0 to produce, increase, or fill with sound, by vibrating (= shaking) objects that are near:
1 to be filled with a particular quality:
The building resonates with historic significance.
The significance of those great stories resonates down the centuries.
Her experiences resonate powerfully with me, living, as I do, in a similar family situation.
2 to produce or be filled with clear, continuing sound:
The fluctuation is localized at the surface where the frequency (real) of the stable diocotron waves resonates with the flow continuum.
In this conceptual scheme, the radiating element (bell, resonating body, etc.) is implicitly enclosed within the resonator.
The framing of discourse, then, resonates strongly with the way the exhibits themselves are framed visually.
However, the new policy resonates awkwardly with an unfortunate venture some 40 years ago.
The actual arrangement resonates between the two or three alternative structures.
What ensued from that debate became a mythic moment that resonates throughout countless memoirs, documentaries and commentaries on the period.
We learn about women's and men's daily survival strategies and how money and mobility resonated within the more intimate worlds of sexuality and marriage.
First, they resonated with existing and very deepseated intellectual predispositions.