a waltz
light spot dance is a type of dance danced by light
danced
future: dance present: dancing past: danced
"Dance" is a regular verb; therefore, its past participle is "danced".
Danced
danced; dance/[am/are/is] dancing; will dance/[am/are/is] going to dance
Oh of course they did dance they danced a lot . They even danced for fun when their bored
Polkas are danced for much the same reasons that any other kind of dance is danced.
light spot dance is a type of dance danced by light
bailamos= we dance, we danced, let's dance
No, it is not. Danced is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to dance) and may rarely be used as an adjective.
If you think about it, the Greeks danced in a circle just as we dance in a circle in a Ring-Around-The-Rosy dance. So, they danced to have fun, and what fun is it alone?
danced
danced
danced
future: dance present: dancing past: danced
if you mean "a dance" as in the noun "dance", it would just be "dances" - "We danced one dance" to "We danced two (or three or four etc) dances" If you mean "dance" as in the general term or subject, I believe "dance" would then just be plural for "dance", but I am not sure. Anyone else have some input on that?