The players, once able to bounce back from setbacks and adversity, are looking more and more like dead men walking. |
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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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Americans bounce back from failures, scandals, and bubbles with infinitely renewable confidence. |
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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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He should bounce back, as we say in the medical lingo, within a few days, I think. |
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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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This wasn't so long ago, and the Royals' supposed bounce back to public favour came as a shock to many in the commentariat. |
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A Shafiq Khan century enabled Haryana to bounce back from 166 for six to 285 at Rohtak, thereby conceding a lead of only 13 runs. |
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Around the corner, with the rest of the Celtic fans, Sean is downcast about the 3-2 win for Rangers, but sure his team can bounce back. |
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It's always a joy to watch prissy corporate mail filters twitch their lace curtains and bounce back NTK when they spot a phrase they don't like. |
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The sub-bottom profiler emits sound pulses that bounce back from objects deep in the ocean floor. |
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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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You have to do that to get the best out of him, but he's just having a bad patch at the moment and we expect him to bounce back soon. |
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Break a stalk, and the plant secretes a growth hormone that causes four or five shoots to bounce back. |
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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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When markets bounce back, they bounce back fast, wiping out past losses, and everyone is back in the black. |
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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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In an hour, Bryant and her postnatal clients do jumping jacks, running, burpees, sit-ups and anything else to bounce back. |
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Teachers need to be able to bounce back quickly and react sensitively to their needs. |
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We believe that our ability to bounce back in the asset management business is significant. |
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You have to poke them and watch their soft puffy bodies give away and bounce back, hypnotizing you into taking them home and daring you to eat them. |
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He also revealed an admiration for his subject's ability to bounce back after periods of struggle. |
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But over the years, one apparent constant has been his ability to bounce back from failure. |
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More than housing, what the Group offers its employees is a willingness to listen and the ability to bounce back in critical periods. |
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Others highlighted the robustness of nature and its ability to bounce back. |
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The under-confidence occurred when we had temporarily run it down, then doubted its ability to bounce back. |
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I am convinced that African society is very resilient and has the ability to bounce back after even the most traumatic events. |
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Resilience is the ability to bounce back or adapt quickly to the consequences of an extreme natural event, such as a flood. |
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In spite of these new strategies, you will still feel a certain fragility, that your ability to bounce back is not what it was. |
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An ability to bounce back and management of failure are the skills that are drawn upon. |
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And finally they need ego-strength, or the ability to bounce back from rejection. |
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As the conference hosts often say, better to stumble and bounce back even stronger than fall down and stay down feeling sorry for yourself. |
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Cognitively, these teenagers tend to bounce back and forth between concrete and abstract thought. |
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Beaten in their last two friendlies, Germany made the most of Liechtenstein's visit to bounce back with a morale-boosting 4-0 win. |
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Poland: This surprise package showed great resilience to bounce back from their mauling at the hands of the USA in their second match. |
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Featuring a blend of Panthenol and frizz-reducing conditioners, it restores elasticity for springy curls that bounce back. |
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After the last recession, it took eight years for the job rate to bounce back. |
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We believe it is important to ensure Canada's workforce is in a position to get good jobs and bounce back from the recession. |
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This is usually temporary, but if someone's energy reserve is very low, it's hard to bounce back. |
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This transformation has made it more resilient to tougher times and should enable it to bounce back once economic conditions brighten up. |
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Misery loves company, and when times are tough, it's hard not to get caught up in thoughts of whether the economy will bounce back or not. |
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This study states it is nearly impossible for women belonging to already poor and vulnerable groups to bounce back once hit by extreme events. |
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However, growth is projected to bounce back in 2010, in line with the expected recovery in global demand. |
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Our support will primarily go towards the micro-entrepreneurs who lost everything they had in the catastrophe, so that they can bounce back. |
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These deaths deeply affected Dani, but she was determined to bounce back from the edge and pull herself out of depression. |
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The housing bounce back in 2010 and 2011 will require recruiting from outside of the local industry. |
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Plenty of potus and first-lady aspirants failed to bounce back lickety-split. |
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York Wasps will be looking to bounce back from Friday's drubbing at Doncaster to end Keighley Cougars' seven-match winning run at Huntington Stadium today. |
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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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We're going to give up home runs, but the good relievers bounce back. |
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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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We'd lost one game, not six on the trot, and we had to bounce back. |
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If the fishery bounces back we will see our community bounce back. |
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His determination has always seen him bounce back from setbacks. |
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They're under starter's orders for this year's Great Yorkshire Show, with organisers determined to bounce back after 2001's foot and mouth-enforced cancellation. |
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A lot of weekend practise saw Trevor bounce back to form, also beating his handicap on a day when the poor greens proved too difficult for most of the field. |
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The initiatives they have undertaken are beginning to bear fruit, enabling them to improve their cost structures and recover their ability to bounce back from a commercial standpoint. |
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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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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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A thick skin and an ability to bounce back from knocks is also important. |
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The only worry is people might clonk the Airbumps just to watch them bounce back. |
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After the disappointment of last race in Barcelona, the 27-year-old is determined to bounce back on the track where he got the victory in 2005 aboard the 250cc machine. |
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Working two jobs and sewing her own clothes, she has provided Shiancoe with a lifelong role model, and he credits his ability to bounce back on the field to his African mother's unwavering resilience. |
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It is essential to complete the GALILEO programme in order to demonstrate the European Union's ability to bounce back and successfully complete major forward thinking projects. |
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Upon striking an object in the water, the sound waves bounce back at the whale. |
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Protective factors are defined as the skills, personality factors and environmental supports that contribute to the ability to bounce back from these events and carry on with one's life. |
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The economic crisis that's hammering North America and the rest of the world only strengthens my conviction that updating our equipment is one way we'll be able to bounce back more easily from the crisis. |
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His ability to bounce back from adversity may be tested yet again. |
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Bok believes that media violence undermines... psychological mechanisms that allow people to bounce back and to count to 10 before they lash out. |
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There is recent evidence that resilience the ability to bounce back, to recover strengths and spirits quickly can pertain to communities, as well as individuals. |
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Confident of its ability to bounce back, the Group will continue during 2010 with the process of transforming and adapting the company to a changing economic and regulatory environment. |
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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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Instead of foreseeing the awakening of a temporarily disorientated Russia, its national pride hurt but ready to bounce back, the West has simply acted by giving lessons and pointing the finger. |
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Ms. Gieg doubted he had the resilience to bounce back. |
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We still have a long way to go and I believe it's not late to bounce back. |
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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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In this turmoil, the French Networks turned in solid commercial and financial performances, providing further evidence of their ability to bounce back and the strength of their customer franchises. |
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With age, your ability to bounce back from illness and stress decreases. |
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One more complication: the initial drop of the centre of mass carries it too far for a stable plane of precession, and it tends to bounce back up after overshooting. |
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Due to its resilience you can scrunch it up or flatten it out, all it takes is good shake for it to fluff up and bounce back to the form that keeps you cozy and warm. |
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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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Every team's got the ability to bounce back, that's the joy of rugby. |
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The most notable trend reversal was of the Euro, which dropped during the beginning of the week, just to bounce back later on, due to speculations of a Greek rescue plan. |
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Bell who had had some challenges earlier in the week in the men's points race, rallied to bounce back and win bronze behind Michael Freiberg and Cameron Meyer of Australia. |
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A bad mistake put paid to his chance in the Lexus Chase at Leopardstown over Christmas and trainer Noel Meade is hoping he can bounce back this weekend. |
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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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While some new mothers can dismiss baby fat as a rite of passage, entertainers are expected to bounce back to their former thin, glamorous selves at lightning speed. |
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But we have got an opportunity to bounce back in the Carling Cup. |
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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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The fit-again Scotland star insisted the Warriors can bounce back from their Pro12 fadeout in Wales to beat Ulster and book a home play-off semi-final. |
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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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