| 释义 | 
		Definition of fandango in English: fandangonounPlural fandangoes, Plural fandangosfanˈdaŋɡəʊfænˈdæŋɡoʊ 1A lively Spanish dance for two people, typically accompanied by castanets or tambourine. 方丹戈舞(常由响板或小手鼓伴奏的西班牙双人舞) Example sentencesExamples -  Other folk dances include the yuca, the sarambo, the zapateo, and the fandango.
 -  In a devised piece of theatre, dance and mime, The Shysters' cast of eight actors with learning disabilities present a love story set in the key of a fateful fandango.
 -  As Beryl remarked afterwards, if only she'd had her castanets with her she'd have been rattling away and dancing a fandango.
 -  Jeanette MacDonald and Archie Leach, a chores boy who will soon be known as Cary Grant, dance a fandango in Boom Boom.
 -  Think of castanets, foot stamping, tambourines and bright silk costumes and you have a picture of the fandango, a sexually provocative, very popular, Spanish dance.
 
 2An elaborate or complicated process or activity.  the Washington inaugural fandango 一派胡言的华盛顿就职演说。 Example sentencesExamples -  We have pre-published books, ready to walk, talk and do the fandango several months before they actually hit the bookstores.
 -  We gazed at the sunset, a flame-grilled tropical sky, and watched the lights on the yachts glow, while somewhere behind us touring buskers were firing off a fandango of skirling tunes.
 -  Gamins, snappy in pinstripe suits and cross-culture printed silk, dress up for the evening like gypsies in a dizzy fandango of swirling, hand-painted silk ruffled skirts.
 -  The centre also has all the high-tech fandango - video analysis, man v ball machine - although, frankly, this is a place where the spa treatments are as important as the tennis itself.
 -  After two decades of surefooted dealmaking, he closed out his tenure with a bizarre fandango of wrongheaded acquisitions and strategic U-turns that devastated Tyco's share price even before his first indictment.
 
 
 OriginMid 18th century: Spanish, of unknown origin. Rhymescharango, Durango, mango, Okavango, quango, Sango, tango    Definition of fandango in US English: fandangonounfanˈdaNGɡōfænˈdæŋɡoʊ 1A lively Spanish dance for two people, typically accompanied by castanets or tambourine. 方丹戈舞(常由响板或小手鼓伴奏的西班牙双人舞) Example sentencesExamples -  In a devised piece of theatre, dance and mime, The Shysters' cast of eight actors with learning disabilities present a love story set in the key of a fateful fandango.
 -  Other folk dances include the yuca, the sarambo, the zapateo, and the fandango.
 -  Think of castanets, foot stamping, tambourines and bright silk costumes and you have a picture of the fandango, a sexually provocative, very popular, Spanish dance.
 -  As Beryl remarked afterwards, if only she'd had her castanets with her she'd have been rattling away and dancing a fandango.
 -  Jeanette MacDonald and Archie Leach, a chores boy who will soon be known as Cary Grant, dance a fandango in Boom Boom.
 
 2A foolish or useless act or thing.  the Washington inaugural fandango 一派胡言的华盛顿就职演说。 Example sentencesExamples -  We have pre-published books, ready to walk, talk and do the fandango several months before they actually hit the bookstores.
 -  We gazed at the sunset, a flame-grilled tropical sky, and watched the lights on the yachts glow, while somewhere behind us touring buskers were firing off a fandango of skirling tunes.
 -  Gamins, snappy in pinstripe suits and cross-culture printed silk, dress up for the evening like gypsies in a dizzy fandango of swirling, hand-painted silk ruffled skirts.
 -  After two decades of surefooted dealmaking, he closed out his tenure with a bizarre fandango of wrongheaded acquisitions and strategic U-turns that devastated Tyco's share price even before his first indictment.
 -  The centre also has all the high-tech fandango - video analysis, man v ball machine - although, frankly, this is a place where the spa treatments are as important as the tennis itself.
 
 
 OriginMid 18th century: Spanish, of unknown origin.     |