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'go jumping' is not a correct and usable phrase in written English.
In written English, the expression would be 'go jump'. For example, "He decided to go jump in the lake to cool off."
Exact(19)
"After climbing Mount Everest, you don't immediately go jumping on to the nearest peak.
"We're on pace to win 100 games, so let's not go jumping off any bridges," Nick Swisher said.
"You can jump on the rabbit furs, but don't you go jumping on the mink and sable," Herbert warned.
It's just, 'Walk away, don't go jumping today.' The difficulty is trying to discern between 'Fear' and 'No,' because they're both telling you the same thing.
I mean that they kept me so busy caring for them, keeping them from the rats, roaches, falling plaster, and all the banality of poverty that I had no time to go jumping off the roof, or to become a junkie or an alcoholic.
"Our advice for now is not to go jumping in with a chainsaw".
Similar(41)
Hard Brexiteers can go jump off a cliff.
It's genuinely awesome; the haters can go jump off a pier.
Please help before I tell my son to go jump off a cliff.
Or, as he had it, "before I go jump the old trampoline".
Toward midnight, he recalled, "they said they were going to go jump a Mexican," and they left.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com