lope

listen to the pronunciation of lope
Englisch - Englisch
To jump, leap

And as he cam by a ryver, in hys woodnes he wolde have made hys horse to have lopyn over the watir; and the horse fayled footyng and felle in the ryver .

To travel an easy pace with long strides

He loped along, hour after hour, not fast but steady and covering much ground.

A horse's easy gait, consisting of long running strides or leaps. A lope resembles a canter
Lens built into a small stand Used to inspect copy, film, proofs, plates and printing Also called glass and linen tester
If a person or animal lopes somewhere, they run in an easy and relaxed way, taking long steps. He was loping across the sand toward Nancy Matty saw him go loping off, running low. + loping lop·ing She turned and walked away with long, loping steps. to run easily with long steps lope along/across/up etc (hlaupa )
A horses easy gait, consisting of long running strides or leaps. A lope resembles a canter
a smooth 3-beat gait; between a trot and a gallop
An easy gait, consisting of long running strides or leaps
of Leap
a slow pace of running
{f} move with a fast relaxed stride; canter (like a horse)
This is a slow Canter, used mostly in Western disciplines
To leap; to dance
run easily
Large ORU Protective Enclosure
The lope has the same basic movements as the canter, but in the lope the inside rear and outside front feet hit separately creating a four beat gait The lope is a broken four beat gait that is common to all horses The lope is a faster gait than the canter The lope is like a slow gallop The lope a horse moves with a low flat motion and has some rocking motion In a lope each foot touches the ground one at a time, and the horse is not supported at all a part on each stride
Slow western canter
{i} canter, easy gallop; fast loose stride
To move with a lope, as a horse
A leap; a long step
Lope de Vega
v. in full Lope Félix de Vega Carpio born Nov. 25, 1562, Madrid, Spain died Aug. 27, 1635, Madrid Spanish playwright, the outstanding dramatist of the Spanish Golden Age. After serving with the Spanish Armada, he lived in Madrid, serving as secretary to a series of nobles, including the duke of Sessa (from 1605). Called the "Phoenix of Spain," the phenomenally prolific Vega wrote as many as 1,800 plays, of which 431 survive, and established the comedia (tragicomic social drama), which typified the new Golden Age drama. He wrote two major types of drama, both Spanish in setting: the historical play based on a national legend (e.g., Peribáñez and The King, the Greatest Alcalde) and the "cloak-and-sword" drama of contemporary manners and intrigue, which turned on some "point of honour" (e.g., The Gardener's Dog). He established the comic character, or gracioso, as a commentator on the follies of his social superiors. All Citizens Are Soldiers is his best-known work outside Spain. He also wrote 21 volumes of nondramatic works in verse and prose, including The New Art of Writing Plays (1609)
Lope de Vega
{i} (1562-1635) Spanish playwright and poet
lope

    Türkische aussprache

    lōp

    Synonyme

    bound, canter, gallop, run, trot

    Aussprache

    /ˈlōp/ /ˈloʊp/

    Etymologie

    [ 'lOp ] (noun.) 1809. Alteration of loup, from Old Norse hlaupa (“to leap, jump”)“” in the Online Etymology Dictionary, Douglas Harper, 2001. See leap. Cognate with German laufen (“walk, run”), Danish løbe, Dutch lopen (“walk, run”), Norwegian løpe (“run”). Compare leap.

    Tempora

    lopes, loping, loped
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