-
1 bounce
bounce [baʊns]• to bounce off sth [light, sound] se réverbérer sur qchb. [cheque] (inf) être sans provisiona. [+ ball] faire rebondir ; [+ light, heat] réverbérer• they bounce radio waves off the moon ils émettent des ondes radio qui se réverbèrent sur la surface de la lune3. noun[of ball] bond m, rebond m( = recover) se remettre très vite* * *[baʊns] 1.1) ( rebound of ball) rebond m2) (of mattress, material) élasticité f; ( of hair) souplesse f4) ( in email) retour m à l'expéditeur2.transitive verb1) faire rebondir [ball]; retransmettre [signal]2) (colloq)to bounce a cheque — [bank] GB refuser d'honorer un chèque; [person] US faire un chèque sans provision
3) Computing renvoyer [quelque chose] à l'expéditeur [email]3.1) [ball, object] rebondir ( off sur; over au-dessus de); [person] (on trampoline, bed) faire des bonds, sauterto bounce up and down on something — faire des bonds or sauter sur quelque chose
2) fig ( move energetically)to bounce in/along — entrer/marcher énergiquement
3) (colloq) [cheque] être sans provision4) Computing [email] revenir à l'expéditeur•Phrasal Verbs: -
2 bounce
A n1 ( rebound of ball) rebond m ;4 ( in email) retour m à l'expéditeur.B vtr1 faire rebondir [ball] ; retransmettre [signal, radiowave] ; to bounce a baby on one's knee faire sauter un bébé sur ses genoux ;2 ○ to bounce a cheque [bank] GB refuser d'honorer un chèque ; [person] US faire un chèque sans provision ;3 ○ ( hurry) to bounce sb into sth/into doing sth pousser qn dans qch/à faire qch ;4 ○ ( eject) vider ○ [person] ;5 Comput renvoyer [qch] à l'expéditeur [email].C vi1 [ball, object] rebondir (off sur ; over au dessus de) ; [person] (on trampoline, bed) faire des bonds, sauter ; the ball bounced down the steps la balle a descendu les marches en rebondissant ; to bounce up and down on sth faire des bonds or sauter sur qch ; the car bounced along the track la voiture rebondissait sur le chemin ;3 ○ [cheque] être sans provision ;4 Comput [email] revenir à l'expéditeur.■ bounce back [person] ( after illness) se remettre ; ( after lapse in career) faire un retour en force ; [currency] remonter. -
3 bounce
1. verb1) (to (cause to) spring or jump back from a solid surface.) (faire) rebondir2) ((of a cheque) to be sent back unpaid, because of lack of money in a bank account.) être refusé pour provisions insuffisantes2. noun1) ((of a ball etc) an act of springing back: With one bounce the ball went over the net.) (re)bond2) (energy: She has a lot of bounce.) allant•- bouncing -
4 bounce
bounce [baʊns]1 noun∎ Sport he caught the ball on the bounce il a pris la balle au bond;∎ Sport you get a better bounce on grass cela rebondit mieux sur l'herbe∎ there isn't much bounce in this ball cette balle ne rebondit pas beaucoup;∎ I'd like to put some bounce in my hair je voudrais donner du volume à mes cheveux;∎ figurative he's still full of bounce at seventy à soixante-dix ans il est encore plein d'énergie∎ to give sb the bounce virer qn;∎ he got the bounce il s'est fait virer∎ on the bounce (in succession) à la suite(a) (cause to spring) faire rebondir;∎ she bounced the ball against or off the wall elle fit rebondir la balle sur le mur;∎ he bounced the baby on his knee il a fait sauter l'enfant sur son genou;∎ Telecommunications signals are bounced off a satellite les signaux sont renvoyés ou retransmis par satellite;∎ to bounce an idea off sb soumettre une idée à qn∎ the bank bounced my cheque la banque a refusé mon chèque∎ the ball bounced down the steps la balle a rebondi de marche en marche;∎ the knapsack bounced up and down on his back le sac à dos tressautait sur ses épaules;∎ the bicycle bounced along the bumpy path le vélo faisait des bonds sur le chemin cahoteux;∎ the hailstones were bouncing off the roof les grêlons rebondissaient sur le toit∎ we bounced up and down on the bed nous faisions des bonds sur le lit;∎ she came bouncing into/out of the room elle est entrée dans/sortie de la pièce d'un bond∎ I hope this cheque won't bounce j'espère que ce chèque ne sera pas refusé►► Computing bounce message = message électronique non délivré revenu à l'expéditeur;Sport bounce pass (in basketball) passe m par rebond(ball) rebondir; (person → after illness, disappointment) se remettre rapidement; (Stock Exchange) reprendre, remonter;∎ Finance the pound has bounced back against the dollar la livre a regagné du terrain par rapport au dollar;∎ she bounced right back after her illness elle s'est vite rétablie après sa maladie -
5 bounce
(b) to bounce an idea off sb soumettre une idée à qn(a) (of cheque) être refusé(e) pour non-provision;∎ I hope this cheque won't bounce j'espère que ce chèque ne sera pas refusé(of Stock Exchange) reprendre, remonter;∎ the pound has bounced back against the dollar la livre a regagné du terrain par rapport au dollar
См. также в других словарях:
cheque — [tʆek] , check noun [countable] BANKING 1. a printed form that you use to pay for something instead of using money. You write on it the amount in words and numbers, the date, the person being paid, and sign your name: • a cheque for £200 … Financial and business terms
Cheque fraud — Cheque fraud/check fraud refers to a category of criminal acts that involve making the unlawful use of cheques in order to illegally acquire or borrow funds that do not exist within the account balance or account holder s legal ownership. Most… … Wikipedia
bounce — A check returned by a bank because it is not payable, usually because of insufficient funds. Also used in the context of securities to refer to the rejection and ensuing reclamation of a security; a stock price s abrupt decline and recovery.… … Financial and business terms
Cheque — A Canadian cheque … Wikipedia
cheque — (BrE) (AmE check) noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, fat (informal), large ▪ blank ▪ monthly ▪ bad … Collocations dictionary
bounce — [[t]ba͟ʊns[/t]] bounces, bouncing, bounced 1) V ERG When an object such as a ball bounces or when you bounce it, it moves upwards from a surface or away from it immediately after hitting it. [V n prep] I bounced a ball against the house... [V n]… … English dictionary
bounce — I UK [baʊns] / US verb Word forms bounce : present tense I/you/we/they bounce he/she/it bounces present participle bouncing past tense bounced past participle bounced ** 1) [intransitive/transitive] if a ball or other object bounces, or if you… … English dictionary
bounce — bounce1 S3 [bauns] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(ball/object)¦ 2¦(jump up and down)¦ 3¦(cheque)¦ 4¦(walk)¦ 5¦(something moves up and down)¦ 6¦(light/sound)¦ 7¦(email)¦ 8 bounce ideas off somebody 9¦(force somebody to leave)¦ Phrasal … Dictionary of contemporary English
bounce — 1 verb 1 MOVE FROM A SURFACE (I, T) if a ball or other object bounces, it immediately moves away from a surface it has just hit, or you make it move in this way (+ off): The ball bounced off the crossbar and into the net. | bounce sth on/against… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bounce — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun Bounce is used before these nouns: ↑pass {{Roman}}II.{{/Roman}} verb ADVERB ▪ high ▪ The ball bounced high and she missed it. ▪ back, off … Collocations dictionary
bounce — [baʊns] verb I 1) [I/T] if a ball or other object bounces, or if you bounce it, it hits a surface then immediately moves away The ball bounced twice before hitting the net.[/ex] Hailstones were bouncing off the roof.[/ex] Josh bounced the ball… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English