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).
1. Deo vremena u razvoju nečega;
2. Razvojni stepen, stupanj;
3. Period vremena za koji se nešto zbiva ili traje;
4. Period vojnog marša ili nastupanja u ratu;
5. Deo određenog rastojanja u sportskim utakmicama (fr.)
Stepen, stupanj, stepen razvitka; voj. konak, danište, postaja, drumska stanica, odmorište; dan marša; slagalište, spremište, skladište, magacin robe; dnevni obrok.
Plesna zabava, ples, bal, priredba.
Nagli odraz od tla, odraz u visinu ili daljinu.
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
[Humulus lupulus] Indistrijska biljka, služi za proizvodnju piva.
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.
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..