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dobjection
saltó

Oxford Spanish Dictionary

jumped-up [ingl. am. ˈˌdʒəmp ˈtəp, ingl. brit.] ADJ. ingl. brit. atrbv.

I. jump [ingl. am. dʒəmp, ingl. brit. dʒʌmp] V. intr.

1.1. jump (leap):

1.2. jump (move quickly):

he jumped up from his seat
I jumped out of bed
to jump at sth she jumped at the offer
to jump on sb/sth
abalanzarse sobre alguien/algo

2.1. jump (change, skip):

2.2. jump (increase, advance suddenly):

3.1. jump (jerk):

3.2. jump (in alarm):

4. jump (be lively) coloq.:

II. jump [ingl. am. dʒəmp, ingl. brit. dʒʌmp] V. trans.

1.1. jump (leap over):

jump stream/hurdle
jump stream/hurdle
brincar Méx.
jump counter/piece JUEGOS
to jump rope ingl. am.
to jump rope ingl. am.
to jump rope ingl. am.
saltar (al) lazo Col.
to jump rope ingl. am.
to jump rope ingl. am.

1.2. jump (cause to leap):

2.1. jump (spring out of):

jump rails/tracks

2.2. jump (disregard):

to jump the line or ingl. brit. queue

3. jump (run away) coloq.:

4. jump (ambush, attack):

jump coloq.
jump coloq.

5.1. jump ingl. am. (catch):

jump coloq. bus/plane
agarrar coloq.
jump esp Esp.

5.2. jump coloq. ingl. am. (without paying fare):

he jumped the train

III. jump [ingl. am. dʒəmp, ingl. brit. dʒʌmp] SUST.

1.1. jump (leap):

go (and) take a running jump! coloq.

1.2. jump (fence):

2.1. jump (sudden transition):

2.2. jump (increase, advance):

ski jump [ingl. am. ˈski ˌdʒəmp, ingl. brit.] SUST.

1. ski jump (ramp):

2. ski jump (action):

triple jump SUST.

water jump SUST.

high jump SUST.

salto m alto amer.

parachute jump SUST.

jump out V. [ingl. am. dʒəmp -, ingl. brit. dʒʌmp -] (v + adv)

1. jump out (from plane):

2. jump out (from car):

3. jump out (be striking):

jump off V. [ingl. am. dʒəmp -, ingl. brit. dʒʌmp -] (v + adv)

1. jump off (in showjumping):

2. jump off (get started):

jump off ingl. am.

jump cut [ingl. am. ˈdʒəmp ˌkət, ingl. brit. ˈdʒʌmpkʌt] SUST.

jump cut CINE, TV

en el diccionario PONS

jumped-up [ˌdʒʌmptˈʌp] ADJ. ingl. brit. coloq.

jumped-up

I. jump [dʒʌmp] V. intr.

1. jump (leap):

to jump up and down with frustration ingl. austr., ingl. brit.

2. jump (skip):

3. jump (jerk):

4. jump (increase suddenly):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

go jump in the lake! coloq.

II. jump [dʒʌmp] V. trans.

1. jump (leap across or over):

2. jump (attack):

3. jump (disregard):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

III. jump [dʒʌmp] SUST.

1. jump (leap):

2. jump (hurdle):

long jump SUST. sin pl.

salto m largo amer.

jump jet SUST.

jump down V. intr.

jump at V. trans.

jump at opportunity
jump at offer

jump about V. intr.

jump in V. intr.

parachute jump SUST.

jump suit SUST.

en el diccionario PONS

I. jump [dʒʌmp] V. intr.

1. jump (leap):

2. jump (skip):

3. jump (jerk):

4. jump (increase suddenly):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

go jump in the lake! coloq.

II. jump [dʒʌmp] V. trans.

1. jump (leap across or over):

2. jump (attack):

3. jump (disregard):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

III. jump [dʒʌmp] SUST.

1. jump (leap):

2. jump (hurdle):

no-jump [ˌnoʊ·ˈdʒʌmp] SUST. DEP.

jump up V. intr.

long jump SUST.

salto m largo amer.

triple jump SUST.

ski jump SUST.

1. ski jump (jump):

2. ski jump (runway):

parachute jump SUST.

jump about V. intr.

jump at V. trans.

jump at an opportunity
jump at an offer

jump down V. intr.

Present
Ijump
youjump
he/she/itjumps
wejump
youjump
theyjump
Past
Ijumped
youjumped
he/she/itjumped
wejumped
youjumped
theyjumped
Present Perfect
Ihavejumped
youhavejumped
he/she/ithasjumped
wehavejumped
youhavejumped
theyhavejumped
Past Perfect
Ihadjumped
youhadjumped
he/she/ithadjumped
wehadjumped
youhadjumped
theyhadjumped

PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

He was able not only to talk but also to jump up and down on the nails.
en.wikipedia.org
In time with the music, the lava would begin to jump up, as fountains narrowly avoided splashing riders.
en.wikipedia.org
A saltating grain may hit other grains that jump up to continue the saltation.
en.wikipedia.org
He endevoured, in boyish strife, to jump up and touch.
en.wikipedia.org
The competitor must jump up and latch onto a bar.
en.wikipedia.org