The word 'bounce' is correct and usable in written English. You can use it when referring to something that is moving quickly, such as a basketball bouncing off the court, or when referring to something that returns quickly, such as an email bounce. For example: "The basketball bounced off the court into the hands of the point guard".
Scandals that aren't out of tune with a celebrity's image are often surprisingly easy to bounce back from: after images of Kate Moss snorting coke surfaced, her bookings fell, but, over time, they went up.
The cinema has on the whole been kind to Oscar winners large and small, so it is interesting to note that The Artist has not (yet) been a major beneficiary of the so-called Oscar bounce.
His piss-take of George Galloway's Cantona-eque concession speech ("The hyena can bounce on the lion's grave, but it can never be a lion …") brilliantly combines dopeyness and disdain.
Labour will not benefit from any personal bounce in the seat because the former prime minister is standing down at the election.
They have also hit a pleasing rich vein of late-season form since being turned over in spectacular style at Old Trafford: five wins on the bounce, a sequence which has included impressive wins at Tottenham and Swansea, plus a six-goal humiliation of QPR.
The second way is for fielders to throw the ball in on the bounce so that it scuffs on the outfield.
On this initial evidence it will galvanise rather than undermine the Peakites in their bid to bounce straight back to Division One, as their captain Wayne Madsen had hoped.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com