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atopoeia
No, neither of those words is an onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia is the name for words formed from an imitation of natural sounds. Words like bang and hiss imitate the sounds they describe and are examples of onomatopoeia.
onomatopoeia
No. onomatopoeia has to do with sound. I agree, but if you use words like WHAM, BOOM or BANG, then, it becomes an onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia words are sounds and actions such as buzz, zip, clang, crash, and sizzle.
Yes, adding "ed" to an onomatopoeia does not change its classification as onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate the sound they represent, and adding "-ed" still reflects a sound.
Describing a sound using words is called onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia is when words imitate the sound they represent, helping to make written or spoken descriptions more vivid and expressive.
Onomatopoeia
Onomatopoeia.
The name for making words from natural sounds is onomatopoeia.
No, onomatopoeia refers to words that are spelled the way they sound as in bang, kaboom, crash.
No, onomatopoeia words are like: boom, crash, bang. Onomatopoeia words are words that sound like what they are. More examples: meow, buzzz, bam, woosh.