[
UK
/nˈaɪtspɒt/
]
NOUN
-
a spot that is open late at night and that provides entertainment (as singers or dancers) as well as dancing and food and drink
the gossip columnist got his information by visiting nightclubs every night
he played the drums at a jazz club
don't expect a good meal at a cabaret
How To Use nightspot In A Sentence
- Students from Manchester and Leeds will join a coachload of 50 journalists on a tour of 10 of the city's top nightspots tomorrow night.
- Nightspots like The Station, which dot highways across the U.S., are more roadhouse than concert hall, and they are intended to serve as little more than joints for adults to blow off steam.
- By night the City Mall turns into a thoroughfare for people moving between the City's most popular nightspots.
- The couple were photographed at Bangkok's trendiest nightspots and restaurants.
- In order to understand the hermeticism of the verbal topology comprising the substance of nightlife, and in order to articulate the various modes of obscurity intrinsic to the nightspot, one must attend more closely to the solipsistic relations characteristic of monadic substance. Club Monad
- Nightspots seem to be the police's main target, apparently based on their assumption that most drug-related crimes take place in nightclubs, discotheques and such.
- The final touches are being put to the nightspot and it will hopefully be up and running in time for summer. The Sun
- Plans for a new nightspot in Maldon have been rejected by district councillors concerned about public safety.
- Wearing tight leather pants, for example, may be appropriate when club hopping to stylish nightspots, or when attending a high-end fashion show.
- Insp Thomas, of Southend Police, said the extra officers would probably be used to keep order in the pubs and nightspots.