cabarets

listen to the pronunciation of cabarets
الإنجليزية - التركية
kabare
cabaret
{i} meyhane
cabaret
show programı
cabaret
kabare

O adam ünlü bir kabare oyuncusu. - That man is a famous cabaret performer.

cabaret
{i} müzikli ve danslı şov
cabaret
{i} gece klübü
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
plural of cabaret
cabaret
The nightclub or restaurant where such entertainment is held
cabaret
Style of dance most often found in nightclubs and restaurants generally performed in bedlah
cabaret
A tavern; a house where liquors are retailed
cabaret
Live entertainment held in a restaurant or nightclub
cabaret
{i} cafe or restaurant that includes live entertainment (generally singing and dancing)
cabaret
A simple performance platform, with the audience usually seated at tables
cabaret
Culture of Haiti during the local Lithic age
cabaret
a spot that is open late at night and that provides entertainment (as singers or dancers) as well as dancing and food and drink; "don't expect a good meal at a cabaret"; "the gossip columnist got his information by visiting nightclubs every night"; "he played the drums at a jazz club"
cabaret
Cabaret is live entertainment consisting of dancing, singing, or comedy acts that are performed in the evening in restaurants or nightclubs. Helen made a successful career in cabaret
cabaret
A cabaret is a show that is performed in a restaurant or nightclub, and that consists of dancing, singing, or comedy acts. Peter and I also did a cabaret at the Corn Exchange. Restaurant that serves liquor and offers light musical entertainment. The cabaret probably originated in France in the 1880s as a small club that presented amateur acts and satiric skits lampooning bourgeois conventions. The first German Kabarett was opened in Berlin 1900 by Baron Ernst von Wolzogen and accompanied its musical acts with biting political satire. By the 1920s it had become the centre for underground political and literary expression and a showcase for the works of social critics such as Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill; this decadent but fertile artistic milieu was later portrayed in the musical Cabaret (1966; film, 1972). The English cabaret derived from concerts given in city taverns in the 18th-19th centuries and evolved into the music hall. In the U.S. the cabaret developed into the nightclub, where comedians, singers, or musicians performed. Small jazz and folk clubs and, later, comedy clubs evolved from the original cabaret
cabaret
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
cabaret
a series of acts at a night club