0 to produce, increase, or fill with sound, by vibrating (= shaking) objects that are near: --
1 to be filled with a particular quality: --
Her experiences resonate powerfully with me, living, as I do, in a similar family situation.
The significance of those great stories resonates down the centuries.
The building resonates with historic significance.
2 to produce or be filled with clear, continuing sound: --
Thus stated, the message sounds almost banal, but on stage it was striking and resonated with great power.
The moment resonates with the tremors of conquest.
An organism's nervous system resonates to environmental regularities because the nervous system itself is an embodiment of those regularities.
One consequence of this approach would be a school music pedagogy, which was transformative in nature because it resonated with the children's view of themselves.
Such experiences (physical discomfort, difficulties with stamina, acute performance anxiety) resonated with me as a player.
The defence of employment and public service resonated with the wider public.
The romantic ideal of self-overcoming within the ' superman ' literature resonated with feminist thought.
First, they resonated with existing and very deepseated intellectual predispositions.