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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a cha" is not correct or usable in written English.
It appears to be a fragment and lacks context to determine its intended meaning or usage.
Example: "I found a cha in the garden." (Note: "cha" may refer to tea in some contexts, but the phrase remains unclear.)
Alternatives: "a cup" or "a type".
Exact(41)
Matt Aguilar, a CHA spokesman, told the Sun-Times that the company had agreed to hire at least 75 CHA residents at the new store as part of the proposed deal.
Perhaps, but, in the magazine, the former, at least (with a "cha" or two amputated and elbows in) was still having its heyday.
I adore snacking in a cha chaan teng and dining in steamy noodle houses (More about those cheap and tasty mihn ga in a forthcoming post).
"Ladies and gentlemen, you are on fire!" enthused compere, Paul Reeve, as the crowd did a cha cha to the tune Baubles, Bangles and Beads.
One lesson became 15, and soon she was dancing four or five nights a week: moving quickly from a box step into a fox trot, a rhumba and a cha cha.
Among his reasons, Mr Cisneros cited the fact that two boys, aged 10 and 11, had recently dropped a five-year-old out of the 14th-floor window of a CHA building.
Similar(19)
You may have heard a "pulsating shuffle-wobble ballad," or a "plaintively harmonic, rhythmic warmhearted romancer with a contagious repeating melody riff," or even an "infectious shuffle-beat rock-a-cha-cha that's loaded with commercial ingredients".
But after drinking a cha-chunker you can't help but feel that the joke's on you.
Her most commanding performance was on "Amado Mio," a cha-cha with cinematic pedigree.
"Who thought of doing it as a cha-cha?" Mr. Nayder asked his audience.
VOLTERRA, ITALY — As a sound-system blasted a cha-cha-cha, the men began to dance.
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