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groovy

[ UK /ɡɹˈuːvi/ ]
[ US /ˈɡɹuvi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. (British informal) very chic
    groovy clothes
  2. very good
    you look simply smashing
    we had a grand old time
    a neat sports car
    had a great time at the party
    he did a bully job

How To Use groovy In A Sentence

  • The director organised two-day hippy schools for his extras, in which they were shown news clips from 1969 and instructed in hippy speak until such antiquated terms as 'crashpad', 'dig' and 'groovy' came naturally. Latest articles - Radio Prague
  • He is often admired for his tasteful shirts, cool strides and groovy haircuts.
  • But up on the fifth floor there is an altogether different scene, with desirable clothes from groovy young Manhattan designers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apparently I have a ‘groovy urban boho life spent cruising bagel shops, watching films in Swahili and listening to music sung in ancient tribal click languages’.
  • He might be a groovy so-and-so who just happens to think you're hot.
  • Welcome to the new world of groovy indoor cycling. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a hurly-burly whirl of tunes and groovy jives, Macbeth: The Rock Opera, which puts on its final performance at the Guild Theatre tonight, is rocking audiences, young and old.
  • The cable channel is giving you the chance to catch up on all the groovy episodes by rerunning them in October.
  • Add the groovy psychedelia of late 1967, before the trend went sour. Oh, What Can It Mean?
  • But each one also has their highpoints of hysterical heinousness, a reason to celebrate groovy grotesqueries.
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