NOUN
- a style of dancing that originated among ordinary people (not in the royal courts)
VERB
- perform a folk-dance
How To Use folk dance In A Sentence
- The traditional folk dance, the quadrille, dates back to eighteenth century European settlers.
- The event will be followed by a Pan-Orthodox folk dance celebration.
- Perhaps the most commonly recognized folk dance, the tarantella, for example, is Neapolitan, with little diffusion elsewhere in the peninsula.
- The people with typical costumes, folk dances, music and sports such polo and buzkashi provide the travellers with an unforgettable experience.
- Bosnian folk dances include the silent kolo (accompanied only by the sound of stomping feet and the clash of silver coins on the women's aprons).
- Bartok: Roumanian Folk Dances They have it spelled "Roumanian" on the track listing My Evening with Brandon Sanderson
- The programme is 90 minutes of dynamic Indian folk dance, live music and storytelling.
- I am not very fond of folk dance.
- The birds twitter, the horn calls back, the mountain folk dance a droll measure, and all's right with the Alpine world.
- As Sclavis and Collignon explore the first of several ecstatic improvised conversations, whirling folk dances turn into warp-speed vocal scatting against electronic echoes.