Rebound in a sentence as a noun

There's a natural rebound from that as people adjust.

However, it's likely he'll rebound and be off to other conquests soon.

One way or another, their reputation will probably rebound within a decade, and you'll have it all.

You can look at hydrostatic rebound, erosion patterns, etc to see where glaciers usually are.

Usually when you have assignments, you are permitting a name to be rebound to a different value than it had originally.

You should also look into the US Dollar- I hear people are going crazy over that one too... and since it's lost 98% of its value in the last 100 years it is bound to rebound any day now.

Rebound in a sentence as a verb

Recent economic indicators have been very positive so expectations are for a significant rebound for Q2.

One neat trick is that, unless it's been explicitly rebound, this will show you all keybindings beginning with C-h\n\nSo if you want to see all keybindings in the current buffer starting with C-c !

And the other \n > problem is that victims of non-representative members of a\n > group have the right to complain, even though those complaints\n > will unfairly rebound upon the other members of that group.

I was in high school when the Razr came out, and based on how popular it was I thought Motorola was an absolutely world-dominating company, not a business on the rebound from extremely heady heights.

Now we'll get the backlash blog posts from people ditching the cloud and I'm jousting waiting for the inevitable rebound outages when they learn that high availability requires geographic redundancy either way.

So this is from 2011 and this is the thesis paragraph:"But here is the question: if the pace of technological progress is accelerating faster than ever, as all the evidence indicates it is, why has unemployment remained so stubbornly highdespite the rebound in business profits to record levels?

Rebound definitions

noun

a movement back from an impact

See also: recoil repercussion backlash

noun

a reaction to a crisis or setback or frustration; "he is still on the rebound from his wife's death"

noun

the act of securing possession of the rebounding basketball after a missed shot

verb

spring back; spring away from an impact; "The rubber ball bounced"; "These particles do not resile but they unite after they collide"

See also: bounce resile spring bound recoil reverberate ricochet

verb

return to a former condition; "The jilted lover soon rallied and found new friends"; "The stock market rallied"

See also: rally