Need another word that means the same as “bounce back”? Find 30 related words for “bounce back” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Bounce back" (30 Words)
anachronism | A thing belonging or appropriate to a period other than that in which it exists, especially a thing that is conspicuously old-fashioned. The town is a throwback to medieval times an anachronism that has survived the passing years. |
backslide | Relapse into bad ways or error. There are many things that can cause slimmers to backslide. |
backward | (used of temperament or behavior) marked by a retiring nature. A backward agricultural country. |
backwards | At or to or toward the back or rear. He took a step backwards. |
behind | A kick that sends the ball over a behind line or a touch that sends it between the inner posts scoring one point. Campbell grabbed him from behind. |
degeneracy | The state of being degenerate in mental or moral qualities. Moral degeneracy followed intellectual degeneration. |
degeneration | The state or process of being or becoming degenerate; decline or deterioration. Degeneration of the muscle fibres. |
discontinuity | The state of having intervals or gaps; lack of continuity. There is no significant discontinuity between modern and primitive societies. |
inverse | A reciprocal quantity, mathematical expression, geometric figure, etc. which is the result of inversion. Numerous studies have shown an inverse relationship between exercise and the risk of heart disease. |
later | At or toward an end or late period or stage of development. A later symptom of the disease. |
past | A past tense or form of a verb. The war damaged church is preserved as a reminder of the past. |
posterior | Relating to or denoting presentation of a fetus in which the rear or caudal end is nearest the cervix and emerges first at birth. A posterior labour. |
posthumous | Occurring or coming into existence after a person’s death. He was awarded a posthumous Military Cross. |
regress | Calculate the coefficient or coefficients of regression of a variable against or on another variable. A regress to the nursery. |
regression | A return to an earlier stage of life or a supposed previous life, especially through hypnosis. Regression therapy. |
regressive | Proceeding from effect to cause or from particular to universal. Indirect taxes are as a group regressive. |
relapse | A failure to maintain a higher state. He relapsed into silence. |
restoration | The restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in France in 1814 following the fall of Napoleon Louis XVIII was recalled from exile by Talleyrand. The restoration of Andrew s sight. |
retrace | Discover and follow (a route taken by someone else. We retraced the route we took last summer. |
retreat | Make a retreat from an earlier commitment or activity. The bugle sounded a retreat. |
retrieval | The process of getting something back from somewhere. Storage and retrieval systems. |
retroactive | Affecting things past. A big retroactive tax increase. |
retrograde | Show retrograde motion. The outer satellites move in retrograde orbits. |
retrogression | Passing from a more complex to a simpler biological form. A retrogression to 19th century attitudes. |
retrospect | Contemplation of things past. A full retrospect of the battle. |
retrospective | Concerned with or related to the past. A Georgia O Keeffe retrospective. |
return | A good rate of return. McAllister went out in 43 and returned in 32. |
reversion | A property to which someone has the right of reversion. He was given a promise of the reversion of Boraston s job. |
revert | Turn (one’s eyes or steps) back. In the event of the building ceasing to become a school ownership would revert to the Church. |
throwback | An organism that has the characteristics of a more primitive type of that organism. The eyes could be an ancestral throwback. |