dancer's in the Oxford-Paravia Italian Dictionary

Translations for dancer's in the English»Italian Dictionary

dancer [Brit ˈdɑːnsə, Am ˈdænsər] N

taxi dancer [Brit ˈtaksi dɑːnsə, Am ˈtæksi dænsər] N

tap dancer [Am ˈtæp ˌdænsər] N

belly dancer [Am ˈbɛli ˌdænsər] N

ice dancer [ˈaɪsˌdɑːnsə(r), Am-ˌdænsə(r)] N

morris dancer [Am ˈmɔrəs ˌdænsər, ˈmɑrəs ˌdænsər] N

country dancer [ˌkʌntrɪˈdɑːnsə(r), -ˌdænsə(r)] N

pole dancer [ˈpəʊl ˌdɑːnsə(r)] N

dancer's in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for dancer's in the English»Italian Dictionary (Go to Italian»English)

Translations for dancer's in the Italian»English Dictionary (Go to English»Italian)

dancer's Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It is played with the fingers, thumbs, and palms dusted with dancer's rosin.
en.wikipedia.org
Unless jewellery or make-up is an expected part of a dancer's appearance in a certain dance style, dance auditionees should generally avoid jewellery and makeup.
en.wikipedia.org
A nice rhythmic roll is obtained, supposedly reminiscent of the "bailadors" (flamenco dancer's) feet and the roll of castanets.
en.wikipedia.org
This friction, under the high pressure of much of the dancer's body weight, can result in chafing and blistering.
en.wikipedia.org
Sway describes a dancer's body position in which the entire body gracefully deflects from the vertical.
en.wikipedia.org
She has a dancer's way of sitting -- perched like a resting ballerina, and reckons she got her hoofing feet from her grandfather.
www.independent.co.uk
Once scored, totals are refigured and tabulators determine each recalled dancer's placement in the group.
www.irishcentral.com
Since the dresses are handmade with pricey materials, unique designs, and are measured to each dancer's body type, the dresses can cost between $600 and $4,000.
en.wikipedia.org
A dancer's career would last as long as he was beardless and retained his youthful appearance.
en.wikipedia.org
They take a dancer's attitude, tiptoed or lightly balanced on one leg.
en.wikipedia.org

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