Verb
The tax breaks should help to buoy the economy.
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Noun
Supercomputers ingest measurements from satellites, weather balloons, Doppler radar, lightning detection networks, buoys, surface weather stations and other measurement platforms to solve the equations that provide weather predictions.—Chris Vagasky, The Conversation, 28 Apr. 2026 Families flock to the Cape for mini-golfing, traipsing around sand dunes, comparing ice cream stands, gobbling up lobster rolls, spotting whales, and simply admiring the gray cedar shake houses adorned with colorful buoys.—Kara Williams, USA Today, 25 Apr. 2026
Verb
Fiscal stimulus helped to buoy spending in the first quarter.—ABC News, 3 May 2026 During the 2024 elections, Custer’s campaign was buoyed by CTU and the Illinois Federation of Teachers, which together contributed about $90,000.—Kate Armanini, Chicago Tribune, 2 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for buoy
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English boye, probably from Middle Dutch boeye; akin to Old High German bouhhan sign — more at beacon