Echos can be categorized as a verb.
Verb |
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echo - call to mind; "His words echoed John F. Kennedy" | ||
echo - ring or echo with sound; "the hall resounded with laughter" | ||
echo - to say again or imitate; "followers echoing the cries of their leaders" | ||
Noun |
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echos - Plural of echo. | ||
echos - Alternative spelling of echoes. |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | The flower arrangement was created as an echo of a client's still life. | |
2. | noun | His contention contains more than an echo of Rousseau. | |
3. | noun | Napoleon III was an echo of the mighty Emperor but an infinitely better man. | |
4. | verb | I'll just echo both other answers. | |
5. | verb | If you shout from the top of a cliff, you can hear the echo of your voice. | |
6. | verb | We heard the echo of our voices from the other side of the valley. | |
7. | verb | His opinion does not arouse any echo in his colleagues. | |
8. | verb | Your eyes reflect the echo of my voice. | |
9. | verb | The sound of a kiss is not so loud as that of a cannon, but its echo lasts a deal longer. | |
10. | verb | Don't expect anything original from an echo. | |
11. | verb | The sound of a kiss is not as loud as that of a cannon, but its echo lasts much longer. | |
12. | verb | The translator's task is to find the power in their language that evokes an echo of the originals; the echo of the translator's language must also provide a reverberation of the work, the echo of the foreign language. | |
13. | verb | Translation is at best an echo. | |
14. | verb | His compositions represent the last echo of Renaissance music. | |
15. | verb | Chloe, who, till then, had never heard an echo, looked first at the sea and listened to the boatmen as they sang, and then turned round to the woods in expectation of seeing the other men who, as she imagined, were responding to the chorus. | |
16. | verb | Poetry is the echo of the melody of the universe in the hearts of humans. | |
17. | verb | Your life is the echo of your mindset. | |
18. | verb | Your life is the echo of your mental attitude. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
The flower arrangement was created as an echo of a client's still life. |
|
His contention contains more than an echo of Rousseau. |
|
Napoleon III was an echo of the mighty Emperor but an infinitely better man. |
|
verb | |
I'll just echo both other answers. |
|
If you shout from the top of a cliff, you can hear the echo of your voice. | |
We heard the echo of our voices from the other side of the valley. | |
His opinion does not arouse any echo in his colleagues. | |
Your eyes reflect the echo of my voice. | |
The sound of a kiss is not so loud as that of a cannon, but its echo lasts a deal longer. | |
Don't expect anything original from an echo. | |
The sound of a kiss is not as loud as that of a cannon, but its echo lasts much longer. | |
The translator's task is to find the power in their language that evokes an echo of the originals; the echo of the translator's language must also provide a reverberation of the work, the echo of the foreign language. | |
Translation is at best an echo. | |
His compositions represent the last echo of Renaissance music. | |
Chloe, who, till then, had never heard an echo, looked first at the sea and listened to the boatmen as they sang, and then turned round to the woods in expectation of seeing the other men who, as she imagined, were responding to the chorus. | |
Poetry is the echo of the melody of the universe in the hearts of humans. | |
Your life is the echo of your mindset. | |
Your life is the echo of your mental attitude. |