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[ UK /flˈʌmp/ ]
VERB
  1. fall heavily
  2. set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise
    He planked himself into the sofa
    He planked the money on the table

How To Use flump In A Sentence

  • Sara rolled her eyes and flumped back down on her pillows, pulling her comforter back over her head again.
  • Instead, I arrive home exhausted each afternoon, flump out on the sofa and sleep like a child after her first day at school.
  • With a soft flump, I flopped on my own bed and yawned.
  • There was a loud flump as a collection of letters landed on the doormat.
  • He used to have a great flump on 'im: he'd spot a patch of floor that he fancied, then flump right down and stretch out.
  • A half minute later, there was an explosive flump, the groan of contorting steel, a crash as the door frame was torn from the wall, the overhead twisting and falling. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation: Skin Deep
  • As I flumped backwards into the water, expecting a lazy dive, I landed almost on top of two large mantas sailing out from the lagoon.
  • Berryman, who wrote funny poems and then stopped writing funny poems and launched himself off a bridge and, flump, that was it for him. THE ANTHOLOGIST
  • Aggie lifted her head, coughed up water, took one look at her surroundings, and flumped down.
  • ‘I'm not in the mood to pander to you,’ Aidan huffed as he flumped into an orange suede beanbag.
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