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cha-cha-cha

NOUN
  1. a modern ballroom dance from Latin America; small steps and swaying movements of the hips

How To Use cha-cha-cha In A Sentence

  • America has always loved Latin American dance music – from tango to cha-cha-cha to bossa nova – but none of these crazes were quite as big as mambo. Perez Prado goes to Hollywood
  • One gentleman even stayed after class to show me the classical version of a cha-cha-cha because, never having taken traditional ballroom dancing, I didn't know.
  • He was very famous in the '50s and '60s - doing cha-cha-chas and boleros orchestrally.
  • It's all about the look and absolutely no dancing whatsoever: six-eighths of just standing while Ola dances around you isn't what I'd call a cha-cha-cha. Bad boy Robbie Savage finds life tough outside his comfort zone | Barry Glendenning
  • As a result, my tomboy daughter has become a fan of Latin and shimmies around in sparkly silver sandals doing the cha-cha-cha annoyingly better than me.
  • He was very famous in the '50s and '60s - doing cha-cha-chas and boleros orchestrally.
  • Lulu managed to perform a cha-cha-cha that consisted of walking and sass, the dance steps apparently awol. TV reivew: Strictly Come Dancing
  • Salsa is still relatively new compared to other Latin American dances such as the cha-cha-cha or the samba, and as such is still in the process of evolving.
  • They launched into a cha-cha-cha, which I had no idea of how to dance.
  • America has always loved Latin American dance music – from tango to cha-cha-cha to bossa nova – but none of these crazes were quite as big as mambo. Perez Prado goes to Hollywood
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