Rebound
Rebound (noun)
a. Bounce off a hard surface
b. Bounce back, succeed after failure
c. Catching a basketball shot after it bounces off the board in back of the net.
d. Something bad you do returns to you and brings injury with it
enjoying a remarkable rebound
a strong rebound
a rebound in factory output
expect inflation to rebound
on the rebound
on the rebound from Y
love on the rebound
strategy will rebound
continue to rebound
sustain a rebound
an economic rebound
signs of an economic rebound
sahre prices rose in anticipation of an economic rebound
economic indicators suggest a rebound
a rebound after a recession
the first part of the economy to rebound after a recession
a weak rebound
a rebound in factory output
expect inflation to rebound
questioned whether the rebound could be sustained
indicators suggest a weak rebound in the second quarter
still on the rebound from Y
the ice pick rebounded from the ice as it fell
you've got to prove that you can rebound from this
rebound hepatitis
do on the rebound
said this quickly on the rebound
the strategy will rebound on the most vulnerable
this could rebound on them later
tap in the rebound (basketball)
hold on to a rebound (basketball)
pounced on the rebound (basketball)
Example sentences:
* "Recent signs of an economic rebound are encouraging, but they do not vindicate a do-nothing approach, the group said in an open letter to the President George Bush and the Fed chairman."
* "Share prices rose sharply at the beginning of the year in anticipation of an economic rebound, but the recovery has so far been very sluggish."
* "A rebound in factory output today gave a last-minute boost to Mr Clarke before tonight's speech."
* "Even now, many analysts think the improvement too good to be true, and expect inflation to rebound when the effects of devalued sterling work right through to the shops."
* "The ?4.1 billion jump in bank-lending was month was twice the average monthly increase in 1992, but economists warned that it reflected a rebound rather than new hope that consumers are taking on significantly bigger borrowings to fuel recovery."
* "Now in the middle of a recession which is shaking the rest of America's car industry, Buick is enjoying a remarkable rebound."
* "A stronger rebound in America would provide a useful counterbalance to the deteriorating picture in Japan and Germany."
* "Some market participants, worried by the market's volatility, questioned whether the rebound could be sustained."
AK6 807 Though Harford levelled on the rebound for Luton after 25 minutes after Varadi had hit the bar, Sharp restored Oldham's lead within the minute, pouncing to side-foot home Adams' low ball into the goalmouth.
* "Even assaults on the Unionists over alleged cases of discrimination could rebound on them later."
* "If there was some difficulty involved which resulted in your leaving a job, avoid referring to it, but do not resort to outright lying as this will rebound badly against you if you are found out."
* "She has done this on the rebound."
* "The American silver sales at Christie's, on 22 January, and at Sotheby's on 28 January, seemed to confirm that the last area of the market to give way in the recession was the first to rebound."
* "If the kick is too hard the crampons tend to rebound from the ice, and a hard kick can be painful on the toes."
* "Not only is this irritating to consumers; it also seems to rebound on some of the firms themselves, think of Eurotunnel, or of Euro RSCG, a troubled French ad agency."
* "Other indicators suggest, at best, a weak rebound in the second quarter; but consumer confidence plunged in May to below its level a year ago."
* "So long as the other 85% continues to rebound, thanks to stronger exports outside Europe and the boost to demand from lower interest rates, continental recession will dampen Britain's recovery, but not block it."
* "The strategy of encouraging, supporting and protecting deliberate non-payers is deeply flawed, as it will rebound on the most vulnerable."
* "I would hate this problem to rebound from another direction."
* "I said this quickly on the rebound but I have no reason to regret it."
* "Love on the rebound?"
* "Was it just rebound thing?"
* "She was suffering from rebound hepatitis."
* "I had to have a lot of chats with her and said well you you've got to prove that you can rebound from this."
* "For in Republican France, still on the rebound from the Dreyfus Affair, both his heredity and his religion told strongly against him."
* "At 30 km/h their metabolic machinery (using oxygen) supplied only a third of the power necessary to make a kangaroo rebound after landing."
* "The basketball player pounced on the rebound."
* "A fast and furious encounter between Aldenham and King Edward School, Witley, had yielded no goals when, with just minutes to go, Aldenham's Jason Clemow tried a long-range shot, the goalkeeper parried, and Kazeem Abimbola poked in the rebound."






