rebound from



rebound from something

 
1. Lit. to bounce back from something. The ball rebounded from the wall and hit Randy hard on the elbow. When the ball rebounded from the backboard, it bounced onto the court and Tom tripped on it.
2. Fig. to recover quickly from something. Barbara rebounded from her illness in less than a week. I hope I can rebound from this cold quickly.
See also: rebound

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Iestyn-Welsh
Judson['dʒʌdsn]
VĚNceslav-Czech (Rare)
Bruno['bru:nəu]
TobiaszTAW-byahshPolish
Akram-Arabic