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View synonyms for cabaret

cabaret

[ kab-uh-rey kab-uh-ret ]

noun

  1. a restaurant providing food, drink, music, a dance floor, and often a floor show.
  2. a caf é that serves food and drink and offers entertainment often of an improvisatory, satirical, and topical nature.

    Synonyms: club, supper club, nightclub

  3. a floor show consisting of such entertainment:

    The cover charge includes dinner and a cabaret.

  4. a form of theatrical entertainment, consisting mainly of political satire in the form of skits, songs, and improvisations:

    an actress whose credits include cabaret, TV, and dinner theater.

  5. a decoratively painted porcelain coffee or tea service with tray, produced especially in the 18th century.
  6. Archaic. a shop selling wines and liquors.


verb (used without object)

, cab·a·reted [kab-, uh, -, reyd], cab·a·ret·ing [kab-, uh, -, rey, -ing].
  1. to attend or frequent cabarets.

cabaret

/ ˈkæbəˌreɪ /

noun

  1. a floor show of dancing, singing, or other light entertainment at a nightclub or restaurant
  2. a nightclub or restaurant providing such entertainment


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Word History and Origins

Origin of cabaret1

1625–35; < French: tap-room, Middle French dial. ( Picard or Walloon) < Middle Dutch, denasalized variant of cambret, cameret < Picard camberete small room (cognate with French chambrette; chamber, -ette )

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Word History and Origins

Origin of cabaret1

C17: from Norman French: tavern, probably from Late Latin camera an arched roof, chamber

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Example Sentences

Then we were dropping in on some cabaret in Denver, or perhaps it was a restaurant in Nevada.

“I was thinking of Bob Fosse when he took Cabaret and completely changed it for film,” Marshall says.

Like Fosse did with Cabaret, Marshall excised two major characters: the Narrator and the Mysterious Man.

One thing I do to respect the people who want to keep hip hop ‘sacred’ is refer to myself as rap-cabaret.

I went to see Cabaret the other night, but it was over the top slightly.

It is a narrow lane, and there is a cabaret at each corner of it.

Despite this clue to Miss Weston's character, we were disappointed and surprised at her conduct in the Paris cabaret.

She sat first with her one friend in the establishment, who was a kindly but hardened cabaret singer.

The house was near a noted cabaret, to which they sometimes resorted, at the Saint-Sulpice end of the street.

He was expected to maintain the dignity of the government on a salary that a cabaret performer would count beneath contempt.

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