Technically, it is categorized as a Night Club dance. There are similarities to Latin Dances (Samba, Cha-Cha, Rumba, Paso Doble, Jive), but you will usually not find it at a dance competition.
Gig and Jive are both very lively dances.
Bopping, which is almost the same as the Jive, I'm sure there are many more dances that originated in the UK, because the dance scene in the UK is fantastic.
I can name most all of them if i try hard...Paso DobleSambaRumbaCha ChaWaltzViennese WaltzFoxtrotEC SwingWC SwingJiveSalsaQuickstepeach unique in its own way
*THE 10 CLASSIFICATION OF DANCE FORMS* *Ballet *Modern Dance *Classical Dance *Folk Dance *Ethnic Dance *Ballroom Dance *Exercise Dance *Dance Exercise *Dance Drama *Allied Movement Form
yes, and in some places the jive still is a ballroom dance. Although, they may only use the Jive for team Jive competitions, it is still sometimes considered ballroom dancing.
hive jive
Yes.
i love to dance and sing to jive music all day long. i the jive music is a really good type of music. a lot of people in the world like to listen to jive music. jive is the name of my most favorite music.
the jive hand jive bop the stroll slow dancing-fox trotThe Twist
Sincere, honest, truthful are all antonyms of "jive", when the word is not being used to with reference to jive dance, jive music, or the slang used by jazz musicians. Beyond the musical reference, most people confuse "jive" with "jibe" and use it incorrectly. Used correctly you might say "This jive turkey tried to sell me the Brooklyn Bridge!" Incorrectly... "Your story just doesn't jive with the facts".
Dance/Song: Jive/"Would You..?" a la Touch and Go
Abba
Absolutely, jive is a word.jivejīv/nounnoun: jive; plural noun: jives; noun: jive talk; plural noun: jive talks1. a lively style of dance popular especially in the 1940s and 1950s, performed to swing music or rock and roll.swing music.a style of dance music popular in South Africa. "township jive"2. a form of slang associated with black American jazz musicians.North Americaninformala thing, especially talk, that is deceptive or worthless."a single image says more than any amount of blather and jive"verbverb: jive; 3rd person present: jives; past tense: jived; past participle: jived; gerund or present participle: jiving1. perform the jive or a similar dance to popular music."people were jiving in the aisles"2.North Americaninformaltaunt or sneer at."Willy kept jiving him until Jimmy left"talk nonsense. "he wasn't jiving about that bartender"adjectiveNorth Americaninformaladjective: jive1. deceitful or worthless.
Technically, it is categorized as a Night Club dance. There are similarities to Latin Dances (Samba, Cha-Cha, Rumba, Paso Doble, Jive), but you will usually not find it at a dance competition.
Gig and Jive are both very lively dances.
Jive Jive was created on 1983-11-30.