释义 |
groove verb- to enjoy US, 1950
- Word had gone out that this was going to be a head-knocking run anyway, and the idea of having a writer in two didn’t groove anybody. — Hunter S. Thompson, Hell’s Angels, p. 116, 1966
- I get up and shave with Grayson Kirk’s razor, use his toothpaste, splash on his after-shave, grooving on it all. — James Simon Kunen, The Strawberry Statement, p. 34, 1968
- How can a guy really groove on cunt unless he has one? — Angelo d’Arcangelo, The Homosexual Handbook, p. 74, 1968
- I began to think of myself as some sort of lean and hungry Pierre Sal, as I grooved there with Dave Delinger[.] — Terry Southern, Now Dig This, 1968
- I groove on Hollywood movies – even bad ones. — Jerry Rubin, Do It!, p. 12, 1970
- “Most of us have too many friends outside that we groove on,” she insisted. — Malcolm Boyd, My Fellow Americans, p. 147, 1970
- And they used to sit around and groove all the time, y’know. — Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, Santa Calus and his Old Lady, 1971
- [J]oking and vibing and grooving[.] — Uncut, p. 44, May 2001
- to please, to make happy US
- This enabled him to get enough morphine to keep "grooved" for several weeks. — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 198, 1952
- to make good progress, to co-operate UK
- — The Observer, 3 December 1967
- to have sex US
- [H]ere was a man who could do a lot of good, who had the bread to support her bee and give her almost face value for the goods she pulled, all for a little grooving. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Scene, p. 34, 1960
- to be relaxed and happy US
- — Adrian Reid, The Confessions of a Hitch-Hiker, 1970
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