| Substantiv |
| 1. |
dump - a piece of land where waste materials are dumped |
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wasteyard,
dumpsite |
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land site,
site physical position in relation to the surroundings; "the sites are determined by highly specific sequences of nucleotides"
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eitchen midden,
kitchen midden,
midden (archeology) a mound of domestic refuse containing shells and animal bones marking the site of a prehistoric settlement
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garbage heap,
junk heap,
junk pile,
refuse heap,
rubbish heap,
scrapheap,
trash heap,
trash pile an accumulation of refuse and discarded matter
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toxic dumpsite,
toxic waste dump,
toxic waste site a location where toxic wastes can be or have been disposed of (often illegally)
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| 2. |
dump - (computer science) a copy of the contents of a computer storage device; sometimes used in debugging programs |
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copy,
written matter a thing made to be similar or identical to another thing; "she made a copy of the designer dress"; "the clone was a copy of its ancestor"
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computer science,
computing the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structures
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core dump (computer science) dump of the contents of the chief registers in the CPU; usually used for debugging
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| 3. |
dump - a place where supplies can be stored; "an ammunition dump" |
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depot,
entrepot,
storage,
store,
storehouse a port where merchandise can be imported and then exported without paying import duties; "Bahrain has been an entrepot of trade between Arabia and India since the second millennium BC"
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| Verb |
| 1. |
dump - drop (stuff) in a heap or mass; "The truck dumped the garbage in the street" |
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drop give birth; used for animals; "The cow dropped her calf this morning"
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| 2. |
dump - throw away as refuse; "No dumping in these woods!" |
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cast aside,
cast away,
cast out,
chuck out,
discard,
dispose,
fling,
put away,
throw away,
throw out,
toss,
toss away,
toss out throw or cast away; "Put away your worries"
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| 3. |
dump - sell at artificially low prices |
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underprice |
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sell persuade somebody to accept something; "The French try to sell us their image as great lovers"
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| 4. |
dump - sever all ties with, usually unceremoniously or irresponsibly; "The company dumped him after many years of service"; "She dumped her boyfriend when she fell in love with a rich man" |
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ditch |
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get rid of,
remove dispose of; "Get rid of these old shoes!"; "The company got rid of all the dead wood"
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