Words like "sushi" from Japan, "baguette" from France, "ballet" from Italy, and "kangaroo" from Australia are examples of words that originate from other countries.
Ballet came from FRANCE probably because a lot of BALLET words are FRENCH.France is in Europe.
Most of the words in ballet are French.
Words. Shakespeare has them. Ballet does not.
some ballet words would be arabesque, devant, fondu, grand battement, glissade, jeté
Some words accociated with ballet are graceful, flexible, strong, elegant, delicate, lyrical, poetic, and beautiful.
No, it actually didn't, even though the Classical Ballet words are in French. Classical Ballet first started in Italy!
There is no script for Clara. The Nutcracker is a ballet, and a ballet's story is communicated through dance, not words.
Both words originate from greek or latin words, as most english words do. Also, they originate from older slang terms from even back to the medival times.
Basically all of the ballet vocabulary is in French, that's where ballet first got started. Some basic vocabulary words are, pointe, tendu, pirouette, r'terre, echape, jete and plie
Many people believe ballet started in France but ballet was created in Italy during the Renaissance. It later spread to France during Luis XIV's time and became extremely popular. That's where they got the words for the different movements.
The words used in ballet are French, such as pas de chat which means 'step of a cat' or plié which is when you bend your knees.