Funk in a sentence as a noun

And what the funk with all this opt-out ********?

Being around people and interacting with them is the best cure for this kind of funk.

Sometimes not, but even in those times, the funk they are in is slighly less funky.

He advised young musicians to learn rock, rhythm and blues and funk tunes rather than jazz standards.

But I've had to defer it due to family pressures and because of this blasted funk.

Grass-fed is tougher and always seems to have that aged beef funk, which is sometimes welcome and sometimes not.

In other words, it was funk, disco, or dance music using more electronic sounding equipment that we now equate to an '80s sound'.

Funk in a sentence as a verb

>>I think the separation was driven by Steve being in a real funk because the Macintosh, which he developed, was failing in early 1985.

If we look back at Chicago and Detroit before this time, they still had house, but it sounded like funk or disco or dance music with upgraded gear.

We should pride ourselves in taking a critical eye to things, and the OP isn't the only person to smell the unmistakable funk of a scam in this.

If you are honestly challenging and validating your idea and business model you will lose faith from time to time and may even slip into a funk.

It's super expensive, the economy has been in a funk for a long time, the work hours are widely known to be brutally long, people don't know anything but work and sleep over there.

First you have upper-middle-class often gay black kids in detroit rejecting the polyrhythms and rowdy attitude of the hiphop and funk around them in pursuit of the perceived sophistication of androgynous european synth-pop.

Funk definitions

noun

a state of nervous depression; "he was in a funk"

noun

United States biochemist (born in Poland) who showed that several diseases were caused by dietary deficiencies and who coined the term `vitamin' for the chemicals involved (1884-1967)

See also: Funk

noun

an earthy type of jazz combining it with blues and soul; has a heavy bass line that accentuates the first beat in the bar

verb

draw back, as with fear or pain; "she flinched when they showed the slaughtering of the calf"

See also: flinch squinch cringe shrink wince recoil quail