[
UK
/ɡɹˈuːpi/
]
[ US /ˈɡɹupi/ ]
[ US /ˈɡɹupi/ ]
NOUN
- an enthusiastic young fan (especially a young woman who follows rock groups around)
How To Use groupie In A Sentence
- We were right up there on the list of rock-star scalps the groupies wanted to add to their belts. Times, Sunday Times
- Being the wife of a minister at a party conference is a bit like being a groupie at a rock concert. Times, Sunday Times
- If you are a plane-spotter or air force groupie, you will love staying a mere five minutes from RAF Kinloss, where you can see the planes taking off.
- So we're thinking of becoming, if not Baptists, possibly Baptist church band groupies.
- Array of contributors includes players, commentators and groupies, with handsome illustrations.
- I began writing a chick lit and my Fearless Leader and groupies all women over 50 btwsaid my protag was "unlikable" if she was 35 and doing the things she was doing. Do you like Miss Snark?
- His immaculate suit, unfashionable haircut and adult ways made him instead look more like a parent than the screaming groupies that clamoured around the stage during the show.
- Instead, the song's about a rock 'n' roll archetype - the wild heartbreaker, the man-eater, the endearing groupie - and it never manages to transcend the blandly conceptual.
- A few years back, Walker and his friends skittered around the nation on something they called a Fiscal Wake-Up Tour; now they're back with the Fiscal Solutions Tour, sort of a number-nerd's version of a rock-and-roll reunion road show - without the groupies, sex or drugs, that is. David Walker, the prophet of deficit doom, and his sermon to save America
- So with this in mind, I downloaded a few well-known photos of Ghandi riding in a Hummer with half-naked groupies and pasted them on my Wall of Inspiration. I have no point, but I may or may not be funny sometimes regardless of what that guy with the lazy eye says, and also, where’s my taco? | Johnny B. Truant