trip the light fantastic


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trip

 (trĭp)
n.
1. A going from one place to another; a journey.
2. A stumble or fall.
3. A maneuver causing someone to stumble or fall.
4. A mistake.
5. Slang
a. A hallucinatory experience induced by a psychedelic drug: an acid trip.
b. An intense, stimulating, or exciting experience: a power trip.
6. Slang
a. A usually temporary but absorbing interest or preoccupation: He's on another health food trip.
b. A certain way of life or situation: "deny that his reclusiveness is some sort of deliberate star trip" (Patricia Bosworth).
7. A light or nimble tread.
8.
a. A device, such as a pawl, for triggering a mechanism.
b. The action of such a device.
v. tripped, trip·ping, trips
v.intr.
1. To stumble.
2. To move nimbly with light rapid steps; skip.
3. To be released, as a tooth on an escapement wheel in a watch.
4. To make a trip.
5. To make a mistake: tripped up on the last question.
6. Slang To have a drug-induced hallucination.
v.tr.
1. To cause to stumble or fall.
2. To trap or catch in an error or inconsistency.
3. To release (a catch, trigger, or switch), thereby setting something in operation.
4. Nautical
a. To raise (an anchor) from the bottom.
b. To tip or turn (a yardarm) into a position for lowering.
c. To lift (an upper mast) in order to remove the fid before lowering.
Idiom:
trip the light fantastic
To dance.

[Middle English, act of tripping, from trippen, to trip, from Old French tripper, to stamp the foot, of Germanic origin.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Verb1.trip the light fantastic - move in a patterntrip the light fantastic - move in a pattern; usually to musical accompaniment; do or perform a dance; "My husband and I like to dance at home to the radio"
dancing, terpsichore, dance, saltation - taking a series of rhythmical steps (and movements) in time to music
jive - dance to jive music; dance the jive
hoof - dance in a professional capacity
clog - dance a clog dance
tap dance - perform a tap dance
belly dance - perform a belly dance
heel - perform with the heels; "heel that dance"
shimmy - dance a shimmy
move - move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion; "He moved his hand slightly to the right"
dance - move in a graceful and rhythmical way; "The young girl danced into the room"
bebop, bop - dance the bebop
bump - dance erotically or dance with the pelvis thrust forward; "bump and grind"
twist - do the twist
waltz, waltz around - dance a waltz
tapdance, tap - dance and make rhythmic clicking sounds by means of metal plates nailed to the sole of the dance shoes; "Glover tapdances better than anybody"
tango - dance a tango
foxtrot - dance the foxtrot
break dance, break-dance, break - do a break dance; "Kids were break-dancing at the street corner"
cakewalk - perform the cakewalk dance
conga - dance the conga
samba - dance the samba
two-step - dance the two-step
Charleston - dance the Charleston
boogie - dance to boogie music
cha-cha - dance the cha-cha
disco - dance to disco music
mambo - dance a mambo
polka - dance a polka
one-step - dance the one-step
rhumba, rumba - dance the rhumba
mosh, slam dance, thrash, slam - dance the slam dance
jig - dance a quick dance with leaping and kicking motions
jitterbug - do the jitterbug
folk dance - perform a folk-dance
square dance - dance in formation
quickstep - perform a quickstep
kick - kick a leg up
skank - dance the skank
grind - dance by rotating the pelvis in an erotically suggestive way, often while in contact with one's partner such that the dancers' legs are interlaced
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
TRIP THE LIGHT FANTASTIC Take 90 tonnes of steel, 60,000 bulbs, 40,000 metres of silk and 50,000 hours of work and you've got the biggest Chinese lantern festival in Britain.
Get ready to trip the light fantastic. DancingThrough the Decades is a fun, retro disco night in aid of the Scottish Huntington's Association charity, which is based in Paisley.
THEATRE goers have their last chance to trip the light fantastic with Billy Elliot in the North-east this week.
Meanwhile, we off-plan apartment buyers have to remain wallflowers watching this eight-year-old version of Pass the Parcel; that is until the Marina West developers are actually made to trip the light fantastic in The Last Waltz.
Strictly's Katya and Pasha will trip the light fantastic at The Coliseum, Aberdare, on April 24.
IF I could have one wish fulfilled, apart from ensuring future health and happiness for my family and I, I'd love to be able to trip the light fantastic like a professional.
For a start, the celebs have to perform a no-holds-barred show-dance - and as anyone who can remember series three, where Erin Boag and Colin Jackson inexplicably chose to trip the light fantastic with a couple of full-sized dummies, pretty much anything can happen.
Plus there's the Strictly Allstars: nine from previous series back to trip the light fantastic in a group routine.
The festive decorations at Herne Bay in Kent definitely did not trip the light fantastic for the thousands who gathered to watch the actress and singer get the festive fun started.
TRIP the light fantastic in these fabulous gold trim ballerina pumps, pounds 32, from M&Co.