Yes
Depends on how you use it."Roar" is a verb in this example: The lion roared at the audience."Roar" is an onomatopoeia in this example: The roar of the wind deafened me.
well the word roar is onomatopoeia so i guess it is...
the lion roared at the zebra.
"Old MacDonald Had A Farm" is an excellent example of onomatopoeia.
Yes, scratch is an onomatopoeia :)
Depends on how you use it."Roar" is a verb in this example: The lion roared at the audience."Roar" is an onomatopoeia in this example: The roar of the wind deafened me.
well the word roar is onomatopoeia so i guess it is...
The big Boom made the whole crowd roar.
the lion roared at the zebra.
The big Boom made the whole crowd roar.
Words that imitate or suggest the source of their sounds like:meow (cat), bark (dog), oink (pig), roar (lion), croak (frog)
Yes!
is a statement that tells what the problem is.
No, "plot" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia is a word that phonetically imitates, resembles, or suggests the sound that it describes. "Plot" is a term used to describe the sequence of events in a story.
It is an example of onomatopoeia.
An onomatopoeia is a work that imitates a sound, like "bark," "tick-tock," "meow," "moo," "oink," "roar," "ribbit," "vroom," etc. But onomatopoeia is not the same in every language. For example, in Japanese "roof" (a dog's bark), is "wan-wan" - "Meow" is "Nya-nya."
"Old MacDonald Had A Farm" is an excellent example of onomatopoeia.