The most famous of all the cabarets immortalized by Villon is "le trou de la Pomme de Pin," as he usually calls it.
Cabarets born of the need for novelty, which might stimulate the blase; the demand for something eccentric almost to morbid irony.
These cabarets are very numerous on the outskirts of Montmartre, in the streets and boulevards at the foot of the Butte.
You will find often in these cabarets and in the cafes and along the boulevard, a man who, for a few sous, will render a portrait or a caricature on the spot.
It was a necessary measure borne in upon him by many officers of troops, masters and fathers of families, who complained that the numerous cabarets were turning the youth, the soldiers and the servants away from duty, respect and service.
The cabaretsbecame the rendezvous of Montrealers, although they were only licensed for strangers and marketers.
Even those who broke the ecclesiastical abstinence in these cabarets seem to have been in danger of the secular arm.
There were nocabarets in which men could drink and discuss the change.
There were cabarets where men spent evenings drinking and playing games, betting and losing.
The cabaret Petit Maxim aimed at expressing in miniature the essence of all the best cabarets in Paris, just as Bucharest aimed at expressing in miniature the essence of Paris.
A silvery mist enveloped it, or, rather, it resembled a gay picture lightly covered by a layer of mould, dotted with the lights of cafes and cabarets glimmering red.
But here, too, in cabarets and theatres where smoking is allowed, in jolly little nooks and respectable looking back rooms, they passed numberless hours in riotous abandon.
He was accompanied by his friend Tournefort and a gang of half a dozen ruffians recruited from the most disreputable cabarets of Paris.
I haunt the most disreputable cabarets in the lowest slums of Paris.
As cabarets go, it was not bad, although I could imagine how wild it might become in the evening or on special occasion.
Between cabarets and tea rooms I don't know whether this is work or play.
Why, you dirty crook, you're known from San Francisco to New York, and I've had to work in cheap shows and dirty cabarets just because of you always coming and queering me when I got started.
I have met some of the other dancers in the cabarets and they are mostly a nice lot of girls.
Of course I know you had to take in the shows and cabarets of New York.
She's spillin' over with talk about the styles in New York and the cabarets and the new shows.
But it seems to be no exaggeration to say that it was the cafes and cabarets of the Left Bank rather than the university that fanned the smouldering flame of discontent into a conflagration of rebellion.
Here abound the literary and artistic restaurants, cafes, bouillons, cremeries, and cabarets which have always conferred a peculiar charm on Paris.
The truth is, these cabarets have long ceased to attract the Montmartrois, and are kept up as mere show places for provincial and foreign tourists.
Many of the houses are brightly painted, in blue, green, pink, and other colours not to be expected, and of cabarets the name is legion.
As nearly nine-tenths of the workmen had gone, or been driven, into the strike, the cabarets in which the region abounds were filled with crowds of idle men.
That a dozen or so of Beaufort's friends were for some reason or other spending their time at the Angel Inn and other cabarets I was aware, but I have had no word of their proceedings today.
We halted for breakfast at eleven, and if it had not been for your kind offer we should have had no chance of getting anything till we entered Turin, and even there the less we go into any cabarets the better.
Hector at once procured dresses suitable for gentlemen of the middle class for the troopers, and gave them instructions to spend the greater portion of their time at the cabarets at which these gentlemen stopped.
On the third day, however, he heard that at least a dozen of these gentlemen met in twos or threes at various cabarets near the Duke of Beaufort's, and spent the greater portion of their time there.
They shout, 'the Prussians must be destroyed,' and then go off quietly to their cabarets to smoke and drink.
The news was rapidly spread in the cabarets by the men who had been present at Minette's denunciation that Jean Diantre had endeavored to assassinate the American, and much indignation was excited.
These low salaries are not confined to thecabarets alone.
Singing night after night in the smoke and often vitiated air of the cabarets is fatiguing work.
Their idle hours are spent among their comrades in the cabarets and the little boites tucked away in odd corners of Montmartre, where they breakfast and dine, accompanied by their sweethearts.
In many of the cabarets it is the custom to give gala matinees and gala evenings with more celebrities than usual on the program.
Since then he has been a success as a mimic in nearly all thecabarets of Montmartre and the Latin Quarter.
There are the shows andcabarets of Montmartre and those of the rive gauche, the Noctambules, and the Grillon.
I thought of Marcelle's paradise perched in the pure air above the reek and filth that hung like a miasma about the base of the Butte, and what it meant to her as a refuge from the smoke and stifling air of cabarets and cafes-concert.
The seating capacity of these cabarets is limited, and the profits are in proportion.
From a distance resounded, deadened, however, by good shutters, the songs of the tipplers, enjoying themselves in the cabarets scattered along the plain.
Well, if you are cold, Planchet, you can go into one of those cabarets that you see yonder, and be in waiting for me at the door by six o'clock in the morning.
Artagnan went successively into all the cabarets in which there was a light, but could not find Planchet in any of them.
He shunned the cabarets like a pest, detested drunkards, and it was an honor to be of the same mind as he was.
We remained a month in Mans for training, to get our full equipment and to frequent cabarets and houses of ill-fame.
As you know, there are certaincabarets told off for the use of the soldiers of the Brigade.
The cabarets used by the men are all close to the barracks, so that, in case of a fracas, a guard is sent down to bring all concerned in it back to the barracks.
Ladies refuse to stop at hotels that attract an undesirable element by the operation of cabarets and present-day dances.
Another vice backed by brewers Cabarets and tango dance resorts How a New York brewer advertises his cabaret resort XVII.
You will find them seeking the romance of Berlin's greying night amid the Turkish cigarette smoke and stale wine smells of the half-breed cabaretsmarshalled along the Jägerstrasse, the Behrenstrasse and their tributaries.
No city in the world is punctuated with so large a number of semi-private intimate theatres and cabarets as Vienna--theatres with a seating capacity of forty or fifty.
Numerous ruined farms and cabaretswere scattered along the line, sometimes in our territory and sometimes belonging to the enemy.
These numbers refer to certain locations on the map, and the cabarets are not exactly such as one is accustomed to seeing in American cities.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cabarets" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.