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масштаб
odbijać się

I. bounce [baʊns] VB intr

1. bounce (rebound):

bounce
odbijać [perf odbić] się
to bounce against sth

2. bounce (jump):

bounce
podskakiwać [perf podskoczyć]
to bounce in fig

3. bounce inf cheque:

bounce

4. bounce e-mail:

bounce

II. bounce [baʊns] VB trans

1. bounce ball:

bounce
odbijać [perf odbić]

2. bounce baby:

bounce

3. bounce inf:

to bounce a cheque
odmawiać [perf odmówić] realizacji czeku

III. bounce [baʊns] N

1. bounce (rebound):

bounce

2. bounce (energy):

bounce

I. bounce back VB intr

1. bounce back (rebound):

bounce back
odbijać [perf odbić] się

2. bounce back (recover):

bounce back
dochodzić [perf dojść] do siebie
bounce back
bounce back prices
wracać [perf wrócić] do poprzedniego poziomu

II. bounce back VB trans

bounce back
odbijać [perf odbić]

bounce off VB trans, intr

to bounce off [sth]
odbijać [perf odbić] się [od czegoś]
Present
Ibounce
youbounce
he/she/itbounces
webounce
youbounce
theybounce
Past
Ibounced
youbounced
he/she/itbounced
webounced
youbounced
theybounced
Present Perfect
Ihavebounced
youhavebounced
he/she/ithasbounced
wehavebounced
youhavebounced
theyhavebounced
Past Perfect
Ihadbounced
youhadbounced
he/she/ithadbounced
wehadbounced
youhadbounced
theyhadbounced

PONS OpenDict

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Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to bounce off [sth]
odbijać [perf odbić] się [od czegoś]
to bounce a cheque
odmawiać [perf odmówić] realizacji czeku
to bounce in fig

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

The reasoning behind why some products bounce whereas others do not, is thought to lie in the rapidity of the initial price decline.
en.wikipedia.org
I learned you can bounce back from misfortune and view it as just something adverse that happened to you.
en.wikipedia.org
It's making a key up-and-down here or getting a good bounce here, capitalizing on an opportunity here and there.
sports.inquirer.net
The unlocked nose wheel collapsed and was forced back into its well, causing the aircraft's nose to slam into, bounce off, and then scrape along the ground.
en.wikipedia.org
If people overact to information then we would expect companies that report unexpectedly bad earnings to suffer a big hit and then bounce back over time.
theconversation.com