S: (n) bulge, bump, hump, swelling, gibbosity, gibbousness, jut, prominence, protuberance, protrusion, extrusion, excrescence (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"
S: (n) blow, bump (an impact (as from a collision)) "the bump threw him off the bicycle"
Verb
S: (v) bump, knock (knock against with force or violence) "My car bumped into the tree"
S: (v) find, happen, chance, bump, encounter (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"
S: (v) bump (dance erotically or dance with the pelvis thrust forward) "bump and grind"
S: (v) tapdance, tap (dance and make rhythmic clicking sounds by means of metal plates nailed to the sole of the dance shoes) "Glover tapdances better than anybody"
S: (v) grind (dance by rotating the pelvis in an erotically suggestive way, often while in contact with one's partner such that the dancers' legs are interlaced)
S: (v) demote, bump, relegate, break, kick downstairs (assign to a lower position; reduce in rank) "She was demoted because she always speaks up"; "He was broken down to Sergeant"
S: (v) dislodge, bump (remove or force from a position of dwelling previously occupied) "The new employee dislodged her by moving into her office space"
S: (v) displace (cause to move, usually with force or pressure) "the refugees were displaced by the war"
S: (v) move, displace (cause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense) "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"