释义 |
Definition of baile in English: bailenounˈbʌɪleɪˈbīlā (in the south-western US and parts of Central and South America) a gathering for dancing. (美国西南部、中南美洲部分地区的)舞会 Example sentencesExamples - It was a childhood of bodas, quinceaneras, carnes asadas, bailes, misa cada domingo, with frequent trips to the other side de la linea, to Mexicali, where my relatives lived.
- Since police are unlikely to raid a baile itself, he's unlikely to be caught in the act of singing the song.
- The baile is at the top of the hill, where a bend in the street has created a large-enough space between ramshackle brick homes.
- In 2000, the Rio state assembly passed a law setting strict conditions under which bailes could take place: such as obligatory metal detectors and start-to-end military police presence.
- By the late 1980s and early 1990s the bailes had ceased being dances and become venues for organised gang warfare.
- They bankroll the bailes as a way of showing that they're investing in their communities.
- Theoretically, the police could come in and shut the bailes down - but they aren't likely to even try.
- The previous week, he left a baile in the early hours of the morning in his manager's car.
- For years, the underground bailes, or funk parties, ended in fistfights or shootouts between gangs.
- It is after midnight and Juca says it's time to go to the neighbourhood's regular Sunday night baile.
- Now, there are at least a dozen DJ crews with enormous speaker systems putting on more than 100 bailes every weekend.
- At certain bailes, groups of men began to divide themselves into two sides and face one another across the dancefloor.
OriginSpanish, 'dance, dancing'. Definition of baile in US English: bailenounˈbīlā (in the southwestern US and parts of Central and South America) a gathering for dancing. (美国西南部、中南美洲部分地区的)舞会 Example sentencesExamples - By the late 1980s and early 1990s the bailes had ceased being dances and become venues for organised gang warfare.
- The previous week, he left a baile in the early hours of the morning in his manager's car.
- At certain bailes, groups of men began to divide themselves into two sides and face one another across the dancefloor.
- The baile is at the top of the hill, where a bend in the street has created a large-enough space between ramshackle brick homes.
- Now, there are at least a dozen DJ crews with enormous speaker systems putting on more than 100 bailes every weekend.
- It is after midnight and Juca says it's time to go to the neighbourhood's regular Sunday night baile.
- In 2000, the Rio state assembly passed a law setting strict conditions under which bailes could take place: such as obligatory metal detectors and start-to-end military police presence.
- Theoretically, the police could come in and shut the bailes down - but they aren't likely to even try.
- For years, the underground bailes, or funk parties, ended in fistfights or shootouts between gangs.
- Since police are unlikely to raid a baile itself, he's unlikely to be caught in the act of singing the song.
- They bankroll the bailes as a way of showing that they're investing in their communities.
- It was a childhood of bodas, quinceaneras, carnes asadas, bailes, misa cada domingo, with frequent trips to the other side de la linea, to Mexicali, where my relatives lived.
OriginSpanish, ‘dance, dancing’. |