ANSWERTRIVIA.COM: We ask you, humbly: don't scroll away.

Dear Reader, If you use ANSWERTRIVIA a lot, this message is for you. We're sure you are busy so we'll make this quick: Today we need your help. We don't have salespeople. We depend on donations from exceptional readers, but fewer than 2% give. If you donate just a coffee, lunch or whatever you can today, ANSWERTRIVIA could keep thriving. Thank you.
(Secure PayPal)

*Everything counts! No minimum threshold!
Thank you for inspiring us!

We hate spoilers, search for clues one by one:

Friday 10 April 2020

[Answer] Leap crossword clue


  • LeapLook up LEAP, Leap, or leap in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.: A leap is a jump or big step forward.. Leap or LEAP may refer to: · Contributing artist, LEAP’s own, Martha Shepp (MarthaShepp.com) is fairly new to New Mexico; her studies ranged from graphic design and dance to filmmaking and music. Her works across a range of media reveal her abiding interest in the intersection of …A leap year (also known as an intercalary year or bissextile year) is a calendar year that contains an additional day (or, in the case of a lunisolar calendar, a month) added to keep the calendar year synchronized with the astronomical year or seasonal year. Because astronomical events and seasons do not repeat in a whole number of days, calendars that have the same number of days in each year ...

    Ballerina (titled Leap! in the United States) is a 2016 3D computer-animated musical adventure comedy film co-directed by Éric Summer and Éric Warin and written by Summer, Carol Noble and Laurent Zeitoun. A co-production between Canadian and French companies, the film follows a poor orphan girl who dreams of becoming a ballerina and gets a chance to audition for the celebrated school of the ...

    · (intransitive) To jump. c. 1450, anonymous, Merlin It is grete nede a man to go bak to recouer the better his leep 1600, anonymous, The wisdome of Doctor Dodypoll, act 4 I, I defie thee: wert not thou next him when he leapt into the Riuer? 1783, Hugh Blair, from the “Illiad” in Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres, lecture 4, page 65 Th ...





Answer: BOUND




Disclaimer: Are We Wrong To Think We're Right? Then Give Right Answer Below As a Comment!



No comments:

Post a Comment