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View synonyms for bump

bump

[ buhmp ]

verb (used with object)

  1. to come more or less violently in contact with; collide with; strike:

    His car bumped a truck.

  2. to cause to strike or collide:

    He bumped the car against a tree.

  3. to dislodge or displace by the force of collision.
  4. to dislodge by appropriating the privileges of:

    The airline bumped me from the flight.

  5. to demote or dismiss:

    He was bumped from his job.

  6. to force upward; raise:

    Demand from abroad bumped the price of corn.

  7. to move to a new position:

    We had to bump your story to next week's paper.

  8. Digital Technology. to move (an online post or thread) to the top of the reverse chronological list by adding a new comment or post to the thread:

    I bumped the question I posted last week to make it more visible.



verb (used without object)

  1. to come in contact or collide with (often followed by against or into ):

    She bumped into me.

  2. to bounce along; proceed in a series of jolts:

    The old car bumped down the road.

  3. to dance by thrusting the pelvis forward abruptly, in a provocative manner, especially to the accompaniment of an accented musical beat. Compare grind ( def 14 ).
  4. to boil with violent jolts caused by the sudden eruption of large bubbles through the surface.

noun

  1. an act or instance of bumping; collision; blow.
  2. the shock of a blow or collision.
  3. a swelling or contusion from a blow.
  4. a small area raised above the level of the surrounding surface; protuberance:

    He tripped over a bump on the sidewalk.

  5. Informal. a promotion or demotion; transfer to a higher or lower level:

    He got a bump to vice president of the company.

  6. Informal. an increase in amount, especially of salary or a wager:

    He asked the boss for a ten-dollar bump.

  7. Aeronautics. a rapidly rising current of air that gives an airplane a severe upward thrust.
  8. a dance movement in which the pelvis is abruptly thrust forward in a provocative manner, especially to the accompaniment of an accented musical beat. Compare grind ( def 20 ).
  9. Mining. crump ( def 6 ).
  10. Television. bumper 1( def 9a ).

verb phrase

  1. Informal. to meet by chance:

    I bumped into an old friend yesterday.

  2. Slang. to kill, especially to murder:

    They bumped him off because he knew too much.

bump

/ bʌmp /

verb

  1. whenintr, usually foll by against or into to knock or strike with a jolt
  2. introften foll byalong to travel or proceed in jerks and jolts
  3. tr to hurt by knocking

    he bumped his head on the ceiling

  4. tr to knock out of place; dislodge

    the crash bumped him from his chair

  5. tr to throw (a child) into the air, one other child holding each limb, and let him down again to touch the ground
  6. (in rowing races, esp at Oxford and Cambridge) to catch up with and touch (another boat that started a fixed distance ahead)
  7. cricket to bowl (a ball) so that it bounces high on pitching or (of a ball) to bounce high when bowled
  8. intr to dance erotically by thrusting the pelvis forward (esp in the phrase bump and grind )
  9. tr poker to raise (someone)
  10. informal.
    tr to exclude a ticket-holding passenger from a flight as a result of overbooking
  11. informal.
    tr to displace (someone or something) from a previously allocated position

    the story was bumped from the front page

  12. bump uglies slang.
    to have sexual intercourse


noun

  1. an impact; knock; jolt; collision
  2. a dull thud or other noise from an impact or collision
  3. the shock of a blow or collision
  4. a lump on the body caused by a blow
  5. a protuberance, as on a road surface
  6. any of the natural protuberances of the human skull, said by phrenologists to indicate underlying faculties and character
  7. a rising current of air that gives an aircraft a severe upward jolt
  8. plural the act of bumping a child. See sense 5
  9. rowing the act of bumping See bumping race
  10. bump ball
    cricket a ball that bounces into the air after being hit directly into the ground by the batsman

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Other Words From

  • bump·ing·ly adverb
  • un·bumped adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bump1

First recorded in 1560–70; imitative

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bump1

C16: probably of imitative origin

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Idioms and Phrases

  • goose pimples (bumps)
  • like a bump on a log

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Example Sentences

As Bump notes, this goes a long way toward explaining the disciplinary disparity between blacks and whites in public schools.

And over at The Wire, Philip Bump highlights a disturbing new study that measures bias as it applies to African American boys.

Bump along with Bill to his newest (and possibly only) dance track in this promo video for GatesLetter.com.

However the breakfast show they were working on has been axed and will be replaced by a show called The Bump.

Philip Bump on how a performance artist misled the public radio show.

"Bump," it went up against a telephone pole and the wind left it there.

Bump it in the carburetor enough times, rake it with shrapnel, and it begins to lose its first freshness.

Rocking the boats till people fell Bump right out of their berths onto the floor!

Bump he went against the ceiling, and I knew then why he was all over white on the more salient curves and angles of his person.

The pole seemed to have magnetic qualities and the result was "Bump."

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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