Bounce in a sentence as a noun

The assumption is that someone curious is going to sign up to find out. Lots of people won't do this and will just bounce.

Surely twould be more efficient just to tell Yahoo rather than trying to bounce the message off us.

It's pretty much an insta-bounce for me for the exact reasons cited in the article.

""NO Idea Guys: security is on strick [sic] instructions to bounce anyone who can't code.

If you have problems with uptime, your incoming email will bounce around for 5 days before it gets dropped.

Being ready to bounce back and try again is a good capacity to develop during youth.

That being said, see that circular saw over there that will occasionally bounce and cut off its user's fingers?

Bounce in a sentence as a verb

More latency = more bounces = fewer visitors buying stuff from you, reading your ad copy, etc etc.- Increased rendering times.

My point is not to encourage the OP to dig in but to let him know that it is ok to fail, many do with families as well but he will bounce back with a good job or something else down the line.

A teeny tiny sampling of these discoveries included:- pager escalation gets way harder, because a ticket might bounce through 20 service calls before the real owner is identified.

I can now bounce around CEO and President positions for a while...spending a year or two at each place, strike enough good compensation deals to make me rich and eventually buy myself into a few choice board positions.

If each bounce goes through a team with a 15-minute response time, it can be hours before the right team finally finds out, unless you build a lot of scaffolding and metrics and reporting.- every single one of your peer teams suddenly becomes a potential DOS attacker.

Modern philosophy is so fascinating that of course there's a temptation to skip right to it in my personal studies, I bounce back and forth between contemporary writers and writers from other centuries and millennia, letting the former refine my understanding of the latter and the latter provide context for the former.

If claims were triable by jury, and if a party elected to have them tried by a jury, this right had to be preserved at all costs and it was regarded as inappropriate for a judge to be too aggressive in attempting to screen and bounce claims at any part of the pretrial stage or to use too much authority at the trial itself to limit the scope of assertable claims.

Bounce definitions

noun

the quality of a substance that is able to rebound

See also: bounciness

noun

a light, self-propelled movement upwards or forwards

See also: leap leaping spring saltation bound

noun

rebounding from an impact (or series of impacts)

See also: bouncing

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: resile spring bound rebound recoil reverberate ricochet

verb

hit something so that it bounces; "bounce a ball"

verb

move up and down repeatedly

See also: jounce

verb

come back after being refused; "the check bounced"

verb

leap suddenly; "He bounced to his feet"

verb

refuse to accept and send back; "bounce a check"

verb

eject from the premises; "The ex-boxer's job is to bounce people who want to enter this private club"