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DAFNI TRAGAKI has written:

'REBETIKO WORLDS'

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DAFNI TRAGAKI has written:

'REBETIKO WORLDS'

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The cast of O kloios - 1987 includes: Socrates Alafouzos as Ahilleas Frantzeska Alexandrou as Mother Dimitris Antoniadis as Security Officer Fotis Armenis as Sanitation Captain Giorgos Athanasopoulos as Broadcaster Nikos Bousdoukos as Lakis Frank Caruso as Consul Akis Dakis Akis Davies as Manolis Nikos Dendrinos as General Foteini Dimitropoulou as Grandmother Giannis Dimou as Security Officer Prokopis Dourvas as Copilot Akis Drakoulinakos as Second Lieutenant Thodoros Exarhos as Uncle Pavlos Foltidis as Security Officer Anna Fonsou as Mary Mata Fotopoulou as Girl in Zappeio Apostolos Frydas as Priest Ilias Galanoulis as Police Officer Maria Gousiou as Girl Mina Himona as Air Hostess Marina Iliadi as Girl in Zappeio Christos Kalavrouzos as Condemned Giannis Kaloudis as Policeman Mary Kaltsa as Neighbour Vasilis Kaltsas as Argyris Dimitris Kanellos as Security Officer Dimitris Karambetsis as Antonis Kiriakos Katrivanos as Father Antonis Katsaris as Maravitsas Nikos Kesoulis as Dimitris Thomas Kindinis as Radio Operator Vladimiros Kiriakidis as Giorgos Hristos Kokkinos as Air Traffic Controller Tasos Kostis as Merchant Eleni Koulourioti as Girl in Zappeio Giorgos Kyritsis as Airport Director Periklis Lianos as Pimpled Man Cathleen Lyons as Mrs. Kerimi Constantine Lyras as Mr. Kerimi Fraizi Mahaira as Girl in Zappeio Alekos Mandilas as Security Officer Aias Manthopoulos as Alekos Ilias Menexes as Parisian Giannis Mihail as Detachment Officer Giorgos Mihalakopoulos as Member of Parliament Athina Mihalakopoulou as Mrs. Kafetzoglou Giorgos Moshidis as Mr. Kafetzoglou Giannis Nikolopoulos as Security Officer Tasos Palatzidis as Master Giagos Yorgos Papadimitrakis as Pilot Giannis Papagiannis as Policeman Tina Papastergiou as Aristoula Taxiarhis Pardalis as Photojournalist Stelios Pavlou as Spyros Timos Perlegas as Colonel Pavlos Poimenidis as Vardis Tasos Polyhronopoulos as Ballos Stelios Reppas as Secret Officer Gerasimos Skiadaressis as Lambis Apostolos Sofianos as Air Traffic Controller Panagiotis Stamatopoulos as Court Martial Secretary Mania Syriopoulou as Girl at the Yard Mihalis Theodorou as Squadron Leader Rasmi Tsopela as Paloma Dimitris Tzoumakis as Grigoris Katerina Vakalopoulou as Hotel Employee Vangelis Vazakas as Security Officer Marianna Veaki as Broadcaster Ageliki Veloudaki as Liana Giorgos Xyntaris as Rebetiko Musician Masa Zaharia as Yugoslav Woman Zozo Zarpa as Hysteric

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List of dances in the world A-Z

Allemande (historical, court, baroque)

An dro or "En dro" (Brittany, in-round traditional dance)

Antikrystos (Greece), face-to-face traditional dance

Arkan (Ukrainian, Hutsul)

Balboa (Swing)

Ballet, category, also known as classical dance

Ballos(Burçak tarlası oyunu)(Greece),(Turkey)

Ballu tundu (Sardinia)

Bandari (South of Iran)

Can-can (Cancan, can can)

Capoeira (dance and martial art, Brazilian)

Carinosa (dance of love) Philippines

Carol (Medieval)

Dilan (a Kurdish dance, Iran , Turkey , Iraq)

Disco

Doublebugg

Dragon dance

East Coast Swing

Eisa

Electric Slide

English Country Dance

Ethnic dance

Fad dance

Fandango

Farandole (Provencal)

Farruca

Flamenco (Spanish/gypsy)

Folk dance

Gaida (Greece)

Galliard

Galop

Garba (India)

Gankino (Bulgaria)

Habanera

Haka (Māori)

Hakken (Dutch)

Halay (Turkish, Folk)

Japanese traditional dance (Japanese)

Jarabe tapatío

Jazz dance

Kozachok (Ukrainian)

Krakowiak (Poland)

Krumping (Western U.S.)

Kuchipudi (India)

Kurdish dance (Iran and Iraq)

Kujawiak (Poland)

Lambada

Lambeth Walk

Lancer (Quadrille)

Landler (Quadrille)

Lap dance

Merengue (Latin Club)

Mexican Hat Dance

Metelytsia ((Ukrainian), khorovod)

Milonga (see Argentine Tango)

Novelty and fad dances

The Nutbush

Oberek (also called Obertas or Ober, Poland)

Odissi (India)

Pagode

Pandango sa Ilaw (Philippines)

Pangalatok (Philippines)

Parasol dance (Japan)

Quadrille

Quickstep (Ballroom)

Raqs Sharqi ("belly dance")

Rebetiko dances (Greece)

Redowa

Reel (Irish and Scottish)

Samba dance

Samba de Gafieira

Son (Mayan, Guatemala/Mexico)

Soraya ("Bellydance")

Sousta (Greece)

Argentine Tango - also known as Tango Argentino (Social)

Texas Tommy (see Lindy Hop)

Troika (Folk, Russian, Cajun)

Vesnianka (Ukrainian, a type of khorovod)

Volte (also Volta, La volta, or Lavolta, Renaissance)

Waltz (ballroom, social)

Whip (Swing, Texas)

Wolosso (Ivory Coast)

Watusi (fad dance)

Western swing (United States)

West Coast Swing ("WCS"; Swing, United States)

Yakshagana (India, Karnataka)

Yowla (rifle dance from (UAE)

Zapateado (Spain)

Zebetiko, and Zembekiko; Greece)

Zeibeks, Teke zortlatması (Turkey)

Zouk-Lambada (Brazil) === === http://www.streetswing.com/histmain.htm

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Egaleo Park, Ancient Olive Groove and Athens), which offer modern teaching and research spaces, entertainment and support facilities for all students. Other universities that lie within Athens are the Athens University of Economics and Business, the Panteion University, the Agricultural University of Athens and the University of Piraeus. There are overall ten state-supported Institutions of Higher (or Tertiary) education located in the Athens Urban Area, these are by chronological order: Athens School of Fine Arts (1837), National Technical University of Athens (1837), National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (1837), Agricultural University of Athens (1920), Athens University of Economics and Business (1920), Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences (1927), University of Piraeus (1938), Harokopio University of Athens (1990), School of Pedagogical and Technological Education (2002), University of West Attica (2018). There are also several other private colleges, as they called formally in Greece, as the establishment of private universities is prohibited by the constitution. Many of them are accredited by a foreign state or university such as the American College of Greece and the Athens Campus of the University of Indianapolis. The city is a world centre of archaeological research. Along with national institutions, such as the Athens University and the Archaeological Society, there are multiple archaeological Museums including the National Archaeological Museum, the Cycladic Museum, the Epigraphic Museum, the Byzantine & Christian Museum, as well as museums at the ancient Agora, Acropolis, Kerameikos, and the Kerameikos Archaeological Museum. The city is also home to the Demokritos laboratory for Archaeometry, alongside regional and national archaeological authorities that form part of the Greek Department of Culture. Athens hosts 17 Foreign Archaeological Institutes which promote and facilitate research by scholars from their home countries. As a result, Athens has more than a dozen archaeological libraries and three specialized archaeological laboratories, and is the venue of several hundred specialized lectures, conferences and seminars, as well as dozens of archaeological exhibitions, each year. At any given time, hundreds of international scholars and researchers in all disciplines of archaeology are to be found in the city. Athens incorporates architectural styles ranging from Greco-Roman and Neoclassical to modern times. They are often to be found in the same areas, as Athens is not marked by a uniformity of architectural style. A visitor will quickly notice the absence of tall buildings: Athens has very strict height restriction laws in order to ensure the Acropolis hill is visible throughout the city. Despite the variety in styles, there is evidence of continuity in elements of the architectural environment through the city's history.For the greatest part of the 19th century Neoclassicism dominated Athens, as well as some deviations from it such as Eclecticism, especially in the early 20th century. Thus, the Old Royal Palace was the first important public building to be built, between 1836 and 1843. Later in the mid and late 19th century, Theophil Freiherr von Hansen and Ernst Ziller took part in the construction of many neoclassical buildings such as the Athens Academy and the Zappeion Hall. Ziller also designed many private mansions in the centre of Athens which gradually became public, usually through donations, such as Schliemann's Iliou Melathron. Beginning in the 1920s, modern architecture including Bauhaus and Art Deco began to exert an influence on almost all Greek architects, and buildings both public and private were constructed in accordance with these styles. Localities with a great number of such buildings include Kolonaki, and some areas of the centre of the city; neighbourhoods developed in this period include Kypseli.In the 1950s and 1960s during the extension and development of Athens, other modern movements such as the International style played an important role. The centre of Athens was largely rebuilt, leading to the demolition of a number of neoclassical buildings. The architects of this era employed materials such as glass, marble and aluminium, and many blended modern and classical elements. After World War II, internationally known architects to have designed and built in the city included Walter Gropius, with his design for the US Embassy, and, among others, Eero Saarinen, in his postwar design for the east terminal of the Ellinikon Airport. All over the city can be found several statues or busts. Apart from the neoclassicals by Leonidas Drosis at the Academy of Athens (Plato, Socrates, Apollo, Athena), other notable include the statue of Theseus by Georgios Fytalis at Thiseion, of philhellenes like Lord Byron, George Canning and William Gladstone, the equestrian statue of Theodoros Kolokotronis by Lazaros Sochos in front of the Old Parliament, statues of Ioannis Kapodistrias, Rigas Feraios and Adamantios Korais at the University, of Evangelos Zappas and Konstantinos Zappas at Zappeion, of Ioannis Varvakis at the National Garden, the "woodbreaker" by Dimitrios Filippotis, the equestrian statue of Alexandros Papagos at Papagou district and various busts of fighters of Greek independence at the Pedion tou Areos. A significant landmark is also the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Syntagma. Athens' most important museums include: the National Archaeological Museum, the largest archaeological museum in the country, and one of the most important internationally, as it contains a vast collection of antiquities; its artifacts cover a period of more than 5,000 years, from late Neolithic Age to Roman Greece; the Benaki Museum with its several branches for each of its collections including ancient, Byzantine, Ottoman-era, and Chinese art and beyond; the Byzantine and Christian Museum, one of the most important museums of Byzantine art; the Numismatic Museum, housing a major collection of ancient and modern coins; the Museum of Cycladic Art, home to an extensive collection of Cycladic art, including its famous figurines of white marble; the New Acropolis Museum, opened in 2009, and replacing the old museum on the Acropolis. The new museum has proved considerably popular; almost one million people visited during the summer period June–October 2009 alone. A number of smaller and privately owned museums focused on Greek culture and arts are also to be found. the Kerameikos Archaeological Museum, a museum which displays artifacts from the burial site of Kerameikos. Much of the pottery and other artifacts relate to Athenian attitudes towards death and the afterlife, throughout many ages. the Jewish Museum of Greece, a museum which describes the history and culture of the Greek Jewish community. Athens has been a destination for travellers since antiquity. Over the past decade, the city's infrastructure and social amenities have improved, in part because of its successful bid to stage the 2004 Olympic Games. The Greek Government, aided by the EU, has funded major infrastructure projects such as the state-of-the-art Eleftherios Venizelos International Airport, the expansion of the Athens Metro system, and the new Attiki Odos Motorway.Athens was voted as the third best European city to visit in 2015 by European Best Destination. More than 240,000 people voted. Athens is home to 148 theatrical stages, more than any other city in the world, including the ancient Odeon of Herodes Atticus, home to the Athens Festival, which runs from May to October each year. In addition to a large number of multiplexes, Athens plays host to open air garden cinemas. The city also supports music venues, including the Athens Concert Hall (Megaro Moussikis), which attracts world class artists. The Athens Planetarium, located in Andrea Syngrou Avenue, in Palaio Faliro is one of the largest and best equipped digital planetaria in the world. The Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center, inaugurated in 2016, will house the National Library of Greece and the Greek National Opera. Music The most successful songs during the period 1870–1930 were the so-called Athenian serenades (Αθηναϊκές καντάδες), based on the Heptanesean kantádhes (καντάδες 'serenades'; sing.: καντάδα) and the songs performed on stage (επιθεωρησιακά τραγούδια 'theatrical revue songs') in revues, musical comedies, operettas and nocturnes that were dominating Athens' theatre scene. Notable composers of operettas or nocturnes were Kostas Giannidis, Dionysios Lavrangas, Nikos Hatziapostolou, while Theophrastos Sakellaridis' The Godson remains probably the most popular operetta. Despite the fact that the Athenian songs were not autonomous artistic creations (in contrast with the serenades) and despite their original connection with mainly dramatic forms of Art, they eventually became hits as independent songs. Notable actors of Greek operettas, who made also a series of melodies and songs popular at that time, include Orestis Makris, Kalouta sisters, Vasilis Avlonitis, Afroditi Laoutari, Eleni Papadaki, Marika Nezer, Marika Krevata and others. After 1930, wavering among American and European musical influences as well as the Greek musical tradition. Greek composers begin to write music using the tunes of the tango, waltz, swing, foxtrot, some times combined with melodies in the style of Athenian serenades' repertory. Nikos Gounaris was probably the most renowned composer and singer of the time. In 1923, after the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, many ethnic Greeks from Asia Minor fled to Athens as a result of the Greco-Turkish War. They settled in poor neighborhoods and brought with them Rebetiko music, making it popular also in Greece, which became later the base for the Laïko music. Other forms of song popular today in Greece are elafrolaika, entechno, dimotika, and skyladika. Greece's most notable, and internationally famous, composers of Greek song, mainly of the entechno form, are Manos Hadjidakis and Mikis Theodorakis. Both composers have achieved fame abroad for their composition of film scores. Overview Athens has a long tradition in sports and sporting events, serving as home to the most important clubs in Greek sport and housing a large number of sports facilities. The city has also been host to sports events of international importance. Athens has hosted the Summer Olympic Games twice, in 1896 and 2004. The 2004 Summer Olympics required the development of the Athens Olympic Stadium, which has since gained a reputation as one of the most beautiful stadiums in the world, and one of its most interesting modern monuments. The biggest stadium in the country, it hosted two finals of the UEFA Champions League, in 1994 and 2007. Athens' other major stadium, located in the Piraeus area, is the Karaiskakis Stadium, a sports and entertainment complex, host of the 1971 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Final. Athens has hosted the EuroLeague final three times, the first in 1985 and second in 1993, both at the Peace and Friendship Stadium, most known as SEF, a large indoor arena, and the third time in 2007 at the Olympic Indoor Hall. Events in other sports such as athletics, volleyball, water polo etc., have been hosted in the capital's venues. Athens is home to three European multi-sport clubs: Olympiacos, Panathinaikos, AEK Athens. In football, Olympiacos have dominated the domestic competitions, Panathinaikos made it to the 1971 European Cup Final, while AEK Athens is the other member of the big three. These clubs also have basketball teams; Panathinaikos and Olympiacos are among the top powers in European basketball, having won the Euroleague six times and three respectively, whilst AEK Athens was the first Greek team to win a European trophy in any team sport. Other notable clubs within Athens are Athinaikos, Panionios, Atromitos, Apollon, Panellinios, Egaleo F.C., Ethnikos Piraeus, Maroussi BCE and Peristeri B.C.. Athenian clubs have also had domestic and international success in other sports. The Athens area encompasses a variety of terrain, notably hills and mountains rising around the city, and the capital is the only major city in Europe to be bisected by a mountain range. Four mountain ranges extend into city boundaries and thousands of kilometres of trails criss-cross the city and neighbouring areas, providing exercise and wilderness access on foot and bike. Beyond Athens and across the prefecture of Attica, outdoor activities include skiing, rock climbing, hang gliding and windsurfing

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there is a lot of types of dancing. jazz, ballet, tap, show group, acro, hip hop, ballroom, belly, group, contra, Irish, line, and

A
  • Acro dance
  • Allemande
  • Arkan (Ukrainian, Hutsul)
  • Ardha (Arab tribal war dance)
  • Argentine Tango
  • Anaconda ([Snake Dance])
  • Arial
  • Attan (Pashtun)
  • Acharuli ([Georgian folk dance])
  • Azonto (Ghanaian dance)
  • Baba Karam (Persian, Folk)
  • Bachata (Latin Club, Folk)
  • Bagurumba (Folk dance of Assam, North-east India)
  • Balboa (Swing)
  • Ballet, category, also known as classical dance
  • Ballos (Burçak tarlası oyunu)(Greece), (Turkey)
  • Ballroom dance, category
  • Ballu tundu (Sardinia)
  • Bandari dance
  • Bardo Chham (Folk dance of Arunachal, North-east India)
  • Barn dance, category
  • Baroque dance, category
  • Barynya (Russian, folk)
  • Basse danse (also Basse-dance, Bassadanse, Bassadanze. French and Italian Renaissance dances)
  • Basque dance
  • BBoying (Breakdance)
  • Belly dance
  • Beguine, dance of Caribbean origin
  • Bereznianka (Ukrainian, Carpathian Ruthenia)
  • Bergamask (Be dance, from Bergamo, Italy
  • Bhangra (Folk Dance of Northern India)
  • Bharatanatyam (Indian classical dance)
  • Big Apple (Line dance)
  • Bihu dance (Folk dance of Assam, India)
  • Black Bottom (see Lindy Hop)
  • Blues (Club dance, Swing)
  • Bolero (American Ballroom, Cuban, European)
  • Bollywood (Danced in Indian Movies)
  • Bomba (African, Caribbean)
  • Bon Odori (Japanese)
  • Boogaloo
  • Boogie-woogie (Swing)
  • Bop, see Bop music, also ABA at List of dance organizations
  • Bossa nova (Brazilian, see Bossa nova music)
  • Borrowdale (Zimbabweean, see Museve music)
  • Boston
  • Bourrée (historical)
  • Branle (Bransle) (historical)
  • Breakaway (see Lindy Hop)
  • Breakdancing
  • Bump and grind
  • Bugg
  • Bunny Hop
  • Butoh (Japanese)
  • Butterfly (Urban, USA/Caribbean)
  • Buyo (Japanese)
C
  • Cat Daddy
  • Cajun dance, (Louisiana, USA Regional, Cajun)
    • Cajun Jig or Cajun One Step
    • Cajun Jitterbug and Two Step
    • Cajun Waltz
    • Zydecko
  • Cakewalk (Swing)
  • Calypso (Caribbean)
  • Candombe (Uruguayan)
  • Canaries dance (historical, Renaissance, court)
  • Can-can (Cancan, can can)
  • Capoeira (dance and martial art, Brazilian)
  • Cariñosa (dance of love) Philippines
  • Carioca
  • Carol (Medieval)
  • Castle Walk
  • Căluş (Romanian ritual dance)
  • Céilidh (Ireland, Scotland and Northern England)
  • Ceroc (Modern Jive, Club)
  • Chacarera (Argentina)
  • Chaconne
  • Cha cha cha or Cha cha (Cuba, Latin Ballroom Social)
  • Chamame (Chamamé, Argentina)
  • Charleston
  • Charmander (dance)
  • Chumak (Ukrainian)
  • Chasapiko (Greece)
  • Cheerleading
  • Chicken Dance
  • Chicken Noodle Soup
  • Chodzony (Poland)
  • Chula (Southern Brasil)
  • Cinquepace, Cinque-pace
  • Circassian Dance
  • Circle dance
  • Clogging
  • Clowning
  • Cocek
  • Collegiate shag
  • Compas (Haiti)
  • Conga
  • Contact improvisation
  • Contemporary dance
  • Contra dance
  • Cordax Greek / Roman erotic dance
  • Cossack dance
  • Cotillion
  • Country/western dance
  • Country dancing
  • Country/Western Two-step
  • Country Swing or Western Swing
  • Courante (historical)
  • Court dance
  • Cueca (Chile)
  • Cumbia (Colombia, Club)
  • Cupid Shuffle
  • Csárdás (Folk, Hungarian; also variants in Slovak dances, Rusyn dances, (Ukrainian dances, Lemko dances))
  • Chowpurulia W.B. INDIA
D
  • Dances of Universal Peace
  • Dandia (Folk dance of Gujarat, India)
  • Dabke (Levantine)
  • Dilan (a Kurdish dance, Iran, Turkey, Iraq)
  • Disco
  • Dappan koothu
  • Doublebugg
  • Dougie
  • Dragon dance
  • Drobushki (Russia)
  • Dubotanets (Ukrainian)
  • Duranguense
  • Dutty Wine - a West Indian, Dancehall-inspired dance
  • dougie-american dance
E
  • East Coast Swing
  • Eisa
  • Electro dance
  • Electric Slide
  • English Country Dance
  • Ethnic dance
F
  • Fat dance
  • Fandango
  • Farandole (Provençal)
  • Faroese dance
  • Farruca
  • Flamenco (Spanish/gypsy)
  • Folk dance
  • Formation dance
  • Forró (dance from northeast of Brazil)
  • Foxtrot (Ballroom Social)
  • The Freddy
  • Frug
  • Freak dancing
  • Funk Brazil
G
  • Gaida (Greece)
  • Galliard
  • Galop
  • Garba (folk dance of state of Gujarat, India)
  • Gankino (Bulgaria)
  • Gavotte (Brittany), Gavot (historical)
  • Gigue
  • Ghoomar (Folk Dance of Rajasthan, Northern India)
  • Grizzly Bear
  • Guapacha (dance)
  • Gumboot dance (Africa)
  • Giddha (Folk dance of Northern India)
  • g-slide by Lil Mama
H
  • Habanera
  • Haka (Māori)
  • Hakken (Dutch)
  • Halay (Turkish, Folk)
  • Hambo (Scandinavian, Folk)
  • Hand Dance (Swing, Washington DC and Baltimore MD metropolitan areas, regional)
  • Hardcore Dancing (Urban American Hardcore)
  • Hasapiko (Greece)* Headbanging
  • Highland dancing
  • Hip hop dance
  • Historical dance
  • Hitch hike
  • Hokey Pokey, also known as Hokey-cokey, Okey-cokey
  • Hootchy-Kootchy : Bellydance
  • Holubka (Ukrainian, Hutsul, Bukovina, Carpathian Ruthenia)
  • Hopak (Ukrainian)
  • Hopak-Kolom (Ukrainian)
  • House dance
  • Hora (many named versions; folk, Bulgarian, Israeli, Romanian, Ukrainian)
  • Horan (Crimean Tatars)
  • Horon (Turkish, Folk)
  • Hornpipe (Ireland)
  • Hula
  • Hully Gully
  • Hustle and its variant, New York Hustle (Club)
    • Latin Hustle
  • Humppa (see Music of Finland)
  • Hutsulka (Ukrainian, Hutsuls)
I
  • Ice dancing
  • Ikariotikos (Greece)
  • Improv Tribal Style Belly Dance
  • Intercessory dance
  • International folk dance
  • Interpretive dance
  • Irish
    • Irish Dance
    • Irish Sean-Nós Dance
    • Irish Stepdance
  • Israeli folk dancing
J
  • Japanese traditional dance (Japanese)
  • Jarabe tapatío
  • Java (French dance developed in France in the early part of the 20th century)
  • Jazz dance
  • Jazz Funk
  • Jenkka (see Music of Finland)
  • Jerkin'
  • Jig Ireland
  • Jig (Scottish country)
  • Jitterbug (Swing)
    • Cajun Jitterbug
  • Jitterbug Stroll (Line dance, Swing)
  • Jive (Ballroom, International Latin)
  • Joged (Indonesian)
  • John Wall dance
  • Jota (Spanish dance)
  • Jove Malaj Mome (Bulgarian folk dance)
  • Jumpstyle (Techno based dance)
  • Jabbawokeez
K
  • Kalinka (Russia)
  • Kalymnikos (Greece)
  • Kamarinskaya (Russia)
  • Karsilama (Antikrystos, Marinella) (Greece, Gypsy)
  • Karşılama (Serbia, Iran, Turkey)
  • Kandian ([sri Lanka])
  • Kathak (Classical Indian Dance)
  • Kathakali (India, incorporates dance)
  • Kazachok (Russia)
  • Kerala Natanam (Indian Dance created by Guru Gopinath)
  • Khasapiko (Greece)
  • Khattak Dance (Pashtun)
  • Kizomba (Angola)
  • [{Kizomba De Roda - New way to Dance Kizomba}] ({[Angola}])
  • Kolo (Slavic)
  • Khon (Thai dance)
  • Khorovod (Russia)
  • Kleistos (Greece)
  • Koftos (Greece)
  • Kolbasti (Turkey)
  • Kolomyjka (Ukrainian)
  • Kopanitsa (Bulgaria)
  • Kotsari(Armenian: Քոչարի; Turkish: Koçari; Greek: Κότσαρι; Georgian: ქოჩარი; Laz: Koçari; Azerbaijani: Köçəri)
  • Kozachok (Ukrainian)
  • Krakowiak (Poland)
  • Krishnanattam (India)
  • Krumping)
  • Kuchipudi (Classical Indian Dance)
  • Kuki Lenkhawm Laam (Classical dance form of the Kuki people practised during the times of the Sukte Dynasty)
  • Kurdish dance (Iran and Iraq)
  • Kujawiak (Poland)
  • Kushtdepdi (Turkmen)
L
  • La Jota
  • LambadaKochari(Armenian folk dance)
  • Lambeth Walk
  • Lancer (Quadrille)
  • Landler (Quadrille)
  • Lap dance
  • Latin dance
  • Lavani
  • Lavolta
  • Ländler (Austria)
  • Lerikos (Greece)
  • LeRoc (Modern Jive, Ceroc)
  • Letkajenkka (also known as Letkis, Letkajenka, Letkiss, Letka-Enka, Let's Kiss Jenka, La Yenka)
  • Leventikos (Greece)
  • Limbo (dancers pass under horizontal pole)
  • Lindy Hop (Swing)
  • Line dance
  • Lion dance
  • Liscio (Italian traditional music and dance inspired to Waltz,Polka and Mazurka)
  • Locking
  • Long Sword
  • Loure (historical)
  • Lyrical hip hop dance
  • Lyrical jazz dance
  • Lyrical contempery
M
  • Macarena
  • Madison (Line dance)
  • Maglalatik (Folk Dance of Philippines)
  • Malaguena
  • Mambo (American Ballroom, of Cuban origin)
  • Mandra (Mandilatos) (Balkan)
  • Maneo (Galicia)
  • Manila Swing
  • Manipuri (Classical Indian Dance form)
  • Mapale
  • Marinera
  • Marinella (Greece)
  • Mashed Potato
  • Matachin (Matachines)
  • Maypole dance
  • Maxixe (Social)
  • Mazur (dance) (Poland)
  • Mazurka(Poland)
  • Medieval dance
  • Melbourne Shuffle (Australia)
  • Merengue (Latin Club)
  • Metelytsia ((Ukrainian), khorovod)
  • Milonga (see Argentine Tango)
  • Minuet
  • Modern dance
  • Modern contemporary
  • Modern Jive
  • Molly dance
  • Mohiniattam
  • Monkey
  • Moonwalker
  • Morris dance
  • Moshing
  • Muiñeira (Galicia)
    • Carballesa
    • Chouteira
    • Contrapaso
    • Golpe
    • Muiñeira ribeirana
    • Muiñeira vella
    • Pandeirada
    • Piruxada
    • Redonda
    • Regueifa
  • Walk it out
  • Novelty and fad dances
  • The Nutbush
  • Nama Stap (Namibia)
O
  • Oberek (also called Obertas or Ober, Poland)
  • Odissi AKA orissi (Orissa, India)
  • Onei
  • Over/Under
  • Pachanga
  • Palo de Mayo (Nicaragua), Afro-Caribbean influence, not to be confused with Maypole dance
  • Pagode
  • Pangalatok (Philippines)
  • Panthi (Folk dance of Chhatisgarh, India)
  • Pantsula (South Africa)
  • Parasol dance (Japan)
  • Partner dance
  • Participation dance
  • Para Para
  • Passacaglia (Passacaille) (historical)
  • Passepied (historical)
  • Pasillo
  • Paso Doble (Ballroom, International Latin)
  • Pavane (historical)
  • Peabody (ballroom)
  • Peewee style (originated by Pee-wee Herman in Pee-wee's Big Adventure)
  • Pentozalis (Greece)
  • Persian dance (Iran).
  • Pidikhtos (Greece)
    • Kastrinos Pidikhtos (Greece)
    • Malevyziotiko Pidikhtos (Greece)
  • Pendozalis (Greece)
  • Pole dancing
  • Pop, Lock, and Drop It (Hip hop)
  • Pogo (A punk dance, consisting of jumping up and down)
  • Pogonisios (Greece)
  • Polka - many named versions (Ballroom, Folk, Historical)
  • Polka-mazurka
  • Polonaise
  • Pony
  • Pols (Norway, Folk, see Polska)
  • Pom Squad
  • Polska (pl.: Polskor; Sweden, Folk)
  • Prophetic dance
  • Pryvit (Ukrainian)
  • Pyrrhichios (Dance from Pontos; Greek Black Sea)
  • Push (Swing, Texas)
Q
  • Qasemabadi (a northern Persian style)
  • Quadrille
  • Quickstep (Ballroom)
  • Quebradita (Mexico)
  • FINE (United States of America)
R
  • Raas
  • Rain dancing
  • Ramvong (Cambodia)
  • Rapper sword
  • Raut Nacha (Folk dance of Chhatisgarh, India)
  • Raqs Sharqi ("belly dance")
  • Rebetiko dances (Greece)
  • Redowa
  • Reel (Irish and Scottish)
  • Regency dance
  • Reggae
  • Reggaeton
  • Renaissance dance
  • Rigaudon, Rigadoon
  • River Dancing
  • Robot dance
  • Rock and Roll
    • Acrobatic Rock'n'Roll
  • Round dance (two kinds: circular chain, couples)
  • Rumba (Ballroom: International Latin & American Rhythm, Folk)
    • Cuban Rumba (Ballroom dance as of the beginning of the century, e.g., "The Peanut Vendor" piece)
  • Salsa (Latin Club)
  • Salsa Rueda (Latin Club, Round)
  • Saltatio (Roman)
  • Sambalpuri (India)
  • Samba
    • Samba dance
    • Samba de Gafieira
    • Samba (ballroom)
  • Sarabande (Saraband)
  • Sardana (Catalonia)
  • Sattriya dance
  • Saunter
  • Schottische
  • Scottish country dance
  • Scottish highland dance
  • Schoolcraft
  • Sean-Nós Dance (Ireland - Irish Dance in Sean Nós "Old Style")
  • Seguidilla (Spanish, folk)
  • Sequence dance
  • Serra (Greece)
  • Set Dance Ireland
  • Sevillana (Spain)
  • Shag (Swing)
    • Carolina Shag
    • Collegiate Shag
    • St. Louis Shag
  • Shake
  • Shim Sham (Line dance)
  • Shimmy
  • Shuffle
  • Siganos (Greece)
  • Single Swing (Single Time Swing)
  • Sirtaki (Syrtaki, Zorba) (Greece)
  • Skank (dance)
  • Skip jive
  • Slängpolska (Sweden, Folk, see Polska)
  • Slip jig (Ireland)
  • Slosh (Scotland)
  • Slow dance
  • Slow Foxtrot - also known as Foxtrot and Slowfox (Ballroom)
  • Social dance
  • Son (Mayan, Guatemala/Mexico)
  • Sousta (Greece)
    • Bulgarian Sousta (Greece)
    • Cretan Sousta (Greece)
    • Dodecanese Sousta (Greece)
    • Macedonian Sousta (Greece)
    • Megarian Sousta (Greece)
  • The Spongebob
  • Square dance
    • Traditional square dance
    • Modern Western square dance
  • Stage diving
  • (Do The) Standing Still (The Table, 1977)
  • Stanky Legg (GS Boys)
  • Step dance Ireland
  • Street dance
  • Swim
  • Swing (both as family of dances and as specific Texas dance)
  • Swing Jive (Modern Jive, Club)
  • Swing Roc (Modern Jive, Club)
  • Suzie Q
  • Syrtos (Greece)
    • Cretan Syrtos (Greece)
    • Kalamatianos Syrtos (Mainland Syrtos) (Greece)
    • Kapoutzidon Syrtos (Greece)
    • Nisiotiko Syrtos (Island Syrtos) (Greece)
    • Silyvriano Syrtos (Greece)
T
  • Tambourin (Provençal)
  • Tango (Ballroom, Social, Club)
    • Argentine Tango - also known as Tango Argentino (Social)
    • Uruguayan Tango - also known as Tango Uruguayo (Social)
    • Ballroom Tango - competitive and social dance styles
    • Brazilian Tango - see Maxixe
    • Finnish tango
    • Chinese tango
  • Tanoura (Egyptian dance)
  • Tap Charleston (see Lindy Hop)
  • Tap dance
  • Tarantella (Italian, folk)
  • Tau'olunga (Tongan or Samoan - Polynesian origins)
  • Tecktonik ("tck")
  • Texas Tommy (see Lindy Hop)
  • Thizz Dance
  • Tik (Greece)
  • Tinikling (Philippines)
  • Time Warp
  • Tourdion (historical)
  • Traditional dance
  • Tranky Doo (Swing, Line dance)
  • Trata (Greece)
  • Trepak (Russian, folk)
  • Tribal Style Belly Dance
  • Troika (Folk, Russian, Cajun)
  • Tropotianka (Ukrainian, Rusyn, Carpathian Ruthenia, Bukovina, Hutsuls)
  • Troubadou (Haiti)
  • Tsakonikos (Greece)
  • Tsamiko (Greece)
  • Tsifteteli (Tsifte-Teli) (Çifte-telli) (Turkish) (Greece)(Gypsy)(Arabic)
  • Tsirigotikos (Kythiraikos, Bourdaris) (Greece)
  • Tsyganochka, ("Gypsie Girl") Russian
  • Turf Dancing
  • Tumba
  • Twist
  • Two-step
    • Cajun Two Step
    • Country/Western Two-step
    • Nightclub two-step - also known as California Two-step, abbrn: NC2S
  • Theatre jazz
    • Progressive Double Two
U
  • Universal Peace, Dances of
  • Ukrainian dance
  • Upa or Upa Habanera, claimed by some to be the origin of merengue music and dance.
  • Uvyvanets (Ukrainian, Carpathian Ruthenia, Rusyns, Lemkos, Hutsuls)
  • Pole Dancing
V
  • Valeta (a dance to waltz music)
  • Vals (Argentina, tango style)
    • Valse à deux temps (Valse à deux pas)
  • Verbunkos
  • Vesnianka (Ukrainian, a type of khorovod)
  • Vintage dance
  • Vogue (dance)
  • Volte (also Volta, La volta, or Lavolta, Renaissance)
W
  • Waltz (ballroom, social)
    • Boston (dance)
      • Walking Boston
    • Cajun Waltz
    • Dream Waltz
    • Elizabeth Waltz
    • Cross-step waltz
    • Five-step Waltz (Five Step Waltz)
    • Hesitation Waltz
    • Slow waltz - known as Waltz in ballroom context (ballroom)
    • Viennese Waltz (ballroom, social)
    • Valse à deux temps (Valse à deux pas)
  • Watusi (fad dance)
  • West Coast Swing ("WCS"; Swing, United States)
  • Western swing (United States)
    • Classic WCS
    • Funky chick
    • Sophisticated Swing (an older name of WCS)
  • Western promenade dance
  • Whip (Swing, Texas)
  • Winterguard
  • Wolosso (Ivory Coast)
  • Worship dance
X
  • Xibelani (traditional Shangaan (South Africa))
Y
  • Yablochko (Russian, folk)
  • Yerakina (Greece)
  • YMCA
  • Yakshagana (India, Karnataka)
  • Yowla (rifle dance from (UAE)
Z
  • Zapateado (Spain)
  • Zeibekiko (also spelled Zeibetiko, Zembetiko, Zebetiko, and Zembekiko; Greece)
  • Zeibeks (Turkey)
  • Zonaradiko (Thrace)
  • Zorba's dance (of Greek origin)
  • Zouk (Brazil, Haiti, Guadeloupe, Martinique)
  • Zouk-Lambada (Brazil)
  • Zumba (Colombia)
  • Zydeco (Louisiana, U.S.)
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