Genetic editing technique.
Someone who bounds or leaps (as in competition)
1Occasionally, a leaper touched a bar and did not retain his hold.
2But I tell you I'm going to be a leaper, Phil.
3I'll back him to be the biggest leaper and the quickest horse in Herefordshire.
4Maybe it had made her the confident leaper she was.
5The leaper added two more people after Quinn and cleared all of them, too.
6Now, your friend Teddy ought to make a fine leaper.
7He was equally remarkable as a leaper, surpassing all competitors.
8Pat thereupon jumps the river (he is a splendid leaper), and Tom hesitates.
9An active leaper might have sprung on to the berg, could footing have been found.
10He was a fast runner and a good leaper, but seemed to dislike violent exercise.
11Such a leaper, so fast, and such courage.
12They talk to a leaper, say, one who lands on an awning or something and somehow survives.
13If a leaper were to impel himself horizontally only, he would, in the shortest leap, fall below a level.
14Anyway the leaper can wait.
15A great leaper and with strong, facile fingers to help, Ignatius stood looking down on the recumbent figure of Buttons.
16The leaper says, You know, doc, as soon as I jumped out that fourteenth-floor window, I had this overpowering thought.