1 The little gavotte is an old dance in the second-hand book store.
2 At Court he revived classical dances like the minuet and the gavotte .
3 Something nameless and shapeless had lifted; there was a gavotte to her heartbeat.
4 It was first a gentle gavotte , but impatience quickened the time.
5 A gavotte was just over, as Moor entered the superb rooms.
6 They dance a gavotte , and then stand at left of stage.
7 They dance a gavotte , and retire to a line at left.
8 And Kevin Connolly explains what dancing the gavotte has got to with Brexit.
9 The string band struck the preliminary cords of the gavotte .
10 Broken down best sellers here-pausingin their gavotte toward oblivion.
11 There is a quaint sarabande, and a gavotte written on simple lines, but superbly.
12 But it ought, of course, to have the gavotte before.
13 The pavane had come to its first conclusion; the dancers bowed, preparing for the gavotte .
14 The sounds were plainer now, and presently resolved into the rhythmic accents of a gavotte .
15 David's "Charmant Oiseau," and then the gay little gavotte from "Manon."
16 The gavotte is in G, and ends on the keynote thus (if I remember):-
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