💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Overjump"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| overleapverb | (transitive) To leap over, to jump over, to cross by jumping. |
| overvaultverb | (transitive) To leap over. |
| outjumpverb | (transitive) To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. |
| jumpnoun | The act of jumping; a leap; a spring; a bound. |
| overnoun | Finished; ended; concluded. |
| overspringverb | (transitive) To overtop; overclimb; rise above; spring or leap over. |
| leapnoun | The act of leaping or jumping. |
| overgoverb | To go beyond; to exceed, surpass. |
| overhipverb | (transitive, obsolete) To leap over; skip over; omit. |
| overwalkverb | To walk over or upon. |
| base jumpnoun | A parachute jump from a fixed point rather than from an aircraft; typically from a tall building, high bridge or rock formation. |
| overclimbverb | To climb over. |
| leapfrognoun | (games) A game, often played by children, in which a player leaps like a frog over the back of another person who has stooped over. One variation of the game involves a number of people lining up in a row and bending over. The last person in the line then vaults forward over each of the others until they reach the front of the line, whereupon they also bend over. The process is then repeated. |
| o'erleapverb | (literary) Contraction of overleap [(transitive) To leap over, to jump over, to cross by jumping.] |
| overshootnoun | (countable) The amount by which something goes too far. |
| overfareverb | (transitive) To go over; pass; traverse. |
| overcatchverb | To catch too many; to overfish. |
| overstepverb | (transitive) To go too far beyond (a limit); especially, to cross boundaries or exceed norms or conventions. |
| overtraceverb | (transitive) To trace over. |
| run oververb | (transitive, idiomatic) To drive over, causing injury or death. |
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