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How To Use Bump into In A Sentence

  • You often bump into visiting vets, middle-aged men with flabby muscles and military tattoos.
  • And the film, as it turns out, is a touching, beautifully told story about two septuagenarians who, 50 years after their adolescent romance, bump into each other once more and fall in love all over again.
  • It would be no great surprise, along here, to bump into a platoon of confused old men in Japanese infantry uniforms.
  • He was humming the song aloud and loudly, louder in fact than any man would have hummed it had he expected to bump into another human being.
  • When we bump into each other at meetings or conferences we share a momentary nostalgia because we bumped into each other in activist circles back then.
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  • The phrase "severe reality distortion field" is probably not one you bump into every day. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • To those questioning the stability of this thing, all I can say confidently is that it's totally adequate for the size and weight of my computer - it doesn't budge, even when I (constantly) bump into my desk accidentally. $8 DIY Aluminum Laptop Stand | Lifehacker Australia
  • This is not the safest option as you may bump into flashers, perverts and weirdos.
  • Serial networkers - you know, the ones you seem to innocently bump into at all sorts of events - can certainly teach us a thing or two.
  • Even the most stand-offish of neighbours had no choice but to bump into each other on the stairs.
  • Born of Russian parentage, Robin never new his father and it was a standing joke that he would probably bump into him when one of the many Soviet dance troupes visited Wimbledon Theatre.
  • I slink away to "SOC 4," and a class about how the siddur came into being, and after head over to get some tea in the Arts center, where I bump into Silvia Nacamulli, a 39-year-old Italian chef. Danna Harman: What I Learned At Limmud
  • They would bump into one another and laugh softly.
  • Particles that are much smaller than a micron in fact tend to "coagulate," i.e. cling together when they bump into one another, so sub-micron particles don't last long in the air. Running Out of Room at the Bottom
  • Did you bump into him down your local chippy or share a box at the opera in Rome? The Sun
  • It was great fun and a chance to bump into a few names and faces from the past.
  • Venture out into the waters and woodlands of New England, and there's a chance you'll bump into "Champ," America's own Loch Ness Monster, who allegedly plies the muddy ripples of Lake Champlain. Boing Boing
  • Roads will be properly illuminated to avoid accidents, especially for the two-wheeler riders who bump into road dividers, he said.
  • In the dim light he couldn't see clearly and ran bump into a tree.
  • In the dim light he couldn't see clearly and ran bump into a tree.
  • But if you happen to bump into the bootylicious pair, please don't tell anyone you saw them. Globe and Mail
  • His reclusion was so absolute that as recently as 2001 he avoided attending a wedding on the long shot that he might bump into a journalist that he scarcely even knew.
  • I hung out at Tysons Corner Center over the weekend, figuring I'd bump into kids buying the kind of skanky, sequined hookup outfits they saw on the show, or rather, the kind that would soon be peeled off the underage bodies on the show. For teens, MTV's 'Skins' offers allure of the forbidden
  • In the dim light he couldn't see clearly and ran bump into a tree.
  • Byrd says, "Sometimes there's a depth perception issue too where you can see that a child may bump into things differently or they may be reaching for something and kind of misjudge the distance. KELOLAND.COM: News, Weather and Sports
  • Caddy finally goes to bed, but, unsettled, Quentin wanders around, and happens to bump into Dalton.
  • At night, no one is allowed to walk around the camp without a guide, in case they bump into one of the enormous hippos that stroll past the chalets during their nocturnal perambulations from river to bush.
  • I bump into an eastern European businesswomen I know whose conversational strategy consists of staring at you a bit awkwardly until a chance to mention her product arises. February « 2010 « Squares of Wheat
  • So I was getting a manicure the other day and I happened to bump into one of my girlfriends.
  • A building can be organized to maximize interaction, so that people bump into each other and talk, drink, flirt, eat, complain, kibitz.
  • By chance I happened to bump into the two gentlemen in one of our local establishments.
  • Meantime the hump of that awful bump Into the heavens contrived to get To so great a height that they called the wight The man with the minaret. INTERNET WIRETAP: The Devil's Dictionary, by Ambrose Bierce (1993 Edition)
  • When I am walking in a crowded room, especially while carrying a spillable object in my hands balanced above other precariously situated object, and some rude motherchicken decides to bump into me, spill my long-anticipated tasty lunch on the ground, and then continue on his bumbling way, I should be able to sentence that person to eternal damnation. Bluemeany Diary Entry
  • I had tried to bump into Roland whenever I got the chance and he had done the same.
  • Did you bump into him down your local chippy or share a box at the opera in Rome? The Sun
  • Having decided, she carefully walked over to her tall boy, as to not bump into anything, opened a drawer and fished out what looked like a one-piece.
  • Also, sometimes I am clumsy and drop things or bump into furniture.
  • I think when you bump into people who like to spout off, you intuitively know it's coming from some inner hurt.
  • Wherever I go I always seem to bump into him.
  • I wander backstage after the set and bump into Clint.
  • We've never met, though someday if we do bump into each other we'll manage to get someone to buy us both a drink.
  • Even the most stand-offish of neighbours had no choice but to bump into each other on the stairs.
  • In the dim light he couldn't see clearly and ran bump into a tree.
  • I slip and slide and skid and bump into things even in the best of weather.
  • In the dim light he couldn't see clearly and ran bump into a tree.
  • Anyone who wanders into a bookshop or looks through a publisher's catalogue is bound to bump into a new Companion.
  • I happened to bump into Mervyn Johns in the hallway.
  • Suddenly face-to-face with a Dutch spirits promoter whom he had been trying to bump into for days in New Orleans, Jason Wilson is handed a hip flask of genever, or Holland gin. On a Spirited Journey
  • One evening at the Olympic Park, I bump into Lincoln DeWitt, who until 1997 couldn't tell you the difference between a skeleton sled and a Flexible Flyer.
  • I told him he could drive around the old cedar tree but he must not bump into the cedar tree. Times, Sunday Times
  • She says unpainted railings and radiators he could bump into are just some of the health risks which could pose serious problems for her son.
  • For every time you bump into people in the street, there must be ten times as many when you just narrowly miss each other.
  • We experienced that the Germans have a strange tendency to bump into people, which no one seemed to mind, however had this happened in a club back in England, it would certainly have lead to a ruck.
  • It feels a bit like when you're in a supermarket and, by the fruit and veg, you bump into somebody you know well enough to stop and have a natter.

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