Advertisement

Advertisement

View definitions for dancing

dancing

Discover More

Example Sentences

Think of a folk dance where people change partners, says Manas-Zloczower.

The app, majority-owned by investor Proxima Media, gives users editing tools and video filters to make short videos of their dance challenges and comedy skits.

From Fortune

They enjoy just a brief dance of death lasting perhaps hundreds of nanoseconds.

Kara Billington, a 16-year-old TikTok user from Richardson, Texas, says users of Instagram, and therefore Reels, seem to skew a little older, meaning fewer dance challenges.

From Fortune

Instead, as proof of the appeal of Reels, it pointed to several high-profile influencers who are using the service to make videos focused on food, beauty, and dance.

From Fortune

There is one time, however, when couple dancing is in high demand, and that is around weddings.

I ask Atefeh and Monir if they see dancing as a form of income in the future, a potential career.

Her very first performance onstage came at the age of 4, when she cameoed as a dancing flower in the musical Bye Bye Birdie.

And so it was that the federal government did not shut down just when we all had visions of sugar plumbs dancing in our heads.

Pakistan was dancing for the U.S. dollar and joined up with it without any dignity.

The storm, however, was over; the moon and stars were shining in a clear sky, and the aurora was dancing merrily.

This slaughter is accompanied by the tabagie and what follows it—namely, the singing and dancing.

Then there was dancing and singing under the palm-trees by old and young, and when evening came there were displays of fireworks.

He had taken an immediate fancy to Isabel and promised to show her the lower rooms as soon as she tired of dancing.

Looking through this hole, the king perceived an old man weeping, a man in mourning garb singing, and a nun or widow dancing.

Advertisement

On this page you'll find 33 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to dancing, such as: disco, samba, tango, waltz, boogie, and charleston.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement