a genre of popular music that originated in New Orleans around 1900 and developed through increasingly complex styles | the act of scoring in a game or sport |
a style of dance music popular in the 1920s; similar to New Orleans jazz but played by large bands | a seduction culminating in sexual intercourse |
empty rhetoric or insincere or exaggerated talk | a number or letter indicating quality (especially of a student's performance) |
| the facts about an actual situation |
| a written form of a musical composition; parts for different instruments appear on separate staves on large pages |
| a resentment strong enough to justify retaliation |
| a set of twenty members |
| grounds |
| a number that expresses the accomplishment of a team or an individual in a game or contest |
| a slight surface cut (especially a notch that is made to keep a tally) |
| an amount due (as at a restaurant or bar) |