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Lambeth walk
noun
- a spirited ballroom dance popular, especially in England, in the late 1930s.
Lambeth walk
noun
- a line dance popular in the 1930s
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Word History and Origins
Origin of Lambeth walk1
First recorded in 1935–40
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Example Sentences
He became interested in theater after his parents returned from a London playhouse late one night and taught their children a new dance they had seen onstage, the Lambeth Walk.
From Washington Post
So Terry and I went down to the new toilets on Lambeth Walk with the band playing behind us.
From BBC
The first-act closer, “The Lambeth Walk,” is less an ear worm than an ear snake, strangling you in its coil of endlessly repeating choruses.
From New York Times
And I loved it so much — I was singing “The Lambeth Walk” for weeks.
From New York Times
"Nobody thought it was odd after dinner if we put on a record and all sang Doing the Lambeth Walk, so music has always been part of her life."
From BBC
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