0 present participle of buzz
1 to make a continuous, low sound such as the one a bee makes:
3 to be very excited and happy:
The singer confirmed that he and his girlfriend were expecting a boy and said, "I'm buzzing!"
4 If an aircraft buzzes a place or people, it flies over it or them very low and fast.
5 to cut someone's hair very short using a special machine
The scientific sessions, and the tearooms and the bars, are buzzing with talk about the latest developments with this procedure.
Few women took advantage of the opportunity to report additional symptoms-breast pains, buzzing in ears, tingling of extremities and irritability were mentioned.
Suddenly the facsimile machine pulses into action, chirping and buzzing, ejecting a printed page 30 seconds later.
The buzzing fly defines a certain time-extent - a multiplicity of past events, such as wing oscillations, summed in a blurred visual display.
But if there is no ongoing, buzzing, continuous state, then there is no ongoing, buzzing, continuous neural process that we need appeal to.
The buzzing fly and the transforming brain are phases of the same dynamically transforming field.
Outside all was still but the buzzing of the bees, some of which now and then found their way in to the half darkened room.
And both dome and phantasmagoria gather and order sensory data to suggest a coherent whole rather than a buzzing confusion.