bump

Related to bump: bump up

bump

1. noun, slang A small amount of some powdered substance, such as cocaine, that is to be inhaled nasally. I took a quick bump of coke to help perk up before my big presentation. He offered me a bump of ketamine at the party, but I don't really remember much after that.
2. noun, slang A shot of liquor, especially when ordered alongside a beer. The bar always serves a beer and a bump for $5 on Fridays.
3. noun, informal The bulge of a woman's abdomen during pregnancy. You've got such a cute little bump! How far along are you by now? I remember being eight months pregnant, my bump out to here, having to pack up our whole house on my own ahead of our big move to San Francisco.
4. noun, informal A slight increase. Our sales always get a nice bump around spring, when people start coming out of the post-holidays blues. I'll get a bump in my bonus if I can close this deal before Christmas.
5. verb, informal To increase (something) slightly. Just one more five-star user review will bump our app's overall rating to a 4.0 average. They said they'd bump my salary a bit if I complete the training course.
6. verb, informal To prevent someone from boarding their flight due to an overbooking. The airline bumped me from my flight to London, but they offered to put me up in a five-star hotel for the night, so I didn't mind.
7. verb, informal To move someone or something to some different location than what was previously allocated or reserved. It really irritated me that they bumped my story from the front page at the last minute. They needed room for a passenger in a wheelchair, so they bumped me and a couple other passengers to the back of the bus.

bumping

1. With a strong, often enjoyable, beat. This song is really bumping—let's dance!
2. Bustling or busy. Sorry I was gone so long, the deli was really bumping.
3. Very good or excellent. I had a bumping night at the concert, didn't you?
See also: bump
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

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.

bumping

1. mod. [of music] having a good beat. Man, this music is bumping. I can feel the beat.
2. mod. crowded and busy. This place is bumping. Let’s sit in the corner, out of the way.
3. mod. really good; cool. We had a bumping time at Tiff’s last night.
See also: bump
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See:
  • baby bump
  • be bumping along the bottom
  • bump
  • bump (one's) gums
  • 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
  • have goose bumps
  • if a toady frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass
  • If frogs had wheels, they wouldn't bump their butts
  • if frogs had wings, they wouldn't bump their butts (when they hop)
  • 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
References in periodicals archive
A different user also said that Markle is (https://www.ibtimes.com/meghan-markle-overdoing-pregnancy-unlike-kate-middleton-using-bump-prop-2757437) "overdoing" her pregnancy and is making her baby bump a prop.
Pointing fingers won't bring bump stocks back, nor will it help us win the next fight.
"But with Bean revealed at the nation's number one bump name, it's interesting to see how many of the other top nicknames relate to food -- maybe mums' cravings are helping couples choose?"
The second peak force occurring after synchronization force is called double bump, in fact the name double or second bump comes from here.
"Stay true to your style but make a few tweaks - invest in a great fitting pair of jeans with built-in bump support."
Bump points to the audit as representative of the improvements she said she's brought to the office since the departure of A.
Is it any surprise, then, that the fist bump is finally safe enough to appear in a financial services advertisement?
The new Scott Safety First Base 3 FR bump cap is designed to offer customers dual protection.
Bump created the buzz for allowing smartphones to transfer data by tapping them together, a feature that became a signature feature in Samsung's Galaxy S3, competing the iPhone and pushing Apple to launch a similar feature.
The insider also said that Bump had raised nearly USD20m million from venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz.
This bump is dangerous and causes too many accidents as drivers coming both ways veer into traffic to avoid the bump.
PEOPLE who feel excess pain when travelling over a speed bump could be suffering from appendicitis, research suggests.
Bump Pay is a new app for person-to-person mobile payments developed by Bump, the makers of the app of the same name that allows the instant transfer of contact information and photos.
Bump Pay relies on the physical contact of phones, so it can only be done in person.
But thanks to a startup called Bump Technologies, Inc.