Go+at+a+gallop

  • 31gallop — A triple cadence to the heart sounds; due to an abnormal third or fourth heart sound being heard in addition to the first and second sounds, and usually indicative of serious disease. SYN: bruit de galop, cantering rhythm, g. rhythm, Traube bruit …

    Medical dictionary

  • 32gallop — {{11}}gallop (n.) 1520s, from GALLOP (Cf. gallop) (v.). {{12}}gallop (v.) early 15c., from M.Fr. galoper (12c.), cognate of O.N.Fr. waloper, from Frankish *wala hlaupan to run well (see WALLOP (Cf. wallop)). Related: Galloped; galloping …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 33gallop — n. & v. n. 1 the fastest pace of a horse or other quadruped, with all the feet off the ground together in each stride. 2 a ride at this pace. 3 a track or ground for this. v. (galloped, galloping) 1 a intr. (of a horse etc. or its rider) go at… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 34Gallop (studio) — nihongo|Gallop|株式会社ぎゃろっぷ|Kabushiki Kaisha Gyaroppu, sometimes credited as Studio Gallop, is a Japanese animation studio.WorksTV seriesProduction* Akazukin Chacha * Animal Yokocho * Anime TV de Hakken! Tamagotchi * Eyeshield 21 * Gaki Deka * Genji …

    Wikipedia

  • 35Gallop (drumming) — A gallop is a drum beat typically used in metal songs, mostly using a double kick pedal (but can also be played with a single pedal).The gallop is usually formed around this skeleton: H x x x x S o o B o ooo ooo ooo oo Bands that use the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 36gallop — noun 1》 the fastest pace of a horse or other quadruped, with all the feet off the ground together in each stride.     ↘a ride on a horse at a gallop. 2》 Brit. a track where horses are exercised at a gallop. verb (gallops, galloping, galloped) 1》… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 37gallop through — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms gallop through : present tense I/you/we/they gallop through he/she/it gallops through present participle galloping through past tense galloped through past participle galloped through gallop through something… …

    English dictionary

  • 38gallop — gal•lop [[t]ˈgæl əp[/t]] v. i. 1) to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed 2) to run rapidly by leaps, as a horse; go at a gallop 3) to go fast, race, or hurry, as a person or time 4) to cause (a horse or other animal) to gallop 5) a fast… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 39gallop — /ˈgæləp / (say galuhp) verb (i) 1. to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed. 2. to run rapidly by leaps, as a horse; go at a gallop. 3. to go fast, race, or hurry, as a person, the tongue, time, etc. –verb (t) 4. to cause (a horse, etc.)… …

  • 40Gallop — Recorded in many spellings including Gallop, Gollop, Yallop, Yollop, Jollip, Gillop, Gillup and others, this very interesting surname is almost certainly English. It appears to be locational and to derive from a lost medieval village. As some… …

    Surnames reference