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 hop [hɒp]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 单脚跳, 跳跃, 舞会, 飞行

vi. 单脚跳, 跳跃

vt. 跃过, 跳上, 加蛇麻子于, 服麻醉药

[计] 跳跃式传输

[化] 酒花; 啤酒花; 蛇麻花; 忽布

[医] 高氧压




    hop
    hopped, hopping
    [ noun ]
    1. the act of hopping; jumping upward or forward (especially on one foot)

    2. <noun.act>
    3. twining perennials having cordate leaves and flowers arranged in conelike spikes; the dried flowers of this plant are used in brewing to add the characteristic bitter taste to beer

    4. <noun.plant>
    5. an informal dance where popular music is played

    6. <noun.event>
    [ verb ]
    1. jump lightly

    2. <verb.motion> hop-skip skip
    3. move quickly from one place to another

    4. <verb.motion>
    5. travel by means of an aircraft, bus, etc.

    6. <verb.motion>
      She hopped a train to Chicago
      He hopped rides all over the country
    7. traverse as if by a short airplane trip

    8. <verb.motion>
      Hop the Pacific Ocean
    9. jump across

    10. <verb.motion>
      He hopped the bush
    11. make a jump forward or upward

    12. <verb.motion>


    Hop \Hop\, v. t.
    To impregnate with hops. --Mortimer.


    Hop \Hop\, n.
    1. A leap on one leg, as of a boy; a leap, as of a toad; a
    jump; a spring.

    2. A dance; esp., an informal dance of ball. [Colloq.]

    {Hop, skip and jump}, {Hop, step and a jump} or {Hop, step
    and jump},

    1. a game or athletic sport in which the participants cover
    as much ground as possible by a hop, stride, and jump in
    succession.

    2. a short distance. --Addison.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]


    Hop \Hop\, v. i.
    To gather hops.

    Usage: [Perhaps only in the form {Hopping}, vb. n.]


    Hop \Hop\, n. [OE. hoppe; akin to D. hop, hoppe, OHG. hopfo, G.
    hopfen; cf. LL. hupa, W. hopez, Armor. houpez, and Icel.
    humall, SW. & Dan. humle.]
    1. (Bot.) A climbing plant ({Humulus Lupulus}), having a
    long, twining, annual stalk. It is cultivated for its
    fruit (hops).

    2. The catkin or strobilaceous fruit of the hop, much used in
    brewing to give a bitter taste.

    3. The fruit of the dog-rose. See {Hip}.

    {Hop back}. (Brewing) See under 1st {Back}.

    {Hop clover} (Bot.), a species of yellow clover having heads
    like hops in miniature ({Trifolium agrarium}, and
    {Trifolium procumbens}).

    {Hop flea} (Zo["o]l.), a small flea beetle ({Haltica
    concinna}), very injurious to hops.

    {Hop fly} (Zo["o]l.), an aphid ({Phorodon humuli}), very
    injurious to hop vines.

    {Hop froth fly} (Zo["o]l.), an hemipterous insect
    ({Aphrophora interrupta}), allied to the cockoo spits. It
    often does great damage to hop vines.

    {Hop hornbeam} (Bot.), an American tree of the genus {Ostrya}
    ({Ostrya Virginica}) the American ironwood; also, a
    European species ({Ostrya vulgaris}).

    {Hop moth} (Zo["o]l.), a moth ({Hypena humuli}), which in the
    larval state is very injurious to hop vines.

    {Hop picker}, one who picks hops.

    {Hop pole}, a pole used to support hop vines.

    {Hop tree} (Bot.), a small American tree ({Ptelia
    trifoliata}), having broad, flattened fruit in large
    clusters, sometimes used as a substitute for hops.

    {Hop vine} (Bot.), the climbing vine or stalk of the hop.


    Hop \Hop\ (h[o^]p), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Hopped} (h[o^]pt); p.
    pr. & vb. n. {Hopping} (h[o^]p"p[i^]ng).] [OE. hoppen to hop,
    leap, dance, AS. hoppian; akin to Icel. & Sw. hoppa, Dan.
    hoppe, D. huppelen, G. h["u]pfen.]
    1. To move by successive leaps, as toads do; to spring or
    jump on one foot; to skip, as birds do.

    [Birds] hopping from spray to spray. --Dryden.

    2. To walk lame; to limp; to halt. --Dryden.

    3. To dance. --Smollett.

    Hip \Hip\, n. [OE. hepe, AS. he['o]pe; cf. OHG. hiufo a bramble
    bush.] (Bot.)
    The fruit of a rosebush, especially of the English dog-rose
    ({Rosa canina}); called also {rose hip}. [Written also {hop},
    {hep}.]

    {Hip tree} (Bot.), the dog-rose.

    1. They all hop into their cars And drive off for a thrill, Gathering on highways Where, together, they stand still.
    2. "I know a doctor who likes to be able to hop in a plane and fly whenever he wants," says Gerald Walton, an FAA official who until recently was the tower manager at Burbank.
    3. If the profession is not to be caught on the hop again, it should look forward to the changed needs for audit at, say, the turn of the century.
    4. His serve is big, and every now and then you get a funny hop on the serve, and then he comes in and hits some decent volleys."
    5. In the past, when he emerged from the water, Mr. MacLaren had to hop up the beach on his good leg to where his bicycle was waiting.
    6. "Over the short term there's going to be a sense of urgency among many portfolio managers to hop aboard and ride this up."
    7. It even has to ring for an elevator, hop aboard and select the correct floor.
    8. July 13 Watertown (Wis.) Daily Times on napping pilots: A federal government study concludes that an occasional in-flight nap helps pilots to cope with the tensions of landing after a long hop.
    9. True, he caught financial markets on the hop with his decision to nudge short-term US interest rates upwards by a quarter percentage point in February.
    10. The festival lasts longer; because of the timing and the frequency of the performances customers hop from restaurant to restaurant as well as from event to event; corporate entertaining is rife. But the unique ingredient, he added, is the atmosphere.
    11. The much lower taxes on spirits and wine in France will encourage more people to hop on a ferry to buy their drinks across the Channel. 'From January next year they will be allowed to bring back nine cases of wine and a case of spirits.
    12. They polish off the bottles themselves, then hop in the front seats and drive around the plaza, blowing their horns.
    13. Another cage is lowered and I hop in with Carl and George.
    14. Just a short hop from the US in a yacht, the Abacos are very popular as a sailing destination.
    15. Hooked I'm addicted to "how-to" books; From one to another I hop.
    16. The 67-year-old will gladly hop off his bike to pose for a photo or stop for a chat.
    17. Contestants have been known before to hop states in the pageants that lead to Miss America.
    18. Some investors are tempted to hop in and "play the spread."
    19. She reveals that the former leader of the world's second-largest economy used to hop out of his bath and, dressed only in his underwear, simultaneously dance and hum sections of "Swan Lake."
    20. But he made the leap, and others in Japan are making it, too: One survey of recent college graduates suggests 60% might job hop.
    21. She isn't oblivious to the "glamour" they had to offer, but she also recognizes that a great many people enjoyed doing the bunny hop and stuffing their faces in those heady days of pre-cholesterol consciousness.
    22. "One other possibility would have been for them to go out the keeper's entrance, but they'd have to hop a 3-foot wall, walk around and jump another 3-foot wall," Dancho said.
    23. Getting there took a ride in a puttering outboard with a studiedly silent lobster fisherman and then a hop by local sailboat, but it was worth it.
    24. Of course Romanian is just a hop, skip and a jump from Italian," she adds.
    25. "He knows that if he says anything specific, the market's going to hop on it."
    26. We had been going to pop down Madison Avenue, nip over to Penn Station, take a train to New London and hop on a ferry. But our friend Jonathan is like that.
    27. Polish has more brass, more of a hop," Petovsek said. "Bohemian has more brass, and German is more oom pah pah _ they'll have tubas, baritones and trumpets.
    28. But some firms question the value of wellness efforts, contending that workers job hop so often that employers who invest in long-term health won't reap the benefits.
    29. I can hop on the plane and get out of there, go home.
    30. The chance to swim with a pod of dolphins and even hop a ride on a passing dorsal fin has tourists lining up at attractions in the Florida Keys, but some environmental activists worry the animals will be exploited.
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