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The phrase "bump into something" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe when something physically bumps into something else, either accidentally or intentionally. For example, "I was walking down the street and I accidentally bumped into someone on my way."
Exact(28)
If you bump into something, it's not going to cause an accident or cause any damage".
"These robots, if they bump into something they'll turn around," Jessica said.
The flavours are distinguished by the particles which emerge on the rare occasion a neutrino does bump into something.
It's what we miss about going to libraries: you go for one thing and you bump into something else".
I always assumed that the bean plants simply grow this way or that, until they eventually bump into something suitable to climb.
I'd never visited it until years after I came to live in America, but you bump into something you half-remember being taught in school every few feet.
Similar(32)
Actually, you can hardly go shopping these days without bumping into something Trump.
Over all, he's curious, open to bumping into something new.
He declined to explain the black eye any further other than to say, "I kind of bumped into something".
For instance, the ability to avoid bumping into something comes from small anti-collision sensors used in Mercedes-Benz cars.
I can't move more than a few inches in my room without bumping into something New Yorker-cartoon-related.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com