User talk:AcerPorte

Explanation for my changes :

Commentaries on old version, between brackets : ...these dances contra-dances [the french never use the term contra-dance : cite source please] or contredanses (which roughly translated "opposites dance" [cite source please : in 1686, André Lorin wrote La Contredanse du Roy, for Louis XIV, explaining that the word contredanse is just french pronunciation of Counrydance), as indicated in a 1710 [is from 1706 and not from 1710] dance book called Recuil[mystake : Recueil] de Contredance (with a S). As time progressed, these dances. returned to England and were spread and reinterpreted in the United States, and eventually the French form of the name came to be associated with the American folk dances, where they were alternatively called "country dances" or in some parts of New England such as New Hampshire, [not clear, the dance who move to England AND America simultaneously, by french dance master, were Contredanses françaises, so squares, and not countrydances (or contredanses anglaises) in longways. These squares were usually called Cotillions]