dance to a different tune

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

dance to a different tune (third-person singular simple present dances to a different tune, present participle dancing to a different tune, simple past and past participle danced to a different tune)

  1. Alternative form of dance to a new tune
    • 2004, Rolf A. F. Witzsche, Flight Without Limits, →ISBN, page 28:
      You can choose to override these laws, you can change the game, you can dance to a different tune.
    • 2007, Cornelius J. Troost, Apes Or Angels?: Darwin, Dover, Human Nature, and Race, →ISBN, page ix:
      The single event that forced Christianity to dance to a different tune was Darwin's great 1859 book called On the Origin of Species.
    • 2012, E.V. Thompson, Dream Traders, →ISBN:
      'We'll all be dancing to a different tune before long.' Killian somehow managed to produce the semblance of a smile. 'When trading in opium becomes legal I doubt if Gemmell Company will be lagging behind.'
  2. To behave differently; to march to the beat of a different drummer.
    • 2011, Scott Lyall, Margery Palmer McCulloch, The Edinburgh Companion to Hugh MacDiarmid, →ISBN, page 128:
      In one way the book is a straightforward defence of eccentricity, a plea for the importance of valuing individuals who choose to dance to a different tune.
    • 2012, anonymous author, The Erotic Memoirs of a Lusty Victorian Rake: Volume 2, →ISBN:
      Whether they walk or take a cab, they arrive at exactly the right time to bag a window seat and settle themselves down in comfort for their trip. Alas, I dance to a different tune. I have been catching trains all my life and throughout this time I have always been afraid of missing them.
    • 2014, Jen Minkman, The Space In Between: A YA Paranormal Romance, page 29:
      Is it a crime to work like that? Is it so hard to accept that some people dance to a different tune?!
  3. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see dance,‎ different,‎ tune.

References[edit]