[
UK
/lˈɪndi/
]
[ US /ˈɫɪndi/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɪndi/ ]
NOUN
- an energetic American dance that was popular in the 1930s (probably named for the aviator Charles Lindbergh)
How To Use lindy In A Sentence
- They sat on the beach at Cape May, New Jersey, back to back, Lindy’s long, white-blond hair wrapped around her by the wind, her expression cocky, sassy. Moments in Time
- New to audiences might be the fact that the lindy hop, along with the Charleston, cakewalk, minstrel blues and boogie-woogie, was originally called jazz.
- The word barely scratches the surface where Lindy was concerned. Moments in Time
- The producer of the extravaganza is Lindy Shaw, who says she has been arranging it since Christmas.
- Lindy was persecuted, hounded by the media and the hearing, for security purposes, was relocated to Darwin.
- Lindy tried to get them to dump the junker two years ago after she bought the hybrid.
- Lindy Chamberlain set to break silence on Azaria case in church LINDY Chamberlain will speak out in an exclusive interview about the death of her daughter Azaria, what she calls a prejudiced police investigation, accusations of murder and a marriage breakdown. AustralianIT.com.au | Top Stories
- The grandchildren of the original swing and ballroom dancers are now the ones demonstrating their niftily executed foxtrot or flamboyant lindy-hop routine.
- The coaches will school the dance couples in the rules and basic steps of each dance style, including Cuban salsa, boogie woogie, Argentine tango, disco, lambada, lindyhop, jitterbug and shag.
- Thinking back, Lindy bursting into Lloyd's office, the party, the sudden invitation, all seemed too coincidental. ROSES ARE FOR THE RICH