Karl Lagerfeld (always one to chime in) does not approve of the habit.
Diane Kruger Is Chanel’s New Face; Yves Saint Laurent Films Face Off|The Fashion Beast Team|April 8, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez was quick to chime in, dismissing her as a “bandit.”
GOP's New Foreign Affairs Chair Ready to Play Hardball|Sandra McElwaine|February 20, 2011|DAILY BEAST
Dick stopped for a moment to listen, and as he did so, their chime came to his ears like the sound of his own name.
Dick and His Cat and Other Tales|Various
A clock inside the hall began to chime midnight, and he turned on his heel.
The Education of Eric Lane|Stephen McKenna
An hour passed by, and the chime of a clock striking five dropped down coolly, almost frostily, to the hot and curious crowd.
In the Wilderness|Robert Hichens
Here the sigh lifted and her laugh pealed like a chime of silver bells.
The Haunted Pajamas|Francis Perry Elliott
It was a Sabbath day in late August, and in no month of the year does a Sabbath day so chime with the time.
Corporal Cameron|Ralph Connor
British Dictionary definitions for chime (1 of 2)
chime1
/ (tʃaɪm) /
noun
an individual bell or the sound it makes when struck
(often plural)the machinery employed to sound a bell in this way
Also called: bella percussion instrument consisting of a set of vertical metal tubes of graduated length, suspended in a frame and struck with a hammer
a harmonious or ringing soundthe chimes of children's laughter
agreement; concord
verb
to sound (a bell) or (of a bell) to be sounded by a clapper or hammer
to produce (music or sounds) by chiming
(tr)to indicate or show (time or the hours) by chiming
(tr)to summon, announce, or welcome by ringing bells
(intr foll by with) to agree or harmonize
to speak or recite in a musical or rhythmic manner
Derived forms of chime
chimer, noun
Word Origin for chime
C13: probably shortened from earlier chymbe bell, ultimately from Latin cymbalumcymbal
British Dictionary definitions for chime (2 of 2)
chime2
chimbchine (tʃaɪn)
/ (tʃaɪm) /
noun
the projecting edge or rim of a cask or barrel
Word Origin for chime
Old English cimb-; related to Middle Low German kimme outer edge, Swedish kimb