Verb
The tax breaks should help to buoy the economy.
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Noun
Golden mussels attach to nearly all underwater surfaces, including boats, ropes and buoys.—
Sofia Williams,
Sacbee.com,
27 June 2026 Stephen worked at Weber Brothers Metal Works at the time, welding half spheres together to make buoys.—
Kori Rumore,
Chicago Tribune,
27 June 2026
Verb
Ecuador will be buoyed by its 2-1 win over Germany in its final group game.—
David Hickey,
NBC news,
30 June 2026 The Red Sox’s four-game sweep will buoy them and haunt the Yankees for a while, and this Travelers will probably stay with Scheffler, too.—
Dom Amore,
Hartford Courant,
29 June 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