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Whats Bump Mean?


FalloutGod

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bump

v. bumped, bump·ing, bumps

v. tr.

To strike or collide with.

To cause to knock against an obstacle.

 

To knock to a new position; shift: bumped the crate out of the way.

To shake up and down; jolt: bumped the child on her knee; was bumped about on a rough flight.

 

To displace from a position within a group or organization.

To deprive (a passenger) of a reserved seat because of overbooking.

To raise; boost: bump up the price of gasoline.

Sports. To pass (a volleyball) by redirecting it with the forearms.

 

v. intr.

To hit or knock against something.

To proceed with jerks and jolts: bumped along slowly over the rocky terrain.

Sports. To bump a volleyball.

 

n.

 

A blow, collision, or jolt.

The sound of something bumping: heard a loud bump in the dark.

 

A raised or rounded spot; a bulge.

A slight swelling or lump.

Something, such as unevenness or a hole in a road, that causes a bump.

A rise or increase, as in prices or enrollment.

One of the natural protuberances on the human skull, considered to have significance in phrenology.

A forward thrust of the pelvis, as in a burlesque striptease.

Sports. A pass in volleyball made by redirecting the ball with the inside of the forearms, especially when extended and held together.

Slang. A shot of hard liquor, sometimes accompanied by a beer chaser.

 

Phrasal Verbs:

bump into

To meet by chance: I often bump into him at the supermarket.

bump off Slang

To murder.

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[imitative.]

 

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

 

Just in case you REALLY didn't know what bump meant

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Originally posted by SivyB

bump

v. bumped, bump·ing, bumps

v. tr.

To strike or collide with.

To cause to knock against an obstacle.

 

To knock to a new position; shift: bumped the crate out of the way.

To shake up and down; jolt: bumped the child on her knee; was bumped about on a rough flight.

 

To displace from a position within a group or organization.

To deprive (a passenger) of a reserved seat because of overbooking.

To raise; boost: bump up the price of gasoline.

Sports. To pass (a volleyball) by redirecting it with the forearms.

 

v. intr.

To hit or knock against something.

To proceed with jerks and jolts: bumped along slowly over the rocky terrain.

Sports. To bump a volleyball.

 

n.

 

A blow, collision, or jolt.

The sound of something bumping: heard a loud bump in the dark.

 

A raised or rounded spot; a bulge.

A slight swelling or lump.

Something, such as unevenness or a hole in a road, that causes a bump.

A rise or increase, as in prices or enrollment.

One of the natural protuberances on the human skull, considered to have significance in phrenology.

A forward thrust of the pelvis, as in a burlesque striptease.

Sports. A pass in volleyball made by redirecting the ball with the inside of the forearms, especially when extended and held together.

Slang. A shot of hard liquor, sometimes accompanied by a beer chaser.

 

Phrasal Verbs:

bump into

To meet by chance: I often bump into him at the supermarket.

bump off Slang

To murder.

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[imitative.]

 

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

 

Just in case you REALLY didn't know what bump meant

 

LOL :lol:

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Originally posted by SivyB

bump

v. bumped, bump·ing, bumps

v. tr.

To strike or collide with.

To cause to knock against an obstacle.

 

To knock to a new position; shift: bumped the crate out of the way.

To shake up and down; jolt: bumped the child on her knee; was bumped about on a rough flight.

 

To displace from a position within a group or organization.

To deprive (a passenger) of a reserved seat because of overbooking.

To raise; boost: bump up the price of gasoline.

Sports. To pass (a volleyball) by redirecting it with the forearms.

 

v. intr.

To hit or knock against something.

To proceed with jerks and jolts: bumped along slowly over the rocky terrain.

Sports. To bump a volleyball.

 

n.

 

A blow, collision, or jolt.

The sound of something bumping: heard a loud bump in the dark.

 

A raised or rounded spot; a bulge.

A slight swelling or lump.

Something, such as unevenness or a hole in a road, that causes a bump.

A rise or increase, as in prices or enrollment.

One of the natural protuberances on the human skull, considered to have significance in phrenology.

A forward thrust of the pelvis, as in a burlesque striptease.

Sports. A pass in volleyball made by redirecting the ball with the inside of the forearms, especially when extended and held together.

Slang. A shot of hard liquor, sometimes accompanied by a beer chaser.

 

Phrasal Verbs:

bump into

To meet by chance: I often bump into him at the supermarket.

bump off Slang

To murder.

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[imitative.]

 

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

 

Just in case you REALLY didn't know what bump meant

 

Ooo...a walking dictionary and/or librarian...

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Originally posted by SivyB

bump

v. bumped, bump·ing, bumps

v. tr.

To strike or collide with.

To cause to knock against an obstacle.

 

To knock to a new position; shift: bumped the crate out of the way.

To shake up and down; jolt: bumped the child on her knee; was bumped about on a rough flight.

 

To displace from a position within a group or organization.

To deprive (a passenger) of a reserved seat because of overbooking.

To raise; boost: bump up the price of gasoline.

Sports. To pass (a volleyball) by redirecting it with the forearms.

 

v. intr.

To hit or knock against something.

To proceed with jerks and jolts: bumped along slowly over the rocky terrain.

Sports. To bump a volleyball.

 

n.

 

A blow, collision, or jolt.

The sound of something bumping: heard a loud bump in the dark.

 

A raised or rounded spot; a bulge.

A slight swelling or lump.

Something, such as unevenness or a hole in a road, that causes a bump.

A rise or increase, as in prices or enrollment.

One of the natural protuberances on the human skull, considered to have significance in phrenology.

A forward thrust of the pelvis, as in a burlesque striptease.

Sports. A pass in volleyball made by redirecting the ball with the inside of the forearms, especially when extended and held together.

Slang. A shot of hard liquor, sometimes accompanied by a beer chaser.

 

Phrasal Verbs:

bump into

To meet by chance: I often bump into him at the supermarket.

bump off Slang

To murder.

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[imitative.]

 

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

 

Just in case you REALLY didn't know what bump meant

 

Thank you, Commander Data.

data.gif

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Originally posted by BCanr2d2

I thought it meant

 

Boring

Useless

Meaningless

Post

 

 

useless

 

\Use"less\, a. Having, or being of, no use; unserviceable; producing no good end; answering no valuable purpose; not advancing the end proposed; unprofitable; ineffectual; as, a useless garment; useless pity.

 

Not to sit idle with so great a gift Useless, and thence ridiculous. --Milton.

 

Syn: Fruitless; ineffectual.

 

Usage: Useless, Fruitless, Ineffectual. We speak of an attempt, effort, etc., as being useless when there are in it inherent difficulties which forbid the hope of success, as fruitless when it fails, not from any such difficulties, but from some unexpected hindrance arising to frustrate it; as, the design was rendered fruitless by the death of its projector. Ineffectual nearly resembles fruitless, but implies a failure of a less hopeless character; as, after several ineffectual efforts, I at last succeeded.

 

Useless are all words Till you have writ ``performance'' with your swords. The other is for waiving. --Beau. & Fl.

 

Waiving all searches into antiquity, in relation to this controversy, as being either needless or fruitless. --Waterland.

 

Even our blessed Savior's preaching, who spake as never man spake, was ineffectual to many. --Bp. Stillingfleet. -- Use\"less*ly, adv. -- Use\"less*ness, n.

Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

 

Nope, bump doesn't mean useless

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scare

v. scared, scar·ing, scares

v. tr.

To strike with sudden fear; alarm. See Synonyms at frighten.

 

v. intr.

To become frightened: a child who scares easily.

 

n.

A condition or sensation of sudden fear.

A general state of alarm; a panic: a bomb scare that necessitated evacuating the building.

 

adj.

Serving or intended to frighten people: scare stories; scare tactics.

 

Phrasal Verb:

scare up Informal

To gather or prepare with considerable effort or ingenuity: managed to scare up some folding chairs for the unexpected crowd.

 

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[Middle English skerren, scaren, from Old Norse skirra, from skjarr, timid.]

 

 

You asked for that one!

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