English

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Noun

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spy-hop (plural spy-hops)

  1. Alternative form of spyhop
    • 1995, Michelle A. Gilders, Reflections of a Whale-Watcher, Indiana University Press, page 47:
      Gradually, spy-hopping humpbacks viewing whaling vessels became mating whales embracing in a double spy-hop.
    • 1999, Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill, In the Presence of High Beings: What Dolphins Want You to Know, Council Oak Books, page 181:
      Soon, a mother whale marked by nature with a white, iris-shaped star on her side and a calf with a matching star surfaced bear the bow of our boat where I was sitting. Then they popped up together in a dual spy-hop.

Verb

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spy-hop (third-person singular simple present spy-hops, present participle spy-hopping, simple past and past participle spy-hopped)

  1. Alternative form of spyhop
    • 1995, Michelle A. Gilders, Reflections of a Whale-Watcher, Indiana University Press, page 47:
      Humpbacks are known to spy-hop and are perhaps the most aerial of cetaceans.
    • 1998, Robert H. Busch, Gray Whales: Wandering Giants, Orca Book Publishers, page 32:
      It was once thought that they stood on their tails on the ocean bottom to do this, but grays have been seen spy-hopping in very deep water and obviously can spy-hop merely by treading water with their tail flukes.
    • 2001, Dick Russell, Eye of the Whale: Epic Passage from Baja to Siberia, Simon & Schuster, page 186:
      Much of what these whales are doing eludes us. This became evident when I asked Payne whether we know why they spy-hop and breach.

Anagrams

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  NODES
Note 1