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bounce around
Move around from one person or place to another. For example, The staff spent the morning bouncing around ideas to improve sales , or She had been bouncing around from one job to another . This term alludes to a ball bouncing among players. [ Colloquial ; mid-1900s]
Treat roughly or unfairly, as in Quit bouncing me around; I won't stand for it . This usage is based on a somewhat earlier meaning of bounce , âto beat upâ or âcoerce.â ] Slang ; c. 1970]
Example Sentences
âWhat drives me is the same thing that drove me when I first started. Iâm still hungry, hungry to do good work and interesting things. Iâm curious about stuff I donât know, and that curiosity makes me bounce around.â
The men bounce around departments, including the assessment appeals office, telling workers they will audit their computer systems, calling oneâs work âlists of stupid sâ,â while bothering employees as they worked.
Rob Warnock, an analyst with ApartmentList, cautioned the companyâs data does not include single-family homes and that, even in normal times, rent can bounce around month-to-month.
Olsen: I think whatâs so remarkable in that moment is, for me at least, it opened the movie up in a way where instead of feeling like Iâm locked in with this one character, you felt like it could bounce around.
As a head coach, you bounce around to different meeting rooms, but as the coordinator, youâre with the quarterbacks all the time.
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