make+a+buzzing+sound

  • 81Roller coaster elements — Contents 1 Basic elements 1.1 Brake run 1.2 Buzz bars 1.3 …

    Wikipedia

  • 82Mandrake the Magician (serial) — Mandrake the Magician Directed by Norman Deming Sam Nelson Produced by Jack Fier Written by Joseph F. P …

    Wikipedia

  • 83Figeater beetle — Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Phylum …

    Wikipedia

  • 84bumble — bumble1 bumbler, n. /bum beuhl/, v., bumbled, bumbling, n. v.i. 1. to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow bumbled through two years of college. 2. to stumble or stagger. 3. to speak in a low, stuttering, halting manner; mumble. v.t. 4 …

    Universalium

  • 85annoy — 01. It really [annoys] me when you change the television channel every five minutes. 02. That buzzing sound from the refrigerator is really [annoying]. 03. The noise of the lawnmower was an [annoyance] that kept me from being able to really… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 86noise — 01. She usually went to the library to study because there was so much [noise] in the student residences. 02. The soldiers were awoken by the [noise] of gunfire. 03. We heard a [noise] in the cupboard, and when we opened the door, there was a… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 87bombinate — (v.) make a buzzing noise, 1865, from L. bombinare, corrupted from bombitare to hum, buzz, from bombus a deep, hollow sound; hum, buzz, echoic. Related: Bombinated; bombinating …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 88bumble — I bum•ble [[t]ˈbʌm bəl[/t]] v. bled, bling, n. 1) to bungle or blunder awkwardly 2) to stumble or stagger 3) to mumble 4) to bungle or botch 5) an awkward blunder • Etymology: 1525–35 bum′bler, n. II bum•ble [[t]ˈbʌm bəl[/t]] v. i. bled, bling to …

    From formal English to slang

  • 89vuvuzela — /vuvəˈzeɪlə/ (say voohvuh zayluh) noun a plastic horn (def. 13), up to one metre in length, which emits a loud buzzing sound; commonly played in South Africa by fans at soccer games. {? Zulu vuvu to make a noise} …

  • 90whirr — meaning ‘to make a continuous buzzing sound’, is spelt with two rs in BrE and usually with one r in AmE, and the corresponding noun follows suit. The verb has inflected forms whirred, whirring in both varieties …

    Modern English usage