jump
suomi-englanti sanakirjajump englannista suomeksi
säpsähdys, sätky, hypähdys
hypätä
heilahdella, hyppiä
herättää huomiota
hypähtää, hätkähtää
hypätä laskuvarjolla
suistua kiskoilta
nousu
laskuvarjohyppy
ponkaisu, hyppy
nousta nopeasti
hyppäyttää
harppaus
käynnistää kaapeleiden avulla
rynnätä
ponkaista
siirtymä
jump englanniksi
To propel oneself rapidly upward, downward and/or in any horizontal direction such that momentum causes the body to become airborne.
(ux)
(RQ:Shakespeare Winter's Tale)
To cause oneself to leave an elevated location and fall downward.
To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap.
To employ a parachute to leave an aircraft or elevated location.
To react to a sudden, often unexpected, stimulus (such as a sharp prick or a loud sound) by jerking the body violently.
To employ a move in certain games where one game piece is moved from one legal position to another passing over the position of another piece.
To move to a position (in a queue/line) that is further forward.
To pass (a light) when it is indicating that one should stop.
To attack suddenly and violently.
To engage in intercourse with (a person).
{{quote-text|en|year=1983|title=Big Chill (film)|The Big Chill
To cause to jump.
To move the distance between two opposing subjects.
To increase the height of a crane by inserting a section at the base of the tower and jacking up everything above it.
To expose to danger; to risk; to hazard.
(RQ:Shakespeare Coriolanus)
To join by a buttweld.
To jump-start a car or other vehicle with a dead battery, as with cables.
{{quote-book|en|year=2000|author=United States. Employees' Compensation Appeals Board|title=Decisions of the Employees' Compensation Appeals Board: Index digest|page=511
{{quote-book|en|date=2015-01-30|author=Robert M. Morgan; Janet Turner Parish; George Deitz|title=Handbook on Research in Relationship Marketing|publisher=Edward Elgar Publishing|isbn=9781783478637|page=250
To coincide; to agree; to accord; to tally; followed by ''with''.
(quote-book)
To start executing code from a different location, rather than following the counter.
To flee; to make one's escape.
(RQ:Locke Conduct)
(RQ:Shakespeare Antony and Cleopatra)
A dislocation in a stratum; a fault.
An abrupt interruption of level in a piece of brickwork or masonry.
An instance of causing oneself to fall from an elevated location.
An instance of employing a parachute to leave an aircraft or elevated location.
An instance of reacting to a sudden stimulus by jerking the body.
A button (of a joypad, joystick or similar device) used to make a game character jump (propel itself upwards).
An obstacle that forms part of a showjumping course, and that the horse has to jump over cleanly.
A discontinuity in the graph of a function, where the function is continuous in a interval of the discontinuity.
An abrupt increase in the height of the surface of a flowing liquid at the location where the flow transitions from supercritical to subcritical, involving an abrupt reduction in flow speed and increase in turbulence.
An instance of faster-than-light travel, not observable from ordinary space.
(short for)
(clipping of)
(synonym of)
{{quote-journal|en|journal=Billboard|date=23 December 1950|page=36
Exact; matched; fitting; precise.
{{quote-text|en|year=1640|author=Ben Jonson|title=An Execration Upon Vulcan
(RQ:Shakespeare Hamlet)
A kind of loose jacket for men.
to suicide by jumping from a building; to jump to one's death
to jump