leep
English
    
    Verb
    
leep
- Obsolete form of leap.
- Ye mountains, that ye did leep like rams; and ye hills, like lambs of the flock.
 
 
Dutch
    
    Pronunciation
    
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -eːp
 
Adjective
    
leep (comparative leper, superlative leepst)
Inflection
    
| Inflection of leep | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| uninflected | leep | |||
| inflected | lepe | |||
| comparative | leper | |||
| positive | comparative | superlative | ||
| predicative/adverbial | leep | leper | het leepst het leepste  | |
| indefinite | m./f. sing. | lepe | lepere | leepste | 
| n. sing. | leep | leper | leepste | |
| plural | lepe | lepere | leepste | |
| definite | lepe | lepere | leepste | |
| partitive | leeps | lepers | — | |
Middle English
    
    Etymology 1
    
From Old English hleapan; see leap.
Verb
    
leep
- leap
- 1481, William Caxton, The Historye of Reynard the Foxe:
- the dogges haue be sette on hym and haue hunted hym away / And ones they leep on hym vpon the banke
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
 
 
 
 
Etymology 2
    
See leap.
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