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  • (file)

Noun edit

bump in the road (plural bumps in the road)

  1. (idiomatic) A setback or obstacle, especially one which is relatively minor.
  2. (idiomatic) A very small town.
    • 1995 June 25, “Wired In The Woods”, in Newsweek, retrieved 21 July 2014:
      "We're such a small bump in the road that driving through Sylvester is like hitting an armadillo at 60 miles an hour," drawls local businessman David Register.
    • 1996, Lilian Jackson Braun, The Cat Who Blew the Whistle, →ISBN, page 28:
      "Believe it or not, that ugly little town was the county seat originally, when Pickax was only a bump in the road."
    • 1998 December 6, Marilyn Thompson, “South of Atlanta, 'Fried' and True”, in Washington Post, retrieved 21 July 2014:
      The town of Juliette, Ga., wasn't even on the map until after 1991. . . . Now, the one-stop-sign bump in the road is officially marked along Georgia's long and lonesome Highway 16.
    • 2000 September 6, Andrew Gumbel, “Fortune was not manna from heaven, just money from mugs”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 21 July 2014:
      The Lord has been a good provider in the small farming town of Mattoon, Illinois. . . . The scheme, which began in 1994, proved a bonanza for Mattoon, no more than a bump in the road halfway between St Louis and Indianapolis.

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