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.
(20)
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
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.
(17)
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.
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.