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: --
That has reverberated in my mind ever since.
But now that music has swelled and reverberated beyond the prison walls, and across the world.
Two specific issues have reverberated in this debate.
That reverberated around the meeting then and has reverberated around the farming communities of the south-west ever since.
I remember when that factory reverberated with the noise of production.
Rhythmic hammering and the whoofing of bellows reverberated from forges.
We hear crickets and bugs, and further, space is created aurally through reverberation (the first bird is dry at 00.05:20; the second is reverberated at 00.05:56).
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.