1 bachata | Definition of bachata

bachata

noun
ba·​cha·​ta | \ bä-ˈchä-tä How to pronounce bachata (audio) \

Definition of bachata

: a genre of popular song and dance of the Dominican Republic performed with guitars and percussion The group has helped make bachata’s romantic tidings and spiky guitar syncopations a staple of Latin radio …— Jody Rosen, New York Times, 3 June 2009

First Known Use of bachata

1957, in the meaning defined above

History and Etymology for bachata

borrowed from Caribbean Spanish, earlier, “partying, noisy revelry” of uncertain origin

Note: Fernando Ortiz Fernández, Glosario de afronegrismos (La Habana, 1924), p. 153, sees bachata as a derivative of bacha, supposedly a synonym, and both as apheretic forms of cumbancha or cumbacha (the latter very rare if it exists), which has approximately the same meaning as bachata. The base of cumbancha, per Ortiz Fernández, is cumbé, “a dance of the blacks, and the music to which they dance” (“un baile de los negros, y el son á que se baila”), as the word is glossed in successive editions of the dictionary of the Real Academia Española, going back to the Diccionario de autoridades (the C volume in 1729), which cites the word in verse by the dramatist Francisco de Castro (1672-1713). These connections are possible, but speculative; the African etymologies proffered by Ortiz Fernández are even more speculative.

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