23 adjectives to describe hopping

" Kitty Grant gave a little hop, skip, and jump here, to Laura's astonishment.

Be careful not to exaggerate the slight hop at the first and third beats of each bar; and to slide the foot gracefully forward, not merely to make a step, as some bad dancers do.

Having completed four steps, first with the left foot, and then with the right, you come to the second part, which consists of a series of double hops, two on each foot alternately.

2.This is made in the same manner as the preceding, with this exception, that one fourth of a cup of loose hops tied in a clean muslin bag, is boiled in the water for five minutes before pouring it into the potato and flour mixture.

After dinner Ted rushed off again to the telegraph office which he had been haunting all the afternoon to see if any word had come from his brother, and Doctor Holiday went on up to the campus to escort his niece to the informal hop.

Well, anyhow, advancing; Aunt Alice bending from the hips, And Bill in little runs and trips, And John with frequent hops and skips, While I was fairly dancing.

Spanning the Pacific; or, A nonstop hop to Japan.

He has made his brother (who, as well as himself, used to retail hops in the streets of St. Pol,) a General; and in order to deliver him from rivals and critics, he breaks, suspends, arrests, and sends to the Guillotine every officer of any merit that comes in his way.

The tea was made of the native hops, which out on the ranges grew; Twas sweetened with honey bees and wax for the stringy-bark cockatoo.

HOP YEAST.Put half a cup of loose hops, or an eighth of an ounce of the pressed hops (put up by the Shakers and sold by druggists), into a granite-ware kettle; pour over it a quart of boiling water, and simmer about five minutes.

The third ball was a slow long hop, and hit the road at about the same spot where the first had landed.

THE TURKEY [Watching CHANTECLER as by a series of stately hops he comes down a pile of hay.]

thick coming, many more, more than one can tell, a world of; no end of, no end to; cum multis aliis [Lat.]; thick as hops, thick as hail; plenty as blackberries; numerous as the stars in the firmament, numerous as the sands on the seashore, numerous as the hairs on the head; and what not, and heaven knows what; endless &c (infinite) 105.

[At sight of a small OWL dropping from a bough, and coming forward with tiny hops.]

He found a brew pub where he sat at a corner table with a pint of ruby brown alecool and fresh, the malt veiled with lacy astringent hops.

Catch him!" cried Bawly, and Sammie gave three tremendous hops to catch Buddy.

The English beer of by-gone times underwent many vicissitudes, and it was long before our ancestors conquered their dislike to the bitter hop, after having been accustomed to a thick, sweet liquor of which the modern Kentish ale is in some measure a survival.

Inwardly taken Liquid fluid Wines; as of hellebore, bugloss, tamarisk, &c. Syrups of borage, bugloss, hops, epithyme, endive, succory, &c. or consisting.

The crooked leaps, the clumsy hops, Nor for appearance careth. FIDDLER To take each other's life, I trow, Would cordially delight them!

She presented them collectively, and the eldest of them charmingly reminded Lanfear that he had once had the magnanimity to dance with her when she sat, in a little girl's forlorn despair of being danced with, at one of those desolate hops of the good old Osprey House.

" It was a particularly gay and pleasant hop.

He found a brew pub where he sat at a corner table with a pint of ruby brown alecool and fresh, the malt veiled with lacy astringent hops.

He descended from the floor of the veranda with a stiff-legged hop and took Bull by the arm, leading him down the street.

23 adjectives to describe  hopping