dancing

IPA: dˈænsɪŋ

noun

  • The activity of taking part in a dance.
  • (historical) A dance club in France.
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Examples of "dancing" in Sentences

  • They are youthful and elegant, and proficient in the art of dancing.
  • Shalene's been watching me ... and my dancing is actually watchable!
  • The Barynya dance is an alternation of chastushkas and frenetic dancing.
  • The dance instructor creates and teaches the dancing involved in the show.
  • Hula dancing is a lot like sign language: If you don't know the language, you can't enjoy it as much.
  • The main distinction in Mr. Stern's design is the inclusion of dozens of what he calls "dancing mullions."
  • At Purdue, Tiller was always looking for what he described as "dancing bears" up front who could handle the team's complicated blocking schemes.
  • I get them all enthused about it, and through long experience I am able to tell which group is going to be what I call my dancing girls or boys.
  • Mark, who as well as being a highly skilled conservator and connoisseur of Latin American dancing is also a dedicated twitcher, knew what I meant.
  • Then their women are so immodest; striding about in ball-rooms with very little on, and embracing strange men in a whirligig which they call dancing, but very unlike the dignified movements which our male dancers exhibit in the Confucian temple.
  • I fancied I was slightly disappointed in Taglioni, whose dancing followed Pasta's singing, but I suppose the magnificent tragical performance I had just witnessed had numbed as it were my power of appreciation of her grace and elegance, and yet she seemed to me like a _dancing flower_; so you see I must have like her very much.

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synonyms for dancingdescribing words for dancing
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