pushing the enemy off islands
They were hoping for an end to Jim Crow laws
It has 2 p's because if it didn't, it would be pronounced like hoping. Adding the extra p is to show that it is pronounced differently to hoping. It is part of how the English language is used.
There are several.... Governor's Island, Liberty Island, Staten Island, Ellis island and Manhattan Island.
Jan Gies
pushing the enemy off islands
By moving island to island called island hoping
i was hoping you could tell me
General Douglas MacArthur.
Island Hoping
Yes, the word hoping is a common noun (a gerund).A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Professor Dr. Helmut Hoping, Falculty of Theology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, SwitzerlandHoping Island Beach Park, Zhongzheng District, Keelung City, TaiwanMary Hoping (street name), Metro Manila, Philippines"Hoping for Rain", historical fiction by Kate Connell
Island Hoping
Gatsby wants to take Nick to Coney Island so he can show him his strip club he owns. He hopes Nick takes bands.
Lafitte and his men plundered countless ships from his base on Galveston Island in the Gulf of Mexico, but they were powerless to stop the zombie plague that overran the island early in 1821. The USA Navy, hoping to contain the spread, bombed the island into oblivion.
I assume it is WW2 you are talking about. 'Island hopping' was the tactic the US used. They took over Japanese islands in the Pacific one by one setting up bases on each of them.
the hoping of the hoping hopping bunnies that just keep hoping and hopping till they hope. and hope upon hope leads to hope and hoping hope is hoping hope indeed and hope leads to hoping hope and bunnies hoping just keep hoping and hopping for hope and hope leads to hoping and hopping and hoping hoping hopping. so just keep hoping and hopping if you are a bunny that was the world's dumbest answer. no you know what is the world's biggest record broken.
Yes, it's hope and hoping