bounciness

[ UK /bˈa‍ʊnsɪnˌɛs/ ]
[ US /ˈbaʊnsinəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of a substance that is able to rebound
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How To Use bounciness In A Sentence

  • Loss of bounciness, sudden blisters or recurring pain are also telltale signs.
  • To be stamped ‘official’ in accordance with the International Tennis Federation, a ball must meet rigid specifications for deformation and bounciness.
  • Steffan Rhodri's Paul is the archetypal Ayckbourn male bully, David Armand as the cuckolded John is all restless, arm-waving energy, and Reece Shearsmith as Colin has the bright-eyed bounciness of the truly insensitive. Absent Friends - review
  • As if everyone's hand has the same firmness and bounciness. Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn: The Gift That Will Make Dad's Food More Fun For You
  • I'd flip through it, letting my eyes enjoy the bounciness and chic of it.
  • Chiles has come across as somewhat Eeyorish on screen, leaving Bleakley to play Tigger, compensating with a bounciness that can at times verge on shrill. Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley: 'It's us against the world at 4am'
  • Instead, she was all jolliness and bounciness and big smiles.
  • Here the characteristics of the material inside the ball are responsible for the bounciness of the ball.
  • Instead, she was all jolliness and bounciness and big smiles.
  • The inappropriate and mindnumbingly catchy 'bounciness' of the underlying rhythm? Word Magazine - Comments
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