Is hover a word


Asked by: Lillian Littel

Score: 4.3/5
(20 votes)

Yes, hover is in the scrabble dictionary.

Is Hower a scrabble word?

No, hower is not in the scrabble dictionary.

Is Fluor a scrabble word?

Yes, fluor is in the scrabble dictionary.

What is a hover in English?

1a : to hang fluttering in the air or on the wing A hawk hovered overhead. b : to remain suspended over a place or object a hummingbird hovering over the flowers Helicopters hovered above us. 2a : to move to and fro near a place : fluctuate around a given point Unemployment hovered around 10 percent.

Why does hover mean?

To hover means to stay in the same position in the air without moving forward or backward. Many birds and insects can hover by moving their wings very quickly. Beautiful butterflies hovered above the wild flowers.

24 related questions found

Is Hoverable a word?

Capable of being traversed by hovercraft. (Internet) Capable of interaction by hovering.

Is FUOR a Scrabble word?

Word Unscrambler

Fuor is not a valid Scrabble word. Fuor is not a valid Words with Friends word.

Is Hower a word?

Archaic spelling of hour.

What does how’re mean?

Filters. (informal) How are. contraction.

What’s the meaning of Hower?

hower (plural howers) Obsolete spelling of hour quotations

Is who’re a proper contraction?

A contraction of “who are” as defined in the dictionary, “who’re” is our word of the day. … Technically, it’s a legitimate contraction (provided, as Dan Smith notes, that you put the apostrophe in the correct place).

Is re exist a word?

Renewed or resumed existence; an instance of this, a new or further existence.

Is re a word on its own?

Oxford University Press.) Thus re has been a word since ancient Roman times (as your own definition shows), and has been in use in English since at least the early 18th century.

What does hovering around mean?

hover around (someone or something)

To position oneself near or around someone or something else; to linger near or around someone or something else.

What does the word hover in sentence mean?

Definition of Hover. to remain near a place or individual. Examples of Hover in a sentence. 1. Because I was sick a lot when I was a child, my mother would always hover over me.

What does he doesn’t hover mean?

hover means when someone surrounds you constantly but doesn’t really take part in conversations or interact.

Is re OK for scrabble?

Yes, re is in the scrabble dictionary.

Is existed or exist?

The word exist is an intransitive verb, so we don’t use it in the passive voice, and we also don’t use existed as an adjective. This rules out existed. Both existing and existent could be used with something that exists, to refer to the state of existing (or existence).

Does Exist mean?

The verb exist means to live, to have reality. Dodos no longer exist because they were hunted to extinction. It’s not only «live» things that exist. … Another meaning for the verb exist is to support oneself or survive.

What is it called when you ask someone for advice?

consult. verb. to ask for information or advice from someone who has special knowledge about a particular subject.

Is where’re a contraction?

Where’re is a contraction of where and are. A contraction is a shortened form of a word or group of words in which some letters are removed and replaced with an apostrophe (‘). Contractions like where’re are mainly used in speech and casual writing and are usually avoided in scholarly or scientific writing.

Can you say there Re?

Is “there’re” a legitimate contraction for “there are”? Strictly speaking, on a grammatical level, it is correct. “There’re” is a legitimate contraction of “there are.” However, just because the rules say something is correct doesn’t mean you can actually use it.

What is a proper contraction?

A contraction is a shortened form of a word (or group of words) that omits certain letters or sounds. In most contractions, an apostrophe represents the missing letters. The most common contractions are made up of verbs, auxiliaries, or modals attached to other words: He would=He’d. I have=I’ve. They are=They’re.

Do contractions count as one word?

Do contractions count as one word or two? Contracted words count as the number of words they would be if they were not contracted. … Where the contraction replaces one word (e.g. can’t for cannot), it is counted as one word.

колебаться, зависать, вертеться, состояние неопределенности, ожидание

глагол

- парить (о птице; тж. hover about, hover over)
- парить, кружить, зависать, находиться в режиме висения (о вертолёте)
- нависать, окутывать (об облаках)
- нависать, застывать (над чем-л.)

the director hovered her typewriter waiting for her to finish the letter — директор застыл над её машинкой, ожидая, пока она закончит письмо

- нависать, угрожать (об опасности и т. п.)

danger is hovering over him — ему (постоянно) грозит опасность

- (over, around) вертеться, болтаться; ходить вокруг кого-л., топтаться, толпиться вокруг кого-л.

don’t hover over me! — не стой над душой!

- быть на краю (чего-л.); постоянно подвергаться угрозе (чего-л.)

to hover between life and death — быть между жизнью и смертью

- колебаться, не решаться, мешкать

to hover on the brink of decision — колебаться, не знать, что делать /какое решение принять/
a smile hovered over her lips — улыбка блуждала по её лицу

- сидеть на яйцах, высиживать
- прикрывать (телом, крыльями и т. п.)

существительное

- парение; свободный полёт
- ожидание; неопределённое положение; состояние неопределённости, «подвешенное» состояние
- диал. нависший берег; яма под берегом (где прячется рыба)

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

hover ferry — паром на воздушной подушке  
hover ground — рыхлая почва  
to hover at the height of… — зависать на высоте… (о вертолете)  
hover between life and death — быть между жизнью и смертью  
hover on the brink of decision — не знать, что делать; колебаться  
hover capability — возможность висения  
hover-ground — рыхлый грунт; рыхлая почва  
hover phase — фаза зависания  
hover platform — платформа на воздушной подушке  
hover power — мощность на режиме висения; тяга на режиме висения  

Примеры с переводом

The big bird was hovering high in the sky.

Высоко в небе парила большая птица.

Bees hovered around the hive.

Пчёлы зависли в воздухе вокруг улья.

The fear of a new war hovered over us.

Над нами нависла угроза новой войны.

We hovered around our guide.

Мы толпились вокруг нашего экскурсовода.

Without even a hover of hesitation.

Не мешкая ни секунды!

Unemployment hovered around 10%.

Уровень безработицы колебался на уровне десяти процентов.

A mind hovering on the verge of madness.

Балансирующий на грани безумия разум.

ещё 10 примеров свернуть

Возможные однокоренные слова

hoverer  — брудер, элевеза, зонтичный брудер
hovering  — висение, зависание, парение,
hovership  — судно на воздушной подушке

Формы слова

verb
I/you/we/they: hover
he/she/it: hovers
ing ф. (present participle): hovering
2-я ф. (past tense): hovered
3-я ф. (past participle): hovered

Verb



Watch as the hummingbird hovers over the flowers.



Bees hovered around the hive.



Waiters hovered near our table.



nervous mothers hovering over their children



Unemployment rates were hovering around 10 percent.



Temperatures will continue to hover around freezing.



The patient was hovering between life and death.



The country hovers on the brink of famine.

See More

Recent Examples on the Web



The school has worked to right-size its finances, but still has struggled to pay off debts and manage changing student needs. Enrollment, which has typically hovered above 1,000, fell to 975 this fall.


Rebecca Griesbach | , al, 7 Apr. 2023





He was taken in a motorcade to Trump Tower, where at least four helicopters hovered.


Corey Kilgannon, BostonGlobe.com, 4 Apr. 2023





He was taken in a motorcade to Trump Tower, where at least four helicopters hovered.


Corey Kilgannon, New York Times, 3 Apr. 2023





Ultimately a recycling, composting and waste-to-energy plant will be built for a price tag that could hover around $1 billion, officials said.


Lisa J. Huriash, Sun Sentinel, 15 Mar. 2023





Some 6,400 kilometers of public water delivery canals crisscross the Golden State, providing ample airborne real estate for hovering solar panels.


IEEE Spectrum, 14 Mar. 2023





Along with the intermittent air shows, the trail offers views of Courthouse Rock, Bell Rock and Cathedral Rock, which hovers above the winding course of Oak Creek.


Mare Czinar, The Arizona Republic, 9 Mar. 2023





The Oscar winner attended the Saint Laurent women’s wear fall 2023 show at Paris Fashion Week in a slinky green floor-length dress that hovers somewhere between forest, jade, and emerald.


Elizabeth Logan, Glamour, 1 Mar. 2023





Bell has touted the capabilities of its V-280 Valor prototype that features a tilt-rotor design combining the vertical takeoff and hovering ability of a helicopter with the speed and range of an airplane.


Hartford Courant, 27 Feb. 2023




Analyst Nick Waters of Bellingcat, author of the definitive work on ISIS drone bombers, says this novel bomb-aiming technique from a hover allows the operator to correct for wind or other variables and gives a far higher chance of a hit.


David Hambling, Forbes, 1 June 2022





Altitude-Hold function ensures a steady hover in the air at a certain altitude.


Maren Estrada, BGR, 23 Apr. 2021





Likewise, the average age for those arrested for assault and battery with a gun, gun discharge, murder, or assault with intent to murder hovers around the same age.


Danny Mcdonald, BostonGlobe.com, 11 Mar. 2023





Typically, a seat on a JSX flight hovers around what a first-class seat may cost on a commercial airline.


Chris Dong, Travel + Leisure, 10 Mar. 2023





Grogu follows in his hover-stroller, clearly terrified.


Erik Kain, Forbes, 8 Mar. 2023





Abandoning his blue-collar bona fides is not smart politics: While Mr. Biden’s approval rating hovers near historic lows, approval of labor unions is reaching historic highs.


Matthew Miles Goodrich, The New Republic, 6 Mar. 2023





Trump hovers; DeSantis ignores As DeSantis performs relatively well in early Republican polls, Trump has stepped up criticism on the ambitious governor.


David Jackson, USA TODAY, 5 Mar. 2023





The premium stylus offers the best drawing and note-taking experience on compatible iPads, with pressure sensitivity and a new hover feature on the recent M2 iPad Pros. Woot is selling a bundle of an Apple 61W USB-C charger with a two-meter USB-C cable for $36.99 (about $41 off).


Antonio G. Di Benedetto, The Verge, 3 Mar. 2023



See More

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘hover.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

hover
(verb)

/ˈhʌvɚ, ˈhɑv-/


LISTEN

Hover means ‘to remain in the air in the same position.’ When used for people, it means ‘to wait or linger near somebody or something for more time or at a closer distance than is expected.’ When referring to a number or value, it means ‘to stay around a specific level or amount.’ Hover can also be used figuratively to mean ‘to be in a state of indecision.’

Example sentences

  • A yellow butterfly was hovering above the fence, and I couldn’t resist taking a picture.
  • I can’t decide what to order, and that waiter hovering next to me makes me nervous.
  • For a long time, inflation hovered around 2%, but after the recession began, things changed dramatically.
  • «Stop hovering, Mark! I’ll never get my work done with you looking over my shoulder!»
  • The shipwrecked sailors hovered between hope and despair as their raft drifted on the ocean.

Words often used with hover

hover over: an idiom used with computers, referring to moving the mouse or cursor over something on the screen. Example: “Hover over the words to see their definitions.” It can also be used as an adjective (with a hyphen), as in “I like hover-over explanations because they clarify things I’m confused about.”

In pop culture

Listen to Incubus singing their song “Quicksand” here. Listen out for the lyric “I hover somewhere in between.”

Did you know?

Hovercrafts are vehicles that can travel on water, land, and ice because of a cushion of compressed air.

Origin

Hover dates back to around the year 1400, as the Middle English verb hoveren, a frequentative form of the verb hoven (to hover, tarry or linger), which we still have in the form of the rarely used verb hove (‘to float or rise to the surface,’ as well as ‘to remain suspended in the air’). It can be traced back to the Old English hofian (to receive into your home), from the Proto-Germanic hufa– (hill, height, farm or dwelling) and the Proto-Indo-European keup– (to arch, bend or buckle). Hover is, therefore, related to the Old Frisian hovia and the Old Dutch hoven (to entertain or receive into your home), as well as the Old English hof (court, house or dwelling), the Dutch hof (garden or court), the German Hof (yard, garden, court or palace) and the Icelandic hof (temple or hall), as well as the English hovel. Though rare, hover has also been used as a noun, meaning ‘the act of hovering,’ since the early 16th century.

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January 17, 2022

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

The verb is derived from Middle English hoveren (to float in the air, hover; to stay),[1] probably from hoven (hover; of a bird: to fly high in the air, soar)[2] (which it displaced) + -er- (frequentative suffix).[3] Hoven is probably derived from Old English *hōfian, from hōfon, the plural past indicative form of hebban (to lift, raise), from Proto-West Germanic *habbjan, from Proto-Germanic *habjaną (to lift; to heave), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *keh₂p- (to hold, seize). The English word is analysable as hove ((obsolete) to remain suspended, float, hover; to linger, wait) +‎ -er (frequentative suffix).[4]

The noun is derived from the verb.[5]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈhɒvə/, (other UK also) IPA(key): /ˈhʌvə/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈhʌvɚ/
  • Rhymes: -ɒvə(ɹ), -ʌvə(ɹ)
  • Hyphenation: hov‧er

Verb[edit]

hover (third-person singular simple present hovers, present participle hovering, simple past and past participle hovered)

  1. (transitive)
    1. To keep (something, such as an aircraft) in a stationary state in the air.
    2. Of a bird: to shelter (chicks) under its body and wings; (by extension) of a thing: to cover or surround (something).
      • 1789, Gil[bert] White, “Letter XXXII. To the Same.”, in The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, in the County of Southampton: [], London: [] T[homas] Bensley; for B[enjamin] White and Son, [], →OCLC, page 212:

        Castration has a ſtrange effect: it emaſculates both man, beaſt, and bird, and brings them to a near reſemblance of the other ſex. [] Capons have ſmall combs and gills, and look pallid about the head, like pullets; they alſo vvalk vvithout any parade, and hover chickens like hens.

    3. (obsolete) Of a bird or insect: to flap (its wings) so it can remain stationary in the air.
      • 1608, [Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas], “[Du Bartas His First VVeek, or Birth of the VVorld: [].] The Fift Daie of the First VVeek.”, in Josuah Sylvester, transl., Du Bartas His Deuine Weekes and Workes [], 3rd edition, London: [] Humfrey Lownes [and are to be sold by Arthur Iohnson []], published 1611, →OCLC, page 142:

        O’er the deer Corps ſomtimes her vvings ſhe [an eagle] hovers, / Somtimes the dead breſt vvith her breſt ſhe covers, []

      • 1686 (first performance), A[phra] Behn, The Luckey Chance, or An Alderman’s Bargain. A Comedy. [], London: [] R. H[olt], for W. Canning, [], published 1687, →OCLC, Act I, scene i, page 5:

        Thus have I lain conceal’d like a vvinter Fly, hoping for ſome bleſt Sun-Shine to vvarm me into Life again, and make me hover my flagging VVings; []

  2. (intransitive)
    1. To remain stationary or float in the air.

      The hummingbird hovered by the plant.

      • 1579, Stephen Gosson, “The Schoole of Abuse, []”, in The School of Abuse, Containing a Pleasant Invective against Poets, Pipers, Players, Jesters, &c. [], London: [] [Frederic Shoberl, Jun.] for the Shakespeare Society, published 1841, →OCLC, page 49:

        [T]hough you go to Theaters to see sport, Cupid may cache you ere you departe. The little god hovereth aboute you, and fanneth you with his wings to kindle fire: when you are set as fixed whites, Desire draweth his arrow to the head, and sticketh it uppe to the fethers, and Fancy bestireth him to shed his poyson through every vayne.

      • 1609, William Shakespeare, “A Louers Complaint”, in Shake-speares Sonnets. [], London: By G[eorge] Eld for T[homas] T[horpe] and are to be sold by William Aspley, →OCLC, signature L2, verso:

        Thus meerely vvith the garment of a grace, / The naked and concealed feind he couerd, / That th’vnexperient gaue the tempter place, / VVhich like a Cherubin aboue them houerd, / VVho young and ſimple vvould not be ſo louerd.

      • 1665, Robert Boyle, “Occasional Reflections. Reflection III. Killing a Crow (out of a Window) in a Hog’s-trough, and Immediately Tracing the Ensuing Reflection with a Pen Made of One of His Quills.”, in [John Weyland], editor, Occasional Reflections upon Several Subjects. With a Discourse about Such Kind of Thoughts, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Alex[ander] Ambrose Masson; and sold by John Henry Parker, [], published 1848, →OCLC, section V, page 304:

        Long and patiently did I wait for this unlucky Crow, [] till at length having guzzl’d and croak’d enough, when by hovering over his beloved Dainties, he had rais’d himself high enough, to prompt me to fire at him, []

      • 1727, [Daniel Defoe], “Of such Tradesmen who by the Necessary Consequences of Their Business are Oblig’d to be Accessary to the Propagation of Vice, and the Encrease of the Wickedness of the Times, and that All the Immorality of the Age is Not Occasion’d by the Ale-houses and the Taverns”, in The Compleat English Tradesman. [], volume II, London: [] Charles Rivington [], →OCLC, part II, pages 163–163:

        [T]he Mercers encreaſing prodigiouſly vvent back into the City; there like Bees unhiv’d they hover about a vvhile, not knovving vvhere to fix; but at laſt, as if they vvould come back to the old Hive in Pater-noſter Rovv, but could not be admitted, the ſvvarm ſettled on Lu[d]gate-hill.

      • 1851 November 14, Herman Melville, “The Mast-head”, in Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, 1st American edition, New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers; London: Richard Bentley, →OCLC, page 176:

        Over Descartian vortices you hover. And perhaps, at mid-day, in the fairest weather, with one half-throttled shriek you drop through that transparent air into the summer sea, no more to rise for ever.

      • 1857, William Platt, “‘His Will Be Done!’”, in Mothers and Sons. A Story of Real Life. [], volume I, London: Charles J. Skeet, [], →OCLC, page 87:

        Thou hoveredst, like a guardian angel—healing in thy wings, and glad-tidings all around thee—over the poor lost-one.

      • 1877, William Black, “The Isobars”, in Green Pastures and Piccadilly. [], volume II, London: Macmillan and Co., →OCLC, page 150:

        Here are there were smaller craft—wherries, steam-launches, tenders, and what not; and they seemed like so many flies hovering on the surface of the water when they came near that majestic ship.

      • 2013 June 29, “Travels and travails”, in The Economist[1], volume 407, number 8842, London: Economist Group, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-10-18, page 55:

        Even without hovering drones, a lurking assassin, a thumping score and a denouement, the real-life story of Edward Snowden, a rogue spy on the run, could be straight out of the cinema. But, as with Hollywood, the subplots and exotic locations may distract from the real message: America’s discomfort and its foes’ glee.

    2. (figuratively)
      1. Sometimes followed by over: to hang around or linger in a place, especially in an uncertain manner.
        Synonym: wasp around

        His pen hovered above the paper.

        The strange man hovered outside the gents’ toilet.

        The visitors were hovering at the door, seemingly unwilling to enter.

        Some helicopter parents weren’t so much dropping off their kids as hovering over them until the event started.

        • c. 1599 (date written), I. M. [i.e., John Marston], The History of Antonio and Mellida. The First Part. [], London: [] [R. Bradock] for Mathewe Lownes, and Thomas Fisher, [], published 1602, →OCLC, Act IV, signature F4, recto:

          Alas, this that you ſee, is not Antonio, / His ſpirit houers in Piero’s Court, / Hurling about his agill faculties, / To apprehend the ſight of Mellida: []

        • a. 1749, James Thomson, “Ode”, in [George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton], editor, The Works of James Thomson. [], volume II, London: [] A[ndrew] Millar, [], published 1750, →OCLC, stanza III, page 220:

          Oh! if thou hover’ſt round my vvalk, / VVhile, under ev’ry vvell-knovvn tree, / I to thy fancy’d ſhadovv talk, / And every tear is full of thee.

        • 1818, Martin Luther, “Of the Last Day of Judgment”, in Henry Bell, transl.; Joseph Kerby, editor, The Familiar Discourses of Dr. Martin Luther, (the Great Reformer), which He Held with Various Learned Men at His Table, &c. on the Important Doctrines of Religion; [], new edition, Lewes, East Sussex: Sussex Press, [] John Baxter; London: Baldwin, Craddock, and Joy, [], →OCLC, page 408:

          [T]he fat swimmeth above, and the best thereof hovereth always uppermost; but the unclean matter, or the dregs is left at the bottom like a dead carcase and worthless thing. Even so likewise, God will deal at the day of judgment, therewith he will separate all things through fire, will separate the righteous from the ungodly, []

        • 1846, [Edward Bulwer-Lytton], “Epilogue to Part the Second”, in Lucretia: Or The Children of Night. [], volume III, London: Saunders and Otley, [], →OCLC, part II, pages 288–289:

          But often, when he felt the harshness of experience creep over him— [] the image of that fair child, [] hovered over him; and the very air grew warmer, as if with a living breath.

        • 1862 July – 1863 August, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], “Romola in Her Place”, in Romola. [], volume II, London: Smith, Elder and Co., [], published 1863, →OCLC, book III, page 275:

          Pestilence was hovering in the track of famine.

        • 1881–1882, Robert Louis Stevenson, “The Sea Chest”, in Treasure Island, London; Paris: Cassell & Company, published 14 November 1883, →OCLC, part I (The Old Buccaneer), page 28:

          The neighbourhood, to our ears, seemed haunted by approaching footsteps; and what between the dead body of the captain on the parlour floor, and the thought of that detestable blind beggar hovering near at hand, and ready to return, there were moments when, as the saying goes, I jumped in my skin for terror.

        • 2023 February 8, Sir Michael Holden, “Comment: Boom or bust: time to decide”, in RAIL, number 976, page 3:

          «Overall satisfaction with rail journey», as measured fortnightly by Transport Focus, has maintained a broadly flat line at around 85% across the last four months of travel disruption, while «satisfaction with punctuality/reliabilty» is hovering around 75%.

      2. To be indecisive or uncertain; to vacillate, to waver.

        Filling in the voting form, I hovered between Labour and Liberal Democrat.

        • 1596 (date written; published 1633), Edmund Spenser, A Vewe of the Present State of Irelande [], Dublin: [] Societie of Stationers, [], →OCLC; republished as A View of the State of Ireland [] (Ancient Irish Histories), Dublin: [] Society of Stationers, [] Hibernia Press, [] [b]y John Morrison, 1809, →OCLC, page 134:

          And the reason why the land-lord will no longer covenant with him [the husbandman], is, for that he dayly looketh after change and alteration, and hovereth in expectation of new worlds.

        • 1712 August 6 (Gregorian calendar), Joseph Addison, “SATURDAY, July 26, 1712”, in The Spectator, number 441; republished in Alexander Chalmers, editor, The Spectator; a New Edition, [], volume V, New York, N.Y.: D[aniel] Appleton & Company, 1853, →OCLC, page 175:

          When the soul is hovering in the last moments of its separation, [] what can support her under such tremblings of thought, such fear, such anxiety, such apprehensions, but the casting of all her cares upon Him who first gave her being, who has conducted her through one stage of it, and will be always with her in her progress through eternity?

        • 1872, William Black, “‘Prinz Eugen, der edle Ritter’”, in The Strange Adventures of a Phaeton. [], volume I, 2nd edition, London: Macmillan and Co., →OCLC, page 45:

          Arthur Ashburton was rather cold and distant towards her, and was obviously in a bad temper. He even hovered on the verge of rudeness towards both herself and the Lieutenant.

    3. (computing) Chiefly followed by over: to use a mouse or other device to place a cursor over something on a screen such as a hyperlink or icon without clicking, so as to produce a result (such as the appearance of a tooltip).

      A tooltip appears when you hover over this link.

    4. (nautical) To travel in a hovercraft as it moves above a water surface.

Conjugation[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

  • hover-height
  • hoverable
  • hoverbike
  • hoverboard
  • hoverboat
  • hovercam
  • hovercar
  • hoverchair
  • hovercraft
  • hovered (adjective)
  • hoverer
  • hovering (adjective, noun)
  • hoveringly
  • hoverjet
  • hoverpack
  • hoverport
  • overhovering
  • windhover

[edit]

  • hove

Descendants[edit]

  • Welsh: hofran

Translations[edit]

of a bird: to shelter (chicks) under its body and wings

of a thing: to cover or surround (something) see cover,‎ surround

to remain stationary or float in the air

  • Afrikaans: sweef
  • Arabic: حَامَ(ḥāma)
  • Baatonum: bɛɛri
  • Belarusian: луна́ць (lunácʹ), віта́ць (vitácʹ)
  • Bikol Central: lupád (bcl)
  • Bulgarian: нося се (nosja se), рея се (reja se)
  • Catalan: zumzejar (ca)
  • Cebuano: langaw (of an insect)
  • Central Franconian: schwevve
  • Chinese:
    Cantonese: (lau1) (of an insect)
    Mandarin: 翱翔 (zh) (áoxiáng), 高飛高飞 (zh) (gāofēi), 懸停悬停 (xuántíng) (aviation),  (zh) ()
  • Czech: vznášet impf
  • Dutch: omzweven (nl), zweven (nl)
  • Esperanto: flugpendi, ŝvebi
  • Estonian: hõljuma
  • Finnish: leijailla (fi), leijua (fi), lekuttaa (of a bird), lekutella (of a bird)
  • French: éventiller (fr) (of a bird), planer (fr)
  • Galician: barutar, pairar (gl), peneirar (gl), peneirarse, atariñar, tordear (gl)
  • Ge’ez: ጸለለ (ṣälälä)
  • German: rütteln (de) (of a bird of prey), schweben (de)
  • Greek: αιωρούμαι (el) (aioroúmai), αλαφροζυγιάζομαι (alafrozygiázomai)
  • Greenlandic: agiorpoq, qangatavoq
  • Hebrew: רִחֵף (he) (rikhéf)
  • Icelandic: sveima, svífa
  • Ido: flugetar (io)
  • Indonesian: layang (id)
  • Irish: ainligh
  • Italian: volteggiare (it)
  • Latin: oberrō, pendeō (la), volitō
  • Latvian: peldēt, stāvēt (lv)
  • Limburgish: schwéëve
  • Luxembourgish: schwiewen
  • Macedonian: ле́бди (lébdi)
  • Malagasy: mihevaheva (mg)
  • Maltese: sseqqer
  • Maori: tīonioni (of a bird), topaki
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: sveve (no)
    Nynorsk: sveve
  • Occitan: flotejar (oc), planar (oc)
  • Polish: zawisać (pl) impf, zawisnąć pf
  • Portuguese: pairar (pt)
  • Romanian: pluti (ro)
  • Russian: нависа́ть (ru) impf (navisátʹ) (of clouds), пари́ть (ru) impf (parítʹ), порха́ть (ru) impf (porxátʹ) (of a butterfly), ре́ять (ru) impf (réjatʹ), вита́ть (ru) impf (vitátʹ), ви́ться (ru) impf (vítʹsja), зависа́ть (ru) impf (zavisátʹ), зави́снуть (ru) pf (zavísnutʹ)
  • Scots: hover
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: лѐбдети, лѐбдјети
    Roman: lèbdeti, lèbdjeti (sh)
  • Spanish: cerner (es) (takes a reflexive pronoun), cernerse (es), levitar (es) pl, revolotear (es), volar (es)
  • Swedish: sväva (sv)
  • Thai: ร่อน (th) (rɔ̂n)
  • Turkish: havada durmak, uçmak (tr)
  • Ukrainian: ширя́ти impf (šyrjáty)
  • Vietnamese: lượn (vi)
  • Welsh: hofran (cy)
  • Yiddish: שוועבן(shvebn)
  • ǃXóõ: ǀxâã

to hang around or linger in a place, especially in an uncertain manner

  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 彽徊 (zh) (dīhuái) (literary, rare), 盤旋盘旋 (zh) (pánxuán), 縈繞萦绕 (zh) (yíngrào)
  • Finnish: norkoilla (fi)
  • French: faire du sur-place (fr)
  • German: verweilen (de)
  • Italian: aggirarsi (it), attardarsi, gironzolare (it), indugiare (it), ronzàre (it) (figuratively), ronzare intorno
  • Japanese: 揉み合う (もみあう, momiau) (of stock market prices)
  • Korean: 맴돌다 (maemdolda)
  • Latin: circumvolitō (figuratively), impendeō, pendeō (la)
  • Macedonian: се вр́ти (se vŕti), се вр́тка (se vŕtka)
  • Portuguese: voltear
  • Russian: болта́ться (ru) impf (boltátʹsja) (informal), ме́шкать (ru) impf (méškatʹ), слоня́ться (ru) impf (slonjátʹsja) (informal), верте́ться (ru) impf (vertétʹsja) (informal)
  • Vietnamese: luẩn quẩn (vi), chờn vờn (vi)

to be indecisive or uncertain See also translations at vacillate,‎ waver

  • Bulgarian: колебая се (kolebaja se)
  • Czech: balancovat impf
  • Finnish: epäröidä (fi), häilyä, olla kahden vaiheilla
  • French: hésiter (fr)
  • Galician: atariñar, bambanear, bambear (gl), dubidar, musear, nutar, tordear (gl)
  • German: zögern (de)
  • Greek: αιωρούμαι (el) (aioroúmai)
  • Italian: esitare (it), essere in bilico, essere indeciso, essere sospeso, pencolare (it)
  • Macedonian: се ко́леба (se kóleba)
  • Portuguese: hesitar (pt), vacilar (pt)
  • Romanian: oscila (ro)
  • Russian: колеба́ться (ru) impf (kolebátʹsja)
  • Spanish: dudar (es), hesitar (es), vacilar (es)

to use a mouse or other device to place a cursor over (something on a screen) without clicking, so as to produce a result

to travel in a hovercraft as it moves above a water surface

Noun[edit]

hover (plural hovers)

  1. An act, or the state, of remaining stationary in the air or some other place.
  2. A flock of birds fluttering in the air in one place.
  3. (figuratively) An act, or the state, of being suspended; a suspension.
  4. (chiefly Southern England) A cover; a protection; a shelter; specifically, an overhanging bank or stone under which fish can shelter; also, a shelter for hens brooding their eggs.
    • 1609, Richard Carew, “The Second Booke”, in The Survey of Cornwall. [], new edition, London: [] B. Law, []; Penzance, Cornwall: J. Hewett, published 1769, →OCLC, folio 105, verso:

      Oyſters grevv vpon boughs of trees (an Indian miracle) vvhich vvere caſt in [the pond] thither, to ſerue as a houer for the fiſh.

    • 1862 August – 1863 March, Charles Kingsley, chapter III, in The Water-Babies: A Fairy Tale for a Land-Baby, London; Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Macmillan and Co., published 1863, →OCLC, page 116:

      And now, down the rushing stream, [] past dark hovers under swirling banks, from which great trout rushed out on Tom, thinking him to be good to eat, and turned back sulkily, for the fairies sent them home again with a tremendous scolding, for daring to meddle with a water-baby; []

    • 1874, Charles Kingsley, “Superstition. A Lecture Delivered at the Royal Institution, London.”, in Health and Education, London: W. Isbister & Co. [], →OCLC, page 234:

      Without the instinct of self-preservation, which causes the sea-anemone to contract its tentacles, or the fish to dash into its hover, species would be extermined wholesale by involuntary suicide.

Derived terms[edit]

  • hovercard
  • hoverfly, hover fly
  • hover hand
  • hover text

Translations[edit]

act, or the state, of remaining stationary in the air or some other place

flock of birds fluttering in the air in one place

act, or the state, of being suspended see suspension

overhanging bank or stone under which fish can shelter

References[edit]

  1. ^ “họ̄veren, v.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  2. ^ “họ̄ven, v.(1)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  3. ^ “-er-, suf.(3)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  4. ^ Compare “hover, v.1”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2022; “hover, v.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
  5. ^ “hover, n.2”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, June 2022; “hover, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Further reading[edit]

  • hover (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • “hover”, in The Century Dictionary [], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
  • hover in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
  • hover at OneLook Dictionary Search

Norwegian Bokmål[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

  • høver

Noun[edit]

hover m

  1. indefinite plural of hov

Scots[edit]

Verb[edit]

hover (third-person singular simple present hovers, present participle hoverin, simple past hovert, past participle hovert)

  1. to hover
  2. to pause (in hesitation)

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