bounce
bounce — verb
1. to spring away after hitting the ground, a wall, or another surface, or to make
to spring away after hitting the ground, a wall, or another surface, or to make something move with short repeated jumps or shaking.
The tennis ball bounced off the fence and rolled under a car.
pattern: bounce off + surface
Priya bounced the basketball twice before passing to her brother.
transitive: bounce + object
The bus bounced along the dirt road after last night's storm.
Grandpa bounced the baby on his knee beside the fire.
- rebound
more formal; common in sports, science, and figurative writing.
- spring back
stresses quick return after pressure or impact.
- bob
usually means small repeated up-and-down movement, often on water.
文法句型
bounce off + surface
bounce + object
bounce + object + on someone's knee
bounce along/against
用法筆記
Often followed by 'off', 'against', or 'along'. Transitive uses usually involve balls, babies, vehicles, or signals being moved in short repeated jumps. Distinguish from sense 2, which adds a cheerful or excited feeling.
常見錯誤
2. to move with quick, cheerful energy, as if you are too excited or happy to stay
to move with quick, cheerful energy, as if you are too excited or happy to stay still.
Hana bounced into the kitchen with her exam results in hand.
pattern: bounce into + place
The children bounced around the yard when the ice-cream truck arrived.
pattern: bounce around + place
After the final whistle, Diego bounced across the field to hug his coach.
Noa bounced on her toes outside the theater, too excited to wait.
文法句型
bounce into + place
bounce around + place
bounce across + place
bounce on your toes
用法筆記
Often followed by words like 'into', 'around', 'across', or 'on'. Unlike sense 1, the focus here is not on striking a surface but on the person's lively manner.
3. if a cheque or check bounces, the bank will not pay it because the account does
if a cheque or check bounces, the bank will not pay it because the account does not contain enough money; a bank can also bounce it.
Our rent cheque bounced, so the landlord called that afternoon.
pattern: a cheque/check bounces
The bank bounced Yusuf's cheque after three bills cleared first.
transitive: bounce a cheque/check
Mina panicked when her school fee cheque bounced again.
The club's cheque bounced on Friday and delayed the uniform order.
- be rejected
general phrase; not limited to banking.
- be returned
describes the result, but not always the reason.
- fail to clear
banking phrase that focuses on the payment process.
- clear
be accepted and paid by the bank.
文法句型
a cheque/check bounces
bounce a cheque/check
用法筆記
Usually used with 'cheque' or 'check' as the subject or object. The problem is lack of money in the account, not a technical delivery error like sense 4.
常見錯誤
4. to have an email come back to the sender because it cannot reach the address, or
to have an email come back to the sender because it cannot reach the address, or to have a mail system send it back in this way.
My message to the hotel bounced because I typed the address wrongly.
pattern: an email bounces
The system bounced Omar's email after the mail server went down.
transitive: bounce an email
Every email to that old account bounced within a few seconds.
The booking email bounced, so Zara phoned the office instead.
- be returned
general result phrase; not specific about email systems.
- fail
broader computing word; can refer to many kinds of system problems.
- be undeliverable
more formal and common in technical notices.
- go through
be sent successfully and reach the receiver.
- be delivered
arrive in the other person's inbox.
文法句型
an email bounces
bounce an email
bounce back to the sender
用法筆記
Usually used with 'email', 'message', or 'address'. Unlike sense 3, the failure is about delivery, often because the address is wrong or the server cannot receive the message.
5. to mention an idea to someone so that you can hear their reaction or find out wh
to mention an idea to someone so that you can hear their reaction or find out whether they approve of it.
Can I bounce a plan off you before tomorrow's meeting?
pattern: bounce an idea off someone
Ravi bounced his app idea off two teachers during lunch.
The director bounced several title options off the marketing team.
Before signing the lease, Ines bounced the budget idea off her cousin.
文法句型
bounce an idea off someone
bounce a plan off someone
bounce something off someone
用法筆記
Most common in the pattern 'bounce an idea off someone'. It suggests an informal check for reactions, not a formal request for permission.
常見錯誤
6. to throw someone out of a job, team, building, or similar place, usually suddenl
to throw someone out of a job, team, building, or similar place, usually suddenly and not by choice.
The club bounced two players after the late-night fight.
pattern: bounce someone from + team
Security bounced the drunk customer from the concert hall.
pattern: bounce someone from + place
After months of losses, the board bounced the manager on Monday.
The hotel bounced several guests for breaking the no-smoking rule.
文法句型
bounce someone from + place
bounce someone from + team
bounce someone from + job
用法筆記
Informal. The object is a person, and the job, team, or place often follows with 'from'. Standard business English more often uses 'fire' for a job, while 'bounce' also works for being thrown out of a place.
bounce — noun
1. the act of springing back after a hit, or the springy quality that lets somethin
the act of springing back after a hit, or the springy quality that lets something rise again after being pressed, dropped, or struck.
The ball lost its bounce after a week in the cold garage.
collocation: lose bounce
These running shoes still have good bounce after six months.
collocation: have bounce
A little cream gave Mei's hair more bounce before the party.
In tennis, Bao hit the ball before its second bounce.
- rebound
close equivalent for the movement after impact.
- spring
can describe lively elastic movement or stored energy.
- elasticity
more technical; focuses on physical property rather than movement.
- flatness
lack of life, lift, or springy quality.
文法句型
lose bounce
have bounce
give something bounce
second bounce
用法筆記
Can refer either to one rebound or to springy quality. The quality sense is common with hair, shoes, balls, mattresses, and sports surfaces.
2. a quick rise after a fall or weak period, especially in support, sales, prices,
a quick rise after a fall or weak period, especially in support, sales, prices, or other measured results.
The singer got a bounce in ticket sales after the TV interview.
pattern: get a bounce in + noun
Local stores saw a bounce in business during the holiday week.
pattern: see a bounce in + noun
The party hoped for a bounce after its leader's debate win.
At the port market, traders saw a small bounce in oil prices by Friday.
文法句型
a bounce in + noun
get a bounce
see a bounce
用法筆記
Most often used for numbers, ratings, prices, sales, or political support after a fall. It usually suggests a quick or limited rise, not a full long-term recovery.