BUMP - 3 reference results
Bump or Bumps may refer to:
- Bump (Internet), raising a thread's profile by returning it to the top of the list of active threads
- Bump (union), in an unionised work environment, a re-assignment of jobs on the basis of seniority
- Bump (football), a body contact alternative to a tackle and shepherding method in Australian Rules Football
- Bumps race, a type of rowing competition
- Bump mapping, a computer graphics technique
- Speed bump, a raised portion of road designed to slow traffic
- Coal mine bump, a seismic jolt occurring within a mine
- Lock bumping, a method of lock picking
- The bumps, a birthday tradition
In entertainment:
- Bump (Music), a progressive rock/pop group from Detroit, MI founded in 2001
- Bump (Transformers), a fictional character in the Transformers universe.
- Bump (television), a short video segment used in advertising
- Bump (professional wrestling), making actual contact with another individual, an object, or the ground
- Bump (TV series), a 1990 children's programme featuring an elephant
- "Bump (song)", a 2005 single by Raven-Symoné
- Bump (album), a Jazz album recorded by musician John Scofield in 2000
- Bump (dance), a dance from the 1970s disco era
- Bump (pricing game), a game played on The Price Is Right from 1985 through 1991
- Mr. Bump, a Mr. Men character
- "Bump, Bump, Bump", a 2003 single by B2K featuring P. Diddy
- The Bump, a 1974 hit single by Kenny
Bump may also refer to:
- The removal of passengers from an overbooked airline flight
- Colloquialism for a skin lesion such as pimple, blackhead, etc.
- A "shout out"
- A dosage of some illegal substance (slang, most often in reference to cocaine)
- The basketball elimination game invented by Keith Setty and Garyn Waits in 1987. Knockout (game)
- A pregnant celebrity (starting to show)
- A small dose of cocaine to continue the recreational effect or prevent the comedown.
- The rubbing of one's nose against another's, or in the most extreme cases, physical exchange of saliva through the mouth
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Last updated on Monday September 01, 2008 at 02:11:59 PDT (GMT -0700)
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Monday September 01, 2008 at 02:11:59 PDT (GMT -0700)
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To bump a thread on an Internet forum is to post a reply to it purely in order to raise the thread's profile. This will typically return it to the top of the list of active threads.

Motivation
Many Internet forums show as their first page a list of the 20–50 topics or "discussion threads" most recently posted to. Someone wishing to keep a thread on this first page, or bring an old thread back to it will post a reply to it purely to do this. If they are open about this, the post may simply be the word "BUMP".Netiquette
Thread bumping is commonly considered a breach of netiquette and some moderated forums forbid it. Users may get around that by posting what is ostensibly a genuine reply. Sometimes this will mockingly contain the word "bump" in it, such as "Wandering the forum, he bumps into this thread...", or be a trivial question or response such as "Anyone?" Bumping old or inactive ("dead") threads is occasionally called "necroposting" or "thread necromancy", and the bumped posts referred to as "frankenposts". "Dead" threads that are reawakened are often called "thread necros". People who resurrect old threads are often called "threadomancers". On some boards, bumping a new thread with no replies in order to elicit a response is tolerated, but resurrecting an old thread that has run its course and has been inactive for a period of time (usually anywhere from a few days to a month) is prohibited. The acceptable practice is usually to start a new thread and link to the old thread so that readers can become familiar with the background information.Sticky threads
Many forums now have features allowing administrators to make a thread "sticky", meaning that the thread will remain at the top regardless of the time of the latest entry.
In a similar way a few forums create an area specifically for bumping (which usually does not count for a user's postcount). The thread is usually used as a way for forum goers to post on nothing in particular, or just pass time talking to themselves, and allows the moderators to lessen the clutter of pointless threads.
External links
- Adobe forums posting guidelines
- The Purple Martin Forum Posting Policy
- vBadvanced Forums: Forum Posting Rules - PLEASE READ BEFORE POSTING!
- Ubuntu Forums: The BUMP Thread
References
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia © 2001-2006 Wikipedia contributors (Disclaimer)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Friday September 26, 2008 at 00:09:48 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Friday September 26, 2008 at 00:09:48 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
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