[
US
/ˈnaɪtˌɫaɪf/
]
[ UK /nˈaɪtlaɪf/ ]
[ UK /nˈaɪtlaɪf/ ]
NOUN
-
the activity of people seeking nighttime diversion (as at the theater, a nightclub, etc.)
in the summer the nightlife shifts to the dance clubs -
the entertainment available to people seeking nighttime diversion
a futile search for intelligent nightlife
How To Use nightlife In A Sentence
- The main attraction of the place is the nightlife.
- In terms of nightlife, São Paulo has no rivals - not London, not New York, not Ibiza in August.
- As with all Spanish cities, Santander has a hopping nightlife scene.
- Take an end-of-summer city break in Oslo and enjoy the bustling nightlife as the bars fill up to catch the end of the midnight sun.
- With its countless bars and clubs, the area is the hub of the town's nightlife.
- Carly Otness/BFA DJ Nick Cohen Ludlow Manor, Mr. Carl's latest foray into nightlife, is an over-the-top triplex space with a tapas restaurant on the ground floor and palm trees on the rooftop. Tacos to Tapas: Hot on the Scene
- The urban buzz, youthful feel and proximity to vibrant streets and nightlife. Times, Sunday Times
- With its colourful houses, street cafes and lively nightlife, the area is best-known as a hangout for students and a stop-off for those visiting the city pad of the poet Pablo Neruda, which is kept shipshape (literally), just as he and his third wife left it. Santiago: chill out in Chile's capital
- It has no sandy beaches, little nightlife and few hotels. Times, Sunday Times
- But round these parts eating is only a warm-up for the main event, as I discover when we later descend into the teeming lanes around Concert Square, epicentre of Liverpool nightlife.