From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdiscodis‧co /ˈdɪskəʊ $ -koʊ/ noun (plural discos) 1 DLAP[countable] a place or social event at which people dance to recorded popular music the school disco2 [uncountable] a type of dance music that was first popular in the 1970s
Examples from the Corpus
disco• Nick met Rachel at a disco when she was 17 years old.• At the hotel there is a disco which is open from 10 July-20 Aug.• U2 have just released a disco remix.• Do you know of any discos or clubs in your area listing events under a cigarette brand name?• There were presents for every child, disco dancing, party games, fizzy drinks and floating gas balloons.• It was a small seaside town with a couple of bars and one shabby-looking disco.• If the children had been with us they'd have been in the disco, fortunately soundproofed, every night.Origin disco (1900-2000) discotheque