Dump in a sentence as a noun

He ran a pump and dump scheme to defraud investors.

The "market" won't correct anything, because no one will touch the BofA toxic waste dump with a 10 foot pole.

Specifically if you are writing a mysql dump remotely why are the packets being sent as UDP?

Amazing!I ended up quite with an intimate knowledge of the Goldeneye hex dumps.

Yes, you can also go in with SVN and obliterate history too, using svnadmin dump and svnadmin load.

Either admit it's a "dump and release" or ensure your open projects are handled properly.

Dump in a sentence as a verb

They can more easily dump legacy cruft, embrace genuinely novel and interesting ways of doing things, etc.

Unix can be quite easily, and accurately, derided as a heaping pile of text dumps in a simple file system.

We see fewer problems at companies that dump blobs with opaque names into S3 than we do with apps that have a file repository with named files.

It took me a while to realize that it was an insult because in reality the use of "text dump" markup languages is one of the key enabling features of the web.

Reasonably fast indexing, expressive searching tools, I could dump the data onto disk and use an in memory SQLite db at the same time, caching solved.

It's based off a very primitive core idea, everything is a file, and very heavily reliant on "text dump" based programming and configuration.

Dump definitions

noun

a coarse term for defecation; "he took a shit"

See also: shit

noun

a piece of land where waste materials are dumped

See also: wasteyard waste-yard dumpsite

noun

(computer science) a copy of the contents of a computer storage device; sometimes used in debugging programs

noun

a place where supplies can be stored; "an ammunition dump"

verb

throw away as refuse; "No dumping in these woods!"

verb

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"

See also: ditch

verb

sell at artificially low prices

See also: underprice

verb

drop (stuff) in a heap or mass; "The truck dumped the garbage in the street"

verb

fall abruptly; "It plunged to the bottom of the well"

See also: plunge

verb

knock down with force; "He decked his opponent"

See also: deck coldcock floor