Definition, Meaning, Synonyms & Anagrams | English word RESONATE


RESONATE

Definitions of RESONATE

  1. To vibrate or sound, especially in response to another vibration.
  2. (figurative) To have an effect or impact; to influence; to engender support.

1

6

Number of letters

8

Is palindrome

No

17
AT
ATE
ES
ESO
NA
NAT
ON
ONA
RE
RES
SO
SON

4

4

973
AE
AEO
AER
AES
AET

Examples of Using RESONATE in a Sentence

  • Covering the hole(s) on a traditional 's pipe(s) would cause the entire length of the pipe(s) to resonate with the reeds' frequency.
  • The movement largely faded by the 1940s, having failed to resonate with most Egyptians, and was superseded by pan-Arabism and Islamism.
  • By 1938, researchers at Bawdsey Manor began experiments with "reflectors" consisting of dipole antennas tuned to resonate to the primary frequency of the CH radars.
  • Although The Velvet Underground's proto-punk aesthetics failed to resonate with the incipient San Francisco counterculture, Graham retained Williams to build additional light systems.
  • Its purpose is to disseminate information on the results of Christian research publications, and popularizations, to various learning levels that resonate with the vision of ICS, INCHE, and related worldwide organizations and movements.
  • If the feedpoint of such an antenna is shorted, then it will be able to resonate at a particular frequency, just like a guitar string that is plucked.
  • It was praised for effectively capturing the thrilling and suspenseful elements of Wells' novel while modernizing the action and effects to resonate with contemporary audiences.
  • By adding the abovementioned resonances and, of course, their fifths (the fifth being a strong resonant frequency)—that is to say, G, F, D, C—the guitar's strings now resonate more equally with all 12 notes of the chromatic scale, bringing the guitar's sound closer to the consistency and sustainability of the harpsichord and piano.
  • This peak can be quite prominent, and when the filter's frequency is swept by a control, partials present in the input signal resonate.
  • Message drums, or more properly slit gongs, with hollow chambers and long, narrow openings that resonate when struck, are larger all-wood instruments hollowed out from a single log.
  • Michelangelo's illustrated poem reads:Jelbert has suggested that the physical pain described in this poem, and the pose of Michelangelo in his illustration for it, resonate with the agonised postures of the Vatican's 'Laocoön Group'.
  • Bass frequencies from stereo speakers can make a room resonate, particularly annoying if you live next door and your living room resonates due to your neighbour's music.
  • The frequencies in the white noise corresponding to the original signal's frequencies will resonate with each other, amplifying the original signal while not amplifying the rest of the white noise – thereby increasing the signal-to-noise ratio, which makes the original signal more prominent.
  • The revolutionary fervor underscored the belief in the possibility of creating radically new governments founded on the principles of justice and equality, a sentiment that continues to resonate in modern times.
  • The music from Dilate is less guitar orientated and is instead based more heavily on synthesisers and percussion, leading to "danceable dynamics" that "resonate with focused heft and power".
  • Although the self-capacitance of even large objects is rather small in ordinary terms, as Tesla himself appreciated it is possible to resonate that capacitance using a sufficiently large inductor (depending on the frequency used), in which case the large reactance of that capacitance is cancelled out.
  • The result is a program of numbers that resonate across all manner of invigorating wordplay with a jazzy, stoned ambiance.
  • Accounts of the moral inculcated by the exemplum of the Theban Legion resonate with the immediate culture of each teller.
  • Aliquot stringing, in stringed instruments, the use of strings which are not struck to make a note, but which resonate sympathetically with struck notes.
  • Air under pressure (called wind) is driven through a flue and against a sharp lip called a labium, causing the column of air in the pipe to resonate at a frequency determined by the pipe length (see wind instrument).
  • He can also communicate and resonate telepathically with Runa and the fragments of her spirit/soul called flickers.
  • The trapezoidal design of the building allows the crowd noise to resonate, creating a deafening environment.
  • The same contradictions resonate at the centre of their later work, 'Sacrificial Heart', 2008, a three-dimensional rotating version of 'Toxic Schizophrenia', which, like the earlier work, is both repellent and strangely alluring.
  • Resonation can be accomplished using a single resonator which all the keys resonate into, such as an open top box, or individual resonators for each key which can be a tube, box, or sphere.
  • Overtone flute tubes typically have a relatively long resonating chamber compared to their inner diameter or cross sectional area, which encourages the instrument to resonate in the higher harmonics.



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