reverberate
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɹɪˈvɜː(ɹ).bəɹ.eɪt/
Verb
reverberate (third-person singular simple present reverberates, present participle reverberating, simple past and past participle reverberated)
- (intransitive) to ring with many echos
- (intransitive) to have a lasting effect
- 2014 November 17, Roger Cohen, “The horror! The horror! The trauma of ISIS [print version: International New York Times, 18 November 2014, p. 9]”, in The New York Times:
- What is unbearable, in fact, is the feeling, 13 years after 9/11, that America has been chasing its tail; that, in some whack-a-mole horror show, the quashing of a jihadi enclave here only spurs the sprouting of another there; that the ideology of Al Qaeda is still reverberating through a blocked Arab world whose Sunni-Shia balance (insofar as that went) was upended by the American invasion of Iraq.
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- (intransitive) to repeatedly return
- To return or send back; to repel or drive back; to echo, as sound; to reflect, as light, as light or heat.
- Shakespeare
- who, like an arch, reverberates the voice again
- Shakespeare
- To send or force back; to repel from side to side.
- Flame is reverberated in a furnace.
- To fuse by reverberated heat.
- Sir Thomas Browne
- reverberated into glass
- Sir Thomas Browne
- (intransitive) to rebound or recoil
- (intransitive) to shine or reflect (from a surface, etc.)
- (obsolete) to shine or glow (on something) with reflected light
Related terms
Translations
to ring with many echos
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to have a lasting effect
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to repeatedly return
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to rebound or recoil
to shire or reflect
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obsolete: to shine or glow
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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References
- “reverberate” in The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989, →ISBN.
Adjective
reverberate (comparative more reverberate, superlative most reverberate)
- reverberant
- Shakespeare
- the reverberate hills
- Shakespeare
- Driven back, as sound; reflected.
- Michael Drayton
- With the reverberate sound the spacious air did fill
- Michael Drayton
Latin
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