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reverberating

/verb ri-vur-buh-reyt; adjective ri-vur-ber-it/US // verb rɪˈvɜr bəˌreɪt; adjective rɪˈvɜr bər ɪt //UK // (rɪˈvɜːbəˌreɪt) //

混响的,混响中的,混响,混响中

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    re·ver·ber·at·ed, re·ver·ber·at·ing.

    • : to reecho or resound: Her singing reverberated through the house.
    • : Physics. to be reflected many times, as sound waves from the walls of a confined space.
    • : to rebound or recoil.
    • : to be deflected, as flame in a reverberatory furnace.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    re·ver·ber·at·ed, re·ver·ber·at·ing.

    • : to echo back or reecho.
    • : to cast back or reflect.
    • : to subject to reflected heat, as in a reverberatory furnace.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : reverberant.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • However, his claims will reverberate in a podcasting community already wary of Spotify’s growing power, and may damage Spotify’s reputation among musicians who say the company doesn’t compensate them adequately for their work.

  • The Milwaukee Bucks’ decision not to take the court for their playoff game Wednesday reverberated quickly across the sports world.

  • The lead baritone hits a depth in his throat that reverberates in your ribs.

  • However, I don’t think anybody would say there hasn’t been a ton of important news this year, much of which could continue to reverberate later in the race.

  • Cries for racial justice and systemic change are reverberating across the state.

  • The cartoons zing, whirr, and reverberate harmonically, making each entry a sort of duet.

  • If a goal is scored, the streets reverberate with cheers and honking horns.

  • The silhouettes seem to reverberate across the room, in a mildly hall-of-mirrors effect.

  • But the impact of the financial maneuvers that he made to save the company will reverberate for years.

  • Over the weekend this question started to reverberate throughout the media pundit class.

  • He uttered a long, loud yell, which seemed to reverberate up and down the lines for at least a mile.

  • Who should know so well as I that it is but a handloom compared to the great guns that reverberate through the age to come?

  • Then the sound would reverberate down the long expanse of ice, and go rolling away to the mountains far beyond.

  • Ennis, edging desperately closer and closer to the line of victims, felt the mighty response reverberate about him.

  • The ponderous steed of the widower thundered after, making the forest reverberate with the heavy fall of his hoofs.