letting your mouse hover over each image should cause a caption to appear
The drone hovered in the air, capturing stunning aerial footage of the landscape below.
As I hovered my hand over the sensor, the faucet automatically turned on.
The word hovering is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb hover.
No, "hover" is not an onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that phonetically resembles the sound that it describes, like "buzz" or "crack." "Hover" does not imitate a specific sound.
The word "hovercraft" was coined in 1955 by Sir Christopher Cockerell. He combined "hover" to symbolize the vehicle's ability to hover above the surface, and "craft" to refer to a vehicle or vessel. The term was officially adopted into the English language as a description for the vehicle he had invented.
"Hovered" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "hover," which means to remain in one place in the air. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to provide more information about how, when, where, or to what degree something is done.
I am going to test-drive a hover craft.
One of the advantages of the helicopter is that it can hover over one spot.
parents often hover over there sick child
The student teacher had to learn not to hover over her students, so they could work the material independently. The mother owl chose to hover over her chicks, so they would learn to hunt on their own.
The list of vehicles that start with hover are: Hover ambulance Hover bike Hover bus Hover car Hover delivery truck Hover fire truck Hover garbage truck Hover ice cream van Hover jeep Hover limousine Hover mail truck Hover motorcycle Hover pickup truck Hover police bus Hover police car Hover school bus Hover taxi Hover train Hover truck and countless others
As I hovered my hand over the sensor, the faucet automatically turned on.
Hovered is a verb. It's the past tense of hover.
The collective noun 'hover' is used for a hover of trout, a hover of crows, a hover of hummingbirds, and a hover of helicopters.
The verb 'hover' is translated by the Welsh words 'hofran' (hover) 'ehedfan' (hover, fly) 'gwibio' (flit, wander)
No It can not hover.
They don't hover, they swim
No, Parrots can fly but not hover.