Verb
The tax breaks should help to buoy the economy.
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Noun
Best case is glowing reviews and great buzz buoy the film’s relevance among moviegoers for one week after another.—J. Kim Murphy, Variety, 27 Sep. 2025 But a replica Southernmost Point buoy has been installed nearby.—Miami Herald Archives, Miami Herald, 27 Sep. 2025
Verb
Spain’s largest company by market capitalization, Inditex, helped buoy that index, after better-than-expected earnings helped its stock to claw back some of its losses for the year.—Jordan Butt, CNBC, 1 Oct. 2025 Hosting artistic icons as diverse as Georgia O’Keefe to Vince Gilligan, the state of New Mexico has a rich history of creativity and innovation, which has been buoyed over the past couple of decades by filmmaker-friendly tax incentives.—Andrew McGowan, Variety, 1 Oct. 2025 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
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