rumba
or rhum·ba
[ ruhm-buh, roo m-, room- ]
/ ˈrʌm bə, ˈrʊm-, ˈrum- /
noun, plural rum·bas [ruhm-buh z, roo m-, room-] /ˈrʌm bəz, ˈrʊm-, ˈrum-/.
a dance, Cuban in origin and complex in rhythm.
an imitation or adaptation of this dance in the U.S.
music for this dance or in its rhythm.
verb (used without object), rum·baed [ruhm-buh d, roo m-, room-] /ˈrʌm bəd, ˈrʊm-, ˈrum-/, rum·ba·ing [ruhm-buh-ing, roo m-, room-] /ˈrʌm bə ɪŋ, ˈrʊm-, ˈrum-/.
to dance the rumba.
Origin of rumba
Borrowed into English from American Spanish around 1920–25
Words nearby rumba
Example sentences from the Web for rumba
Henry's teeth already were chattering like the gourds in a rumba band.
Henry Horn's X-Ray Eye Glasses |Dwight V. Swain
British Dictionary definitions for rumba
rumba
rhumba
/ (ˈrʌmbə, ˈrʊm-) /
noun
a rhythmic and syncopated Cuban dance in duple time
a ballroom dance derived from this
a piece of music composed for or in the rhythm of this dance
Word Origin for rumba
C20: from Spanish: lavish display, of uncertain origin