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groove
(redirected from groovers)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical 0.01 sec.
groove
1. the spiral channel, usually V-shaped, in a gramophone record
2. Anatomy any furrow or channel on a bodily structure or part; sulcus
3. Mountaineering a shallow fissure in a rock face or between two rock faces, forming an angle of more than 120?
4. in the groove Jazz playing well and apparently effortlessly, with a good beat, etc.

groove [grĂ¼v]
(biochemistry)
Any of a group of depressions in the double helix of deoxyribonucleic acid that are believed to be sites occupied by nuclear proteins.
(design engineering)
A long, narrow channel in a surface.
(geology)
Glaciated marks of large size on rock.
(ordnance)
One of the spiral depressions in the rifling of a gun to impart a spinning motion to a projectile which stabilizes it in flight.

groove
A long narrow cut in the edge or face of a wood member; a groove across the grain is a dado; one parallel with the grain is a plow.


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At times unashamedly playful - Up To Our Nex is loved-up Beatley flower power and Saturday Groovers brassy glam pop nostalgia - it's also musically ambitious, and the show-stealing title track glides effortlessly from folk to pop, to rock, and then back again.
A series of Movers and Groovers events from Miller Homes will kick off at Newcastle's Revolution bar next Saturday.
OLD time groovers can take a trip down memory lane to the 50s, 60s and 70s to when LPs and 45s ruled the music world.
 
 
 
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