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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

384.0. "Bounce" by MARVIN::KNOWLES (Pour encourager les auteurs) Fri Jul 17 1987 05:40

    When A.A.Milne used 'bounce' as a transitive verb (Tigger bounced
    Eeyore into the river) I thought it was funny.  What made it funnier
    was that Eeyore used it in the passive: he said 'I was bounced'.
    
    I thought it was funny too, tho' not meant to be funny, when some
    politician (Shirley Williams, I think) berated David Steele about
    a month ago for trying to 'bounce' the SDP into fusion with the
    Liberal party.  I heard someone else using 'bounce ' like this
    on the radio news this morning; this time the Government was
    trying to 'bounce' British Airways into doing something.
    
    Are these early sightings, or has this transitive usage been
    current for years? 
    
    Bob
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384.1Bounce that ball over here...MTA::BOWERSCount Zero InterruptFri Jul 17 1987 09:435
    bounce _vt_(19??) : What a child does to a ball.
    
    I've been using _bounce_ as a transitive verb as long as I've been
    talking (since around 1947).
    
384.2AddendumMTA::BOWERSCount Zero InterruptFri Jul 17 1987 09:473
    After reading .0 more carefully, I feel I should point out that I've
    been using _bounce_ as a transitive verb since 1947 in New York.
     
384.3CoerceMARVIN::KNOWLESPour encourager les auteursFri Jul 17 1987 10:394
    But you don't bounce a ball _into_ the ground, or bounce a baby
    _into_ your knee.  My fault, for mentioning 'transitive'.
    
    The meaning I'm interested in is something like 'coerce precipitately'.
384.4:-)ERIS::CALLASCO in the war between the sexesFri Jul 17 1987 11:235
    re .2:
    
    As opposed to 1947 in Britian?
    
    	Jon
384.5boingngng...INK::KALLISRaise Hallowe'en awareness.Fri Jul 17 1987 11:4311
    "Bounce" is also used, don't forget, as a colloquialism for "fire"
    or "get rid of," as --
    
    "Does he still have a job?"
    "No, he was bounced."
    
    A "bouncer," who presumably "bounces," is a person (usually muscular/
    burley) who throws unruly patrons out of nightclubs, gambling casinos,
    and equivalent.            
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
384.6Gerrold McBoingBoing?WEBSTR::RANDALLI'm no ladyFri Jul 17 1987 15:3910
    When I was growing up (circa 1960 in Montana), I recall hearing bounce,
    presumably as derived from the usage in .5, used as miner's slang for
    being pushed into getting a job one didn't want and intended to get rid
    of as soon as one could manage to get bounced out, as for example, 
    
    "Hey, Stanley, I see you're working at the pharmacy!"
    
    "Yeah, me mum-in-law bounced me into it."
    
    --bonnie