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单词 bump
释义

bump


bump

B0548000 (bŭmp)v. bumped, bump·ing, bumps v.tr.1. To strike or collide with: bumped the chair with a knee.2. To cause to knock against an obstacle: bumped a knee against the chair.3. a. To knock to a new position; shift: bumped the crate out of the way.b. To shake up and down; jolt: bumped the child on her knee; was bumped about on a rough flight.4. a. To displace from a position within a group or organization.b. To deprive (a passenger) of reserved travel accommodations because of overbooking.5. To raise; boost: bump up the price of gasoline.6. Sports To pass (a volleyball) by redirecting it with the forearms.v.intr.1. To hit or knock against something: boxes bumping against one another in a truck.2. To proceed with jerks and jolts: bumped along slowly over the rocky terrain.3. Sports To bump a volleyball.n.1. a. A blow, collision, or jolt.b. The sound of something bumping: heard a loud bump in the dark.2. a. A raised or rounded spot; a bulge.b. A slight swelling or lump.c. Informal See baby bump.3. A rise or increase, as in prices or enrollment.4. A forward thrust of the pelvis, as in a burlesque striptease.5. Sports A pass in volleyball made by redirecting the ball with the inside of the forearms, especially when extended and held together.6. Slang a. A small dose of an illegal drug, especially cocaine inhaled in powdered form.b. 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.]

bump

(bʌmp) vb1. (when: intr, usually foll by against or into) to knock or strike with a jolt2. (often foll by: along) to travel or proceed in jerks and jolts3. (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) Brit to throw (a child) into the air, one other child holding each limb, and let him or her down again to touch the ground6. (Rowing) (in rowing races, esp at Oxford and Cambridge) to catch up with and touch (another boat that started a fixed distance ahead)7. (Cricket) cricket to bowl (a ball) so that it bounces high on pitching or (of a ball) to bounce high when bowled8. (Dancing) (intr) chiefly US and Canadian to dance erotically by thrusting the pelvis forward (esp in the phrase bump and grind)9. (Card Games) (tr) poker to raise (someone)10. (tr) informal to exclude a ticket-holding passenger from a flight as a result of overbooking11. (tr) informal to displace (someone or something) from a previously allocated position: the story was bumped from the front page. 12. bump uglies slang US to have sexual intercoursen13. an impact; knock; jolt; collision14. a dull thud or other noise from an impact or collision15. the shock of a blow or collision16. (Pathology) a lump on the body caused by a blow17. a protuberance, as on a road surface18. (Anatomy) any of the natural protuberances of the human skull, said by phrenologists to indicate underlying faculties and character19. (Aeronautics) a rising current of air that gives an aircraft a severe upward jolt20. (plural) the act of bumping a child. See sense 521. (Rowing) rowing the act of bumping. See bumping race22. (Cricket) bump ball cricket a ball that bounces into the air after being hit directly into the ground by the batsman[C16: probably of imitative origin]

bump

(bʌmp)

v.t. 1. to collide with; strike: The 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. Informal. to remove, dismiss, or eject: The airline bumped me from the flight. 5. Informal. to force upward; raise: Demand from abroad bumped up the price of corn. 6. Poker. raise (def. 22). v.i. 7. to come in contact or collide with: She bumped into me. 8. to bounce along; proceed in a series of jolts: The old car bumped down the road. 9. to use pelvic bumps in erotic dancing. 10. bump into, to meet by chance. 11. bump off, Slang. to murder. n. 12. a collision; blow. 13. a swelling from a blow. 14. a small area raised above the level of the surrounding surface; protuberance. 15. a rapidly rising current of air that gives an airplane a severe upward thrust. 16. a forward thrust of the pelvis for erotic effect. [1560–70; imitative]

bump


Past participle: bumped
Gerund: bumping
Imperative
bump
bump
Present
I bump
you bump
he/she/it bumps
we bump
you bump
they bump
Preterite
I bumped
you bumped
he/she/it bumped
we bumped
you bumped
they bumped
Present Continuous
I am bumping
you are bumping
he/she/it is bumping
we are bumping
you are bumping
they are bumping
Present Perfect
I have bumped
you have bumped
he/she/it has bumped
we have bumped
you have bumped
they have bumped
Past Continuous
I was bumping
you were bumping
he/she/it was bumping
we were bumping
you were bumping
they were bumping
Past Perfect
I had bumped
you had bumped
he/she/it had bumped
we had bumped
you had bumped
they had bumped
Future
I will bump
you will bump
he/she/it will bump
we will bump
you will bump
they will bump
Future Perfect
I will have bumped
you will have bumped
he/she/it will have bumped
we will have bumped
you will have bumped
they will have bumped
Future Continuous
I will be bumping
you will be bumping
he/she/it will be bumping
we will be bumping
you will be bumping
they will be bumping
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been bumping
you have been bumping
he/she/it has been bumping
we have been bumping
you have been bumping
they have been bumping
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been bumping
you will have been bumping
he/she/it will have been bumping
we will have been bumping
you will have been bumping
they will have been bumping
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been bumping
you had been bumping
he/she/it had been bumping
we had been bumping
you had been bumping
they had been bumping
Conditional
I would bump
you would bump
he/she/it would bump
we would bump
you would bump
they would bump
Past Conditional
I would have bumped
you would have bumped
he/she/it would have bumped
we would have bumped
you would have bumped
they would have bumped
Thesaurus
Noun1.bump - a lump on the body caused by a blowbump - a lump on the body caused by a blowharm, hurt, injury, trauma - any physical damage to the body caused by violence or accident or fracture etc.
2.bump - something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundingsbump - something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundings; "the gun in his pocket made an obvious bulge"; "the hump of a camel"; "he stood on the rocky prominence"; "the occipital protuberance was well developed"; "the bony excrescence between its horns"bulge, excrescence, extrusion, gibbosity, gibbousness, hump, jut, protrusion, protuberance, swelling, prominencefrontal eminence - either prominence of the frontal bone above each orbitoccipital protuberance - prominence on the outer surface of the occipital bonebelly - a part that bulges deeply; "the belly of a sail"caput - a headlike protuberance on an organ or structure; "the caput humeri is the head of the humerus which fits into a cavity in the scapula"mogul - a bump on a ski slopenub, nubble - a small lump or protuberancesnag - a sharp protuberancewart - any small rounded protuberance (as on certain plants or animals)projection - any solid convex shape that juts out from something
3.bump - an impact (as from a collision); "the bump threw him off the bicycle"blowimpact - the striking of one body against anotherjolt, jounce, jar, shock - a sudden jarring impact; "the door closed with a jolt"; "all the jars and jolts were smoothed out by the shock absorbers"concussion - any violent blowrap, tap, strike - a gentle blowbang, bash, smash, knock, belt - a vigorous blow; "the sudden knock floored him"; "he took a bash right in his face"; "he got a bang on the head"buffeting, pounding - repeated heavy blowssideswipe - a glancing blow from or on the side of something (especially motor vehicles)slap, smack - a blow from a flat object (as an open hand)
Verb1.bump - knock against with force or violence; "My car bumped into the tree"knockcollide with, impinge on, hit, run into, strike - hit against; come into sudden contact with; "The car hit a tree"; "He struck the table with his elbow"bump into, jar against, knock against, run into, butt against - collide violently with an obstacle; "I ran into the telephone pole"
2.bump - come upon, as if by accident; meet with; "We find this idea in Plato"; "I happened upon the most wonderful bakery not very far from here"; "She chanced upon an interesting book in the bookstore the other day"find, encounter, chance, happen
3.bump - dance erotically or dance with the pelvis thrust forward; "bump and grind"trip the light fantastic, trip the light fantastic toe, dance - move in a pattern; usually to musical accompaniment; do or perform a dance; "My husband and I like to dance at home to the radio"
4.bump - assign to a lower position; reduce in rank; "She was demoted because she always speaks up"; "He was broken down to Sergeant"demote, kick downstairs, relegate, breakassign, delegate, designate, depute - give an assignment to (a person) to a post, or assign a task to (a person)sideline - remove from the center of activity or attention; place into an inferior position; "The outspoken cabinet member was sidelined by the President"reduce - bring to humbler or weaker state or condition; "He reduced the population to slavery"murder, off, bump off, slay, polish off, dispatch, remove, hit - kill intentionally and with premeditation; "The mafia boss ordered his enemies murdered"
5.bump - remove or force from a position of dwelling previously occupied; "The new employee dislodged her by moving into her office space"dislodgethrow - cause to fall off; "The horse threw its inexperienced rider"displace - cause to move, usually with force or pressure; "the refugees were displaced by the war"

bump

verb1. knock, hit, strike, crash, smash, slam, bang He bumped his head on the low beam.2. jerk, shake, bounce, rattle, jar, jog, lurch, jolt, jostle, jounce We left the road again and bumped over the mountainside.noun1. knock, hit, blow, shock, impact, rap, collision, thump Small children often cry after a minor bump.2. thud, crash, knock, smash, bang, smack, thump, clump, wallop (informal), clunk, clonk I felt a little bump and knew instinctively what had happened.3. lump, swelling, bulge, hump, node, nodule, protuberance, contusion She got a large bump on her forehead.4. hump, lump The truck hit a bump and bounced.bump into someone (Informal) meet, encounter, come across, run into, run across, meet up with, chance upon, happen upon, light upon I happened to bump into Mervyn Johns in the hallway.bump into something crash into, knock, hit, strike, collide with, smash into, slam into, bang into They stopped moving and he almost bumped into them.bump someone off (Slang) murder, kill, assassinate, remove, do in (slang), eliminate, take out (slang), wipe out (informal), dispatch, finish off, do away with, blow away (slang, chiefly U.S.), knock off (slang), liquidate, rub out (U.S. slang) They will probably bump you off anyway.bump something up increase, raise, boost, expand, add to, heighten, enlarge, magnify, amplify, jack up, hoick The extra cost will bump up the price.

bump

verb1. To come together or come up against with force:collide, crash.2. To proceed with sudden, abrupt movements:jerk, jolt.3. To put out by force:dismiss, eject, evict, expel, oust, throw out.Informal: chuck.Slang: boot (out), bounce, kick out.Idioms: give someone the boot, give someone the heave-ho, send packing, show someone the door, throw out on one's ear.4. To lower in rank or grade:break, degrade, demote, downgrade, reduce.Slang: bust.phrasal verb
bump intoTo find or meet by chance:chance on (or upon), come across, come on (or upon), find, happen on (or upon), light on (or upon), run across, run into, stumble on (or upon), tumble on.Archaic: alight on (or upon).Idiom: meet up with.phrasal verb
bump offSlang. To take the life of (a person or persons) unlawfully:destroy, finish (off), kill, liquidate, murder, slay.Informal: put away.Slang: do in, knock off, off, rub out, waste, wipe out, zap.noun1. Violent forcible contact between two or more things:collision, concussion, crash, impact, jar, jolt, percussion, shock, smash.2. An unevenness or elevation on a surface:hump, knob, knot, lump, nub, protuberance.3. A small raised area of skin resulting from a light blow or an insect sting, for example:bunch, knot, lump, swelling.
Translations
撞击碰撞声肿块凹凸不平

bump

(bamp) verb to knock or strike (something). She bumped into me; I bumped my head against the ceiling. 撞擊 撞击 noun1. (the sound of) a blow or knock. We heard a loud bump. 碰撞(聲) 碰撞(声) 2. a swelling or raised part. a bump on the head; This road is full of bumps. 腫起,凹凸不平 肿块,凹凸不平 ˈbumper noun a bar on a motor vehicle to lessen damage when it collides with anything. 減震器 减震器 adjective excellent in some way, especially by being large. a bumper crop. 豐盛的,很多的 丰盛的,特大的 ˈbumpy adjective uneven. a bumpy road. 顛簸的 颠簸的bump into to meet (someone) by accident. I bumped into him in the street. 偶然碰到(某人) 偶然碰到(某人) bump of (slang) to murder someone. (俚)殺人 (俚)杀人

bump

撞击zhCN

bump


bump

tv. to remove someone from an airplane flight, usually involuntarily, because of overbooking. They bumped me but gave me something to make up for it.
See:
  • baby bump
  • be bumping along the bottom
  • bump
  • bump (up) against (someone or something)
  • bump against
  • bump along
  • bump along the bottom
  • bump and grind
  • bump fuzzies
  • bump heads with
  • bump in the road
  • bump into
  • bump into (someone or something)
  • bump off
  • bump someone off
  • bump that
  • Bump that!
  • bump uglies
  • bump up
  • bumping
  • bumping fuzzies
  • come down to earth
  • fist bump
  • get goose bumps
  • goose bumps
  • goose pimples
  • if a toady frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass
  • If frogs had wheels, they wouldn't bump their butts
  • Let’s bump this place!
  • let's bump this place
  • Let's bump this place!
  • like a bump on a log
  • things that go bump in the night

bump


bump

1. any of the natural protuberances of the human skull, said by phrenologists to indicate underlying faculties and character 2. a rising current of air that gives an aircraft a severe upward jolt 3. Rowing the act of bumping 4. Cricket bump ball a ball that bounces into the air after being hit directly into the ground by the batsman

bump

Increment. E.g. C's ++ operator. It is used especially ofcounter variables, pointers and index dummies in "for","while", and "do-while" loops.

bump


bump

Regional drug slang for:
noun
(1) Crack cocaine.
(2) Fake crack cocaine.
(3) A hit of ketamine.
verb To boost or increase a high.
A nonspecific lay term for:
(1) A superficial nodule of any kind.
(2) A resolving post-traumatic haematoma.

BUMP


AcronymDefinition
BUMPBring Up My Post (messaging/BBSs)
BUMPBoston University Marine Program
BUMPBaby Under Manufacturing Process (maternity company; Los Angeles, CA)
BUMPBicycle Use Master Plan (Canada)
BUMPBarry's Ultra Motorsports Park (Alberta, Canada)
BUMPBlack Upwardly Mobile Professional
BUMPBenthic Untethered Multipurpose Platform
BUMPBoston Urban Music Project (Boston, MA)

bump


Related to bump: bump up
  • all
  • verb
  • noun
  • phrase

Synonyms for bump

verb knock

Synonyms

  • knock
  • hit
  • strike
  • crash
  • smash
  • slam
  • bang

verb jerk

Synonyms

  • jerk
  • shake
  • bounce
  • rattle
  • jar
  • jog
  • lurch
  • jolt
  • jostle
  • jounce

noun knock

Synonyms

  • knock
  • hit
  • blow
  • shock
  • impact
  • rap
  • collision
  • thump

noun thud

Synonyms

  • thud
  • crash
  • knock
  • smash
  • bang
  • smack
  • thump
  • clump
  • wallop
  • clunk
  • clonk

noun lump

Synonyms

  • lump
  • swelling
  • bulge
  • hump
  • node
  • nodule
  • protuberance
  • contusion

noun hump

Synonyms

  • hump
  • lump

phrase bump into someone

Synonyms

  • meet
  • encounter
  • come across
  • run into
  • run across
  • meet up with
  • chance upon
  • happen upon
  • light upon

phrase bump into something

Synonyms

  • crash into
  • knock
  • hit
  • strike
  • collide with
  • smash into
  • slam into
  • bang into

phrase bump someone off

Synonyms

  • murder
  • kill
  • assassinate
  • remove
  • do in
  • eliminate
  • take out
  • wipe out
  • dispatch
  • finish off
  • do away with
  • blow away
  • knock off
  • liquidate
  • rub out

phrase bump something up

Synonyms

  • increase
  • raise
  • boost
  • expand
  • add to
  • heighten
  • enlarge
  • magnify
  • amplify
  • jack up
  • hoick

Synonyms for bump

verb to come together or come up against with force

Synonyms

  • collide
  • crash

verb to proceed with sudden, abrupt movements

Synonyms

  • jerk
  • jolt

verb to put out by force

Synonyms

  • dismiss
  • eject
  • evict
  • expel
  • oust
  • throw out
  • chuck
  • boot
  • bounce
  • kick out

verb to lower in rank or grade

Synonyms

  • break
  • degrade
  • demote
  • downgrade
  • reduce
  • bust

phrase bump into: to find or meet by chance

Synonyms

  • chance on
  • come across
  • come on
  • find
  • happen on
  • light on
  • run across
  • run into
  • stumble on
  • tumble on
  • alight on

phrase bump off: to take the life of (a person or persons) unlawfully

Synonyms

  • destroy
  • finish
  • kill
  • liquidate
  • murder
  • slay
  • put away
  • do in
  • knock off
  • off
  • rub out
  • waste
  • wipe out
  • zap

noun violent forcible contact between two or more things

Synonyms

  • collision
  • concussion
  • crash
  • impact
  • jar
  • jolt
  • percussion
  • shock
  • smash

noun an unevenness or elevation on a surface

Synonyms

  • hump
  • knob
  • knot
  • lump
  • nub
  • protuberance

noun a small raised area of skin resulting from a light blow or an insect sting, for example

Synonyms

  • bunch
  • knot
  • lump
  • swelling

Synonyms for bump

noun a lump on the body caused by a blow

Related Words

  • harm
  • hurt
  • injury
  • trauma

noun something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundings

Synonyms

  • bulge
  • excrescence
  • extrusion
  • gibbosity
  • gibbousness
  • hump
  • jut
  • protrusion
  • protuberance
  • swelling
  • prominence

Related Words

  • frontal eminence
  • occipital protuberance
  • belly
  • caput
  • mogul
  • nub
  • nubble
  • snag
  • wart
  • projection

noun an impact (as from a collision)

Synonyms

  • blow

Related Words

  • impact
  • jolt
  • jounce
  • jar
  • shock
  • concussion
  • rap
  • tap
  • strike
  • bang
  • bash
  • smash
  • knock
  • belt
  • buffeting
  • pounding
  • sideswipe
  • slap
  • smack

verb knock against with force or violence

Synonyms

  • knock

Related Words

  • collide with
  • impinge on
  • hit
  • run into
  • strike
  • bump into
  • jar against
  • knock against
  • butt against

verb come upon, as if by accident

Synonyms

  • find
  • encounter
  • chance
  • happen

verb dance erotically or dance with the pelvis thrust forward

Related Words

  • trip the light fantastic
  • trip the light fantastic toe
  • dance

verb assign to a lower position

Synonyms

  • demote
  • kick downstairs
  • relegate
  • break

Related Words

  • assign
  • delegate
  • designate
  • depute
  • sideline
  • reduce
  • murder
  • off
  • bump off
  • slay
  • polish off
  • dispatch
  • remove
  • hit

verb remove or force from a position of dwelling previously occupied

Synonyms

  • dislodge

Related Words

  • throw
  • displace
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