to knock down: The champion was dumped twice but won the fight.
b.
to lose (a match) intentionally: a bribe to dump a fight.
7.
Commerce.
a.
to put (goods or securities) on the market in large quantities and at a low price without regard to the effect on market conditions.
b.
to sell (goods) into foreign markets below cost in order to promote exports or damage foreign competition.
8.
Computers. to print, display, or record on an output medium (the contents of a computer's internal storage or the contents of a file), often at the time a program fails.
9.
Slang. to kill; murder: threats to dump him if he didn't pay up.
Informal. a place, house, or town that is dilapidated, dirty, or disreputable.
22.
(in merchandising) a bin or specially made carton in which items are displayed for sale: Fifty copies of the best-selling paperback novel were in a dump near the checkout counter.
23.
Computers. a copy of the contents of a computer's internal storage or of the contents of a file at a given instant, that is printed, displayed, or stored on an output medium.
to attack with verbal abuse; criticize harshly: Reporters never tired of dumping on certain public figures.
b.
to unload one's problems onto (another person): You never phone me without dumping on me.
Origin: 1250–1300; Middle English (in sense “to fall suddenly”) < Old Norse dumpa strike, bump; modern senses as transitive v. and noun (not known before 19th cent.) perhaps < another source, or independent expressive formation
c.1300, "throw down or fall with force," from a Scandinavian source (cf. Dan. dumpe, Norw. dumpa "to fall suddenly"). The sense of "unload en masse" is first recorded in Amer.Eng. 1784. Related: Dumped; dumping. The noun "place where refuse is dumped" is attested from 1865, originally of mining operations.
tv. to empty one's stomach; to vomit. : He's in the john dumping his load.
tv. to defecate. (Usually objectionable. Also with a load.) : He had to go dump a load.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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