THESE five dancers haven't just wowed Sky1's Got To Dance judges, their jaw-dropping moves have inspired a new style.

Diversity's leading man Ashley Banjo was so impressed with Glasgow-based Mini Moves he labelled their style "bendy swag."

The group, all aged 10 and 11, are the latest in a line of acts from Glasgow to make the grade on the TV dance contest hosted by Davina McCall.

Viewers can see Mini Moves audition before Banjo and his fellow judges, ex-Pussycat Doll Kimberly Wyatt and Aston Merrygold of JLS, this Sunday.

The girls – Holly McPherson from Clydebank, Cara Paton from Old Kilpatrick, Jay Carr from Paisley, Jo Dempsey from Stepps and Skye Seager from Partick – rehearse four times a week in Laurie- ston.

Their audition is a pop-based commercial rout-ine to Beyonce's Crazy In Love.

Skye, 11, said: "It was a really good experience performing in front of the cameras.

"Ashley thought we were really bendy and that we had a lot of swagger, so he said if he could name that style of dance he would call it 'bendy swag'."

The girls were put together in March 2012 by Robert Hamilton of Dance-point Musical Theatre School.

The South Side school also produced The Box and Fear of the Unknown, which finished as runners-up of the same TV contest in 2010 and last year.

Another Dancepoint troupe, The Fusion, were in the semi-final of Britain's Got Talent in 2010.

Mini Moves, now competing for a £250,000 prize, were munchkins in Pavilion panto, The Wizard of Never Woz.

Founder and choreographer Robert Hamilton said: "I feel very proud that we've been so successful three times around.

"There's no fluke there, it's not a lucky streak. It's down to the hard work and the talent in the school."