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 --
Second, the information provided by the particular pronouns used in a given utterance might help the child isolate the relevant event or action from the blooming, buzzing confusion around her.
Jaenson (1979a) suggested that male wing buzzing at the end of copulation induces the female to 'facilitate' insemination.
Careful consideration reveals that when you see you do not encounter an inner something that is, so to speak, ongoing, buzzing, continuous.
Indeed, once those antennae are up and buzzing, another set of comparators hove into sense perception.
The "buzzing" fly is a certain quality, the heron-like fly another.
He, thus, did not appreciate that buzzing with laterally directed wings and 'peeping' are separate behaviour patterns.
The sounds of buzzing, horses hooves fading away, drawn-out musical notes, for instance, transform the space from the suburb to the desert through sound.
And both dome and phantasmagoria gather and order sensory data to suggest a coherent whole rather than a buzzing confusion.