0 a situation in which people are drinking, dancing, singing, etc. at a party or in public, especially in a noisy way:
1 the activity of a noisy party or other celebration
It avoided both the excesses of aristocratic dilettantism and the degradation of low revelry.
Their revelry and riotous behaviour alienated them from the city inhabitants : they were seen as a good-for-nothing bunch, best avoided.
The rustic revelry that these folk musicians triggered off was so infectious that one was itching as a spectator to join in.
And guess who joined in the revelry?
Her revelry in her imaginative world and the chaffing under the strictures of the real one engages the narrative in different emphasis of optimism and despair.
From then onwards, it was scoured, or cleaned up, every year, this becoming a tradition at the school marked by revelry.
Events including fireworks, fishing contests, golf, swimming, and general revelry are open to all visitors and residents.
Features of the event are subject to the participants and include "community," artwork, "absurdity," decommodification ", and" revelry.