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Definition of Cabaret
1. 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. "He played the drums at a jazz club"
Specialized synonyms: Dive, Honkytonk, Supper Club
Generic synonyms: Spot
2. Noun. A series of acts at a night club.
Definition of Cabaret
1. n. A tavern; a house where liquors are retailed.
2. n. In the United States, a café or restaurant where the guests are entertained by performers who dance or sing on the floor between the tables, after the practice of a certain class of French taverns; hence, an entertainment of this nature.
Definition of Cabaret
1. Noun. Live entertainment held in a restaurant or nightclub. ¹
2. Noun. The nightclub or restaurant where such entertainment is held. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cabaret
1. a music hall [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cabaret
Literary usage of Cabaret
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Adventure Guide by Heather Stimmler-Hall (2004)
"cabaret There are two kinds of cabaret in France: the kind most tourists have
heard of, featuring a perfectly choreographed troupe of identical topless ..."
2. Chronological History of the West Indies by Thomas Southey (1827)
"... pushed in for cabaret Bay, when they completely succeeded in destroying a
battery on shore, of three guns, spiking them up, breaking the carriages, ..."
3. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1849)
"M. cabaret reports in the Journal it Montpelier, a case of strangulated inguinal
hernia, in a man thirty-five years of a^e. which, having resisted all means ..."
4. Bohemian Paris of To-day by Édouard Cucuel, William Chambers Morrow (1899)
"LE cabaret DU SOLEIL D'OR IT is only the name of the cabaret of the Golden Sun
that suggests the glorious luminary of day. And yet it is really brilliant in ..."
5. Adventure Guide by Heather Stimmler-Hall (2004)
"cabaret There are two kinds of cabaret in France: the kind most tourists have
heard of, featuring a perfectly choreographed troupe of identical topless ..."
6. Chronological History of the West Indies by Thomas Southey (1827)
"... pushed in for cabaret Bay, when they completely succeeded in destroying a
battery on shore, of three guns, spiking them up, breaking the carriages, ..."
7. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1849)
"M. cabaret reports in the Journal it Montpelier, a case of strangulated inguinal
hernia, in a man thirty-five years of a^e. which, having resisted all means ..."
8. Bohemian Paris of To-day by Édouard Cucuel, William Chambers Morrow (1899)
"LE cabaret DU SOLEIL D'OR IT is only the name of the cabaret of the Golden Sun
that suggests the glorious luminary of day. And yet it is really brilliant in ..."