释义 |
jumper
jump·er 1 J0079000 (jŭm′pər)n.1. One that jumps.2. A type of coasting sled.3. Electricity A short length of wire used temporarily to complete a circuit or to bypass a break in a circuit.4. Basketball See jump shot.5. A saddle horse that has been trained to jump over obstacles.
jump·er 2 J0079000 (jŭm′pər)n.1. A sleeveless dress or a skirt that has an attached bib and is worn over a blouse or sweater.2. A loose, protective garment worn over other clothes.3. often jumpers A child's garment consisting of straight-legged pants attached to a biblike bodice.4. Chiefly British A pullover sweater.5. See jumpsuit. [Probably from jump, short coat, perhaps from obsolete jup, bodice, from obsolete French juppe, from Old French jupe, jube, from Italian giuppa, giubba, from Arabic jubba, long garment with wide open sleeves, from jabba, to cut; see gbb in Semitic roots.]jumper (ˈdʒʌmpə) n1. (Clothing & Fashion) chiefly Brit a knitted or crocheted garment covering the upper part of the body2. (Clothing & Fashion) Also called: pinafore dress US and Canadian a sleeveless dress worn over a blouse or sweater[C19: from obsolete jump man's loose jacket, variant of jupe, from Old French, from Arabic jubbah long cloth coat]
jumper (ˈdʒʌmpə) n1. (Tools) a boring tool that works by repeated impact, such as a steel bit in a hammer drill used in boring rock2. (Automotive Engineering) Also called: jumper cable or jumper lead a short length of wire used to make a connection, usually temporarily, between terminals or to bypass a component3. (Individual Sports, other than specified) a type of sled with a high crosspiece4. a person or animal that jumps5. derogatory slang Irish a person who changes religion; convertjump•er1 (ˈdʒʌm pər) n. 1. a person or thing that jumps. 2. a participant in a jumping event, as in track or skiing. 3. a horse trained to jump obstacles. 4. jump shot. 5. a boring tool or device worked with a jumping motion. 6. a short length of conductor used to make an electrical connection between terminals of a circuit or to bypass a circuit. 7. Also called jump′er ca`ble. booster cable. 8. a kind of sled. 9. any of various fishes that leap from the water. [1605–15] jump•er2 (ˈdʒʌm pər) n. 1. a sleeveless dress, or a skirt with a bib and straps or with an open-sided bodice, usu. worn over a blouse. 2. a loose outer jacket worn esp. by workers and sailors. 3. Brit. a pullover sweater. [1850–55; obsolete jump short coat (orig. uncertain) + -er1] jumper - First a loose jacket worn by sailors, from jump, "a short coat."See also related terms for sailors.jumperA sleeveless, one-piece dress usually worn over a blouse or sweater.ThesaurusNoun | 1.jumper - a person who jumps; "as the jumper neared the ground he lost control"; "the jumper's parachute opened"individual, mortal, person, somebody, someone, soul - a human being; "there was too much for one person to do"parachute jumper, parachuter, parachutist - a person who jumps from aircraft using a parachute | | 2.jumper - an athlete who competes at jumping; "he is one hell of a jumper"athlete, jock - a person trained to compete in sportsleaper, bounder - someone who bounds or leaps (as in competition)hopper - someone who hops; "at hopscotch, the best hoppers are the children"ski jumper - a skier who leaps through the air (especially on a ski jump) | | 3.jumper - a crocheted or knitted garment covering the upper part of the bodysweatercardigan - knitted jacket that is fastened up the front with buttons or a zippergarment - an article of clothing; "garments of the finest silk"neckband - a band around the collar of a garmentneckline - the line formed by the edge of a garment around the neckpullover, slipover - a sweater that is put on by pulling it over the headpolo-neck, turtle, turtleneck - a sweater or jersey with a high close-fitting collarBritain, Great Britain, U.K., UK, United Kingdom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - a monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England and Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland; `Great Britain' is often used loosely to refer to the United Kingdom | | 4.jumper - a coverall worn by childrencoverall - a loose-fitting protective garment that is worn over other clothing | | 5.jumper - a small connector used to make temporary electrical connectionsconnecter, connector, connective, connection, connexion - an instrumentality that connects; "he soldered the connection"; "he didn't have the right connector between the amplifier and the speakers"booster cable, jumper cable, jumper lead, lead - a jumper that consists of a short piece of wire; "it was a tangle of jumper cables and clip leads" | | 6.jumper - a loose jacket or blouse worn by workmenjacket - a short coat | | 7.jumper - a sleeveless dress resembling an apron; worn over other clothingpinafore, pinnydress, frock - a one-piece garment for a woman; has skirt and bodice | | 8.jumper - (basketball) a player releases the basketball at the high point of a jumpjump shotbasketball shot - throwing the basketball toward the hoop; "his shot hit the rim and bounced out"basketball, basketball game, hoops - a game played on a court by two opposing teams of 5 players; points are scored by throwing the ball through an elevated horizontal hoop |
jumpernoun sweater, top, jersey, cardigan, woolly, pullover You can't go wrong with a baggy jumper.Translationsjumper (ˈdʒampə) noun1. a sweater or jersey. 毛衣,套頭毛衣 套头衫2. (American) a pinafore dress. (美國)無袖連身裙 (美国)无袖便服 IdiomsSeepuddle jumperjumper
jumper1. Engineering a boring tool that works by repeated impact, such as a steel bit in a hammer drill used in boring rock 2. Electronics a short length of wire used to make a connection, usually temporarily, between terminals or to bypass a component 3. a type of sled with a high crosspiece jumper[′jəm·pər] (electricity) A short length of conductor used to make a connection between two points or terminals in a circuit or to provide a path around a break in a circuit. jumper1. A short length of electric cable fitted with connectors at both ends, connected across a device in an electric circuit so that the current bypasses the device. 2. A steel bar which is moved up and down manually in a borehole in the ground; used as a drilling or boring tool. 3. In a stone wall, a stone that is two or more courses, 1 high.jumper (hardware)A removable wire or small plug whose presence orabsence is used to determine some aspect of hardwareconfiguration.jumperA small, plastic-covered metal block that is pushed onto two pins to close a circuit. An alternative to the DIP switch, the jumper is a less costly on/off switch found on motherboards and peripheral devices for one-time configuration. Although jumpers exist on modern computers, especially on hard disk drives, they were more prevalent in the early days of personal computers. Configuration of the hardware via software eliminated the use of many jumpers. See DIP switch and jumperless.
| Jumper |
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Jumpers are used to select options on printed circuit boards. The more sophisticated the board, the fewer the jumpers. Having no jumpers is best if changes have to be made by the user, otherwise the board has to be pulled out of the case. |
| Hard Drive Selection |
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Jumpers are used on IDE/ATA hard drives to select their operation mode, and schematics like this one are commonly found on the drive to show how to place the jumper on the pins. In "Single" mode, the jumper is not used. |
jumper
jumper Medspeak A term for a person who jumps from a height, generally to commit suicide. Vox populi-UK A knitted, heavier top, often worn over lighter clothing. (In American English, a sweatshirt or sweater.)See JMPR See JMPRjumper
Synonyms for jumpernoun sweaterSynonyms- sweater
- top
- jersey
- cardigan
- woolly
- pullover
Synonyms for jumpernoun a person who jumpsRelated Words- individual
- mortal
- person
- somebody
- someone
- soul
- parachute jumper
- parachuter
- parachutist
noun an athlete who competes at jumpingRelated Words- athlete
- jock
- leaper
- bounder
- hopper
- ski jumper
noun a crocheted or knitted garment covering the upper part of the bodySynonymsRelated Words- cardigan
- garment
- neckband
- neckline
- pullover
- slipover
- polo-neck
- turtle
- turtleneck
- Britain
- Great Britain
- U.K.
- UK
- United Kingdom
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
noun a coverall worn by childrenRelated Wordsnoun a small connector used to make temporary electrical connectionsRelated Words- connecter
- connector
- connective
- connection
- connexion
- booster cable
- jumper cable
- jumper lead
- lead
noun a loose jacket or blouse worn by workmenRelated Wordsnoun a sleeveless dress resembling an apronSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun (basketball) a player releases the basketball at the high point of a jumpSynonymsRelated Words- basketball shot
- basketball
- basketball game
- hoops
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