a restaurant providing food, drink, music, a dance floor, and often a floor show.
a café that serves food and drink and offers entertainment often of an improvisatory, satirical, and topical nature.
a floor show consisting of such entertainment: The cover charge includes dinner and a cabaret.
a form of theatrical entertainment, consisting mainly of political satire in the form of skits, songs, and improvisations: an actress whose credits include cabaret, TV, and dinner theater.
a decoratively painted porcelain coffee or tea service with tray, produced especially in the 18th century.
Archaic. a shop selling wines and liquors.
verb (used without object),cab·a·reted[kab-uh-reyd], /ˌkæb əˈreɪd/, cab·a·ret·ing[kab-uh-rey-ing]. /ˌkæb əˈreɪ ɪŋ/.
to attend or frequent cabarets.
Origin of cabaret
1625–35; <French: tap-room, Middle French dial. (Picard or Walloon) <Middle Dutch, denasalized variant of cambret, cameret<Picard camberete small room (cognate with French chambrette;see chamber, -ette)