0 present 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.
In this conceptual scheme, the radiating element (bell, resonating body, etc.) is implicitly enclosed within the resonator.
These 'rattles', varying in volume, weight and sound, possess their own resonating characteristics.
The comb filter produced a pitched quality by resonating at certain pitches when excited by the speech input.
Transfer of electron spin density from the paramagnetic center to the resonating nucleus is somehow related to chemical bonds.
As stated before, every material has a dominant resonating frequency.
The case of marked damping of a resonating body, the interrupted resonance, is an important special case.
Resonating through the concept of bodywork is the issue of gender.
The frequency range about the linear resonant frequencies for which there is a resonating wavelet is the linear resonance region.