That's a very good question. Yes they are the same, but only different. You just 'jump' in a different way. On one leg, on both legs landing at the same time, or jumping forwards without steadying yourself.
A running Hop, skip, and jump.---------------------------------------------------------------- In Scotland's lowland games, where much of the event's initial documentary evidence is from, it was known as the hop, skip and leap. It was known as the hop, step and jump for a long time officially.
Hop, skip and a jump or hop, step, and a jump
In Scottish Lowland and Highland Games the triple jump was known as the hop, skip and leap. Elsewhere it was known as the hop, skip and jump or the hop, step and jump. The triple jump rules used to be such that two hops and a step were allowed, this meant the athletes could use their strongest leg for each of the three phases.
Leap, become airbourne, hop
hop skip jump
Hop Skip and Jump - 1922 was released on: USA: 7 May 1922
you kinda stay on your toes and sorta leap forward
a "Hop, Skip, and a Jump"
jump = spring (verb) ...leap, bound, pronk.Hop, bounce, leap, skip (I guess you could use skip)...For an animal I would use things like hop or bounce... maybe leapFor a person I would use leap or skip.Hope this helps!!! :)hoppedleap
A hop starts on one foot and ends on the same foot. A jump starts on two feet and usually ends on two feet but can end on one foot. A leap starts on one foot and ends on the other foot. The words 'bound', 'leap' and 'spring' are adjectives that describe a hop, jump or leap. They are not definitions of these movements.
hop, jump, leap, spring
Triple jump is a running hop, step (or skip), and long jump in that order.