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Etymologies
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Examples
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Tambourines were clicking and people were clapping their hands as the praise singers led the first part of the service.
Déjà Vu Suzetta Perkins 2009
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Tambourines were clicking and people were clapping their hands as the praise singers led the first part of the service.
Déjà Vu Suzetta Perkins 2009
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Tambourines were clicking and people were clapping their hands as the praise singers led the first part of the service.
Déjà Vu Suzetta Perkins 2009
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Tambourines and elephants are playing in the band.
Doo Doo Doo 2007
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Tambourines took to the air with their golden rings clashing like cymbals in an upbeat tempo, their skinned backsides beat by the outstretched palms of human flesh.
A Love So Deep Suzetta Perkins 2007
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Tambourines took to the air with their golden rings clashing like cymbals in an upbeat tempo, their skinned backsides beat by the outstretched palms of human flesh.
A Love So Deep Suzetta Perkins 2007
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Tambourines took to the air with their golden rings clashing like cymbals in an upbeat tempo, their skinned backsides beat by the outstretched palms of human flesh.
A Love So Deep Suzetta Perkins 2007
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_Cracked Mary: _ Tambourines and fiddles and pipes -- melodeons and the whistling of drums.
New Irish Comedies Lady Gregory 1892
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Tambourines and all the marks of joy were ready prepared for thee ( "in thee," that is, "with and for thee").
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Among the paintings showcased in "Late Renoir" are some of the artist's most famous, including "Dancing Girl With Tambourines" and "Dancing Girl With Castanets," both originally created for a London industrialist's dining room surrounding a mirror.
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