waltz

listen to the pronunciation of waltz
Englisch - Türkisch
{f} vals yap

Sana vals yapmayı öğretebilirim. - I can teach you how to do the waltz.

vals yapmak
vals

Sana vals yapmayı öğretebilirim. - I can teach you how to do the waltz.

O, piyanoda vals çaldı. - She played a waltz on the piano.

kolay başanlan iş
{f} sekerek hareket etmek
waltz through kolayca başarmak
{i} vals müziği
vals havası
waltz vals
vals yapmak
waltz through
{k} -i kolayca başarmak
waltz time
(fiil)ls dansı
waltz time
vals dansı
dance a waltz
vals yap
waltzes
vals
to waltz
vals yapmak
Englisch - Englisch
to accomplish a task with little effort
a piece of music for this dance (or in triple time)
a ballroom dance in 3/4 time
to move (or move someone) briskly and unhesitatingly
to dance the waltz (with someone)
a simple task
a dance in triple time Especially popular throughout the nineteenth century in Austria
A dance in 3/4 time that originated in the late 18th century
Tune in 3/4 time, noticeable 1-2-3, 1-2-3 beat
a ballroom dance in triple time with a strong accent on the first beat music composed in triple time for waltzing
A dance performed by two persons in circular figures with a whirling motion; also, a piece of music composed in triple measure for this kind of dance
               3                3             Step nominated foot to nominated position, The other
{f} dance to waltz music; move quickly, move with lightness; do something in a relaxed and easy way
A waltz is a dance in which two people hold each other and move around the floor doing special steps in time to waltz music. Arthur Murray taught the foxtrot, the tango and the waltz
If you say that someone waltzes somewhere, you mean that they do something in a relaxed and confident way. She's probably got herself a new man and gone waltzing off with him. Ballroom turning dance evolved from the ländler in the 18th century. It is characterized by a step, slide, and step in 3/4 time. It was highly popular in the 19th and early 20th century. Variations include the rapid, whirling Viennese waltz and the slower, dipping Boston waltz, modified by Vernon and Irene Castle as the hesitation waltz. Many 19th-century composers wrote waltz music, most notably Franz Peter Schubert, Frédéric Chopin, Johannes Brahms, and Johann Strauss
a couple dance in triple time
A dance for couples written in 3/4 time It made ist first appearance in the 18th-century, from German or Bohemian origins The waltz reached England in the last years of the 18th-century
a ballroom dance in triple time with a strong accent on the first beat
A kind of social dance, popular throughout the nineteenth century and still danced today, a couple's dance with bubbly triple-meter music
{i} couples' dance in triple time with a strong first beat; music for a triple-time couples' dance; something that can be done with ease (Informal)
To dance a waltz
dance a waltz
If you waltz with someone, you dance a waltz with them. `Waltz with me,' he said, taking her hand Couples are waltzing round the wooden floor
A simple jump, for beginners, in which takeoff is from the forward outside edge and the landing is on the back outside edge of the other foot, after a half revolution in the air
a lively ballroom dance in which every measure has three beats
A waltz is a piece of music with a rhythm of three beats in each bar, which people can dance to. Tchaikovsky's `Waltz of the Flowers'
an assured victory (especially in an election)
music composed in triple time for waltzing
Danced in European courts in the mid-1700s, the romantic Slow Waltz is an offspring of the faster Viennese Waltz in 3/4 time The rhythm was gradually slowed down over time as songwriters of ballads and love songs chose to compose in a slower and more comfortable tempo This dance has continued to rise in popularity at anniversaries, graduations, and weddings! Considered the 'Mother' of our present dances and a must for keeping with 'social etiquette', Waltz is an excellent dance for strengthening the ankles, knees and balance through its 'rise and fall' styling The Waltz also develops softness, elegance and graceful movement
waltz Matilda
To travel with a swag; that is, with one's belongings wrapped in a cloth
waltz matilda
(deyim) Waltz (or walk) Matilda: carry such a bundle
Viennese waltz
A ballroom dance based on the waltz where the couple is constantly performing turns and pirouettes
waltzer
One who dances the waltz
waltzer
A fairground ride consisting of a number of cars that spin individually while rotating around a central point like a carousel
the last waltz
final waltz dance; execution (Slang)
waltzed
past of waltz
waltzer
A person who waltzes
waltzer
{i} one who waltzes
waltzer
a person who dances the waltz
waltzer
a dancer who waltzes
waltzer
a fairground ride
waltzes
plural of waltz
waltzing
present participle of waltz
waltz

    Türkische aussprache

    wôls

    Aussprache

    /ˈwôls/ /ˈwɔːls/

    Etymologie

    [ 'wol(t)s ] (noun.) 1781. German Walzer, from walzen (“to dance”), from Old High German walzan (“to turn”), from Proto-Germanic *walt- (“to turn”), from Proto-Indo-European *wel- (“to turn”).
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