0 to (cause to) go quickly off the ground with a springing movement -- hoppe; springe
1 to rise; to move quickly (upwards) -- springe
She jumped to her feet
He jumped into the car.
2 to make a startled movement -- fare sammen
The noise made me jump.
3 to pass over (a gap etc) by bounding -- springe over; hoppe over
4 an act of jumping -- spring; hop
She crossed the stream in one jump.
5 an obstacle to be jumped over -- forhindring
6 a jumping competition -- -spring
the high jump.
7 a startled movement -- faren sammen
8 a sudden rise, eg in prices -- stigning
There has been a jump in the price of potatoes.
With the return to peacetime discourse, interest in the scientific approach jumped sharply.
The star performer, as for several years past, was polypropylene, which jumped from under 3.1m tonnes in 1989 to over 3.3m tonnes last year.
Suddenly, they both jumped up, pulled off their remaining cotton restrictions and plunged straight into the water.
As already noted the rate of net foreign investment first jumped to significant levels in the 1850s and 1860s.
The shepherds in turn sit and admire the lovely jumps of the satyrs.
The initial adjustments reflect jumps in the state variables, and have to be accounted for separately.
We note that since, the equation for oxygen tension, is quasi-steady, small jumps in the oxygen tension may appear between consecutive timesteps.
Slippage was readily evident as sporadic jumps in strain during testing.
中文繁体
在空中, 跳,躍, 跳躍…
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在空中, 跳,跃, 跳跃…
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saltar, hacer un movimiento repentino, sobresaltarse…
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saltar, pular, entrar/sair rapidamente…
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~が飛び跳ねる, 飛び越える, 急に動く…
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hoplamak, zıplamak, sıçramak…
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sauter, sursauter, monter…
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saltar, fer un moviment sobtat, sobresaltar-se…
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