andon.draif
New member
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2012
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Indonesian
- Home Country
- Indonesia
- Current Location
- Indonesia
If there is this condition:
You hear President Obama's speech, after he finished, usually people still hear the same speech inside their head for several hours repetitively.
Or
You hear the Beatles, then for the whole day you repetitively hear their specific song that you exactly heard earlier that day.
Questions:
1. If I say "President Obama's speech has been resonating inside my head for the whole day", Do I use the word "resonate" properly?
2. Can I say "echo" instead of "resonate" and produce the same meanings? e.g. "President Obama's speech has been echoing inside my head for the whole day.
3. Or do you find better substitutes for these words that could best explain the two conditions above?
You hear President Obama's speech, after he finished, usually people still hear the same speech inside their head for several hours repetitively.
Or
You hear the Beatles, then for the whole day you repetitively hear their specific song that you exactly heard earlier that day.
Questions:
1. If I say "President Obama's speech has been resonating inside my head for the whole day", Do I use the word "resonate" properly?
2. Can I say "echo" instead of "resonate" and produce the same meanings? e.g. "President Obama's speech has been echoing inside my head for the whole day.
3. Or do you find better substitutes for these words that could best explain the two conditions above?