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单词 honky-tonk
释义

Definition of honky-tonk in English:

honky-tonk

noun ˈhɒŋkɪtɒŋk
informal
  • 1North American A cheap or disreputable bar, club, or dance hall.

    a neighbourhood of honky-tonks and decaying apartment buildings
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As someone who has sometimes wondered about her own capacity to drink herself to death, I was also intrigued by the shots of men and women inside honky-tonks and other bars, sometimes at after-show functions.
    • To soak up a little of the famous Nashville atmosphere, head for the honky-tonks in Downtown, a row of rough-and-ready bars all playing covers of your favourite country songs.
    • Nashville's downtown honky-tonks have helped launch the careers of such greats as Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson.
    • Migrants from the Texas and Oklahoma dustbowls in the 1930s kept their music alive in the honky-tonks and juke joints of California's San Joachim Valley.
    • There's no sign officials will try to remove the forbidden music from the honky-tonks where it first emerged.
    • I used to do, you know, 260 days a year on the road doing fairs and festivals and honky-tonks and symphony dates and whatever.
    • I suspect he preferred the novelty of being a black man who sang like Elvis in mostly white honky-tonks to being a nearly blind visitor to the king of rock 'n' roll's court.
    • It is more of a honky-tonk than a restaurant but it is boasting an oyster bar.
    • Here, you can get a taste of Memphis nightlife, where the blues continues to play in classic clubs and honky-tonks.
    • The author vividly recreates the nature of the Phenix City honky-tonks and brothels and the recurrent violence so often directed against the soldiers of Fort Benning, Georgia.
    • There's a scene at a honky-tonk in which Melanie lays into all her old friends in a way that's vicious and very real.
    • It's a great honky-tonk, with live Texas-style country music most nights of the week.
    • A night in a honky-tonk ensues, during which Henry and Carol dance the night away as Wayne glowers and fumes on the sidelines; he's actually jealous of this old guy out there with his young wife.
    • At 16, Anneth compulsively sneaks out at night to flirt and drink at honky-tonks, dancing to the latest songs by Elvis, Patsy Cline, and Sam Cooke.
    • But they sit around like a bunch of jukeboxes in a private honky-tonk, playing the same sad country songs.
    • Hightower writes, ‘I've been in Oklahoma honky-tonks, Portland brew pubs, Boston neighborhood bars, Napa Valley wine bars - but I've never been in a place like the O2 Spa Bar in Toronto, Canada.’
    Synonyms
    establishment, restaurant, bar, club, nightclub
    1. 1.1as modifier Squalid and disreputable.
      a honky-tonk beach resort
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The town is but a decayed, honky-tonk version of the company town, with everything and everybody in it owned by Mr. Potter, the rapacious banker (and the town itself is, of course, Pottersville).
      • I'd hope to see the site redeveloped in a tasteful way and not in a honky-tonk fashion.
  • 2mass noun, often as modifier Ragtime piano music.

    honky-tonk piano
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There is music for everyone in this city - traditional jazz, honky-tonk piano, Cajun, zydeco, rhythm and blues, gospel, rock, and country.
    • Adam had gone into the small apartment at the back of the white clapboard house, which was pretty quiet, but up front, the sound of a honky-tonk piano tried to rise above talk and laughter.
    • And I would fall asleep lying on the floor of my room with my pillow and my blanket, because he had an old honky-tonk piano that he'd play just all night long.
    • As the honky-tonk piano of Elliott Smith's ‘A Distorted Reality Is Now A Necessity To Be Free’ fades into silence, there's one moment from this compilation that stays with you.
    • The music is the best thing about the film, which includes spirituals, work songs, a lullaby, and a great sequence in a saloon with honky-tonk jazz.
    • ‘My dad was a great pianist and he was always playing honky-tonk and jazz music, so I grew up with it,’ he said.
    • The songs have a bit of a barroom sound, and there are a few blues numbers, and even one honky-tonk piano song.
    • But when the foursome kept playing ragtime and honky-tonk music into the early hours the council decided to pull the plug.
    • The pianist had grand piano, harmonium, honky-tonk piano and celeste, and the percussionist had a range of tuned and untuned percussion.
    • It manages to stay above the pack thanks to Lovett's laconic drawl and some fine honky-tonk piano.

Origin

Late 19th century: of unknown origin.

 
 

Definition of honky-tonk in US English:

honky-tonk

noun
informal
  • 1North American A cheap or disreputable bar, club, or dance hall, typically where country music is played.

    country bands at highway honky-tonks
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Nashville's downtown honky-tonks have helped launch the careers of such greats as Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson.
    • To soak up a little of the famous Nashville atmosphere, head for the honky-tonks in Downtown, a row of rough-and-ready bars all playing covers of your favourite country songs.
    • But they sit around like a bunch of jukeboxes in a private honky-tonk, playing the same sad country songs.
    • There's a scene at a honky-tonk in which Melanie lays into all her old friends in a way that's vicious and very real.
    • A night in a honky-tonk ensues, during which Henry and Carol dance the night away as Wayne glowers and fumes on the sidelines; he's actually jealous of this old guy out there with his young wife.
    • At 16, Anneth compulsively sneaks out at night to flirt and drink at honky-tonks, dancing to the latest songs by Elvis, Patsy Cline, and Sam Cooke.
    • As someone who has sometimes wondered about her own capacity to drink herself to death, I was also intrigued by the shots of men and women inside honky-tonks and other bars, sometimes at after-show functions.
    • It is more of a honky-tonk than a restaurant but it is boasting an oyster bar.
    • There's no sign officials will try to remove the forbidden music from the honky-tonks where it first emerged.
    • Hightower writes, ‘I've been in Oklahoma honky-tonks, Portland brew pubs, Boston neighborhood bars, Napa Valley wine bars - but I've never been in a place like the O2 Spa Bar in Toronto, Canada.’
    • Here, you can get a taste of Memphis nightlife, where the blues continues to play in classic clubs and honky-tonks.
    • Migrants from the Texas and Oklahoma dustbowls in the 1930s kept their music alive in the honky-tonks and juke joints of California's San Joachim Valley.
    • I suspect he preferred the novelty of being a black man who sang like Elvis in mostly white honky-tonks to being a nearly blind visitor to the king of rock 'n' roll's court.
    • It's a great honky-tonk, with live Texas-style country music most nights of the week.
    • I used to do, you know, 260 days a year on the road doing fairs and festivals and honky-tonks and symphony dates and whatever.
    • The author vividly recreates the nature of the Phenix City honky-tonks and brothels and the recurrent violence so often directed against the soldiers of Fort Benning, Georgia.
    Synonyms
    establishment, restaurant, bar, club, nightclub
    1. 1.1as modifier Squalid and disreputable.
      a honky-tonk beach resort
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I'd hope to see the site redeveloped in a tasteful way and not in a honky-tonk fashion.
      • The town is but a decayed, honky-tonk version of the company town, with everything and everybody in it owned by Mr. Potter, the rapacious banker (and the town itself is, of course, Pottersville).
  • 2often as modifier Ragtime piano music.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It manages to stay above the pack thanks to Lovett's laconic drawl and some fine honky-tonk piano.
    • And I would fall asleep lying on the floor of my room with my pillow and my blanket, because he had an old honky-tonk piano that he'd play just all night long.
    • There is music for everyone in this city - traditional jazz, honky-tonk piano, Cajun, zydeco, rhythm and blues, gospel, rock, and country.
    • The music is the best thing about the film, which includes spirituals, work songs, a lullaby, and a great sequence in a saloon with honky-tonk jazz.
    • But when the foursome kept playing ragtime and honky-tonk music into the early hours the council decided to pull the plug.
    • Adam had gone into the small apartment at the back of the white clapboard house, which was pretty quiet, but up front, the sound of a honky-tonk piano tried to rise above talk and laughter.
    • The songs have a bit of a barroom sound, and there are a few blues numbers, and even one honky-tonk piano song.
    • As the honky-tonk piano of Elliott Smith's ‘A Distorted Reality Is Now A Necessity To Be Free’ fades into silence, there's one moment from this compilation that stays with you.
    • The pianist had grand piano, harmonium, honky-tonk piano and celeste, and the percussionist had a range of tuned and untuned percussion.
    • ‘My dad was a great pianist and he was always playing honky-tonk and jazz music, so I grew up with it,’ he said.
  • 3US A style of country and western music of the 1950s associated with honky-tonks.

    good-time urban cowboy fare with a hint of honky-tonk and a healthy measure of rock
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Following a tempestuous marriage, Nelson moved in 1953 to Fort Worth, became a country deejay and played bars, mixing honky-tonk and preaching.
    • Cool beats played by house DJs include an eclectic mix of Cajun and honky-tonk that only adds to the funky, offbeat feel of the place.
    • The rise of honky-tonk and postwar traditional music strengthened the ‘southernness’ of country music, but country pop gave Nashville its most important tool in the battle for respectability.
    • Punching the buttons I find a country music station that's awash with honky-tonk.
    • Though their musical palette contained more folky honky-tonk than their peers', it was difficult to get excited about their jaunty-yet-dull strums and limp ballads.

Origin

Late 19th century: of unknown origin.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/22 12:50:03