Exact(9)
This may not always be such a great thing politicians may receive a bump in the polls from reaching a compromise that is, substantively, awful.
Despicable Me 2 may receive a bump after schools break up for the summer holiday, although Monsters University should provide significant competition when it arrives on Friday.
Anne Bulford, recently promoted to be the corporation's first female deputy general, is also set to receive a bump to her £395,000 pay.
Whoever it is, teasing the audience with the announcement date two weeks in advance assures that the show will receive a bump in the ratings when the co-host is revealed.
But his aides are also girding for Mr. Obama to receive a bump in the polls once his divisive nomination fight ends, and for a tough general election in which Mr. McCain is vying to succeed an unpopular Republican president and to continue an unpopular war.
But we do know that lower- and working-class students receive a bump up in admissions, although this plus factor counts more heavily for nonwhite than for white students.
Similar(51)
President Barack Obama has received a bump in his job approval figures.
His approval ratings, while receiving a bump from the Euro 2016 soccer tournament, have been persistently low.
Fox was by far the No. 1 network for the night, according to Nielsen data, as both "American Idol" and "Touch" received a bump in viewership from last week.
The standard engine is the 3.7-liter V-6, which received a bump in horsepower to 300 and torque to 275 pound-feet.
In previous elections, presidential candidates have received a bump in polling averages after the party convention – and 2016 didn't buck that trend on either side.
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