(especially in sport) the capacity to recover quickly from a setback.
〈非正式〉(尤作体育运动用语)从失败中迅速恢复的能力,重振旗鼓的能力
promotion-chasing sides need to show the requisite bouncebackability after defeat
追求晋级的球队需要显示出可从失败中快速恢复这种必不可少的能力。
Example sentencesExamples
In football they have coined a special term for it: bouncebackability.
It's what they call 'bouncebackability.'
For a long time it looked like bouncebackability would be the story of the day.
Coming back into that series after being down and out shows their bouncebackability.
They even found a clip of a BBC weather forecaster saying "temperatures were showing good bouncebackability".
Even if we suffer a set back we have bouncebackability.
The Stags have 8 days to recover and they need to show bouncebackability in the big local derby against Notts County.
However, if Spurs can show the newfound spirit and bouncebackability brought in by the big Dutchman at the helm, they should be realistically aiming for the three points.
Either way, they were both giving the distinct impression of bouncebackability.
One local newspaper before the game remarked on what they called Dunfermline's 'bouncebackability'.
The Bulls have shown bouncebackability this season but Peacock is tiring of the need for regular salvage jobs.
Kylie's bouncebackability is part of her charm though, and now in her late 30s she has become an artiste who is respected and admired by millions.
Crystal Palace will need all the bouncebackability they can muster, and despite what Iain Dowie might say, it's definitely Lucky Pants Time.
It doesn't have quite the same ring to it as bouncebackability, but it's getting there.
It already sees itself as the world's "can-do" city, and has that most attractive of qualities (if not words): bouncebackability.
But I don't think that it's Beckham's bouncebackability alone that explains our national obsession with him.