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light and sound is produce.
Static electricity
You create friction when you take off your clothes. The crackling sound is the static electricity.
because of static electricity
Yes. pretty much all sounds are onomatopoeias.
ahh...... ARGHHH!! :)
All words have a sound when spoken. Some words sound like the thing they refer to. An example is "splash". Such a word is called an onomatopoeia. In Latin the plural is onomatopoeiae, and this also used to be the plural in English. These days the plural is onomatopoeias.
No. Onomatopoeias are words pronounced like the sound they describe (e.g. boom and moo). Limp doesn't describe a sound at all.
Onomatopoeia is a word that originated from the Greek, it is a word that essentially describes a sound. Some common examples of words that are onomatopoeias are animal noises. "Oink" would be a onomatopoeia. Also if you are wording the sound of a clock, "Tick-tock" that is an onomatopoeia.
Some examples of onomatopoeias in "Gathering Blue" by Lois Lowry include "rustle" to describe the sound of leaves moving, "crack" to represent a noise made by breaking twigs, and "slam" to depict a door closing loudly. These words help create a vivid sensory experience for the reader.
i heard the crackle of the leaves as i raked them.
No, "turn" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeias are words that imitate sounds, such as "buzz" or "hiss". "Turn" does not imitate a specific sound.
"RAWR" or "ARGH" are common onomatopoeias that represent the sound of anger. These words are used to mimic the sound made by a person when expressing anger or frustration.
It is an onomatopoeia, which is a word that describes a sound. Other onomatopoeias include 'beep', 'click', 'pop', and 'bark'.
I think "schlecht" sounds like what it means... "bad."
Light, heat and sound
is burned an onomatopeia