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1 echo
['ekəu] 1. plural - echoes; noun(the repeating of a sound caused by its striking a surface and coming back: The children shouted loudly in the cave so that they could hear the echoes.) atbalss2. verb1) (to send back an echo or echoes: The cave was echoing with shouts; The hills echoed his shout.) atbalsot; atbalsoties2) (to repeat (a sound or a statement): She always echoes her husband's opinion.) atdarināt (skaņu); atkārtot (domu)* * *atbalss; atdarinājums; atbalsot; atbalsoties; atdarināt
См. также в других словарях:
re-echo — verb (re echoes, re echoing, re echoed) echo again or repeatedly … English new terms dictionary
echo — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ distant, faint ▪ clear, distinct, loud, strong (often figurative) ▪ There are clear echoes of Elvis Presley in his vocal style … Collocations dictionary
echo — [[t]e̱koʊ[/t]] ♦♦♦ echoes, echoing, echoed 1) N COUNT: oft N of n An echo is a sound which is caused by a noise being reflected off a surface such as a wall. He listened and heard nothing but the echoes of his own voice dying in the cave. 2) VERB … English dictionary
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echo — I UK [ˈekəʊ] / US [ˈekoʊ] verb Word forms echo : present tense I/you/we/they echo he/she/it echoes present participle echoing past tense echoed past participle echoed ** 1) [intransitive] if a noise echoes, it is repeated because the sound hits a … English dictionary
echo — ech|o1 [ ekou ] verb ** 1. ) intransitive if a noise echoes, it is repeated because the sound hits a surface and returns: echo around/through: Her question echoed around the room. echo across: The howl of a coyote echoed across the canyon. a ) if … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
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word — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 unit of language ADJECTIVE ▪ two letter, three letter, etc. ▪ monosyllabic, polysyllabic ▪ two syllable, three syllable … Collocations dictionary
echo — 1 verb present tense echoespast tense and past participle echoed 1 (intransitive often + adv/prep) if a sound echoes, you hear it again because it was made near something such as a wall or hill: The thunder echoed over the mountains. | Our shouts … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
echo — I. noun (plural echoes; also echos) Etymology: Middle English ecco, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French echo, from Latin, from Greek ēchō; akin to Latin vagire to wail, Greek ēchē sound Date: 14th century 1. a. the repetition of a sound… … New Collegiate Dictionary
echo — I. /ˈɛkoʊ / (say ekoh) noun (plural echoes) 1. a repetition of sound, produced by the reflection of soundwaves from an obstructing surface. 2. a sound heard again near its source, after reflection. 3. any repetition or close imitation, as of the… …