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Word of the Week Archive
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bouncebackability
(also bouncebackibility)
noun [U] / ba nsb k b l ti/
the ability to be successful again
after a period of failure
‘When Everton were knocked out of the League Cup
last week, their manager Mo Marley said: “This will be a
great test of the famous Everton bouncebackability.”
(The
Guardian, 18th October 2004)
‘As a former
Cabinet member of Major’s government, Michael Howard has
an even harder job ahead of him. He has to show he has
enough bouncebackability
to get him into Number Ten.’
(Scotsman,
8th October 2004)
Though the world of English
neologisms is generally dominated by nouns, one of the most
significant new coinages of 2003 was in fact a phrasal verb.
Last year there was intense interest in the term sex
up, a new phrasal verb famously used by the BBC in
the context of the alleged embellishment of the UK
government’s dossier on weapons of mass destruction.
In 2004, a phrasal verb has made its mark on the language
again, though not by being intrinsically ‘new’, but by
spawning a ‘new’ noun. The established intransitive
phrasal verb bounce
back, meaning
‘to become successful again after something bad has
happened’ has formed the basis of a new derivative bouncebackability,
an uncountable noun which apparently fills a gap in the
language for describing a person’s ability to succeed
again after a period of being unsuccessful.
The most common context of use of the term bouncebackability
is in football commentary, as illustrated by the first
citation above. The majority of current usages refer to a
team’s predicted capacity (or lack of capacity!) to come
back and win after one or more defeats, for example:
The
team were determined to show their bouncebackability
after losing in last week’s game …
Tomorrow’s match will be a true
test of the team’s bouncebackability
following last weekend’s defeat.
The term is beginning to
cross over into rugby and other team sports, and is also
gradually appearing in non-sporting contexts, such as
business performance or political commentary, as illustrated
by the second citation above. It is also beginning to be
used in the more general contexts associated with the
original phrasal verb, such as recovery from illness.
So convinced of the need for the term bouncebackability
are some members of the English- speaking public that
they have launched a variety of online
petitions for its inclusion in the Oxford
English Dictionary. What's more, there's a website
called bouncebackability.biz,
where you can buy a T-shirt! UK bookies are even offering odds of
one to five as to whether bouncebackability
will make it into OED,
dictionary coverage of the word recently being the subject
of some debate
in the world of lexicography.
There is a small amount of
evidence for the spelling variant bouncebackibility,
though this is significantly less common.
Background
The word bouncebackability
was first coined by ex-footballer Iain
Dowie, now
manager of Crystal
Palace football club, who famously described his team as
showing ‘… great bouncebackability’.
The word is of course formed from suffixation of the phrasal
verb bounce back with
-ability, a suffix which is usually used with adjectives ending in
‘able’ to form nouns which indicate a particular
quality, such as dependable
– dependability,
suitable – suitability. Thanks
Many thanks to Mark Cox, a freelance teacher of English
as a foreign language based in Kamp-Lintfort
in Germany, for suggesting bouncebackability. Search
the Web for:
bouncebackability
bounce
back
Search
with WebCorp.
Search
with Web
Concordancer.
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