A hissing Sunday
it depends on the sound you heard. ..if it is solid or liquid... but no DEFINITION....
a quick noise heard that may echo
There are threes states of matter: solid, liquid and gas. Music is considered a sound because it's heard. Sound is not classified as solid, liquid nor gas, hence it is not a state of matter.
Sound is a compression wave that travels via then vibrations of particles. If the particles are closer together then the wave (sound) moves faster. Particles are closer together in a liquid than a gas, therefore sound travels faster through liquids.
'The sound of the bells were heard' is grammatically correct.
If it passes through (i.e. you can hear it on the other side of the solid) then it hasn't been absorbed, but merely transferred from the source to the solid and back into the air. If the sound cannot be heard from the other side of the solid (i.e. it does not pass through) then it is said to have been absorbed.
what is the sound that is heard in the Fiordland?
Thunder is the sound heard after lightning.
Generally, Thylacines (as Tasmanian tigers were properly called) did not make any sound. They were heard, on occasion, to make a quick yipping sound. Tasmanian tigers were not tigers, so they did not make a tiger-like growl.
Yes, 'heard' is a short sound.
The speed of sound through a solid depends upon the density of that solid. The denser the solid, the quicker sound travels.
The Diplomats of Solid Sound was created in 1998.