Dictionary Definition
jingle
Noun
1 a metallic sound; "the jingle of coins"; "the
jangle of spurs" [syn: jangle]
2 a comic verse of irregular measure; "he had
heard some silly doggerel that kept running through his mind" [syn:
doggerel, doggerel
verse] v : make a sound typical of metallic objects; "The keys
were jingling in his pocket" [syn: jingle-jangle,
jangle]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
jingle- The sound of metal or
glass clattering against
itself.
- He heard the jingle of her keys in the door and turned off the screen.
- 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.
- a carriage drawn by horses
Translations
A short tune or verse, especially one used to
advertise something
- Finnish: mainossävel
a carriage drawn by horses
Quotations
#:*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
- To make or cause to make a noise of metal or glass clattering
against itself.
- The beads jingled as she walked.
Translations
To make or cause to make a noise of metal or
glass clattering against itself
See also
French
Etymology
From jingle.Pronunciation
/ˈʤɪŋgəl/Noun
fr-noun m- jingle
(tune)
- C'est l'heure d'envoyer le jingle.
Extensive Definition
A jingle is a memorable slogan, set to an engaging
melody, mainly broadcast on
radio and sometimes on
television
commercials.
History
The jingle had no definitive debut: its infiltration of the radio was more of an evolutionary process than a sudden innovation. Product advertisements with a musical tilt can be traced back to 1923, around the same time commercial radio came to the public. If one entity has the best claim to the first jingle it is General Mills, who aired the world’s first singing commercial. The seminal radio bite, entitled "Have You Tried Wheaties?", was first released on the Christmas Eve of 1926. It featured four male singers, who were eventually christened "The Wheaties Quartet", singing the following lines:Have you tried Wheaties? They’re whole wheat with
all of the bran. Won’t you try Wheaties? For wheat is the best food
of man.
While the lyrics may appear hokey to modern day
society, the advertisement was an absolute sensation to consumers
at the time. In fact, it was such a success that it served to save
the otherwise failing brand of cereal. In 1929, General
Mills was seriously considering dropping Wheaties on the
basis of poor sales. However, advertising manager Sam Gale pointed
out that an astounding 30,000 of the 53,000 cases of cereal that General Mills sold
were in the Minneapolis-St.
Paul area, the only location where “Have You Tried Wheaties?”
was being aired at the time. Encouraged by this incredible results
of this new method of advertising, General Mills changed tactics
entirely. Instead of dropping the cereal, it purchased nationwide
commercial time for the advertisement. The resultant climb in sales
single-handedly saved the now incredibly popular cereal.
After the massive success that General Mills
enjoyed, other companies began to investigate this new method of
advertisement. The jingle movement was bursting. Ironically, part
of the appeal of the jingle was that it circumvented broadcasting
giant NBC’s
prohibition of direct advertising: this new variety of
advertisement could get brand’s name embedded in the heads of
potential customers without trying to sell it. The art of the
jingle reached its peak around the economic
boom of the 1950s.
The jingle was used in the advertising of branded
products such as breakfast
cereals, candy and
snacks (including
soda
pop) and other processed
foods, tobacco and
alcoholic
beverages, as well as various franchises and
products that might reflect personal image such as automobiles, personal hygiene
products (including deodorants, mouthwash, shampoo, and toothpaste) and household
cleaning products, especially detergent. Today, with the
ever-increasing cost of licensing preexisting music, a growing
number of businesses are rediscovering the custom jingle as a more
affordable option for their advertising needs.
Parody/Comedy/Lampoon
Jingles can also be used for parody purposes, popularized in Top 40/CHR radio formats primarily Hot30 Countdown and Christian Music News Scoop, used primarily for branding reasons. Parody also allows radio networks to bypass copyright law through parody provisions. It brands the segment as both light-hearted and commercial, thus fulfilling its use as a branding component.References
jingle in German: Jingle
jingle in Spanish: Jingle
jingle in Persian: زنگوله (رادیو)
jingle in French: Ritournelle publicitaire
jingle in Hebrew: זמריר
jingle in Dutch: Jingle
jingle in Polish: Dżingiel
jingle in Portuguese: Jingle
jingle in Russian: Джингл
jingle in Ukrainian: Джинґл
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
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