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单词 flamenco
释义

Definition of flamenco in English:

flamenco

noun fləˈmɛŋkəʊfləˈmɛŋkoʊ
mass noun
  • 1A style of Spanish music, played especially on the guitar and accompanied by singing and dancing.

    弗拉明戈音乐(一种西班牙音乐,多在吉他上演奏并有歌舞相伴)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Music runs from funky flamenco to lively acid jazz, and the sheer glamour of the design will make you think you're in a movie.
    • Elements of flamenco, indigenous folk music, and contemporary harmonic complexity run through Kaufman's work.
    • Picasso frequently played flamenco on the weathered guitar - until the man who taught him how to play asked the artist to pay up for his services.
    • Like the blues, born out of slavery, flamenco is more than music, it's an expression of Cortes's cultural heritage.
    • The virtuoso has further plans to explore ways of blending flamenco with classical music.
    • Lazily strummed blues to nervous flamenco in one short guitar solo.
    • If you haven't investigated Latin folk, flamenco or jazz guitar before, this group is a wonderfully pure introduction.
    • You do pick up a lot about flamenco as Webster learns guitar from intense Juan, who dresses in red and lives in a red apartment.
    • Their dialectic is a reminder that flamenco is foremost an improvisational music, and in the hands of Morente and her collaborators remains a living, breathing tradition.
    • It's been referred to as world music, flamenco, Spanish guitar, folk, etc, so how would you categorise it?
    • Tracing a melodic line from flamenco to raga, it's a subtly modulated burst of Hindu-lusian passion.
    • His eclectic work was written in 1945 and makes use of various styles such as cabaret, jazz and flamenco.
    • While they're used to working with an accompanist, in flamenco the relationship is more interactive.
    • The pairing of a veteran Cuban pianist with one of the rising stars of flamenco on a selection of Cuban and other Latin American standards seems to be a case in point.
    1. 1.1 A style of spirited, rhythmical dance performed to flamenco music, often with castanets.
      弗拉明戈舞(弗拉明戈音乐伴奏下的一种动作有力、节奏强劲的舞蹈,常有响板伴奏)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Show-stopping Irish dance leads into passionate flamenco and red-hot salsa routines.
      • This dance language is firmly anchored in flamenco.
      • He is a master of his style of flamenco and contemporary dance.
      • They receive training in classical ballet, but also take classes in flamenco, tai chi, modern, and other dance disciplines.
      • Horner decided to use the music and sounds of flamenco dancing during the sword fights.
      • As the recitalist said, there are many kinds of dance: maypole, flamenco, ballet, to name but a few.
      • Some of these dance forms, such as flamenco and hula are almost as known and loved by local audiences as are the Western dances of ballet and tap.
      • While essentially a guide for students of Spanish dance, especially flamenco, the book proclaims the author's passion for his art.
      • These classically trained ballet dancers transitioned entirely into flamenco catching the style, impulse and eclat of the genre.
      • Women dance flamenco and tango and belly dancing.
      • Dressed in traditional costume, this is an opportunity to show off their horses and horsemanship, to call on friends, to dance flamenco, to eat, drink and be merry.
      • The fusion of tap with flamenco, flamenco with Indian classical dance, or tap with Indian is not new in the experimentation of the foot cultures of the world.
      • He spent one year there performing flamenco, jazz, and Latino dances in clubs and restaurants.
      • Girls who take lyrical dance, such as flamenco, or character dance will often pull a long black skirt over their regulation leotard.
      • In the early development of flamenco, the rhythm work was done in bare feet, so for me, the footwork is somewhat comparable to American Indian dance.
      • We get an occasional article or news item written about us and go for months without a word about what is happening in the world of Spanish dance and flamenco.
      • Born in Elda, he grew up in Madrid and was sent to a dance academy where he studied flamenco, bolero, and folk dance.
      • They come in expecting to see Mexican folk dance or flamenco.
      • We find this quality in jazz and tap as well as in Euro-Afro dance forms such as flamenco and in world forms from Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent.
      • It now offers twelve to fourteen classes a week to about seventy-five students in ballet, modern dance, hip-hop, and flamenco.

Origin

Late 19th century: Spanish, 'like a Gypsy', literally 'Fleming', from Middle Dutch Vlaminc.

Rhymes

Lysenko, Yevtushenko

Definition of flamenco in US English:

flamenco

nounfləˈmɛŋkoʊfləˈmeNGkō
  • 1A style of Spanish music, played especially on the guitar and accompanied by singing and dancing.

    弗拉明戈音乐(一种西班牙音乐,多在吉他上演奏并有歌舞相伴)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Their dialectic is a reminder that flamenco is foremost an improvisational music, and in the hands of Morente and her collaborators remains a living, breathing tradition.
    • It's been referred to as world music, flamenco, Spanish guitar, folk, etc, so how would you categorise it?
    • Elements of flamenco, indigenous folk music, and contemporary harmonic complexity run through Kaufman's work.
    • The pairing of a veteran Cuban pianist with one of the rising stars of flamenco on a selection of Cuban and other Latin American standards seems to be a case in point.
    • You do pick up a lot about flamenco as Webster learns guitar from intense Juan, who dresses in red and lives in a red apartment.
    • If you haven't investigated Latin folk, flamenco or jazz guitar before, this group is a wonderfully pure introduction.
    • Like the blues, born out of slavery, flamenco is more than music, it's an expression of Cortes's cultural heritage.
    • Tracing a melodic line from flamenco to raga, it's a subtly modulated burst of Hindu-lusian passion.
    • Picasso frequently played flamenco on the weathered guitar - until the man who taught him how to play asked the artist to pay up for his services.
    • Lazily strummed blues to nervous flamenco in one short guitar solo.
    • Music runs from funky flamenco to lively acid jazz, and the sheer glamour of the design will make you think you're in a movie.
    • While they're used to working with an accompanist, in flamenco the relationship is more interactive.
    • The virtuoso has further plans to explore ways of blending flamenco with classical music.
    • His eclectic work was written in 1945 and makes use of various styles such as cabaret, jazz and flamenco.
    1. 1.1 A style of spirited, rhythmical dance performed to flamenco music, often with castanets.
      弗拉明戈舞(弗拉明戈音乐伴奏下的一种动作有力、节奏强劲的舞蹈,常有响板伴奏)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Girls who take lyrical dance, such as flamenco, or character dance will often pull a long black skirt over their regulation leotard.
      • They come in expecting to see Mexican folk dance or flamenco.
      • Some of these dance forms, such as flamenco and hula are almost as known and loved by local audiences as are the Western dances of ballet and tap.
      • These classically trained ballet dancers transitioned entirely into flamenco catching the style, impulse and eclat of the genre.
      • Horner decided to use the music and sounds of flamenco dancing during the sword fights.
      • While essentially a guide for students of Spanish dance, especially flamenco, the book proclaims the author's passion for his art.
      • Dressed in traditional costume, this is an opportunity to show off their horses and horsemanship, to call on friends, to dance flamenco, to eat, drink and be merry.
      • The fusion of tap with flamenco, flamenco with Indian classical dance, or tap with Indian is not new in the experimentation of the foot cultures of the world.
      • It now offers twelve to fourteen classes a week to about seventy-five students in ballet, modern dance, hip-hop, and flamenco.
      • Women dance flamenco and tango and belly dancing.
      • We get an occasional article or news item written about us and go for months without a word about what is happening in the world of Spanish dance and flamenco.
      • He spent one year there performing flamenco, jazz, and Latino dances in clubs and restaurants.
      • As the recitalist said, there are many kinds of dance: maypole, flamenco, ballet, to name but a few.
      • We find this quality in jazz and tap as well as in Euro-Afro dance forms such as flamenco and in world forms from Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent.
      • Born in Elda, he grew up in Madrid and was sent to a dance academy where he studied flamenco, bolero, and folk dance.
      • In the early development of flamenco, the rhythm work was done in bare feet, so for me, the footwork is somewhat comparable to American Indian dance.
      • This dance language is firmly anchored in flamenco.
      • They receive training in classical ballet, but also take classes in flamenco, tai chi, modern, and other dance disciplines.
      • He is a master of his style of flamenco and contemporary dance.
      • Show-stopping Irish dance leads into passionate flamenco and red-hot salsa routines.

Origin

Late 19th century: Spanish, ‘like a Gypsy’, literally ‘Fleming’, from Middle Dutch Vlaminc.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 14:21:13