Reverberate vs Thrum - What's the difference?
reverberate | thrum |
to ring with many echos
to have a lasting effect
* '>citation
to repeatedly return
To return or send back; to repel or drive back; to echo, as sound; to reflect, as light, as light or heat.
* Shakespeare
To send or force back; to repel from side to side.
To fuse by reverberated heat.
* Sir Thomas Browne
to rebound or recoil
to shine or reflect (from a surface, etc.)
(obsolete) to shine or glow (on something) with reflected light
reverberant
* Shakespeare
Driven back, as sound; reflected.
To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking.
To make a monotonous drumming noise.
the ends of the warp threads in a loom which remain unwoven attached to the loom when the web is cut.
(chiefly in plural) a fringe made of such threads.
any short piece of leftover thread or yarn; a tuft or tassel.
(botany) a threadlike part of a flower; a stamen.
(botany) a tuft, bundle, or fringe of any threadlike structures, as hairs on a leaf, fibers of a root.
(anatomy) a bundle of minute blood vessels, a plexus.
(nautical, chiefly in plural) small pieces of rope yarn used for making mats or mops.
(nautical) a mat made of canvas and tufts of yarn.
(mining) A shove out of place; a small displacement or fault along a seam.
to furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe.
* Quarles
(nautical) to insert short pieces of rope-yarn or spun yarn in.
As verbs the difference between reverberate and thrum
is that reverberate is to ring with many echos while thrum is to cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking or thrum can be to furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe.As an adjective reverberate
is reverberant.As a noun thrum is
a thrumming sound; a hum or vibration also fig or thrum can be the ends of the warp threads in a loom which remain unwoven attached to the loom when the web is cut.reverberate
English
Verb
(en-verb)- who, like an arch, reverberates the voice again
- Flame is reverberated in a furnace.
- reverberated into glass
References
*Adjective
(en adjective)- the reverberate hills
- (Drayton)
thrum
English
Alternative forms
* thrumbEtymology 1
Imitative.Verb
- She watched as he thrummed the guitar strings absently.
- to thrum on a table
Etymology 2
From (etyl) (m) from (etyl) and German Trumm.Noun
(en noun)Verb
- are we born to thrum caps or pick straw?
- to thrum a piece of canvas, or a mat, thus making a rough or tufted surface