From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishresoundingre‧sound‧ing /rɪˈzaʊndɪŋ/ adjective 1 → resounding success/victory/defeat etc2 [only before noun]CLOUD/NOISY a resounding noise is so loud that it seems to continue for a few seconds a resounding thud► see thesaurus at loud —resoundingly adverb
Examples from the Corpus
resounding• They were shattered by the sudden incursion of a resounding bass voice which broke into song.• Her remarks were met with resounding cheers.• This was the one resounding defeat of Charlemagne's campaigns, recorded in the ninth-century life of the king by Eginhard.• The papers screamed superlatives, and La Scala, sulking after a resounding flop with Don Carlos, scowled and spat.• The embassage had a trumpeter, and he blew a resounding flourish.• The answer has to be a resounding no.• There are times when they almost entirely break surface and re-enter the water with a resounding slap of their tails.• By 1880 there were about a thousand hotels in the scheme which proved a resounding success.• If it comes close to matching the Braehead competition, then it will be a resounding success.