1. To jump lightly; SYN. skip, hop-skip.
2. To make a jump forward or upward.
3. To move quickly from one place to another.
4. To jump across.
5. To make a quick trip esp. by air.
6. (Informal) To travel by means of an aircraft, bus, etc..
1. Bondir. Sauter ŕ pieds joints.
2. Franchir.
3. Passer. Sauter un obstacle.
4. Omettre. Sauter un paragraphe.
5. (Intrans.) Exploser. Une bonbonne de gaz qui saute.
Sur un seul pied (parce qu'on ne peut pas appuyer l'autre ou par jeu).
En gardant les pieds l'un contre l'autre.
Twining perennials having cordate leaves and flowers arranged in conelike spikes; SYN. hops.
The vine from which hops is obtained having 3- to 5-lobed leaves and inconspicuous flowers of which the pistillate ones are in glandular cone-shaped catkins
ETYM Old Eng. hoppe; akin to Dutch hop, hoppe, Old High Germ. hopfo, German hopfen; cf. Late Lat. hupa, W. hopez, Armor. houpez, and Icel. humall, SW. and Dan. humle.
1. An informal dance where popular music is played; SYN. record hop.
2. The act of hopping (jumping upward or forward, especially on one foot).
In data communications, one segment of the path between routers on a geographically dispersed network. A hop is comparable to one “leg” of a journey that includes intervening stops between the starting point and the destination. The distance between each of those stops (routers) would be a communications hop.