jump$41849$ - translation to arabic
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jump$41849$ - translation to arabic

CUT IN FILM EDITING IN WHICH TWO SEQUENTIAL SHOTS OF THE SAME SUBJECT GIVE THE IMPRESSION OF A JUMP FORWARD IN TIME
Jump-cut; Jump cuts; Jump cutting; Jump Cut; Jumpcut

jump      
n. قفز, إرتفاع مفاجئ للأسعار, طفرة, قفزة
jump up         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Jump-up; Jump up music; Jumping up; Jump-Up; Jump up (disambiguation); Jump Up!; Jump Up! (album); Jump up; Jump Up (disambiguation)
هب على قدمية ، وثب على قوائمه
long jump         
  • 250px
  • Sand pit where [[Bob Beamon]] set the 8.90 m record in Mexico City
  • Halteres]] used in athletic games in ancient Greece
  • Multi-eventer]] [[Jessica Ennis]] during a long jump, preparing to land
  • Takeoff board
  • An indicator of wind direction and a device for measuring wind speed (here +2.6 m/s) along a run-up track
  • Women's Long Jump Final – 28th Summer Universiade 2015
  • An athlete performing a long jump as part of the [[heptathlon]] at the 2013 French Athletics Championships in [[Stade Charléty]], Paris
TRACK AND FIELD EVENT
Broad jump; Long Jump; Longjumper; Longjump; Long jumper; Long-jumping; Long jumping; Long-jumper; Farthest jumper; Long jump (sport); Running long jump; Broad jumper
رياضة القَفزُ الطَّوِيل

Definition

jump-up
¦ noun
1. a Caribbean dance or celebration.
2. Austral. informal an escarpment.

Wikipedia

Jump cut

A jump cut is a cut in film editing in which a single continuous sequential shot of a subject is broken into two parts, with a piece of footage being removed in order to render the effect of jumping forward in time. Camera positions of the subject in the remaining pieces of footage of the sequence should vary only slightly in order to achieve the effect. It is a manipulation of temporal space using the duration of a single shot, and fracturing the duration to move the audience ahead. This kind of cut abruptly communicates the passing of time as opposed to the more seamless dissolve heavily used in films predating Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless, which made extensive use of jump cuts and popularized the technique during the 1960s. For this reason, jump cuts are considered a violation of classical continuity editing, which aims to give the appearance of continuous time and space in the story-world by de-emphasizing editing, but are sometimes nonetheless used for creative purposes. Jump cuts tend to draw attention to the constructed nature of the film. More than one jump cut is sometimes used in a single sequence.

Continuity editing uses a guideline called the "30-degree rule" to avoid the appearance of jump cuts. The 30-degree rule advises that for consecutive shots to appear seamless and continuous in time, the camera position must vary at least 30 degrees from its previous position. Some schools would call for a change in framing as well (e.g., from a medium shot to a close up). The idea is to convey to the viewer a different point of view on the action but with the timeline of the action being continuous. Generally, if the camera position changes less than 30 degrees, the difference between the two shots will not be substantial enough, and the viewer will experience the edit as a jump in the position of the subject rather than a change of point of view, which is jarring.

Jump cuts, on the other hand, keep the camera's relationship to the subject the same but jump forward in time in the action.

Although jump cuts can be created through the editing together of two shots filmed non-continuously (spatial jump cuts), they can also be created by removing a middle section of one continuously filmed shot (temporal jump cuts).

Jump cuts can add a sense of speed to the sequence of events.