0 present participle of cavort
1 to jump or move around in a playful way, sometimes noisily, and often in a sexual way:
On stage the group hold attention with their cavorting antics and general enthusiasm, and to followers this is good album to keep remind of the live performance they'll see.
Now he has become one of those awful "multiple talents" - cavorting like crazy...
While there are a number of modest special effects, the movie relies largely on dancing (or rather cavorting), slapstick, and costuming.
In the second half they are cavorting in a bar where each of the band members portrays several different characters.
The two outer springs also contain both men and women cavorting with abandon.
It seems perfectly normal to see the small figures of naked women cavorting among them.
The title side evokes visions of a primordial wasteland with a menagerie of strange, lumbering life-forms cavorting way off in the (safe) distance.
But when he saw her cavorting with one of his servants, he became angry with her and sent her away.