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Coranto   Listen
noun
Coranto, Corant  n.  A sprightly but somewhat stately dance, now out of fashion. "It is harder to dance a corant well, than a jig." "Dancing a coranto with him upon the heath."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Coranto" Quotes from Famous Books



... dresses were innumerable. Her vanity remained, even to old age, the vanity of a coquette in her teens. No adulation was too fulsome for her, no flattery of her beauty too gross. She would play with her rings that her courtiers might note the delicacy of her hands; or dance a coranto that an ambassador, hidden dexterously behind a curtain, might report her sprightliness to his master. Her levity, her frivolous laughter, her unwomanly jests gave colour to a thousand scandals. Her character ...
— History of the English People - Volume 4 (of 8) • John Richard Green

... She was proficient in the making of preserves and unguents, could play the harpsichord and the virginals acceptably, could embroider an altarcloth to admiration, and, in spite of a trivial lameness in walking, could dance a coranto or a saraband against any ...
— The Certain Hour • James Branch Cabell

... life, its meetings, its passions, its partings. A student of Shakspere, I had learned something of every dance alluded to in his plays, and hence partially understood several of those I now saw—the minuet, the pavin, the hey, the coranto, the lavolta. The dancers were attired in fashion as ancient as ...
— Lilith • George MacDonald



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