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jump off

/juhmp/US // dʒʌmp //UK // (dʒʌmp) //

跳下来,跳下来的,跳下来的人,跃跃欲试

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to spring clear of the ground or other support by a sudden muscular effort; leap: to jump into the air; to jump out a window.
    • : to rise suddenly or quickly: He jumped from his seat when she entered.
    • : to move or jerk suddenly, as from surprise or shock: He jumped when the firecracker exploded.
    • : to obey quickly and energetically; hustle: The waiter was told to jump when the captain signaled.
    • : Informal. to be full of activity; bustle: The whole town is jumping with excitement.
    • : to start a campaign, program, military attack, etc.; launch an activity, especially of major proportions: The march jumped off early in the morning.
    • : Checkers. to move from one side of an opponent's piece to a vacant square on the opposite side, thus capturing the opponent's piece.
    • : to rise suddenly in amount, price, etc.: Costs jumped again this quarter.
    • : to pass abruptly, ignoring intervening steps or deliberation: to jump to a conclusion.
    • : to change abruptly: The traffic light jumped from green to red.
    • : to move or change suddenly, haphazardly, aimlessly, or after a short period: He jumped from job to job.
    • : to pass or go aimlessly: He jumped from one thing to another without being able to concentrate on anything.
    • : to omit letters, numbers, etc.; skip: This typewriter jumps and needs repairing.
    • : to parachute from an airplane.
    • : to take eagerly; seize: He jumped at the offer of a free trip.
    • : to enter into something with vigor: She jumped into the discussion right away.
    • : to advance rapidly from one level to another, especially in rank; pass through or skip intermediate stages in a forward or upward progression: He jumped from clerk to general manager in a year.
    • : Movies. to fail to line up properly with the preceding or following frames because of a mechanical fault in the camera or projector.
    • : Bridge. to make a jump bid: She jumped from three clubs to four spades.
    • : Journalism. to continue on a subsequent page, following intervening copy.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to leap or spring over: to jump a narrow stream.
    • : to cause to leap: She jumped the horse over the fence.
    • : to skip or pass over; bypass: to jump the third grade in school.
    • : to elevate or advance, especially in rank, by causing to skip or pass rapidly through intermediate stages: The boss jumped his son from mail clerk to plant manager.
    • : to move past or start before; anticipate: One car jumped the red light and collided with a truck.
    • : to increase sharply: The store jumped its prices.
    • : Checkers. to capture by leaping over.
    • : to attack or pounce upon without warning, as from ambush: The thugs jumped him in a dark alley.
    • : Bridge. to raise by more than necessary to reach the next bidding level, especially as a signal to one's partner.
    • : Informal. to abscond from; leave: The robbers jumped town.to flee or escape from.
    • : to seize or occupy illegally or forcibly, as on the ground of some flaw in the holder's title.
    • : to spring off or leave.
    • : to get on board quickly or with little planning or preparation for the trip: He jumped a plane for Chicago.
    • : Journalism. to continue from one page to another over intervening copy.
    • : Metalworking. to thicken by striking the end; upset.
    • : Slang: Vulgar. to engage in an act of sexual intercourse with.
    • : to connect to a live battery by attaching booster cables between the respective terminals.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an act or instance of jumping; leap.
    • : a space, obstacle, apparatus, or the like, cleared or to be cleared in a leap.
    • : a short or hurried journey.
    • : a descent by parachute from an airplane.
    • : a sudden rise in amount, price, etc.: a considerable jump in the stock market.
    • : a sudden upward or other movement of an inanimate object.
    • : an abrupt transition from one point or thing to another, with omission of what intervenes: The speaker made an unexplained jump in topic.
    • : a move or one of a series of moves: The gangster stayed one jump ahead of the police.
    • : Sports. any of several contests that feature a leap or jump.Compare broad jump, high jump.
    • : Movies. a break in the continuity of action due to a failure to match the action of one frame with the following one of the same scene.
    • : a sudden start as from nervous excitement: He gave a jump when the firecracker went off.
    • : Checkers. the act of taking an opponent's piece by leaping over it to an unoccupied square.
    • : the jumps, Informal. restlessness; nervousness; anxiety: Long trips in trains and planes give me the jumps.
    • : Also called breakover. Journalism. the part of a story continued on another page.
    • : Mathematics. the difference in limit values at a jump discontinuity of a given function.
    • : Automotive. jump-start.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : Jazz. of, relating to, or characteristic of swing.of, relating to, or characteristic of jazz; played at a bright tempo.
adv.副词 adverb
  1. 1
    • : Obsolete. exactly; precisely.
  1. 1
    • : jump on, to blame or rebuke; reprimand: He'll jump on anyone who contradicts him.

Phrases

  • jump all over someone
  • jump at
  • jump bail
  • jump down someone's throat
  • jump in
  • jump on
  • jump out of one's skin
  • jump the gun
  • jump the track
  • jump through hoops
  • jump to a conclusion
  • get the drop (jump) on
  • go fly a kite (jump in the lake)
  • hop, skip and a jump
  • not know which way to jump
  • one jump ahead of
  • skip (jump) bail

Synonyms & Antonyms

as instart

Examples

  • For a lot of those posting fitness content, this means showing off how much they can bench press, how far they can jump, or how spectacular their backflip is.

  • Days later, France recorded a jump of 10,000 new cases in one day.

  • Sticking with iOS, swipe up from the bottom of the screen and hold to see apps you’ve used recently—browse through them or tap on one to jump right to it.

  • TikTok’s proprietary algorithm has been called its “secret sauce” and is one reason why companies have jumped at the chance to buy the app’s US operations.

  • The Sparks have more players who can beat you than any other team, and their role players — like pogo-stick-with-a-jump-shot Brittney Sykes and ageless Seimone Augustus — know precisely what play is necessary in a key moment.

  • The collection includes kimono capes and hand woven jump overalls.

  • In August 1984, I arrived at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, eager to jump into college life.

  • Why not finish hard on a cliffhanger and the next one just jump straight back in?

  • Would I like to tell half the people I work with to go jump off a cliff?

  • Her new friends jump to her defense and loudly tell the clerk to back off.

  • The sound of my step shall make your heart jump; a look from me shall make you dumb for an hour.

  • We haven't even seen a review of the piece; the footlights go up with a jump, and now the curtain rises.

  • And it did not take Squinty long to learn to jump the rope when there was no apple on the other side.

  • It'll be beastly dull for her at The Warren, you see, poor girl; and she doesn't seem to jump at Spunyarn, though he does hang on.

  • And it is quite true that the particular employer can no more break away from these limits than he can jump out of his own skin.