Spring back; spring away from an impact.
Sinônimos
Examples for "spring"
Examples for "spring"
1The feed situation is still good because of really good spring rain.
2Last year, 260 companies reportedly participated in the spring fair, for example.
3Let us wait until March, until the spring of the new year.
4I ain't had a good turnip since a year ago this spring.
5Hardy; plant in early spring, or in the South in the fall.
1Although the crisis magnifies Noonan's power, he remains bound by EU strictures.
2Media reports are bound to underestimate the true scale of protest, however.
3The market has been range-bound since late last week over political worries.
4Likewise, the left thumb shall be bound to the right great toe.
5The parts were bound for key military installations, including Iraq and Afghanistan.
1The rebound comes hand in hand with looser credit conditions this year.
2However, the trade data may have helped Shanghai stocks rebound 1 percent.
3One result has been a rebound in the euro from recent lows.
4It said exports should rebound significantly at the end of this year.
5A rebound could not come fast enough, however, especially for smaller hotels.
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.
1She said, 'I suppose there will be a certain amount of recoil.'
2This was a good weapon, well-balanced, large trigger, rubber grip, short recoil.
3The recoil would bury it in the earth if they tried that.
4But I was ashamed to recoil in the presence of the hunter.
5Some recoil in terror before that test; others, feeble and affrighted, vacillate.
1Thirty two years later New Zealand's only suicide bombing continues to reverberate.
2Yet the decisions politicians make can reverberate for a long while afterwards.
3The events in which they are enmeshed still reverberate two generations later.
4The echo seemed to reverberate through the vessel for a solid minute.
5At that moment the building began to shake and reverberate, as No.
1As an apical ricochet it corresponds with the Lee-Metford shown in fig.
2The ricochet went right to Atkinson at center ice for the break.
3These can ricochet off walls and can be charged for maximum damage.
4There's an ear-stinging ricochet a fraction of a second after the shot.
5Pity, as talented songwriters and bands ricochet from top to bottom here.
1He did not, however, resile from Mrs Bennett's description of how the policy actually would apply.
2Mr Morrison said the move was "common sense" and he would not resile from it.
3In the end, Alan Rusbridger had little choice but to resile from becoming chair of the Scott Trust.
4David Seymour isn't about to resile from an issue he is passionate about, so that is not a viable tactic.
5The head of the Auckland SPCA says he won't resile from his comments about dog attacks and… Read more Audio
1He takes a hop, skip and a jump and just belts it.
2The fattest bird now takes a hop toward the edge.
3Then Adamski took a hop through outer space and back.
4The creature took a hop closer to the car.
Translations for take a hop