Cut a rug cut the rug dance typically in an energetic or accomplished way north american informal 1966 sky magazine the wide open spaces around the bar mean as it fills up the place soon resembles a club and the punters are itching to cut a rug.
Cut a rug phrase.
Cut a rug rate this phrase.
Use of the phrase persisted well into the 1940s although the popularity of the term has since faded.
Cutting a rug does indeed refer to dancing.
An author writing in vintage vernacular might describe her characters cutting a rug to transport the reader back to the era in which the book is supposed.
Much as the sayings get down and boogie are the more recent vernacular referring to the same action.
If you cut a rug or cut the rug you dance in a lively and energetic way.
3 00 2 votes to dance especially in a vigorous manner and in one of the dance styles of the first half of the twentieth century.
To cut a rug is a term that became popular jargon in the 1920 s when young persons much as they do today developed their own jargon or slang for use in their own peer groups.
I was wondering if anyone knew the origin of the phrase cut a rug meaning to dance or to dance well.
The term to cut a rug first started to emerge as a slang term for dancing in the 1920s.
Some of the mothers had a great time cutting a rug alongside their teenage daughters.
Posted by baceseras on june 04 2011 at 14 27.