reverberate

suomi-englanti sanakirja

reverberate englannista suomeksi

  1. singahtaa

  2. heijastua

  3. kaikua

  4. kuumentaa

  5. heijastaa

  6. kajahdella

  1. kaikua, kajahdella

  2. heijastaa

  3. kuumentaa heijastuslämmöllä">kuumentaa heijastuslämmöllä transitive, kuumeta heijastuslämmöllä">kuumeta heijastuslämmöllä intransitive

  4. heijastella

  5. kulkeutua

  6. heijastua

  7. Verbi

reverberate englanniksi

  1. To cause (a sound) to be (repeatedly) bounced against one or more surfaces; to re-echo.

  2. (RQ:Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida Q1)

  3. (RQ:Montaigne Florio Essayes)

  4. (RQ:Stanley History of Philosophy)

  5. (RQ:Irving Abbotsford)

  6. (RQ:Hawthorne French and Italian Notebooks)

  7. (RQ:Wells Tono-Bungay)

  8. ''Followed by'' on (to): to deflect or divert (flames, heat, etc.) on to something.

  9. (ux)

  10. To heat (something) by deflecting flames on to, or passing flames over, it.

  11. (RQ:Jonson Alchemist). (..) I ſent you of his ''fæces'' there, ''calcin'd''. / Out of that ''calx'', I'ha'vvonne the ''ſalt of Mercurie''. / (smallcaps). By pouring on your ''rectefied vvater''? / (smallcaps). Yes, and reuerberating in ''Athanor''.

  12. (RQ:Browne Religio Medici) is but vitrification, or a reduction of a body into Glaſſe, and therefore ſome of our Chymicks factiouſly affirme; yea, and urge Scripture for it, that at the laſt fire all ſhall be cryſtallized and reverberated into Glaſſe, vvhich is the utmoſt action of that element.

  13. To repeatedly reflect (heat, light, or other radiation).

  14. (RQ:T. Herbert Travaile) the tops dignified by many double guilded creſcents or ſpires vvhich gallantly reverberate ''(w)’s'' yellovv flames (quote-gloss) in a rich and delightfull ſplendor.

  15. (RQ:Bartholin Culpeper Anatomy) hath thicker VValls, more compacted fleſhy Pillars, vvherevvith the heat is both more eaſily preſerved and reverberated, and the blood more ſtrongly driven.

  16. (RQ:Swift Tale of a Tub), vvhen moiſtned vvith Svveat, ſtop all Perſpiration, and by reverberating the Heat, prevent the Spirit from evaporating any vvay, but at the Mouth; (..)

  17. (RQ:Shelley Hellas)

  18. (RQ:Ruskin Modern Painters) in the midst of the obscurity of the dim room and the smoke-laden atmosphere, there could suddenly have been poured the full glory of a tropical sunset, reverberated from the sea; How would you have shrunk, blinded, from its scarlet and intolerable lightnings!

  19. To drive, force, or push (someone or something) back; to repel, to repulse.

  20. (RQ:Coryat Crudities)|lines=33–36|page=160|passage=This banke is ſo neceſſary a defence for the Citie, that it ſerueth in ſteed of a ſtrong vvall to repulſe and reuerberate the violence of the furious vvaues of the Sea.

  21. (RQ:Smollett Humphry Clinker)

  22. To send (something) back from where it came.

  23. Of light or sound: to fall on or hit (a surface or other thing); also, to fill or spread throughout (a space or other thing).

  24. (RQ:Sylvester Du Bartas)

  25. To beat or hit (something) repeatedly.

  26. Of sound: to (repeatedly) bounce against one or more surfaces; to echo or re-echo, to resound.

  27. (RQ:Defoe New Voyage) innumerable Rills and Brooks of VVater falling from the Clifts, making a barbarous and unpleaſant Sound; and that Sound eccho'd and reverberated from innumerable Cavities and Hollovvs among the Rocks, (..)

  28. (quote-journal)|translator=G. Siddons|title=Translation of the ‘Vichitra Nátak’ or ‘Beautiful Epitome,’—a Fragment of the Sikh Granth Sahib|Granth Entitled ‘The Book of the Tenth Pontiff’. Chapter I. There is One God.|journal=Asiatic Society|Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal|location=Calcutta|publisher=Printed by J. Thomas, Baptist Mission Press|year_published=1851|volume=XIX|issue=VII (number XLIII overall)|page=522|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/journalofasiatic19asia/page/522/mode/1up|oclc=1047491870|passage=Sometimes as an echo thou (quote-gloss) reverberatest pleasantly, now as a huntsman thou killest with arrows.

  29. (RQ:Black Phaeton)

  30. (quote-book)

  31. ''Chiefly followed by'' to ''or'' with: of a place or thing: to ring or vibrate with many echoing sounds; to re-echo, to resound.

  32. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed, and are to be sold at Temple-Barr, and in Bishops-gate-street|section=signature B, verso|sectionurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_fragmenta-prophetica_wither-george_1669/page/n11/mode/1up|oclc=222067444|passage=This ''Revievv'' is in the firſt place entituled, ''An Eccho from the Sixth Trumpet''; becauſe, it alluſively reverberateth, and ''Ecchoes'', as it vvere, to vvhat vvas predicted ſhould come to paſs betvveen the ſounding of the ''Sixth and Seventh Trumpet'' (quote-gloss).|footer=(small)

  33. (RQ:Landon Francesca Carrara)

  34. (RQ:Irving Abbotsford) would be in a flutter; some balancing and swinging on the tree tops, others perched on the pinnacles of the Abbey church, or wheeling and hovering about in the air, and the ruined walls would reverberate with their incessant cawings.

  35. ''Often followed by'' from: of heat or light: to be (repeatedly) reflected.

  36. Of information, news, etc.: to be spread widely through repetition.

  37. (RQ:Goldsmith Polite Learning)

  38. Of a thing: to have lasting and often significant effects.

  39. (RQ:Byron Giaour)

  40. (RQ:NYT)

  41. Of a thing: to be heated by having flames, hot gases, etc., deflected or passed over it.

  42. To deflect or divert flames, hot gases, etc., on or into something.

  43. To shine on something, especially with reflected light.

  44. (RQ:Howell Epistolae) Porter, after Capt. Porter, from Barcelona.|date=10 November 1620|page=31|passage=You ſeem'd to reverberate upon me vvith the beams of the Sun, vvhich you knovv hath ſuch a povverful influence, and indeed too great a ſtroke in this Country: (..)

  45. (RQ:Purchas Flying-Insects)

  46. Of a thing: to (repeatedly) bounce against one or more surfaces, especially with a sound; to rebound, to recoil.

  47. (RQ:Irving Rocky Mountains) reverberated against the sides for apparently a very great depth, and, by its sound, indicated the same kind of substance with the surface, as long as the strokes could be heard.

  48. ''Followed by'' on ''or'' upon'', or'' to: of a thing: to return and affect a person, their feelings, etc.; to recoil.

  49. (RQ:De Quincey Works), to one's own feelings, by the manifest impression it made upon ''hers''.

  50. ''Followed by'' in ''and a (glossary) (glossary)'': of a thing: to back on itself.

  51. Of a furnace, kiln, etc.: to heat up through the effect of flames, hot gases, etc., deflecting within it.

  52. To heat something by deflecting flames on to, or passing flames over, it.

  53. (synonym of); re-echoed.

  54. (RQ:Dekker Magnificent Entertainment)

  55. (RQ:Drayton Poly-Olbion)

  56. (RQ:Swinburne Essays)

  57. (senseid) Ringing or vibrating with many echoing sounds; re-echoing, resounding, reverberating.

  58. (RQ:Shakespeare Twelfth Night) / Hallovv your name to the reuerberate hilles, / And make the babling Goſsip of the aire, / Cry out ''(Twelfth Night)|Oliuia:'' (..)

  59. (RQ:Jonson Royall Masques) / Firſt taught to men, by a reuerberate glaſſe)

  60. (quote-book)|chapter=Part the Second|title=Ariadne: A Poem,(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Bulmer (printer)|William Bulmer and Co., Shakespeare Press, for Messrs. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown,(nb...)|lines=578–579|page=34|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=f6lUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA34|oclc=13355515|passage=Thrice his horse neigh'd, and the reverberate hills / Gave back the image of his voice, (..)

  61. (inflection of)

  62. (es-verb form of)