Ezekiel 1:24
And when they went, I heard the noise of their wings, like the noise of great waters, as the voice of the Almighty, the voice of speech, as the noise of an host: when they stood, they let down their wings.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 1:23, the living creatures' wings are described — verse 24 then gives the sound of those wings in motion. Immediate sequential context.
In Ezekiel 1:25, a voice comes from above the firmament after the wings stop — directly continuing the scene from verse 24.
Ezekiel 10:5 directly repeats the imagery: the cherubim wings sound like the voice of God Almighty. This reinforces the vision.
In Ezekiel 43:2, God's voice is also like the sound of many waters — the same metaphor applied to divine sound.
In Ezekiel 3:13, the same sound of wings and wheels returns — linking back to the initial vision of God's glory.
Psalm 29:3-9 repeatedly describes the voice of the LORD over many waters, powerfully echoing the 'roar of many waters' in Ezekiel.
Revelation 1:15 echoes the 'roar of many waters' for Christ's voice — directly borrowing Ezekiel's imagery.
Revelation 19:6 uses the same 'roar of many waters' for a multitude's voice — again echoing Ezekiel's sound of wings.
In Isaiah 6:4, the voice of the Lord shakes the temple — both passages describe the overwhelming sound of divine presence.