lump
nounEtymology
Definitions
Something that protrudes, sticks out, or sticks together
Something that protrudes, sticks out, or sticks together; a cluster or blob; a mound or mass of no particular shape.
- Stir the gravy until there are no more lumps.
- a lump of coal; a lump of clay; a lump of cheese
A swelling or nodule of tissue under the skin or in an internal part of the body.
- Lumps in the breasts are an indicator of breast cancer.
A group, set, or unit.
- The money arrived all at once as one big lump sum payment.
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A small, shaped mass of sugar, typically about a teaspoonful.
- Do you want one lump or two with your coffee?
A dull or lazy person.
- Don't just sit there like a lump.
- "Thou great Norman lump!" he muttered. "If I conjure till Doomsday, I cannot make thee gold."
A fat person.
A beating or verbal abuse.
- He's taken his lumps over the years.
- Komer admitted that the United States would probably suffer "short term lumps" as a result of Johnson's brusque decision.
- Mr. Katzenberg is now taking his commensurate lumps, particularly because contributors feel he helped disabuse donors’ concerns about Mr. Biden’s physical state.
A projection beneath the breech end of a gun barrel.
A kind of fish, the lumpsucker.
- You roast him [the fish] […] just like a lump.
Food given to a tramp to be eaten on the road.
The workhouse.
To treat as a single unit
To treat as a single unit; to group together in a casual or chaotic manner (as if forming an ill-defined lump of the items).
- People tend to lump turtles and tortoises together, when in fact they are different creatures.
- Most gays don't want to know about us, so lumping us in their support efforts is counter-productive at best.
To bear (a heavy or awkward burden)
To bear (a heavy or awkward burden); to carry (something unwieldy) from one place to another.
- Well, a male body was brought to a certain surgeon by a man he had often employed, and the pair lumped it down on the dissecting table, and then the vendor received his money and went.
- I never ceased to be amazed at his prowess at being able to lump two-hundredweight sacks of coal, which seemed as big as he was, up perhaps four flights of narrow stairs
To burden (someone) with an undesired task or responsibility.
To hit or strike (a person).
- If that's the only way you can fight, then you'd better be prepared to get lumped.
To form a lump or lumps.
- Thin the paint with mineral spirits for a medium consistency so that it will not drip or lump.
The neighborhood
- neighbornubble
- neighbortake one’s lumps
- neighborlump it
- neighborlike it or lump it
- neighborlove it or lump it
- neighborlump up
Derived
bring a lump to someone's throat, expository lump, gluelump, in the lump, lady lumps, ladylumps, lumpability, lumpatious, lumpectomy, lumpen, lumpfish, lump hammer, lumpily, lumpiness, lump in one's throat, lumpish, lumpishly, lumpishness, lumpless, lumplike, lumps of delight, lumpsome, lumpsucker, lump-sugar, lump sum, lump to one's throat, lump work, lumpy, lunkhead, sugar lump, take one's lumps, Welsh lump, lumper, lump the lighter, lump together
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at lump. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at lump. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
9 hops · closes at lump
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA