单词 | dance hall |
释义 | dance halln. 1. A large hall or building where public dances are held, esp. where music is played for dancers paying an admission fee. In later use also: spec. a discotheque or nightclub. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > dancing > place for dancing > [noun] > public dance hall dancing-hall1753 dancing-room1788 dancing-house1818 dance hall1845 dance-house1848 dance-hall1858 palais de danse1900 palais1928 pally1928 track1945 1845 J. H. Ingraham Wing of Wind i. ii. 11 The room was a low ceiled apartment, about forty feet in length, and fourteen wide... It was the dance hall of the ‘Golden Anchor’, and had witnessed many a wilder and more lawless scene than that which the young man gazed in upon. 1858 Mass. Acts & Resolves 125 Any person who shall offer to view..any..show, concert, or dance-hall exhibition of any description shall be punished by a fine. 1893 Overland Monthly Oct. 354/2 The roar and din from the dance-hall came to her on the night wind. 1926 Amer. Mercury July 363/1 ‘Caruso’ Mancusi, the ice-man, gives a ball at Donlan's dance hall..to raise the money to make him a grand opera star. 1970 G. Greer Female Eunuch 249 The boys used to go to the local dance halls and stand around..until the..sexual urge prompted them to score a chick. 1993 Vibe Sept. 85/3 Packs of these autoeroticists roam today's dancehalls, clad in tight ‘batty rider’ bicycle shorts and see-through negligees. 2001 Scotl. on Sunday (Electronic ed.) 22 July His playing is rooted in the great local traditions of polka and slide, but his virtuoso skill means that he can turn a great crowded barn into a Kerry dance hall. 2. Frequently in form dancehall. An up-tempo style of popular music originating in the dance halls of Jamaica and derived from reggae, in which a DJ improvises lyrics, or ‘toasts’, over a recorded rhythm track or instrumental version of a record. Also more fully dancehall reggae. Cf. ragga n., toast v.3 ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > pop music > [noun] > Jamaican bluebeat1964 ska1964 rocksteady1967 reggae1968 dub1973 skank1974 roots reggae1976 skanking1976 roots1979 dance hall1982 ragamuffin1986 ragga1990 bashment1996 1982 (title of record) A dee-jay explosion: inna dance hall style. 1983 S. Davis & P. Simon Reggae Internat. ix. 112/1 Anything him play on sound good at Studio One, de original dance hall sound. 1986 Reggae & Afr. Beat 5 iv. 20/3 Pato Banton and Tipa Irie blew away the uninitiated..with broadsides of UK-style raps that blended the tradition of JA dance hall with live backing sounds. 1989 Newsday (Nexis) 15 Dec. 26 Like hip-hop and house music, dancehall is bass music... Brutal dancehall reggae [is] represented on the radio by songs like Foxy Brown's ‘Sorry (Baby Can I Hold You)’. 1995 Guardian 27 Jan. ii. 11/5 Junglism—assertion of modern cultural identity by Afro-Caribbean kids raised on rocksteady, Marley and dancehall. 2000 N.Y. Times 11 Aug. e27/3 Buju Banton started out as a dance hall toaster, bragging with raspy enthusiasm about girls, guns and macho exploits, including an infamous song about gay-bashing. This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1845 |
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