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hopping adjective [ ˈhɒpɪŋ ]

• very active or lively.
• "the delis do a hopping lunch business"

hop verb

• (of a person) move by jumping on one foot.
• "he hopped along beside her"
Similar: jump, bound, spring, bounce, skip, jig, trip, flit, leap, prance, caper, dance, frolic, gambol,
• pass quickly from one place to another.
• "she hopped over the Atlantic for a bit of shopping"
Similar: go, dash, rush, pop, whip, nip,
Origin: Old English hoppian, of Germanic origin; related to German dialect hopfen and German hopsen .

hop verb

• flavour with hops.
• "a strong dark beer, heavily hopped"
• be stimulated or intoxicated by or as if by a narcotic drug.
• "most muggers were hopped up on coke or angel dust"
Origin: late Middle English hoppe (in the sense ‘ripened hop cones for flavouring malt liquor’), from Middle Low German or Middle Dutch.

hopping mad

• extremely angry.



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