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rigadoon
[ rig-uh-doon ]
noun
- a lively dance, formerly popular, for one couple, characterized by a jumping step and usually in quick duple meter.
- a piece of music for this dance or in its rhythm.
rigadoon
/ ˌrɪɡəˈduːn; riɡodɔ̃ /
noun
- an old Provençal couple dance, light and graceful, in lively duple time
- a piece of music for or in the rhythm of this dance
Word History and Origins
Origin of rigadoon1
Word History and Origins
Origin of rigadoon1
Example Sentences
An indignant captain looks like “he’d just been asked if he danced the rigadoon or played the hurdy-gurdy.”
She called it “a rigadoon of rascality, a bawled-out comic song of sex.”
Gore Vidal called his writing pornographic; Dorothy Parker claimed nobody could write a better novel than “The Ginger Man”—which she called “a rigadoon of rascality, a bawled-out comic song of sex”—unless that person was Donleavy himself.
Then we shall meet at Castle balls, and you shall lead me out for a rigadoon like a mere stranger.
As Doreen pictured, he had attended the Castle balls during the winter, and had led out his cousin for a turn of passepied or rigadoon without much sighing; had dutifully called on his mother when Shane was safe away, and had spent the rest of his time yawning over briefs for the behoof of Mr. Curran.
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