- a high-kicking dance of French origin performed by a female chorus line
- The can-can (more correctly not hyphenated, as in the original French: cancan) is regarded today primarily as a physically demanding music hall dance, performed by a chorus line of female dancers who wear costumes with long skirts, petticoats, and black stockings, that hearkens back to the ...
- A high-kicking chorus line dance originating in France; A trick where one leg is brought over the seat, so that both legs are on one side; To dance the cancan
- A trick where the rider removes a foot from the pedal, extends it over the top tube and to the side of their body and then returns it to the pedal before landing. There's also the "no-foot can-can. ...
- v. Radest maneuver you'll ever see! Rider kicks out foot opposite side over top tube while catching sick air.
- (n) – [kænkæn] – a trick consisting of taking one foot off its pedal, kicking that leg over the top tube, then replacing it on its pedal while in the air. “His can-can’s are amazing.”
- A freestyle trick in which a rider puts one foot over the seat in front of the other and replaces it for the landing.