0 an energetic dance from South America for two people, or the music for this dance: --
1 to dance a tango: --
2 a dance of Latin American origin for two people, or the music for this dance --
This hypothesis assumes that the learners who entertain this misrepresentation do not know the lexical meaning of tango and all the other nine nouns in this task.
When talking about dance music, he is careful to distinguish between traditional dance music and jazz (which for him, as seen in the above quotation, also includes the tango).
This soon develops into a series of short tangos before returning to the processional theme, and ending with a gentle percussive strumming of the tango rhythm.
Tango lyrics (the first tango lyric is from 1917) and singers popularized the compadrito and the social dialect spoken by him.
This market of approximately a billion potential readers encourages important editorial endeavours in the region, offering, for instance, at least two hundred different titles about tango.
The gap between the desire and the reality is often the theme of tango, leading to bitterness, suffering or nostalgia, the unsettling of fixed masculine identities.
After 1910, new dances such as one-steps, two-steps and tangos were also recorded.
Just as with the tango : for talking, for thinking, for intending - and therefore for creating - it takes two.