- hopping mad ⇒
in a terrible rage
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
hop•ping /ˈhɑpɪŋ/USA pronunciation
adj.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026- busy:He kept his staff hopping.
- hopping mad, very angry;
furious.
hop•ping
(hop′ing),USA pronunciation adj.
- working energetically;
busily engaged:He kept the staff hopping in order to get the report finished. - going from one place or situation to another of a similar specified type (usually used in combination):restaurant-hopping.
- Idioms hopping mad, furious;
enraged:He was hopping mad when his daughter dropped out of college.
- hop1 + -ing2 1665–75
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
hop1 /hɑp/USA pronunciation
v., hopped, hop•ping, n.
v.
n. [countable]
hop2 /hɑp/USA pronunciation n., v., hopped, hop•ping.
n.
v.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026v.
- Animal Behavior to make a short, bouncing leap, as a rabbit does:[no object]The canary hopped on to her finger.
- to jump over;
clear with a hop:[~ + object]hopped the fence and was gone. - to move quickly as if jumping:[no object]hopped into bed.
- Informal Termsto board or get onto (a vehicle): [~ + object]to hop a train to Peoria.[no object]He hopped into his car.
- Informal Terms to travel or move frequently from one place or situation to another:[no object]to party-hop (= to go from one party to another).
n. [countable]
- a short leap on one foot.
- a short, quick movement or action:a quick hop into bed.
- a journey, esp. a short trip by air:a quick hop from London to Paris.
- Informal Termsa dance or dancing party:the school hop.
- a bounce or rebound, as of a ball.
hop2 /hɑp/USA pronunciation n., v., hopped, hop•ping.
n.
- Plant Biology hops, [plural] the dried ripe cones of the female flowers of a twining plant of the hemp family, used in brewing beer.
v.
- hop up, [Slang.]
- [ ~ + up + obj] to excite;
make enthusiastic:The demonstrators hopped up the crowd with their fiery speeches. - [ ~ + up + obj] to add to the power of:They hopped up the engine of their car.
- [ usually: be + hopped up] to stimulate by narcotics:hopped up on drugs.
- [ ~ + up + obj] to excite;
hop1
(hop),USA pronunciation v., hopped, hop•ping, n.
v.i.
v.t.
n.
hop′ping•ly, adv.
hop2 (hop),USA pronunciation n., v., hopped, hop•ping.
n.
v.t.
v.i.
- Animal Behaviorto make a short, bouncing leap;
move by leaping with all feet off the ground. - to spring or leap on one foot.
- Informal Termsto make a short, quick trip, esp. in an airplane:He hopped up to Boston for the day.
- Informal Termsto travel or move frequently from one place or situation to another (usually used in combination):to island-hop; to job-hop.
- Informal Termsto dance.
v.t.
- to jump over;
clear with a hop:The sheep hopped the fence. - Informal Termsto board or get onto a vehicle:to hop a plane.
- Informal Termsto cross in an airplane:We hopped the Atlantic in five hours.
- Informal Terms, Idioms hop to it, to begin to move, become active, or do something immediately:You'd better hop to it if you intend to buy groceries before the market closes.Also, hop to.
n.
- an act of hopping;
short leap. - a leap on one foot.
- a journey, esp. a short trip by air.
- Informal Termsa dance or dancing party.
- a bounce or rebound of a moving object, as a ball:She caught the ball on the first hop.
- bef. 1000; Middle English hoppen (verb, verbal), Old English hoppian; cognate with German hopfen, Old Norse hoppa
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged jump, spring, bound.
hop2 (hop),USA pronunciation n., v., hopped, hop•ping.
n.
- Plant Biologyany twining plant of the genus Humulus, bearing male flowers in loose clusters and female flowers in conelike forms.
- Plant Biology hops, the dried ripe cones of the female flowers of this plant, used in brewing, medicine, etc.
- Slang Terms[Older Slang.]a narcotic drug, esp. opium.
v.t.
- to treat or flavor with hops.
- hop up, [Slang.]
- to excite;
make enthusiastic:They hopped the crowd up with fiery speeches. - to add to the power of:The kids hopped up the motor of their jalopy.
- to stimulate by narcotics.
- to excite;
- Middle Dutch hoppe (Dutch hop); cognate with Old High German hopfo (German Hopfen)
- late Middle English hoppe 1400–50
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
- (intransitive)
to make a jump forwards or upwards, esp on one foot - (intransitive)
(esp of frogs, birds, rabbits, etc) to move forwards in short jumps - (intransitive)
to move or proceed quickly (in, on, out of, etc): hop on a bus - (transitive)
to cross (an ocean) in an aircraft - (transitive)
to travel by means of (an aircraft, bus, etc): he hopped a train to Chicago - (intransitive)
another word forlimp 1 - hop it, hop off ⇒
to go away
the act or an instance of hopping - on the hop ⇒
active or busy unawares or unprepared
any climbing plant of the N temperate genus Humulus, esp H. lupulus, which has green conelike female flowers and clusters of small male flowers: family Cannabiaceae (or Cannabidaceae)
See also hops- hop garden ⇒
a field of hops opium or any other narcotic drug
'hopping' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
anuran
- barhop
- bellhop
- buck and wing
- carhop
- channel-hop
- frog
- hedgehop
- hop
- hopper
- hopping John
- island-hop
- jet-hop
- job-hop
- saltation
- sand hopper
- shag
- skip
- spyhop
- table-hop
- toad