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  1. Mar 31, 2019 · 3. You “jump off“ of (=from) a surface, so ‘jump off of the rock’ and ‘jump off the rock’ are both grammatical, the former is more common in speech but the latter sounds better and less redundant to my ears. The following guidance is off of Wiktionary. The use of off of as a preposition is now considered tautological or incorrect by ...

  2. Dec 26, 2015 · 10. I think both would be fine. However, "jump over" usually carries a literal meaning, where you jump over a physical object (like a fence or a turnstile or a dog). On the other hand, "jump" without a preposition usually implies a non-literal meaning: "jump the queue" would mean skipping the queue in some way - no physical jumping involved.

  3. Oct 19, 2018 · In the first exercise they expect you to use "jump". The responses say "We will be doing it ...", and 'it' requires a singular antecedent, hence "jump". It's quite common actually to regard it as a group activity and use the singular. In the second one, they're using "jump" as a verb so "will be jumping" is the future continuous tense of the ...

  4. Mar 16, 2012 · British English. Mar 16, 2012. #2. People hop on one leg. They jump with two legs. However, rabbits, when they run, do not actually jump, so 'hop' is not wrong when you're speaking of rabbits. 'Jump' also implies that you put some distance between yourself and the ground. So frogs and fleas actually jump.

  5. Skydivers jump, and people would surmise that they jump "out and down". A frog's jumping includes "up", but the important motion is forward. In typical spoken language, people don't add a directional term to "jump" unless it is important to the context and the meaning would not be clear without it.

  6. Oct 28, 2022 · To hop is to jump using one leg whilst jumping uses both legs. But since it is unlikely that you would do either when boarding a train or a bus, it is always understood that you mean is that you are getting into the vehicle to go somewhere. Thanks a lot, Peter. Please, allow me to ask a question a little out of context.

  7. Dec 17, 2017 · jump out of means to leap from a place which is understood to be (or to belong to) an enclosure of some kind. He jumped out of the wagon. He jumped out of the car. He jumped out of the window. to jump off means to leap from a place which is understood to be a platform of some kind. He jumped off the dock. He jumped off the diving board.

  8. Oct 28, 2016 · The phrase "jump in the air" seems to stand out as something unusual. One is not jumping into the tank with some specific air, but instead is just jumping upwards, whatever air one meets there is quite irrelevant and unknown. I have read this, which was very helpful, but i don't believe is relevant in this example. Would one consider "jump in ...

  9. 3. The phrase jump in is used as a phrasal verb here. It means... jump in (ph.v.) - to start to do something very quickly without spending a long time thinking first. This means, if you want to know how great a software development framework works and performs, have no second thought, start using it right now. Nice, as always.

  10. "Jump you" Is a slang term, and it essentially means the same thing as "Ambush", or to attack a person when they weren't expecting to be attacked. It is frequently used when someone attacks you to steal something. Source "Jump at you" is not as much of a slang word. It means to jump in your direction. However, even though it's not a slang word ...

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