DJ \DJ\ (d[=e]"j[=a]`) n. same as {disc jockey}. [acronym, capitalized] [PJC] ||
Has the stock market, for example, already had its correction, disquised from popular view by a rather slight decline in the DJ average?
The radio station's 10th anniversary show also featured Hall & Oates, Was (Not Was) and Grammy winner DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince.
Doug Clifton, a DJ for eight years with longtime progressive-rock station KBCO-FM in Boulder, Colo., adds, "It's much harder to start a station like this now.
The DJ did not take requests but was more than happy to keep playing the latest hit, a Euro-pop track called Bad Russians. Clearly, though, Russians take their fishing more seriously than their dancing.
It is hard to believe that in that year, as DJ Wendon records, only five of Churchill's speeches were broadcast to the nation, for the prime minister's oratorical skills lay at the very heart of his mobilisation of the nation.