English

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Noun

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bump-out (plural bump-outs)

  1. (Australia) The process of moving sets and equipment out of an event venue, such as a theatre or conference centre, after an event or performance.
    Antonym: bump-in
    • 2005, Gunduz Kalic, “Taking Liberties”, in Peter Billingham, editor, Radical Initiatives in Interventionist and Community Drama, page 82:
      One company in particular, TAE, also played to tens of thousands of schools students in the Northern Territory and Queensland. [] By the end of 1999, after years of hard yakka and a few too many bump-ins and outs, some full time company members were growing tired - including of being permanently ‘broke’.
    • 2014, Lynn Van Der Wagen, Lauren White, Human Resource Management for the Event Industry, page 110:
      In the event industry there are two critical times when safety is often compromised, at bump-in and at bump-out. At bump-in the organizer is usually pressed for time and it is not uncommon for installers to work around the clock. At the end of the show or exhibition, bump-out carries an even higher risk as everyone is exhausted.
  2. A small extension to a house, often involving the expansion of an existing room.
  3. (traffic engineering) A curb extension.