As I bounce happily, I imagine that I am really riding my very own horse through the fields looking for the bad guys. |
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That's when transmitted radio signals bounce off barriers and take multiple paths to get to a receiver, resulting in interference. |
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The frog bra doesn't completely eliminate bounce for me, so I wear a snug fitting Lycra sport shirt as well. |
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The bounce was even and true, and Agarkar, with his quick eye, could do no wrong under such circumstances. |
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A bounce game was arranged in midweek so the manager could assess all five. |
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Americans bounce back from failures, scandals, and bubbles with infinitely renewable confidence. |
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The hard terrazzo floors and glass walls that border the terraced atrium bounce ambient noise around, creating a sense of acoustic community. |
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You can figure the bounce angle by addressing the ball on a hard flat surface. |
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Most of it is the same Colorado River water that rafters bounce on and environmentalists hope to undam upstream. |
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If I could break in for just a second, I just want to bounce off what the other speaker just said, which I found fascinating. |
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They were able to bounce radio waves off an aircraft out to a range of seven miles. |
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Another problem with a big truck and a short wheelbase and a single rear axle is the bounce. |
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They'll bounce right back with excuses, rationalizations, and inane explanations of powers that weren't there in the first place. |
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Testing ourselves against opposition of this quality is one reason why we need to bounce back into the top flight. |
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But for all its talent, the Avalanche lacks scoring on the wings and badly needs Hejduk to bounce back. |
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Composites recoil or bounce as they absorb much of the energy from a slow blow, and they don't catch fire as readily either. |
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The surfaces must have the maximum possible pace and bounce with a reasonable covering of grass. |
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Hit the edge of the drum with the knuckly part of your palm and let your fingers bounce off the head. |
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The pillars are wrapped in new reflective material which allows light to bounce off the stone and create a natural light in the building. |
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You've got to hit the shots and you have to know your yardages, because of the bounce, et cetera. |
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There seems to be a blind faith in the lad because he's lanky and he makes the ball bounce. |
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The work captures O'Hara in repose yet with the suggestion that he would be ready at an instant to bounce into action. |
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The ball should bounce back to the shooter's hands as the left foot is being planted. |
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His chip kick was partially charged down, but the bounce took it in front of the posts only for desperate Waterloo cover to clear the danger. |
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Mostly short articles that seem to bounce around from topic to topic, really with no rhyme or reason, but are informative and interesting. |
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You can play this shot off any lie, even bare ground if your wedge has minimal bounce. |
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Sculptors, welders, and riggers create things to hang from, bounce off, and dance on. |
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Accelerators fire big ball lightnings, and these ball lightnings will bounce off the walls and fly about the room chaotically. |
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The sexual chemistry between Wilks and Gray is palpable as they bounce ripostes off each other with wry wit and superb timing. |
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Her basket no longer swung jauntily from its place at the crook of her elbow, nor did she bounce gaily on the springy moss beneath her feet. |
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He should bounce back, as we say in the medical lingo, within a few days, I think. |
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It's an archaic term that first appeared in 1812-and it's erroneously used to describe any lucky bounce, good or bad. |
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Pocklington recorded their fifth win on the bounce in beating Heworth 68-40 in division five, but five of the nine rubbers were very close. |
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She played the love interest and she does nothing more than bounce, jiggle and ooze vapidness. |
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The road was bumpy and Mike's low-rider was taking it with a little bounce. |
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Faculty often bounce ideas off each other about potential sabbatical plans, and I certainly was no different in planning mine. |
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Targets ride on an enclosed monorail which prevents the sag and bounce associated with wire systems. |
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The home side's tails were really up now and superb inter-linking play saw Standeven score twice on the bounce. |
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You just have to be organised and even if you just take one or two hours to bounce ideas off somebody else that can be important. |
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Get friends and mentors, advisors you trust and bounce your ideas off them. |
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Today this self-assured child arrives at school with a bounce in her step and a talking smile on her face. |
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City are once again trying to bounce straight back from a home defeat by claiming their third away win in a row. |
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The ball should bounce a couple of times, then brake, leaving you a makable putt. |
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I don't expect them to bounce a doctor on his ear just on my say-so, as much as I sometimes wish it were that easy. |
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At one point there was a mad scrabble for the ball and the umpire blew for a bounce. |
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Even the smallest tesserae catch light and differentially bounce it off or cast shadows with their irregular thicknesses. |
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Stuart Cliff broke behind the defence on to a through ball, but before he could get it under control Heeps snaffled it away on the bounce. |
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The goshawk landed with a thunk and then leapt up to take off, only to bounce straight into the front net. |
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I recommend not using the bounce feature, as it's not as yet convincing enough to fool the spam merchants. |
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Teachers need to be able to bounce back quickly and react sensitively to their needs. |
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If the spaceship goes in at too shallow a plane, it will bounce off and just fly off into outer space. |
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They need to bounce back from the shattering blow of defeat at the weekend at Hull City. |
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Coming off four heavy defeats on the bounce, his charges looked lamentably short on confidence. |
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Events, for boys and girls, included relays, long jump, triple jump, target shoot, overhead ball throw, javelin, speed bounce and balance. |
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When markets bounce back, they bounce back fast, wiping out past losses, and everyone is back in the black. |
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I twisted one of the ringlets around my finger and pulled it making it bounce up and down. |
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At the moment it's a bit of a mourning process but he will definitely bounce back, no two ways about it. |
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Heavy vehicles, much as they try, find it impossible not to rattle or cause trailers to bounce. |
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On almost every song I couldn't help but tap my feet and bounce along with the uncompromising, intelligent beats. |
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The skids once again left the runway, allowing the tiny aircraft to bounce its way higher and higher into sustained forward flight. |
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This circuit does not have the monostable multivibrator macro between the switch bounce waveform and the counter. |
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Molecules are very hard spheres that bounce off each other without losing energy in encounters called elastic collisions. |
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Inside it's split over three levels and more hectic, with weekend clubbers cramming in to bop and bounce to everything from house to hip-hop. |
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Too little force in the swing and the axe is liable to bounce back and bop you on the nose. |
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Customers in any industry could bounce questions off these bots, receive alerts about shipping, monitor inventory and order products. |
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He has great vision and tremendous smarts in terms of knowing when to fair catch a ball and when to let it bounce. |
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I kicked my soccer ball into the air and started to bounce it up and down on the heel of my foot. |
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An ultrasound scan uses high-frequency soundwaves, which bounce off solid objects. |
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Light travels in straight lines and will bounce off any non-translucent object. |
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In order for ordinary light to be polarized it must either pass through or bounce off a polarizing substance. |
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The echoes of our footsteps bounce off the bare walls of the hollow structure. |
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The music seemed to bounce off the walls, echoing the sounds and making them louder, more melodic. |
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Light waves become polarized as they bounce off objects or are pushed and pulled by the magnetic fields of interstellar space. |
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Radio waves then bounce off the bottom of the ionosphere at a higher altitude, giving these waves longer pathways to follow. |
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The video effects are so authentic that people's reflections bounce off the table in the room. |
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The animals then listen for how long the echo takes to bounce off an object to determine the distance away from the object. |
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When the sound waves bounce off objects in their path, a portion of the signal is reflected back. |
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Some servers may send the message to the valid addresses, but the invalid address will alert you to the problem because the message will bounce. |
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All subsequent incoming messages would bounce because the allocated storage for my e-mail account was already filled up. |
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The players, once able to bounce back from setbacks and adversity, are looking more and more like dead men walking. |
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Roarke hurried up to us, making the bridge bounce and shake, making me squeal, and making a certain hand steady my back. |
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His determination has always seen him bounce back from setbacks. |
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The whole idea was to be a stone wall and just let everyone else bounce off us. |
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With a complex twist of his wrist he tossed the bhaji onto a plate and it accelerated after the bounce so quickly that he hardly had time to parry it with his knife. |
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Bending your irons stronger to reduce loft decreases the bounce angle and increases the likelihood of your club digging into the turf before impact. |
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Their chins should be up and their eyes fixed on their target, which is the spot on the square where they want to bounce the ball off the backboard. |
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Light rays bounce off the person and onto the retina through the pupil, so if the pupils are large, more light will enter the eyes, and therefore providing a better image. |
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And her first attempts at badminton were fraught with difficulties because up till then she had dabbled with tennis, and expected the shuttlecock to bounce! |
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If the pattern is designed correctly the reflected light will bounce off at an angle that causes it to strike the surface again and to have a second chance to be absorbed. |
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The gosling's best chance at surviving the jump is to bounce off the cliff on its soft belly. |
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So does this mean that this mean that email won't even bounce anymore? |
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In contrast, word that Ebola might be sexually transmitted would likely bounce very differently. |
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But when little bounce resulted, the path toward a third reincarnation of his campaign is becoming steeper and steeper. |
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I can play, I absolutely adore trampolining, I'm absolutely nuts about it, I cannot get enough of it, and I literally bounce myself silly on the trampoline. |
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The bands play for the densely-packed crowd mass, seething with good times, and come out to bounce around to the other bands when their sets are done. |
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Rip currents, sometimes called rip tides, can happen when Longshore currents, which move parallel to the beach, bounce seaward because of a change in the bottom's structure. |
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He used to bounce around in that chair all over the place, he was a riot. |
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The ride is also surprisingly good for a mid-engined supercar, taut but well able to soak up small and large bumps with perfect bounce and rebound control. |
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Your children will grow in a house of suspicion and you will never bounce them upon your knee without wondering if they might one day slip a sword between your ribs! |
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If the fishery bounces back we will see our community bounce back. |
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Words peel off from the text and whirl round the reader, who can also hit the words so that they bounce back to the walls, sometimes taking up different positions from before. |
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Only a cruel bounce robbed him of a try from Duffy's banana kick. |
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He was not a patch on the hitherto unsung Michael Kasprowicz, who bowled with fire, bounce and zest during Australia's 3-0 whitewash of Sri Lanka. |
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It was clear from the moment he went on-loan to Bournemouth as a West Ham player, and banged in all those goals on the bounce, that this was a special talent. |
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While the former manager can claim to have won seven championships in a row, seven derby wins on the bounce is enough for the incumbent to be going on with. |
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It meant more to our father to see us deal with a setback and try to bounce back than to watch how we handled our successes. |
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Finally, after 45 minutes, the audience now diminished as people drifted away, the machine spews out some outsize balls that bounce away on the wind. |
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They cling to the walls, hang off the ceiling, bounce persistently against the mesh opening, trying to get at us. |
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We'd lost one game, not six on the trot, and we had to bounce back. |
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I watched one bee make a bad landing, slip off, fall backwards, bounce off a branch in the stem of the flower, and land on her back on the ground. |
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After all, with twerking, Cyrus was appropriating the hip-hop dance moves of Southern black women in bounce music and culture. |
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Unamused, the headmaster had destroyed the issue and threatened to bounce Bonzo's creator from school. |
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This process, in which sand grains bounce downwind, is called saltation. |
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And there is no chorus of dogs, locked in yards alone, whose barks and yaps and howls, at most other times of the year, bounce from ridge to ridge, amplified by winds. |
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Cuomo said that passengers were woken up about an hour into the flight when the aircraft began to bounce. |
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A beta particle is an electron that could make it just a little way into the skin, while an alpha particle is a charged helium nucleus that will bounce right off of you. |
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We're going to give up home runs, but the good relievers bounce back. |
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The pitch is still good with pace and bounce and in this era of lower order batsmen rather than slogging tail-enders, 31 was not a daunting challenge. |
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And after last Saturday's undeserved opening day defeat to Coventry City, the Blues will be looking to bounce back. |
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But it took a huge deflection off Williamson to wrong-foot keeper Tim Krul and bounce into the net. |
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Day blamed a problem with his cue tip for the miscue on the pink, which saw the cue ball bounce over the pink into the pocket. |
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In fairness, acceleration against Anil Kumble's nagging accuracy and Harbhajan's quirkish bounce was invariably the kamikaze option. |
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Rovers are looking for a fifth Ewood Park success on the bounce, have a rock-solid defence and have already beaten the Smoggies twice this term. |
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Bella's Bouncies family entertainment center provides moonwalks, bounce houses, slides, obstacle courses and a tunnel crawl through. |
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You used to have to drive over the old train sheds and sometimes the ball would hit them and bounce back on to the fairway. |
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Each outlet will house around 150 trampolines, linked to each other, allowing users to bounce around to their heart's content. |
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Leaderene can make it two wins on the bounce in the Bet toteexacta Handicap at Beverley after striking gold on the Lingfield all-weather. |
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If they bounce around too much, their latches break and your Linebacker is out of business. |
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The only worry is people might clonk the Airbumps just to watch them bounce back. |
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And look no further than some of the globe's most treacherous bunkers ready to snare awayward hit and at times an unlucky bounce. |
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As a kid, he'd cruise with his old man in a '59 Pontiac Bonneville and bounce around in the back of his siblings' lowriders. |
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I got very unlucky on the 18th in regulation, where it got a pretty big bounce for a sand wedge. |
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To take pictures of Pluto's nightside, the probe will use Charon as a mirror to bounce sunlight off Pluto's surface. |
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Tupman had a great turnround in his match, being two down with four to play before winning four holes on the bounce. |
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With nothing for the bowlers in terms of pace and bounce, Hafeez and Shahzad made merry. |
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Seriously though, the bobsleigh and sprinting training bounce off each other. |
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Whitney Houston's How Will I Know was stripped of all its pazazz and bounce, so too Money On My Mind. |
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Paul Jewell's Suffolk side, who have lost six Championship games on the bounce, will today be visited by their bogeymen. |
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Gold Point has won his last three on the bounce but may find this harder, leaving it open for DA REBEL KIWI to get back on the winning trail. |
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But to bounce back with a performance this emphatic was probably not something we thought was on the cards. |
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England's seamers operated mostly at a full length from the outset, preferring to seek outswing rather than bounce. |
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City closed the gap at the top to just one point, but Ternent is confident the Clarets will bounce back. |
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Disciplines include speed bounce, vertical jump, long jump, hi-stepper, triple jump, chest push, target throw and balance beam. |
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The ride uses bungee ropes to throw punters skywards at high speed before they bounce up and down. |
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They just needed a little English, one more good bounce, a chance to recover an onside kick and keep an improbable comeback alive. |
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The under-18s will be looking to bounce back from the disappointment of exiting the FA Youth Cupas they take on Ham worthy United tomorrow. |
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Then again Royal Mail once donated 20,000 that posties hadn't dropped towards the world's largest rubber-band ball, which was flown to Arizona to see how high it would bounce. |
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The train jolts as it pulls out of the station, but the bounce of my bladder leaves me unflustered, even though the toilet is three carriages away. |
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First the Mustangs will try to bounce out of the two-game losing streak at 7 tonight in their third straight road game, this time against GSAC rival Vanguard of Costa Mesa. |
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Obviously we had a little bit of lady luck with the bounce of the ball. |
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No More Heroes flopped when favourite at Leopardstown in January, and needs to bounce back, while home hopes Value At Risk and Caracci Apache are capable of having a say. |
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After just one bounce game for Rangers, Sise believes he wasn't able to show his best form in Glasgow and that's why he has returned to his homeland. |
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An unalert Garry O'Connor could only watch McFadden's corner bounce off his chest yards from goal, after Glenn Whelan had miskicked the set piece at the near post. |
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Nevertheless, the consensus seems to be that this year's MIP is an opportunity for companies to bounce back from a shaky 2009, and it's not to be taken lightly. |
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But after eight wins on the bounce at the start of the current campaign, manager Stephen Toman is satisfied that his players are leaving nothing to chance this time around. |
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Controlling light waves as they pass through or bounce off of hundreds or thousands of layer interfaces is defined by the refractive index of the adjacent polymers. |
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Just like wind pushing a ship's sails, particles of light called photons streaming from the sun bounce off the solar sail to create forward-moving thrust. |
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Because he's small in stature and is as fast a player as the Ducks have, he's cast as a scatback who likes to bounce outside and make yards in open space. |
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Liver have taken advantage of the top teams taking points of each other by going top of the table through winning their second game on the bounce. |
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Kallis dismissed the final five Bangladesh batsmen, who had no answer to his extra bounce and were either caught behind or at mid-wicket mistiming pull shots. |
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Bassist Phil Blake is also an admirer of the Firs Park team's ability to bounce back from adversity and insists the song can lift others in a similar plight. |
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But we have got an opportunity to bounce back in the Carling Cup. |
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Sustained pitches bounce one to the other, clicking, almost plucking keypads add percussiveness, virtu-oso harmonics slide chromatically and eerily. |
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