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词汇 reverberate
释义

Definition of reverberate in English:

reverberate

verb rɪˈvəːbəreɪtrəˈvərbəˌreɪt
  • 1no object, usually with adverbial (of a loud noise) be repeated several times as an echo.

    (巨大声响)回响,发出回声

    her deep booming laugh reverberated around the room

    她那低沉的隆隆的笑声在整个房间里回荡。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Oracle addressed them from their midst, her voice reverberating in their ears.
    • The sound of the gunshot reverberated angrily in the room.
    • I tried to imagine what the noise might have been, its echoes still reverberating down the corridors.
    • Simultaneously, a loud thud reverberated from a floor above the waiting room.
    • She started to laugh, the musical tones reverberating through the halls before quieting.
    • A higher, sharper sound reverberates down the hall.
    • His deep bark reverberated throughout the forest.
    • However, their argument was abruptly ended when a loud clang reverberated around the dungeon.
    • Having said that, there is a certain romance in listening to the names of far-away places reverberate off the walls of that magnificent place.
    • She had to be a lot more careful down here; footsteps reverberated very loudly.
    • The deafening thunder reverberated around the room and struck back down from the high ribbed ceiling.
    • A loud roar reverberated through the mountains.
    • Her scream still reverberated off the basement walls in the darkness.
    • Floors, for example, can alert guards based solely on how loud a footstep reverberates upon its surface.
    • Evelyn's eyes snapped open, the scream reverberating in her ears.
    • Emily handed the portfolio to Lee and a tinny scream reverberated over the floor.
    • She called, listening to her voice echo and reverberate through the clay rooms.
    • It was an exhilarating moment as the chopper seemed to come out of nowhere with its low engine roar reverberating across the valleys, echoing back and forth.
    • He pulled the trigger back and the sound of the gunshot reverberated through the walls.
    • Not only does she like to be way off the ground, but her playful and booming laughter reverberates through any campground or room you might find her in.
    Synonyms
    resound, echo, re-echo, repeat, resonate, pulsate, vibrate, ring, peal, boom, rumble, roll, pound, thump, drum, thrum
    1. 1.1 (of a place) appear to vibrate because of a loud noise.
      (地方)因响声而振荡;因喧闹声而被扰乱
      the hall reverberated with laughter

      大厅里回荡着欢笑声。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The courtyard reverberated with the noise of the preparations.
      • No longer do the Middle Eastern deserts reverberate to the sound of Australian helicopters.
      • Neither of us speak for a moment; the lively chords of the song in the background reverberate off the walls.
      • A music concert in the same locale that must have reverberated with her melodious tones centuries ago - the legendary singer could not have asked for a better tribute.
      • The hall reverberated with applause, as two little kids of the group emerged every time on the ramp.
      • For the last few years, Victoria's walls have reverberated with lamentations of the defunct student days of yore.
      • The hall reverberated with applause each time the guest went down memory lane recalling the college's accomplishments.
      • During the day and well into the dark, the place reverberates with the sounds of bongo beats and novices practicing kookaburra noises on freshly-carved wind instruments.
      • The streets of Glasgow reverberated with the sound of the chanter as more than 9,000 musicians made their way to the main event on a sunlit Glasgow Green.
      • The stadium reverberated with claps as brave Marathas displayed their skills in the sport, where the men showcased their acrobatics on poles.
      • On an April night, on the speck of land in the southern Caribbean that is the Grenadine island of Carriacou, the grounds of Belair Park reverberate to the distinctive call of African drums.
      • Trinidad reverberates to soca, and Martinique to the racing double beat of zouk.
      • The P.S. Higher Secondary School hall reverberated with the excited chatter of the women and a dozen schoolgirls.
      • Although the air reverberated with vehicle noise from the adjoining main road, he was awakened by tiny muffled scratchings a few feet from his head.
      • At the start-up signal, the entire base reverberated with noise.
      • And at the end of the 45-minute play, Ravindra Bharathi reverberated with standing ovation.
      • The Blue half of the Eternal City reverberates to a different beat when the Argentinian plays.
      • Fans had barely caught their breath, however, before cricket pavilions around the world reverberated to the crashing of more heroes falling from their pedestals.
      • The atmosphere reverberated with the sound of conch shells and temple drums.
      • When the men with ripping muscles and lean frames slapped their arms and thighs in gusto and let out a Viking war cry, the entire place reverberated with the loud sharp blows.
    2. 1.2archaic with object Return or re-echo (a sound)
      〈古〉使(声音)回响
      oft did the cliffs reverberate the sound

      崖下常惊隆隆响。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Buttermilk Lane is like a natural echo chamber, taking my crazy chords and loopy lines and reverberating them around from stone wall to shuttered window.
      • Large pieces of glass propped against one side of the cell eerily reverberate the soothing sounds of cascading water.
      • They're holding their breath and singing, so they must be reverberating sound inside their head somewhere.
      • Under the right conditions, barricades of trees reverberated a shout with an echo.
  • 2no object, usually with adverbial Have continuing and serious effects.

    不断发生后效,不断引起反响

    the statements by the professor reverberated through the Capitol

    教授的话不断在国会引起反响。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Cree say that life is continuous rebirth; the labor of our love will return time and time again, just as the leaves will decompose into soil and the things that we give to this world will reverberate long after we are gone.
    • It initiated one of the largest property transfers in history, expropriating the principal form of property in one third of the United States, an action that reverberates to this day.
    • In the worst cases, it left legacies of personal pain and distress that continue to reverberate in Aboriginal communities to this day.
    • The insurance implications of the attack continue to reverberate around the world.
    • Oh, and by the way, the Richard Nixon also had another electoral strategy that reverberates to this day and was heavily influenced by race - the suburban strategy.
    • If nothing else, it triggered a series of spats and arguments that continue to reverberate.
    • Reggae music arose from the streets of Kingston and reverberates around the world.
    • This triggered a rivalry between Carrara and the town of Pietrasanta (in whose territory Monte Altissimo lay) that reverberates to this day.
    • That's why, Roy says, small actions in her village reverberate in the power centers of Delhi and Jaipur, the capital of Rajasthan.
    • God was preparing Liddell to honor Him, and his testimony still reverberates today.
    • The repercussions of the controversy around the alleged doping by three of Bulgaria's champion weightlifters continue to reverberate.
    • Thirty years ago today, the single worst day of violence during the Troubles saw the streets of Dublin and Monaghan rocked by blasts, but the aftermath continues to reverberate around Irish society.
    • In the 18th century, two revolutions occurred and both unleashed forces that reverberate even today.
    • And unlike most real estate busts, this one will reverberate around the world.
    • The fallout continues to reverberate through the media, the political sphere, and has forced a discussion on the state of the culture.
    • I'm sure it had and will continue to have an effect and the message reverberated all around the world.
    • Even changing a single field reverberates throughout the development process, he says.
    • The explosions in New York and Washington on September 11 continue to reverberate around the globe.
    • The impact of their decision continues to reverberate.
    • Simply, interconnected stories told in an honest and forthright manner touch readers in ways that continue to reverberate long after the book is put down.

Derivatives

  • reverberant

  • adjective rɪˈvəːbərəntrəˈvərb(ə)rənt
    • Characterized by reverberation.

      the reverberant acoustics of a cathedral
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The sounds were louder than we expected, partly due to the reverberant quality of the room, and the metal columns, pipes and girders resonated even more than we hoped, and more musically, at least in most cases.
      • If it sounds good and reverberant in the room, it takes me that much further.
      • The sad, sweet netherworld in which inarticulate cartoon characters hang out after hours is a reverberant place for many young artists - including local Ben Woodward.
  • reverberantly

  • adverb rɪˈvəːb(ə)r(ə)ntlirəˈvərb(ə)rən(t)li
    • Ultimately, despite the freer methods, the results are often pretty much the same as Officium on disc one -- soothing, timeless sonic frescos reverberantly recorded in the same Austrian St. Gerold monastery.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Richly and reverberantly recorded, Thomson made the most of the swelling, romantic melodies.
      • As a result, all reverberantly reflected rays are eliminated.
  • reverberative

  • adjective rɪˈvəːbərətɪv
    • Aided by filmic, reverberative music, Bosher keeps the tension wound to the horrifying climax when the cannibalistic horrors come tumbling out.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Further, it has a reverberative effect on the family, friends and acquaintances of the victim.
      • One assumes Paul Smith's choice of moniker alludes to his music's reverberative qualities, but in fact its origin is rather more unusual.
      • Aided by Adam Cork's superb sound track, he underscores the action with savage bird-cries and distantly reverberative music.
      • Munro infuses the reverberative weight of history into her work by spiraling time.
  • reverberator

  • noun rɪˈvəːbəreɪtərəˈvərbəˌreɪdər
    • Figure 7.31 shows a simple artificial reverberator, essentially a realization of the design shown in Figure 7.15.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • That said, the El Head sound is embellished time and again with steel pan percussion, the odd echo-meter or reverberator and various bits of machinery that go boing.
      • The audio reverberator system includes a piezoelectric transducer having an intrinsic capacitance coupled to an additional circuit element to form a low-pass type filter circuit for attenuating higher frequency inputs to the transducer to provide a desired flat frequency response for an audio vibrational output to vibrate a reverberation plate for production of a desired audio output.
  • reverberatory

  • adjective rɪˈvəːbət(ə)rirəˈvərb(ə)rəˌtɔri
    • Hebb needed a way to sustain persistent reverberatory activity or ‘trace’ in cortical circuits.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In this study, we investigated the basic synaptic mechanisms responsible for reverberatory activity in small networks of rat hippocampal neurons in vitro.
      • Let us assume then that the persistence or repetition of a reverberatory activity tends to induce lasting cellular changes that add to its stability.

Origin

Late 15th century (in the sense 'drive or beat back'): from Latin reverberat- 'struck again', from the verb reverberare, from re- 'back' + verberare 'to lash' (from verbera (plural) 'scourge').

  • The early sense was ‘drive or beat back’. Latin reverberare ‘strike again’ is the source, from re- ‘back’ and verberare ‘to lash’.

Definition of reverberate in US English:

reverberate

verbrəˈvərbəˌreɪtrəˈvərbəˌrāt
[no object]
  • 1(of a loud noise) be repeated several times as an echo.

    (巨大声响)回响,发出回声

    her deep booming laugh reverberated around the room

    她那低沉的隆隆的笑声在整个房间里回荡。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The deafening thunder reverberated around the room and struck back down from the high ribbed ceiling.
    • She called, listening to her voice echo and reverberate through the clay rooms.
    • Emily handed the portfolio to Lee and a tinny scream reverberated over the floor.
    • However, their argument was abruptly ended when a loud clang reverberated around the dungeon.
    • His deep bark reverberated throughout the forest.
    • I tried to imagine what the noise might have been, its echoes still reverberating down the corridors.
    • Not only does she like to be way off the ground, but her playful and booming laughter reverberates through any campground or room you might find her in.
    • She started to laugh, the musical tones reverberating through the halls before quieting.
    • The Oracle addressed them from their midst, her voice reverberating in their ears.
    • A loud roar reverberated through the mountains.
    • Simultaneously, a loud thud reverberated from a floor above the waiting room.
    • Her scream still reverberated off the basement walls in the darkness.
    • A higher, sharper sound reverberates down the hall.
    • He pulled the trigger back and the sound of the gunshot reverberated through the walls.
    • Floors, for example, can alert guards based solely on how loud a footstep reverberates upon its surface.
    • She had to be a lot more careful down here; footsteps reverberated very loudly.
    • The sound of the gunshot reverberated angrily in the room.
    • Having said that, there is a certain romance in listening to the names of far-away places reverberate off the walls of that magnificent place.
    • Evelyn's eyes snapped open, the scream reverberating in her ears.
    • It was an exhilarating moment as the chopper seemed to come out of nowhere with its low engine roar reverberating across the valleys, echoing back and forth.
    Synonyms
    resound, echo, re-echo, repeat, resonate, pulsate, vibrate, ring, peal, boom, rumble, roll, pound, thump, drum, thrum
    1. 1.1 (of a place) appear to vibrate or be disturbed because of a loud noise.
      (地方)因响声而振荡;因喧闹声而被扰乱
      the hall reverberated with gaiety and laughter

      大厅里回荡着欢笑声。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Trinidad reverberates to soca, and Martinique to the racing double beat of zouk.
      • No longer do the Middle Eastern deserts reverberate to the sound of Australian helicopters.
      • The streets of Glasgow reverberated with the sound of the chanter as more than 9,000 musicians made their way to the main event on a sunlit Glasgow Green.
      • Neither of us speak for a moment; the lively chords of the song in the background reverberate off the walls.
      • At the start-up signal, the entire base reverberated with noise.
      • For the last few years, Victoria's walls have reverberated with lamentations of the defunct student days of yore.
      • The hall reverberated with applause each time the guest went down memory lane recalling the college's accomplishments.
      • During the day and well into the dark, the place reverberates with the sounds of bongo beats and novices practicing kookaburra noises on freshly-carved wind instruments.
      • The Blue half of the Eternal City reverberates to a different beat when the Argentinian plays.
      • The atmosphere reverberated with the sound of conch shells and temple drums.
      • A music concert in the same locale that must have reverberated with her melodious tones centuries ago - the legendary singer could not have asked for a better tribute.
      • And at the end of the 45-minute play, Ravindra Bharathi reverberated with standing ovation.
      • The courtyard reverberated with the noise of the preparations.
      • Fans had barely caught their breath, however, before cricket pavilions around the world reverberated to the crashing of more heroes falling from their pedestals.
      • The stadium reverberated with claps as brave Marathas displayed their skills in the sport, where the men showcased their acrobatics on poles.
      • On an April night, on the speck of land in the southern Caribbean that is the Grenadine island of Carriacou, the grounds of Belair Park reverberate to the distinctive call of African drums.
      • The P.S. Higher Secondary School hall reverberated with the excited chatter of the women and a dozen schoolgirls.
      • When the men with ripping muscles and lean frames slapped their arms and thighs in gusto and let out a Viking war cry, the entire place reverberated with the loud sharp blows.
      • Although the air reverberated with vehicle noise from the adjoining main road, he was awakened by tiny muffled scratchings a few feet from his head.
      • The hall reverberated with applause, as two little kids of the group emerged every time on the ramp.
    2. 1.2archaic with object Return or re-echo (a sound)
      〈古〉使(声音)回响
      oft did the cliffs reverberate the sound

      崖下常惊隆隆响。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Under the right conditions, barricades of trees reverberated a shout with an echo.
      • Large pieces of glass propped against one side of the cell eerily reverberate the soothing sounds of cascading water.
      • Buttermilk Lane is like a natural echo chamber, taking my crazy chords and loopy lines and reverberating them around from stone wall to shuttered window.
      • They're holding their breath and singing, so they must be reverberating sound inside their head somewhere.
    3. 1.3 Have continuing and serious effects.
      不断发生后效,不断引起反响
      the statements by the professor reverberated through the capitol

      教授的话不断在国会引起反响。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • God was preparing Liddell to honor Him, and his testimony still reverberates today.
      • Oh, and by the way, the Richard Nixon also had another electoral strategy that reverberates to this day and was heavily influenced by race - the suburban strategy.
      • In the worst cases, it left legacies of personal pain and distress that continue to reverberate in Aboriginal communities to this day.
      • The Cree say that life is continuous rebirth; the labor of our love will return time and time again, just as the leaves will decompose into soil and the things that we give to this world will reverberate long after we are gone.
      • In the 18th century, two revolutions occurred and both unleashed forces that reverberate even today.
      • The explosions in New York and Washington on September 11 continue to reverberate around the globe.
      • I'm sure it had and will continue to have an effect and the message reverberated all around the world.
      • The fallout continues to reverberate through the media, the political sphere, and has forced a discussion on the state of the culture.
      • The impact of their decision continues to reverberate.
      • The insurance implications of the attack continue to reverberate around the world.
      • The repercussions of the controversy around the alleged doping by three of Bulgaria's champion weightlifters continue to reverberate.
      • Even changing a single field reverberates throughout the development process, he says.
      • Thirty years ago today, the single worst day of violence during the Troubles saw the streets of Dublin and Monaghan rocked by blasts, but the aftermath continues to reverberate around Irish society.
      • It initiated one of the largest property transfers in history, expropriating the principal form of property in one third of the United States, an action that reverberates to this day.
      • And unlike most real estate busts, this one will reverberate around the world.
      • If nothing else, it triggered a series of spats and arguments that continue to reverberate.
      • Reggae music arose from the streets of Kingston and reverberates around the world.
      • This triggered a rivalry between Carrara and the town of Pietrasanta (in whose territory Monte Altissimo lay) that reverberates to this day.
      • That's why, Roy says, small actions in her village reverberate in the power centers of Delhi and Jaipur, the capital of Rajasthan.
      • Simply, interconnected stories told in an honest and forthright manner touch readers in ways that continue to reverberate long after the book is put down.

Origin

Late 15th century (in the sense ‘drive or beat back’): from Latin reverberat- ‘struck again’, from the verb reverberare, from re- ‘back’ + verberare ‘to lash’ (from verbera (plural) ‘scourge’).

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