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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a massive bump on" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a significant protrusion or swelling on a surface, often in a medical or physical context.
Example: "After the fall, he noticed a massive bump on his forehead that was painful to touch."
Alternatives: "a large swelling on" or "a significant protrusion on".
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I was pretty much fine, except for scuffed knees and a massive bump on my forehead.
Similar(59)
Facebook's traffic is still very much not going anywhere but up, but the social network could still see a massive bump in total pageviews and time spent on the site if they can convince even just a tiny percentage of their total user base to set Facebook.com as their homepage.
What the polls failed to predict was a massive bump in turnout.
So to see a massive bump was not unexpected.
That being said, HBO NOW still saw a massive bump thanks to "Game of Thrones" for the Season 7 premiere.
Or if you'd like a massive bump in your salary!
Michelle Lhooq is giving away massive bumps on Twitter.
It's also a massive 130x bump on the $20,000 it was looking to raise on Selfstarter to fund initial production of its connected gizmo.
It's also a massive 130x bump on the $20,000 it was looking to raise on Selfstarter to fund initial production of its connected gizmo.
However, the problem was Flamini flew the coop to Milan at the end of the 2008 season on a "Bosman" transfer after AC Milan offered a massive salary bump.
The company has apparently cracked the code on bringing 5x zoom to the back of a handset without adding a massive camera bump.
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