Define Groove Meaning

Groove
1. An adjective describing a rhythmic quality of music that is emotionally communicative and soulful; used for music moving at a steady beat.
2. A verb meaning to smoothly interact, maintain or improve relations with business associates, a person, or a situation.

1. The groove in this song just isn't right yet.
2. Yeah, I need to groove that guitar player, get him in on another recording session soon.
By Leonora
Groove
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

When I decided to act on my own volition rather than society's, I realized...baby, I got my groove back!
By Anabella
Groove
One's seductive charm, to impress and attract the opposite sex.

(See shwerve)

I'm gonna bounce, gotta go get my groove on, dog.
By Chrysa
Groove

By Daloris
Groove
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.")

Guy 1: "This is just between you and me. Groove?"
Guy 2: "Groove."
By Ardine
Groove

I feel like, groove...
By Violet
Groove
A groove is the event of taking a "hit" from a a gravity bong (weed smoking devie.).

Dude, let's go take a groove from the gravity bong.
By Lesly
Groove

By Ofella
Groove
the most amazing pair of shoes that i got in canada for just a legit 5 american bucks!!

i love my groove shoes
By Faythe
In The Groove
A dancing game developed by Roxor (and later partnered with Andamiro) in which players try to step on panels according to a step pattern that appears on screen.

While nearly identical in concept to Konami's Dance Dance Revolution, so much so that Roxor has been sued for patent and copyright infringement, some conceptual differences can be observed: the use of mines (which reduce one's life if triggered) and hands (a third or fourth arrow needing to be hit by slapping the panel with your hands), a scoring system based on the percentage of points scored over points possible, denser step patterns (some songs have over 800 steps, whereas DDR's densest song has only around 600), and a heavy emphasis on arrow modifiers present in the game's mod-heavy marathon courses

Have you played In the Groove yet? It's like DDR, but a lot harder.
By Thomasa