sekme, sıçrama

listen to the pronunciation of sekme, sıçrama
Turkish - English
{i} hop
the flowers of the hop plant, dried and used to brew beer etc
A climbing plant (Humulus Lupulus), having a long, twining, annual stalk
When birds and some small animals hop, they move along by jumping on both feet. A small brown fawn hopped across the trail in front of them. Hop is also a noun. The rabbit got up, took four hops and turned round
To jump a short distance
On the Internet, most data packets go through several routers to get to their final destination The more hops, the longer it takes to get where you're going Think of it as flying from Los Angeles to New York, with a stop in Chicago--that stops in Chicago would be a "hop " Back to Top
a short jump, a short journey
The link between two network nodes
(n ) A network connection between two distant nodes
{i} small jump, short leap; (Internet) one of many nodes in a computer network through which a message in transferred on its way from one point to another; twining vine related to the Mulberry with cone-shaped flowers that are used when dried in the beer-brewing process to give the beer a bitter taste
[Perhaps only in the form Hopping, vb
The fruit of the dog-rose
To dance
move quickly from one place to another
jump lightly make a jump forward or upward jump across; "He hopped the bush"
jump across; "He hopped the bush"
an informal dance where popular music is played
A jump into the air from one foot and landing on the same foot
In data communications, one segment of the path between routers on a geographically dispersed network A hop is comparable to one "leg" of a journey that includes intervening stops between the starting point and the destination The distance between each of those stops (routers) is a communications hop
In network routing, hops are a measure of the distance from source to destination In some contexts, the number of hops is the number of routers through which a packet must travel to reach its destination
sekme, sıçrama
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