0 past simple and past participle of reverberate
1 If a loud, deep sound reverberates, it continues to be heard around an area, so that the area seems to shake:
2 If an event or idea reverberates somewhere, it has an effect on everyone or everything in a place or group:
This revitalized anti tax fervor reverberated across the political spectrum, making politicians afraid to advocate new taxes.
Reverberated sound, fed to both speaker systems, helps create a unified sound identity.
The aftereffects of its defeat reverberated in state and national politics for years.
The whole is sufficiently reverberated and the movement in delta has here more of the attraction that comes with approach followed by retreat.
The effects of malapportionment reverberated through the party-state.
The invisible transition of the air stream location - from the front of the mouth to in between the teeth - becomes audible when reverberated.
The incident reverberated far beyond the soccer field.
Some economists viewed him as a one-idea thinker, and worse, they whispered, his idea had reverberated less loudly within economics than outside of it; for example, in political science.