A style of jazz played by big bands popular in the 1930s; flowing rhythms but less complex than later styles of jazz.
Sinònims
Examples for "swing"
Examples for "swing"
1Bankers believe swing days could become increasingly common given uncertain market conditions.
2For the past decade he been its swing vote in major cases.
3A new manager will often swing the axe to clear a path.
4One said: Why do people need to know about their sex swing?
5Anthony Kennedy is considered the court's decisive, swing vote on abortion cases.
1There is no higher praise than in swing music circles.
2A jam session is a musicale devoted to swing music.
3It wouldn't have been American swing music, but it might have been Georgian swing music.
4Brown helped pioneer the new jack swing music style in the 1980s and had a No.
5Our swing music is invented and improvised.
1Neither club is yet equipped to jive with the surest of foot.
2Seth returned the smile, exposing crooked teeth, yellow from years of jive-sweet.
3We don't like the cast of Foxy Brown anymore, you jive turkeys.
4His neat printing contrasts wildly with the bullshit jive of the message.
5That really does not jive with their climate goals, she said.
6I kind of had to shuck and jive my way around certain situations.
7Jeff, does this jive with your approach to aid in the developing world?
8Hip-hop by way of Johannesburg jive, Mexican Mariachi and hillbilly jiggery-pokery.
9But this story doesn't jive with what we're hearing at all.
10Maybe that's why you're cranky today. I started humming a popular jive-sweet tune.
11Nobody could jive to the twisting Katia or the title track.
12You've got my word on that, and Cassie Washington doesn't jive.
13He picked a sliver of jive-sweet off his lip before he spoke again.
14They both looked tired in their jive, as did everyone in the end.
15There is jive and jazz and an England versus Wales Grand Poetry Slam.
16The copy-modify-merge approach often doesn't jive with how sysadmins work.
Jive per variant geogràfica