if a market or price bounces back, it rises again after falling
to become healthy, happy, or successful again after something bad has happened to you
After an early defeat, she bounced back to win the championship.
BT’s shares fell dramatically, but bounced back before the end of the day.
He can bounce back to form.
He might be best when fresh and he needs to bounce back after hitting the turf back at Cheltenham last time.
He should be good enough to bounce back better.
He’s sad about Sally leaving him, but he’ll bounce back.
How does he bounce back from one seeming disaster after another?
It looks like employer confidence is bouncing back.
It would have done her good to bounce back into football action.
One said it bounced back into the road after the impact.
Our focus has to be on bouncing back with three points.
Real champions bounce back to get results when the pressure is on and the doubts are increasing.
Scotland lost their opening four games before bouncing back with three consecutive victories.
There are still a lot of games to go and we have to bounce back quickly.
This was a great way to bounce back.
Took some big hits, but bounced back and will learn.
United always used to be able to bounce back from a bad result.
United have also bounced back impressively after setbacks this season.
Unlike those who think it will bounce back when output recovers, he suggested the supply capacity of the economy could have been damaged.
We are going to bounce back and show our character.
We are very good at bouncing back when we are down.
We said between ourselves that we had to bounce back and get into Europe.
We will bounce back after checking what went wrong.
bounces back
bouncing back
bounced back
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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