merengue

English

Etymology

From American Spanish merengue, from French meringue.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /məˈɹɛŋɡeɪ/

Noun

merengue (countable and uncountable, plural merengues)

  1. (music, uncountable) A type of music common in the Caribbean, originally associated with the Dominican Republic.
    • 2007, January 7, “Alex Mindlin”, in For a Shuttered Marina, Some Regret, Some Relief:
      The marina was a mainstay of the neighborhood, and Mr. O’Rourke was known for staging salsa and merengue concerts.
  2. A song performed in this style.
  3. A dance to this style of music.
    • 2011, Elizabeth Drake-Boyt, Latin Dance, →ISBN, page 86:
      If Trujillo said everybody had to dance the merengue, then everybody danced the merengue, for so feared was he by Dominicans that it was said that even a glance from him had the power to kill someone from across the street.

Verb

merengue (third-person singular simple present merengues, present participle merenguing, simple past and past participle merengued)

  1. (intransitive) To dance to merengue music.

French

Etymology

From Spanish merengue, itself borrowed from French meringue.

Noun

merengue m (plural merengues)

  1. (music) merengue

Spanish

Etymology

From French meringue

Noun

merengue m (uncountable)

  1. A type of music common in the Caribbean
  2. meringue
  3. wuss; wimp

merengue m or f (plural merengues)

  1. (soccer, attributive) A person connected with Real Madrid, as a player, fan, coach etc.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.