom dance ** International Standard ** International Latin ** American Smooth ** American Rhythm ** Latin Nightclub ** Country/Western ** Cajun dances ** Polka ** Formation dance * Latin dance ** Argentine Tango * Swing ** Lindy Hop ** East Coast Swing ** West Coast Swing ** Jive ** Modern Jive ** Jitterbug ** Balboa * Hip Hop * Breakdance * Popping * Locking * R&B * Krump * Urban Dance * Animation Dance * Traditional dance * Ceremonial dance ** Ritual dance * Liturgical dance * Contact improvisation * Fad dance / Novelty dance * Disco dance : See also: Disco music * Flying Men Dance * Concert dance * Performance dance * Historical dance ** Medieval dance ** Renaissance dance ** Masque ** English country dance ** Baroque dance ** Regency dance ** Vintage dance * Belly dance ** Category:Syllabus-free dance
The duration of Dance India Dance is 2 hours.
Saltatio - dance (noun) Saltare - to dance
Riverside - Sydney Samson
It was rhythmics but they had to change it because there was a charity named rhythmics.
Editing
Thomas Fitzhugh has written: 'Carmen arvale, seu Martis verber' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics, Italic languages and dialects 'Prolegomena to the History of Italico-Romanic rhythm' -- subject(s): Italic languages and dialects, Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics
D. S. Raven has written: 'Greek metre' -- subject(s): Greek language, Metrics and rhythmics
Carl Bock has written: 'De metris Horatii lyricis' -- subject(s): Prose, Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics
Paul Mohr has written: 'De iambico apud Plautum septenario' -- subject(s): Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics
Thomas Dwight Goodell has written: 'Chapters on Greek metrics' -- subject(s): Greek language, Metrics and rhythmics
Willi Meister has written: 'De Ciceronis poetae arte' -- subject(s): Poetics, Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics
Richard Klotz has written: 'De numero anapaestico quaestiones metricae' -- subject(s): Greek language, Metrics and rhythmics
sorry, but what do you exactly mean by "music codes", is it transcription, rhythmics, law coding... ??? make it clearer please so that the answer will be beneficent.
Joseph Henry. Howard has written: 'The quantitative reading of Latin verse' -- subject(s): Latin language, Metrics and rhythmics
Edward Damphoux has written: 'Latin prosody' -- subject(s): Latin language, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Pronunciation, Metrics and rhythmics, English