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  2. Partner dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partner_dance

    At the end of the 13th century and during the 14th century, nobles and wealthy patricians danced as couples in procession in a slow dignified manner in a circle, while farmers and lower classes danced in a lively fashion. The burgher middle class combined the dances with the processional as a "fore dance", and the turning as an "after dance". [6]

  3. Category : Neighbourhoods in Surrey, British Columbia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Neighbourhoods_in...

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  4. Mixer dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixer_dance

    A mixer dance, dance mixer or simply mixer is a kind of participation dance in a social dance setting that involves changing partners as an integral part. Mixing can be built into the dance choreography or can be structured to occur more randomly. Mixers allow dancers to meet new partners and allow beginners to dance with more advanced dancers.

  5. Jack and Jill (dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_and_Jill_(dance)

    Jack and Jill is a format of competition in partner dancing, where the competing couples are the result of random matching of leaders and followers. Rules of matching vary. Rules of matching vary. The name and format were created by Jack Carey at Hank & Stans in Norwalk, California in the early 1950s to encourage a variety of dancers to enter ...

  6. Country dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Country_dance

    Comical 18th-century country dance; engraving by Hogarth. A country dance is any of a very large number of social dances of a type that originated in England in the British Isles; it is the repeated execution of a predefined sequence of figures, carefully designed to fit a fixed length of music, performed by a group of people, usually in couples, in one or more sets.

  7. Contra dance form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contra_dance_form

    Couples consist of two people, traditionally but not necessarily one male and one female, referred to as the gent or gentleman and lady. Couples interact primarily with an adjacent couple for each round of the dance. Each sub-group of two interacting couples is known to choreographers as a minor set and to dancers as a foursome. (Not all dances ...

  8. Ballroom dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballroom_dance

    The first was a movement away from the sequence dances towards dances where the couples moved independently. This had been pre-figured by the waltz, which had already made this transition. The second was a wave of popular music, such as jazz. Since dance is to a large extent tied to music, this led to a burst of newly invented dances.

  9. West Coast Swing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Coast_Swing

    Lessons in "The New West Coast Swing" were offered at the Arthur Murray Dance Studios in San Bernardino and Riverside, California in December 1948. [11] [12] By 1954 West Coast Swing was taught from Southern California to Vancouver B.C. and from Eastern Washington to Hawaii. By 1957 the dance had reached as far east as Missouri. [13]