Cakewalk - traducción al alemán
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Cakewalk - traducción al alemán

MUSIC GENRE AND TYPE OF DANCE
Cake walk; Cake-walk; Cakewalks; Cakewalker
  • Cakewalk poster, 1896
  • 1915 sheet music cover (late for cakewalk music): "Ebony Echoes: A Good Old-Fashioned Cake-Walk" by Dan Walker. New York, NY: Shapiro, Bernstein & Co.
  • Cakewalk dance, 1896
  • Eugénie Fougère on the 18 October 1903 cover of ''Paris qui Chante'' dancing to the song 'Oh ! ce cake-walk'
  • George Walker, Aida Overton Walker, and Bert Williams link arms and dance the cakewalk in the first Broadway musical to be written and performed by African Americans, ''[[In Dahomey]]''.
  • Painting from 1913

Cakewalk         
n. cakewalk, competitive dance, dance performed on stage
cakewalk      
n. Cakewalk (Tanz); Bühnentanz
cakewalker      
n. Cakewalker (Tänzer)

Definición

cakewalk
Easily done, same as a piece of cake.
Our calculus test was cakewalk. [There is a dance called a cakewalk.If you're on the right square when the music stops, you win a cake.It's also defined as something accomplished with supreme ease.]

Wikipedia

Cakewalk

The cakewalk was a dance developed from the "prize walks" (dance contests with a cake awarded as the prize) held in the mid-19th century, generally at get-togethers on Black slave plantations before and after emancipation in the Southern United States. Alternative names for the original form of the dance were "chalkline-walk", and the "walk-around". It was originally a processional partner dance danced with comical formality, and may have developed as a subtle mockery of the mannered dances of white slaveholders.

Following an exhibition of the cakewalk at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, the cakewalk was adopted by performers in minstrel shows, where it was danced exclusively by men until the 1890s. At that point, Broadway shows featuring women began to include cakewalks, and grotesque dances became very popular across the country.

The fluid and graceful steps of the dance may have given rise to the colloquialism that something accomplished with ease is a "cakewalk".