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1 to hop on one leg
andar a la pata coja -
2 hop
I
1. hop past tense, past participle - hopped; verb1) ((of people) to jump on one leg: The children had a competition to see who could hop the farthest; He hopped about in pain when the hammer fell on his foot.) saltar a la pata coja2) ((of certain small birds, animals and insects) to jump on both or all legs: The sparrow/frog hopped across the lawn.) dar saltos, brincar3) (to jump: He hopped (over) the fence and ran away; He hopped out of bed.) saltar4) ((with in(to), out (of)) to get into or out of a car etc: The car stopped and the driver told the hikers to hop in; I'll hop out of the car at the next crossroads.) subir/bajar
2. noun1) (a short jump on one leg.) salto a la pata coja2) ((of certain small birds, animals and insects) a short jump on both or all legs: The sparrow crossed the lawn in a series of hops.) salto, brinco•- catch someone on the hop
- catch on the hop
- keep someone on the hop
- keep on the hop
II hop noun(a climbing plant, the bitter fruits of which (hops) are used in brewing beer.)hop1 n salto / salto a la pata cojahop2 vb1. andar a la pata cojaher right foot hurt so she had to hop le dolía el pie derecho así que tenía que andar a la pata coja2. dar saltitostr[hɒp]1 (plant) lúpulo————————tr[hɒp]1 salto, brinco3 SMALLAVIATION/SMALL familiar vuelo corto1 saltar, dar brincos, dar saltos2 SMALLAVIATION/SMALL cruzar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be on the hop familiar estar muy atareado,-ato hop on one leg andar a la pata cojato hop on the busain familiar subirse al autobúsenhop n1) leap: salto m, brinco m2) flight: vuelo m corto3) : lúpulo m (planta)n.• brinco s.m.• hombrecillo s.m.• lúpulo s.m.• salto s.m.v.• atravesar de un salto v.• brincar v.• saltar v.hɑːp, hɒp
I
1)a) ( jump - of person) salto m a la pata coja, brinco m de cojito (Méx); (- of rabbit) salto m, brinco m; (- of bird) saltito mto catch somebody on the hop — (BrE colloq) pillar or (esp Esp) coger* a alguien desprevenido or descuidado
b) ( Aviat)2) ( dance) (colloq & dated) baile m, bailongo m (fam)3) (Bot, Culin) (usu pl) lúpulo m
II
1.
- pp- intransitive verba) \<\<frog/rabbit\>\> brincar*, saltar; \<\<bird\>\> dar* saltitosb) \<\<person/child\>\> saltar a la pata coja or con un solo pie, brincar* de cojito (Méx)c) ( move quickly) (colloq)hop in, I'll take you to the station — súbete, que te llevo a la estación
to hop off/on a train/bus — bajarse de/tomarse un tren/autobús
2.
vt1) (AmE colloq) \<\<flightain\>\> tomar, pillar (fam)2)to hop it — (BrE colloq)
hop it! — lárgate! (fam)
I [hɒp]1. N1) (=jump) salto m, brinco mhop, skip and jump — (Sport) triple salto m
- catch sb on the hopthe uncertainty should keep them on the hop — (Brit) * la incertidumbre los mantendrá en estado de alerta
2) † * (=dance) baile m3) (Aer) vuelo m corto2.VI [person, bird, animal] dar saltos, brincar (LAm)- be hopping mad3.VTto hop it — (Brit) * largarse *
hop it! — ¡lárgate! *
- hop off- hop on- hop out
II [hɒp]1.N (Bot) (also: hops) lúpulo m2.CPDhop picking N — recolección f del lúpulo
* * *[hɑːp, hɒp]
I
1)a) ( jump - of person) salto m a la pata coja, brinco m de cojito (Méx); (- of rabbit) salto m, brinco m; (- of bird) saltito mto catch somebody on the hop — (BrE colloq) pillar or (esp Esp) coger* a alguien desprevenido or descuidado
b) ( Aviat)2) ( dance) (colloq & dated) baile m, bailongo m (fam)3) (Bot, Culin) (usu pl) lúpulo m
II
1.
- pp- intransitive verba) \<\<frog/rabbit\>\> brincar*, saltar; \<\<bird\>\> dar* saltitosb) \<\<person/child\>\> saltar a la pata coja or con un solo pie, brincar* de cojito (Méx)c) ( move quickly) (colloq)hop in, I'll take you to the station — súbete, que te llevo a la estación
to hop off/on a train/bus — bajarse de/tomarse un tren/autobús
2.
vt1) (AmE colloq) \<\<flight/train\>\> tomar, pillar (fam)2)to hop it — (BrE colloq)
hop it! — lárgate! (fam)
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3 hop
s.1 salto, brinco (jump); vuelo corto (familiar) (on plane); baile (familiar) (dance)2 lúpulo.3 conexión intermedia.vt.hop it! ¡lárgate!2 brincar, saltar a la pata coja, saltar, brincar de cojito.vi.saltar, brincar (jump); saltar con o (on one leg)en un pie, saltar a la pata coja (Am.) (pt & pp hopped) -
4 pata
pata sustantivo femenino 1 (Zool)◊ las patas delanterasaseras the front/hind legs(— de ave) foot 2 ( de persona) (fam & hum) ( pierna) leg; ( pie) (AmL) foot; a pata (fam & hum) on foot;◊ estirar la pata (fam) to kick the bucket (colloq);meter la pata (fam) to put one's foot in it (colloq); patas (para) arriba (fam) upside down; saltar a (la) pata coja to hop; tener pata (AmL fam) to have contacts; See Also→ malo 1 a 3 ( de mueble) leg ■ sustantivo masculino (Per fam)
pata sustantivo femenino
1 leg: el caballo se rompió la pata delantera, the horse broke its foreleg
2 (suerte) buena/mala pata, good/bad luck
3 (arrugas) patas de gallo, crow's feet Locuciones: estirar la pata, to kick the bucket
ir a la pata coja, to hop
meter la pata, to put one's foot in it
patas arriba, (desordenado) in a mess ' pata' also found in these entries: Spanish: banco - colarse - estirar - estropear - impresionante - metedura - molesta - molesto - nada - palo - patinar - patinazo - resbalar - resbalón - cojo - embarrada - malo - metedura de pata - metida de pata - plancha - tener - trasero English: blunder - boo-boo - boob - brick - bucket - bungle - clanger - flub - foot - goof - hop - hounds-tooth - leg - lucky - paw - put - slip-up - stuck-up - table leg - trip up - unstuck - wooden - chum - drum - faux pas - foreleg - gaffe
См. также в других словарях:
Hop — or hops may refer to:* Hop, a kind of small jump, especially using only one leg * Hop (plant), a genus of climbing flowering plants * Hops, the female flower clusters of one species of hop, used primarily as a flavouring and stability agent in… … Wikipedia
Hop — Hop, n. 1. A leap on one leg, as of a boy; a leap, as of a toad; a jump; a spring. [1913 Webster] 2. A dance; esp., an informal dance of ball. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] {Hop, skip and jump}, {Hop, step and a jump} or {Hop, step and jump}, 1. a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hop skip and jump — Hop Hop, n. 1. A leap on one leg, as of a boy; a leap, as of a toad; a jump; a spring. [1913 Webster] 2. A dance; esp., an informal dance of ball. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] {Hop, skip and jump}, {Hop, step and a jump} or {Hop, step and jump}, 1. a … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hop step and a jump — Hop Hop, n. 1. A leap on one leg, as of a boy; a leap, as of a toad; a jump; a spring. [1913 Webster] 2. A dance; esp., an informal dance of ball. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] {Hop, skip and jump}, {Hop, step and a jump} or {Hop, step and jump}, 1. a … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hop step and jump — Hop Hop, n. 1. A leap on one leg, as of a boy; a leap, as of a toad; a jump; a spring. [1913 Webster] 2. A dance; esp., an informal dance of ball. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] {Hop, skip and jump}, {Hop, step and a jump} or {Hop, step and jump}, 1. a … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hop — [n/v] jump on one leg bounce, bound, caper, dance, hurdle, leap, lop, lope, skip, skitter, spring, step, trip, vault; concept 194 … New thesaurus
hop — I. verb (hopped; hopping) Etymology: Middle English hoppen, from Old English hoppian Date: before 12th century intransitive verb 1. to move by a quick springy leap or in a series of leaps; also to move as if by hopping < hop in the car > 2 … New Collegiate Dictionary
hop — 1. noun /hɒp,hɑp/ a) A short jump b) A jump on one leg. 2. verb /hɒp,hɑp/ a) To jump a short distance. When it had advanced from the wood, it hopped much after the fashion of a kangaroo, using its hind feet and tail to propel it, and when it … Wiktionary
hop — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. leap, spring; informal, dance. v. i. jump, leap, bounce, spring, bound, dance. See amusement. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A quick jump] Syn. spring, bounce, leap; see jump 1 . 2. [*A short flight] Syn.… … English dictionary for students
hop into bed — to copulate casually Usually on a first or single occasion and not propelling yourself on one leg only: How about hopping into bed? At half past four on a Sunday afternoon? (D. Francis, 1978) The American whore hopping is not brothel … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
hop — I. v. n. 1. Spring or leap on one leg or foot. 2. Leap, bound, jump, skip, spring, caper, frisk, frisk about. 3. Dance, trip. 4. Limp, halt, hobble, walk lame. II. n. 1. Leap, bound, jump, spring, skip, caper. 2 … New dictionary of synonyms