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Discover LudwigThe phrase "sounds buoyant" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that has a cheerful, optimistic, or lively quality, often in reference to music, speech, or a general atmosphere. Example: "The melody of the song sounds buoyant, lifting everyone's spirits as they dance."
Exact(4)
She sounds buoyant and sad and vulnerable.
Though Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC candidate, sounds buoyant, it is hard to see how he will be allowed to win.Pro-government militias, backed by the army, are doing all they can to make sure Mr Mugabe keeps his job.
Though Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC candidate, sounds buoyant about his chances, it is hard to see how he will be allowed to win.In an orchestrated campaign of intimidation, pro-government militias, backed by the army, are doing all they can to make sure Mr Mugabe keeps his job.
Despite the hour, he sounds buoyant and engaging, apologizing profusely about the intermittent airline announcements and asking about my family.
Similar(55)
She sounded buoyant on the Western swing-influenced "Best Buy," one of the only real moments of levity during this show.
The handclaps, the bass line, the falsetto vocal – it all sounds as buoyant as balloons in a park on a summer Saturday.
Greenblatt continued to praised Rihanna's vocal performance, writing: "Even while telling a recalcitrant man how hard he is to love, she sounds almost buoyant, her newly expanded vocals eager to scale the song's high-altitude house beat".
Leah Greenblatt from Entertainment Weekly said "Even while telling a recalcitrant man how hard he is to love, she [Rihanna] sounds almost buoyant, her newly expanded vocals eager to scale the song's high-altitude house beat".
But relatively few economists, even those who see signs of an improving economy, sound particularly buoyant, a concern shared by liberals and conservatives alike.
Don't snicker: the stylish Mr. Mizrahi is a vivacious yarn-spinner, and the conductor George Manahan elicits buoyant sounds from his Juilliard players.
"Packin' Up," Marion Williams: I have some other brunch-time favorites: Paul Simon's "Graceland" still sounds fresh and buoyant, Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours" imparts a faintly decadent '70s vibe and, in a certain cast of mind, when I'm using the good china and linens and feeling kind of 19th century, Robert Schumann's songs fit the bill.
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