English
Etymology
From night + club.
Pronunciation
Noun
nightclub (plural nightclubs)
- A public or private establishment that is open late at night to provide entertainment, food, drink, music or dancing.
- Hypernym: club
1957, The Monthly Record, volume 61, page 22:They respond instantly to the faintest rustling in the covert of a sheaf of Ulysses S. Grants, or the homely, rustic tinkle of a wheelbarrow full of rubies being jounced along over a nightclub floor.
2007 September 6, Lisa Belkin, “What Do Young Jobseekers Want? (Something Other Than the Job)”, in The New York Times[1]:EARLY this summer, Joshua J. Pelton decided that he was meant to live in Orlando, Fla. So he quit his sales job in Detroit, packed his car with all the belongings that fit, put the rest in storage, and drove southeast daydreaming about sundrenched winters and packed nightclubs.
- (Philippines) A strip club.
Derived terms
Translations
establishment that is open late at night
- Afrikaans: nagklub
- Arabic: نَادٍ لَيْلِيّ m (nādin layliyy) (indefinite), النَادِي اللَيْلِيّ m (an-nādī l-layliyy) (definite)
- Armenian: գիշերային ակումբ (gišerayin akumb)
- Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܒܹܝܬ ܣܡܵܟ݂ܵܐ ܠܲܝܠܵܝܵܐ m (bēt smāḵā laylāyā)
- Azerbaijani: gecə klubu
- Belarusian: начны́ клуб m (načný klub), дыскатэ́ка f (dyskatéka)
- Bengali: নৈশক্লাব (nōiśoklab)
- Bulgarian: но́щен клуб m (nóšten klub)
- Burmese: နိုက်ကလပ် (nuikka.lap)
- Catalan: discoteca f, club nocturn m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 夜總會 / 夜总会 (je6 zung2 wui6-2), 夜店 (je6 dim3)
- Mandarin: 夜總會 / 夜总会 (zh) (yèzǒnghuì), 夜店 (zh) (yèdiàn)
- Corsican: notturnu m, discuteca f, night club m
- Czech: noční klub m
- Danish: natklub c
- Dutch: nachtclub (nl) f or m
- Esperanto: amuzejo
- Estonian: ööklubi (et)
- Finnish: yökerho (fi)
- French: boîte de nuit (fr) f, discothèque (fr) f, boîte (fr) f, discothèque (fr) f
- Galician: discoteca (gl) f
- Georgian: ღამის კლუბი (ɣamis ḳlubi)
- German: Nachtklub (de) m, Nightclub (de) m, Diskothek (de) f
- Greek: νυχτερινό κέντρο n (nychterinó kéntro)
- Hebrew: מוֹעֲדוֹן לַיְלָה (he) m (mo'adón láyla)
- Hindi: रात का क्लब m (rāt kā klab), क्लब (hi) m (klab), नाइट क्लब m (nāiṭ klab)
- Hungarian: szórakozóhely (hu), mulató (hu), bár (hu), diszkó (hu)
- Icelandic: skemmtistaður, næturklúbbur m
- Irish: club oíche m
- Italian: notturno (it) m, night club (it) m, discoteca (it) f
- Japanese: ナイトクラブ (ja) (naito kurabu)
- Kazakh: түнгі клуб (tüñı klub)
- Khmer: បារ (km) (baa), អគាររាត្រី (ʼaʼkiə riətrəy), រោងរាំ (roong rŏəm)
- Korean: 나이트 클럽 (naiteu keulleop)
- Kyrgyz: түнкү клуб (tünkü klub)
- Latvian: nakts klubs m
- Lithuanian: naktinis klubas m
- Macedonian: ноќен клуб m (noḱen klub)
- Malay: kelab malam (ms)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: nattklubb m
- Nynorsk: nattklubb m
- Pannonian Rusyn: ноцни клуб m inan (nocni klub)
- Persian:
- Iranian Persian: باشْگاهِ شَبانِه (bâšgâh-e šabâne)
- Polish: klub nocny (pl) m
- Portuguese: boate (pt) f, casa noturna (pt) f, discoteca (pt) f, clube (pt) m, balada (pt) f
- Romanian: discotecă (ro) f, club de noapte n
- Russian: ночно́й клуб m (nočnój klub), дискоте́ка (ru) f (diskotéka)
- Scots: nichtclub
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ноћни клуб m
- Roman: noćni klub m
- Sicilian: discuteca f
- Slovak: nočný klub m
- Slovene: nočni klub m
- Spanish: club nocturno m, discoteca (es) f, boliche (es) m (South America)
- Swedish: nattklubb (sv) c
- Tajik: клуби шабона (klub-i šabona), бошгоҳи шабона (bošgoh-i šabona)
- Thai: ไนท์คลับ (nái-klàp)
- Turkish: gece klübü
- Turkmen: gijeki klub
- Ukrainian: нічни́й клуб m (ničnýj klub), дискоте́ка f (dyskotéka)
- Urdu: نائِٹ کَلَب m (nāiṭ kalab), نائِٹ کْلَب m (nāiṭ klab)
- Uzbek: tungi klubi
- Vietnamese: câu lạc bộ giải trí, câu lạc bộ đêm, hộp đêm (vi)
- Welsh: clwb nos (cy) m
- Yakut: түүҥҥү кулууп (tüüññü kuluup)
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Verb
nightclub (third-person singular simple present nightclubs, present participle nightclubbing, simple past and past participle nightclubbed)
- (informal, ambitransitive) To visit a nightclub (or nightclubs) for entertainment.
Our first night in the big city we went out nightclubbing. The next morning we stayed in hung over.
Spanish
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English nightclub.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnaidklub/ [ˈnai̯ð̞.kluβ̞]
- IPA(key): /ˈnaiklub/ [ˈnai̯.kluβ̞]
Noun
nightclub m (plural nightclubs or nightclubes)
- nightclub
Usage notes
According to Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) prescriptions, unadapted foreign words should be written in italics in a text printed in roman type, and vice versa, and in quotation marks in a manuscript text or when italics are not available. In practice, this RAE prescription is not always followed.