

A bullet ricocheted off the rock he was hiding behind.It looks lovely right up until it ricochets off the backboard.What agriculture fires at nature ricochets back, and the injury is great.Every day, billions of dollars ricochet around in the globalized economy.The distributed mass of ricocheting impulses which form the foundation of intelligence forbid deterministic results for a given starting point.I fled to my bedroom, terror, indignation, and confusion ricocheting in me.At one point, laughing, they fired off a couple of rounds, ricocheting the bullets against a wall.

After ricocheting from one emotional moment to another today, she was now face to face with possible disaster.→ See Verb table Examples from the Corpus ricochet From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ricochet ric‧o‧chet 1 / ˈrɪkəʃeɪ / verb HIT/BUMP INTO if a bullet, stone, or other object ricochets, it changes direction when it hits a surface at an angle ricochet off Bullets ricocheted off the boulders around him.
