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mariachi

[ UK /mˌæɹɪˈæt‍ʃi/ ]
[ US /ˌmɑɹiˈɑtʃi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a group of street musicians in Mexico

How To Use mariachi In A Sentence

  • A pot-bellied Catrín (the male version, its name meaning "a dandy") clothed in mariachi garb holds a rooster; a small platoon of grinning Catrinas wear mermaid tails and bear flowers. Catrina: Skeletons take over the art of Capula, Michoacan
  • In mariachi music, stringed instruments are combined with trumpets.
  • This man is Riders of Rebus who like a modern day mariachi emanates unpretentious, rocking pop tunes with spiky guitars and quirky melodies.
  • It was four Hispanic guys dressed in full mariachi garb, head to toe.
  • In Mexico, a mariachi band was strangulated and he stretched the skin of their bodies end to end covering the floor of his hovel. Around the World
  • The violin is an integral part of this musical group; one of the most best known violinists was Don Silvestre Vargas, founder of the world renowned Mariachi Vargas of Tecalitlan. Modern sculpture of a mariachi musician in the Mariachi Museum in Cocula, Jalisco. The violin is an integral part of this musical group; one of the most best known violinists was Don Silvestre Vargas, founder of the world renowned Mariachi Vargas of Tecal
  • El Mariachi : Bless me, Father, for I have just killed quite a few men.
  • Chuck arrives to a fanfare of mariachi violins.
  • Their most eclectic record to date, Sea Of No Cares is the result of the quartet experimenting with flamenco guitars and mariachi trumpets.
  • Painted in rather garish hot pink and viridian green, the cluster includes a tortoise shell, a bass and trombone from a mariachi band, a gourd kalimba, a shark's jaw and a horse's tail.
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