| groove |
A longitudinal "V" shape formed into the length of a metal tube.
Ãâó: www.myraton.com/glossary.shtm
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| groove |
The horizontal scoring lines on the face of the club that help impart spin on the ball. (Before teeing off on the par 3 12th, Jack Nicklaus cleaned out the grooves of his 8-iron with a tee.)
Ãâó: www.pga.com/equipment/Equipment-Glossary.cfm
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| groove |
An engraved line or indentation that marks the separation of notes.
Ãâó: hotpans.se/pan/tuning/app.e.html
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| groove |
Ahh, the groove. The first ingredient for an effective groove is almost always the rhythm section--the bass and drums. Add a solid guitar section on top of that (usually chunky chords), and you have a "groove". You'll know one when you hear it--it almost always causes either the neck or back (or both) to start moving on its own! Examples:
Ãâó: www.metal-reviews.com/glossary.htm
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| groove |
The fastest route through a corner or around the entire track, also referred to as the line. When drivers follow the same line around the track, the build-up of rubber from their tires indicates where the groove is. A high groove takes a car closer to the outside wall for most of a lap, while a low groove takes a car closer to the apron than the outside wall. Road racers use the term line. ...
Ãâó: www.girl-racers.com/racing/g.html
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