Talk:Glossary of partner dance terms

International style
I am unfamiliar with the term "international" in the context of ballroom dancing but I have come across it in other contexts, used by Americans to mean "foreign". This is a very US-centric usage. If, as I suspect, the word is being used this way here, it needs to be spelled out that this is a term used only in America. Tesspub (talk) 09:02, 25 September 2011 (UTC)
 * Worse, I'm also running into it capitalized for no apparent reason (along with virtually every other faintly dance-related term – even "left" and "right" sometimes) in dance articles that read like they were written for a dance class (ahem, sorry, "Dance Class").  — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼  09:36, 5 June 2018 (UTC)

Missing terms
Some I've run across in article text and nav templates (e.g. ). It would be much better to add them here than create more miserable stub articles. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼  09:49, 5 June 2018 (UTC)
 * Change step, closed change[s], outside change, hesitation change
 * Hesitation (dance), cross hesitation
 * Corte (dance), reverse corte, hover corte (Possibly a misspelling of corté? Possibly a proper name like Viennese and Telemark?)
 * Weave (dance), basic weave
 * Pivot (dance), reverse pivot, slip pivot
 * Spin (dance) [Can this really be missing?! The only dance-related article I find is Spin (b-boy move)&#93;; outside spin
 * Fallaway / fall-away; fallaway reverse (or reverse fallaway?), fallaway whisk
 * Link (dance), progressive link
 * Contra check; suggests as "Check (dance)" article or a "check" entry here, too, but maybe I'm mistaking this sense of "contra" as a Latin adjective when it's a noun or something.