Resiliency in a sentence as a noun

The core of it is it's resiliency thanks to redundancy, so let's corrupt it so that the information becomes noise.

The way she simplified what it takes to be a good entrepreneur, resiliency and drive and the "monsters" you'll meet along the way was amazing.

This is a very compelling approach for appellate/higher courts, and should suggest the intent of resiliency in the language by the judge.

Apple is one company that, historically, it has always been a serious mistake to count out. However, how much of this amazing resiliency depends on Apple having Steve Jobs.

I have no idea, but resiliency and adaptability are fundamental to the survival of any peer to peer system.

Due to the human body's natural resiliency, after chemo eventually the bone marrow would start to regenerate.

An equally arbitrary neologism like "hyper-resiliency" would have probably made just as much sense.

The DNS is designed to provide resiliency to these kinds of problems by providing the ability to list multiple NS records located in different networks.

You can have a journal and journal header that is ancient if it just stuck in some cache...The ext* family of filesystems do not appear to have natural resiliency to this sort of problem.

Similar points can be made about network resiliency and single-points-of-failure-- how efficient is it to require full uptime from central points vs. minimal uptime from a mesh?

Mr. LEE submitted an amendment intended to be proposed by him to the bill S. 3414, to enhance the security and resiliency of the cyber and communications infrastructure of the United States; which was ordered to lie on the table; as follows:> At the appropriate place, insert the following:> SEC.

This provides flexibility and resiliency to the economy.

This elevates that notion to another level, get rid of the idea of operating without faults and maintain a low-level of faultiness artificially to ensure that resiliency to faults in the system is always working.

Resiliency definitions

noun

an occurrence of rebounding or springing back

See also: resilience

noun

the physical property of a material that can return to its original shape or position after deformation that does not exceed its elastic limit

See also: resilience