| 9. | Dancing | ||
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Any enthusiastic jiggling of the body. The music was so groovy, Luke and I started enthusiastically jiggling our bodies, a.k.a. dancing.
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| 1. | dancing | ||
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Formal term meaning: to move with unhindered grace around an area with the presence of another enjoying the same activity.
Urban term: Humping someone in public Sad world isn't it. Cinderlla went (formal) dancing.
Jenny and I were (urban) dancing all night at the club, then more at her house. |
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| 2. | dancing | ||
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Something white males cannot accomplish properly sober did you see John last night dancing on the table?
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| 3. | dancing | ||
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an act done vertically that people wish to do horizontally dancing is fun, I wish I could do it horizontally
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| 4. | Dancing | ||
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1. An unsatisfying prelude to a sexual act.
2. An attempt to move one's body to the rhythm of music, resulting in a convulsion like motion that induces the laughter of those in close proximity to the "dancer". The acts seen at grade-school dances. The awkward moments experience in nightclubs. That which some consider "dancing", looks to the rest of us like an uncontrolable spams of the apendages.
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| 5. | dancing | ||
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The act of elaboratly flailing around your apendages in an attempt to immpress or entertain someone or a group of people. She was dancing at the party.
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| 6. | dancing | ||
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NOT dance dance revolution Max 300? They call this dancing?
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| 7. | dancing | ||
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dancing is nothing more than making love set to music. Frank Sinatra:"for what is dancing than making love set to music,, playin."
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