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- CAVORT Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of CAVORT is to leap or dance about in a lively manner How to use cavort in a sentence
- CAVORT | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
CAVORT definition: 1 to jump or move around in a playful way, sometimes noisily, and often in a sexual way: 2 to… Learn more
- Cavort - definition of cavort by The Free Dictionary
Define cavort cavort synonyms, cavort pronunciation, cavort translation, English dictionary definition of cavort intr v ca·vort·ed , ca·vort·ing , ca·vorts 1 To bound or prance about in a sprightly manner; caper 2 To have lively or boisterous fun; romp: The
- CAVORT Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
to behave in a high-spirited, festive manner; have a lively good time; revel The media could not be loaded, either because the server or network failed or because the format is not supported Examples have not been reviewed Masked protesters, dancing and cavorting around burning American flags
- Cavort - Definition, Meaning Synonyms - Vocabulary. com
How to cavort, in one easy step: dance around all crazy, jumping on and over anything nearby like you just ate a lot of sugar Give it a try! Cavorting requires a good mood, lots of energy, and some running room Children love to cavort, and so do parents when they win the lottery
- CAVORT definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
When people cavort, they leap about in a noisy and excited way You can enjoy a quick snack while your children cavort in the sand [VERB] Cavort is sometimes used by journalists to suggest that people were behaving in a playfully sexual way The doctor, 56, cavorted with the models on a jaunt to Trinidad and Tobago [VERB + with]
- cavort - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
cavort (third-person singular simple present cavorts, present participle cavorting, simple past and past participle cavorted) (originally intransitive, of horses) To prance, frolic, gambol
- cavort verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of cavort verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary + adv prep to jump or move around in a noisy, excited and often sexual way The photos showed her cavorting on the beach with her new lover Word Origin late 18th cent (originally US): perhaps an alteration of curvet ‘to leap gracefully or energetically’
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