Crossword clues for cabarets
cabarets
Wiktionary
n. (plural of cabaret English)
Usage examples of "cabarets".
And drifting through all, through this medley of languages and colors, were the people of the port, the sailors of ships, who came in great waves to spend their money in the cabarets, to buy for the night the beautiful women both dark and light, to dine on the best of Spanish and French cooking and drink the imported wines of the world.
The remains of stone stalls under the promenades revealed there had once been a great market here, but the area had long since given way to cabarets, coffeehouses, mazes of small alleys and decaying buildings.
The cabarets and coffeehouses were still open, the streets well-lit and comfortably crowded, and there were peddlers and beggars gathered on every corner, while a truly astonishing number of prostitutes waited on the after-theater crowd.
There were other people in the street or passing through the alley to the courts beyond: tradesmen or day workers hurrying home, a few prostitutes and idlers, a group that was obviously down here to slum among the cabarets and brandy houses, despite their dress and attempts at aping the manners of the working class.
Tak, the Maryinskiy and every other theatre, even the cheap cabarets, must have their programs approved by the tsar's censors.
They postponed the mere ogling of landmarks and monuments, and instead went to theatres and ballets and cabarets, where the show times would conflict with those of the Florilegium when its performances began.
The lowest cabarets squeezed their tables closer together, made room to rope off a space in the middle of them and called that "un ring de boxe.
The cabarets echoed, and behind the tight blinds lines of light showed where the Creole gentry gamed at their tables, perchance in the very clubs Madame la Vicomtesse had mentioned.