[
UK
/ˈɛkəʊ/
]
[ US /ˈɛkoʊ/ ]
[ US /ˈɛkoʊ/ ]
NOUN
- (Greek mythology) a nymph who was spurned by Narcissus and pined away until only her voice remained
How To Use Echo In A Sentence
- Gone was the prim nodus; instead her long hair was parted in the center and allowed to fall loose under a veil, in a deliberate echo of the statuary poses of classical goddesses. Caesars’ Wives
- You may be trying to invoke the ‘echos from the supernal world’ but they're everywhere and where-ever people say they're doing magic there's a bit of truth there.
- A hesitant and very masculine voice echoed through the earpiece.
- It was also a noteworthy echo of a speech Sarkozy himself made last December, when he called for a "positive laicity" and suggested that the state could ultimately grant subsidies to religious groups. The Earth Times Online Newspaper
- As he completed his speech, the room echoed with applause and cheers of celebration.
- Armored Reconnaissance Battalion recon echo 1st plt 2/7 2/2 boeing AH-64 apache 2000 pound jdam us military calls multiple air strikes US air force predator UAV apache airtrikes airstrike in iraq night attack air strike on insurgents american military insurgents meet their virgins 30mm & hellfire killed by marine marines kill insurgents marines kicking insurgent ass apache attack f 16 strikes insurgents ah 64 engage insurgents engaged al qaeda WN.com - Articles related to US warned Britain: you must send more troops to Afghanistan
- The acrylic acid, catechol best suppression bacterium respectively is the golden yellow staphylococcus and the saccharomycetes.
- A rocky shore almost certainly provides a clearer echo than a sandy slope or mud flat.
- Secular remains of Gothic architecture in Czechoslovakia are fewer.
- Haematoma in the abdominal cavity was found as an irregular echo free zone between left hepatic lobe and the transplanted pancreas.