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dancetime. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
dancetime, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
dancetime in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
dancetime you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From dance + time.
Noun
dancetime (uncountable)
- The time for dancing.
1944 August 19, “Frank Dailey's Terrace Room, Newark”, in Billboard, volume 56, number 34:However, there is no loss of dancing floor space since a sectioned, wooden covering is placed over the ice when dancetime rolls around and the patrons trip the light fantastic with no apparent discomfort.
1975, John Dos Passos, edited by Warren G. French, The Twenties: Fiction, Poetry, Drama, page 132:The wind goes among them detaching sweat-smells from underclothes making muscles itch under overcoats tweaking legs with inklings of dancetime.
2006, James B. Reuter, Legacy: Selected Works & Writings of James Reuter, S.J., page 246:It's dancetime here in the Green Room, and time for you to rest a while.
2010, Betty White, Here We Go Again: My Life In Television, page 67:Al was not only leaving the show, he was leaving the station altogether and moving to KABC to do a dancetime show for young people.
- A lively tempo suitable for dancing.
1951, Radio Daily-television Daily - Volume 56, Issues 1-62, page 61:The dancetime stylings of the leader-pianist typify for all ages the carefree mood of a night "on the town".
2006, Frank Krutnik, In a Lonely Street: Film Noir, Genre, Masculinity, page 174:In opposition to Rip and Johnny, then, Martinelli and Krause represent a corrupt 'homosexual' bonding: the sadistic sexual circuit which operates between them is italicised during Krause's beating of Rip, which he performs 'to dancetime', with the radio blaring.
2013, Ian Whitcomb, After the Ball: Pop Music from Rag to Rock, page 1901:Ragtime and dancetime took their toll of the veteran writers.