0 past simple and past participle of resonate
1 to produce, increase, or fill with sound, by vibrating (= shaking) objects that are near:
2 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.
He cultivated this self-image through unceasing teaching and writing that resonated well beyond systematic theology.
But even considerations about the technical realization of perpetual motion resonated with the understanding of the sovereign as the self-acting agent.
The free long waves inside the harbour may be resonated in a low-frequency range which is relevant to the harbour resonance.
They demonstrated that the free long waves can be resonated inside the harbour.
In the higher frequency range both locked and free long waves could be resonated.
Each stroke is resonated in a stereo digital delay line where the feedback level is gradually raised until it dominates the original sound.
And this aspect of their character clearly resonated with the public at large: it made their genius human.
These repudiations resonated with the empiricist teachings of contemporary natural science.