leap造句61. Then came the great leap backward.
62. This is all a big leap of faith.
63. Privatization would be an untested leap of faith.
64. The stats cant leap to his defence either.
65. The ground was prepared for a leap into arbitrariness.
66. Your school could leap ahead of the pack.
67. Some may leap at the chance.
68. Let's leap from the television to the central heating.
69. Then her heart gave a great leap.
70. The quantum leap expressed itself partly in population levels.
71. The orchestra's performance took a quantum leap forward.
72. I think a leap of bad faith was made.
73. Not the leap Halle believed it would be.
74. You've got to take a leap.
75. Such restraint ... Unlike your impulsive blundering leap.
76. Carl Lewis took a golden leap further into history.
77. His leap from collector to seller may be the surest sign yet that road-map collecting has come of age.
78. I knew that if I made the slightest false step he would leap at me.
79. The tension, you might say, generated by that success caused crime fiction also to take a huge lateral leap.
80. Ten minutes later - another leap in the dark - he offered the appointment to Churchill.
81. Even one small step on the path of your plan can be a giant leap!
82. Soon he is digging like a whirling dervish, the impressive show ending with another frantic leap.
83. In his next film, Leap of Faith, a grim drama, he will play the villain, a conman evangelist.
84. Then, flexing their powerfully muscled silver bodies, they thrash their tails and leap from the water.
85. This is a leap year, so use that extra day to plan some great outings.
86. A balletic leap from Alan Knott to dismiss Clive Lloyd.
87. But Christopher has a slightly different angle on why Agnew's have decided to take this leap into the present.
88. Did Geoffrey leap to the defence of every person with disabilities whom he encountered?
89. Which doesn't mean I intend to leap into bed with you just because fate washed you up on my beach.
90. The branch shattered in half, and the gulls crouched to leap, only to be sucked under the bow waves.