Jive

Verb

 * 1) To speak using a jibe or interconnected jibes.
 * 2)  To deceive; to be deceptive.
 * Don’t try to jive me! I know where you were last night!
 * 1)  To dance.
 * You can dance, you can jive, having the time of your life; ooh, see that girl, watch that scene, diggin' the dancing queen! (ABBA, "Dancing Queen")

Noun

 * 1) A dance style popular in the 1940–50s.
 * 2) Swing, a style of jazz music.
 * 3) Jive talk, a slang associated with black American musicians.
 * 4) 🇺🇸 Nonsense; transparently deceptive talk.
 * Don’t give me that jive. I know where you were last night.

Thesaurus
acid rock, avant-garde jazz, badinage, ballroom music, banter, bebop, boogie-woogie, bop, chaff, country rock, dance music, dances, exchange, folk rock, fooling, fooling around, fun, give-and-take, good-natured banter, hard rock, harmless teasing, haze, hot jazz, jape, jazz, jest, joke, jolly, josh, kid, kidding, kidding around, mainstream jazz, musical suite, needle, persiflage, play jazz, pleasantry, put on, rag, ragtime, raillery, rally, rallying, razz, rhythm-and-blues, rib, ride, ridicule, roast, rock, rock-and-roll, sport, suite, suite of dances, swing, syncopate, syncopated music, syncopation, tease, the new music, twit

Etymology
Unknown.

Slang attested in African-American and rural-American culture. Frequently used to infer lying, verbal deception or trickery.

Possible historical antecedent: see gyve

Verb

 * Dutch:, blaasjes wijsmaken
 * Finnish:


 * Spanish: ,


 * Dutch:, swingen
 * Finnish:


 * Spanish:, el bote


 * Dutch: ,


 * Spanish:, de

Noun

 * Dutch:, zever,
 * Finnish: pötypuhe, hölynpöly


 * Spanish: