What's the difference between cachucha and fandango?
Cachucha
Definition:
(n.) An Andalusian dance in three-four time, resembling the bolero.
Example Sentences:
Fandango
Definition:
(n.) A lively dance, in 3-8 or 6-8 time, much practiced in Spain and Spanish America. Also, the tune to which it is danced.
(n.) A ball or general dance, as in Mexico.
Example Sentences:
(1) American retailer Fandango said JJ Abrams’s film sold more than eight times as many tickets on its first day of release – Monday – as the previous record holder, 2012’s The Hunger Games.
(2) Star Wars: The Force Awakens – six things we learned from the new trailer Read more American retailer Fandango said JJ Abrams’ film sold more than eight times as many tickets on its first day of release – Monday – as the previous record holder, 2012’s The Hunger Games.
(3) Here's Lol Fandango: "How can Immobile be picked for Italy when he played number 10 for England already?"
(4) And if the making of Loveless was a song and dance, then the protracted process that led to its follow-up was a fully fledged fandango.
(5) This week's selection features Savages, Sepalcure and Coyote Clean Up Details here Watch and listen Music Weekly podcast: Coachella festival and Houndmouth Little Bear perform The Few and Far Between at Other Voices 2013 Album stream: The Phoenix Foundation – Fandango London Grammar's live performance of Wasting My Young Years John Grant performs Marz live at Other Voices The Stone Roses: Made of Stone – watch the trailer for Shane Meadows's documentary New music: Laura Marling – Master Hunter Further reading Rod Stewart: 'I thought songwriting had left me' Alison Moyet: 'I smashed all my gold discs.
(6) For parents who grew up with Star Wars toys, this is an incredible bonding experience,” said Erik Davis, managing editor of Fandango and father of two.
(7) 2) Are there any English readers secretly hoping that Fabio Capello's team go out after grinding another dull draw today, so we can all forget about the grim fandango of the No Surrender brigade, St George bowler hats, ridiculous front page tabloid covers and all sorts of other England-related embarrassments for a couple of years?
(8) While Mourinho was at great pains to avoid getting tangled up in another conspiracy fandango so early in the season, in the wider analysis Chelsea sent out mixed messages here.
(9) Records were broken on both sides of the Atlantic , with the US retailer Fandango reporting advance ticket sales eight times higher than for any other film on its first day of release, and the studio Disney claiming that more than 200,000 tickets were sold in 24 hours in the UK.
(10) The waitress looks to me to be too scared to come and take it away I accept, or at least I stop arguing, that whatever a woman's economic agency and position in society, she should still make a big fandango about her sexual playfulness and exquisite taste in shoes.
(11) And in the current climate, after the Kids Company fandango , the stakes seem too high for that to be the case.