An audio clip is a piece of a song . You can divide the clip using windows movie maker I have absolutely no idea.
Download (or create) an audio clip of a 'Bleep'. Add it to the audio track on the clip portion you wish to bleep yourself out on.
I was wondering the same. I came across an audio clip of the exact pronunciation, on Wikitionary. Below 'Pronunciation' is the audio clip. http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/guqin
Because a video clip contains far more 'information' than an audio clip. Video contains sound AND picture, if you will, while audio is only sound. There is probably four to five times more data in a video clip than a similary timed audio clip.
A podcast is a clip of audio or video content that is broadcasted over the internet using compressed audio and video files such as MP3s and MP4s.
No, you can't Because the audio clip is one. The rwo sounds have been put into the same file.
You can take the video clip into a video editing program, select the audio by clicking on the audio track in the timeline, then delete it, or you can turn the volume of the audio track all the way down. You can then export the video or render it out. If you are just working with one clip, or don't want sound on any of your clips, you can also decide to export/render the video out without any audio at all (audio should be one of the render options).
You can't stretch an audio clip to any length other than it actually is.
A small piece of recorded video of audio.
MPEG-1 Audio Layer 2 (movie clip)
If you know the bits per second of the audio clip, then simply multiply that by the length of the audio clip. If you do not know the bits per second, and the file is uncompressed, then you will have to take the sampling frequency (generally 44.1KHz), multiply it by the size of each sample, multiply by the number of channels and then finally multiply by the length of the audio clip. For example, a 1 second wav file with the default attributes of a 44.1KHz sampling frequency, 16 bit samples and 2 audio channels (stereo) will be 44100 * 16 * 2 * 1 = ~1.4 megabits = ~176 KB = ~172 KiB
You can change the file name extension (format) with an Audio Converter. Free audio converters are available online. Simply Google: free audio converters.