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cha-cha-cha
/ ˌtʃɑːtʃɑːˈtʃɑː /
noun
- a Latin-American ballroom dance with small steps and swaying hip movements
- a piece of music composed for this dance
verb
- to perform this dance
Word History and Origins
Origin of cha-cha-cha1
Example Sentences
By 1973, Goodman and Cherry were driving thousands of miles a year, demonstrating the cha-cha-cha and rumba to amateur classes the length and breadth of the country.
When Puente died in June 2000 at 77, it was a great blow not only to fans of mambo, cha-cha-cha, bugalú, salsa and Latin jazz, but also to New York itself.
As a friend watched on, the mass murderer Anwar Congo danced the cha-cha-cha.
“She’s a smart Mexican woman who doesn’t have to cha-cha-cha her way through a screen to teach people about Mexicans,” he said.
There are usually three live bands, with danzón, swing and cha-cha-cha featured on Tuesdays, and a more tropical feel of cumbia and samba on Sundays, with dance classes on Mondays and Tuesdays.
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