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Discover LudwigThe phrase "feel a lump" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe the physical sensation of feeling a small, rounded mass or growth on or inside the body. Example: "After noticing some discomfort in her breast, Sarah decided to perform a self-examination and was surprised to feel a lump."
Exact(24)
I defy you not to feel a lump in your throat when you get there.
DACHER KELTNER What's your most sentimental book in your bookshelf that you look to and feel a lump in your throat or feel warm?
Such tumors, usually found when a patient or her doctors feel a lump, may have been present but not detected by the mammogram.
As usual, it's packed with thrills and gags, but as with Pixar's Up, there are moments when grown-ups will feel a lump in their throats.
A young or old person can one day feel a lump, have a fainting or dizzy spell, experience an unusual chest pain or be advised that there is a shadow on a routine X-ray.
I'm surprised, and I'm touched, that a very successful comedian, who's won an awful lot of awards, including three Baftas for TV Burp, could write a musical about The X Factor and feel a lump in his throat.
Similar(36)
Looking back I may have felt a lump in my right breast but I was never exactly sure what I was feeling so I didn't pursue it -- a bump here, a rib there.
I felt a lump.
That's when I felt a lump.
In October, she felt a lump in her breast.
He said he felt a lump on his neck.
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