Grooving or to Groove was an early Black expression for good sex or having sex.
Grooving or Groovy is now used to express a good feeling.
Lot of these expressions such as Rocking, Rolling, Rocking and Rolling, Digging, Beating it, and Creaming are just a few sexual expressions used by early jazz musicians to compliment a fellow musician.
Grooving or Groovy is now used to express a good feeling.
Lot of these expressions such as Rocking, Rolling, Rocking and Rolling, Digging, Beating it, and Creaming are just a few sexual expressions used by early jazz musicians to compliment a fellow musician.
Man I was Grooving last night! I had her climbing the walls!
Man you where Grooving on those drums last night!
I see why you are smiling; you and that girl was Grooving all night
Hey, I can’t do wrong I’m in the Groove!
Man you where Grooving on those drums last night!
I see why you are smiling; you and that girl was Grooving all night
Hey, I can’t do wrong I’m in the Groove!
by cyberanger November 16, 2006
The groove is so mysterious. We're born with it and we lose it and the world seems to split apart before our eyes into stupid and cool. When we get it back, the world unifies around us, and both stupid and cool fall away.
I am grateful to those who are keepers of the groove.
-Lynda Barry, from 100 Demons
I am grateful to those who are keepers of the groove.
-Lynda Barry, from 100 Demons
When I decided to act on my own volition rather than society's, I realized...baby, I got my groove back!
by hiddenattacker August 26, 2009
the groove is a slow, driving, funk based rythm. the groove can only be played by someone who has already heard the groove. the groove is deep. the groove can move. the groove is heavy.
by the groove November 03, 2005
by Minstrel March 05, 2003
by John February 08, 2006
1. An expression of agreement or understanding.
2. To agree or to understand -- as used in a question.
(Note: In this context, groove is not to be used in conjunction with a subjective pronoun, i.e. "Do you groove?" or "I groove.")
2. To agree or to understand -- as used in a question.
(Note: In this context, groove is not to be used in conjunction with a subjective pronoun, i.e. "Do you groove?" or "I groove.")
by Sugar Fish October 27, 2006