Move up and down repeatedly.
Sinônimos
Examples for "bounce"
Examples for "bounce"
1Boris Johnson said members who make racist comments are 'out first bounce'.
2Still, Elmore said with optimal weather conditions, production potential could bounce back.
3Margins will bounce back when the global economy improves, the company said.
4You can see in the new version, there's way, way less bounce.
5The bounce helped lift equities in both the US and the Europe.
1The wagon began to jounce, too; so they were obliged to go slowly.
2I think the jounce would be almost as good a flesh-reducer as pedestrianism.
3Then, he landed with a jounce in a heap of brush and dead leaves.
4Then she felt a great jounce of the bed as her aunt sprang out.
5The three-and four-inch variations in the road made the car jounce like a fairground trolley.
6Then came a sudden jounce, followed by a crash.
7Gracious, how the buckboard did jounce up and down!
8A mass of some greenish brown plant quivered with every jounce and bump of the cart's wheels.
9And she give him a jounce.
10He settled himself into place on the floor with a satisfied jounce which loosened a car-rug draped over the trunk.
11But it is in going down hill, and leaping from a "jounce" that the skier is at his best.
12The carriage didn't jounce at all, and after about a minute wisps of mist began to brush up against the windows.
13It increases the rate at which they jiggle and jounce, and in their enlivened state they crash into one another, releasing heat.
14He eyed the loathsome suitcase through quizzical half-shut eyes, as it rocked and careened at his feet with every jounce of the car.
15Her face felt swollen, her cheek was sticky with blood, and every jounce and bounce send a stab of agony through her arm.
16He moved into the middle of the track after the cart had passed him and watched it jounce toward the crest of a little rise.