Make sure your sound card drivers are up to date. also make sure all wires are in good shape and are well connected make sure your sound is not on mute.
To make sure your sound card drivers are up to date go to start control panel and on classic view click on "device manager" and than click continue and click on "sound and video, controllers" the plus signal to expand and/or right click and select update driver software.
Some people lose all sound from their computers because their sound drivers are not updated..
If this is the case find information on your computer and look for its sound card driver and download it directly from the website.
if that's not the case you may need to replace your sound card but i would make sure you test everything to do with software before you spend money on replacing...
The A has a short A vowel sound as in bat and pack.
It's a short sound. A long sound for a is something like in May.
No. It has a short A sound as in back and sack.
An echo is a sound that bounces back to you after reflecting off a surface.
The time it takes for a sound to come back as an echo depends on the distance between the sound source and the reflecting surface. Sound travels at a speed of approximately 343 meters per second in air, so you can roughly calculate the time by dividing the total distance the sound travels (to the reflecting surface and back) by the speed of sound.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in bat or crack.
The A has a short A sound as in bat and sack.
The A has a short A sound as in bat and sack.
Yes, all the words "back," "sat," and "wanted" have the short 'a' sound.
The word "back" has a short A vowel sound.
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
A low back vowel in phonetics is characterized by the tongue being positioned low and towards the back of the mouth when producing the sound. Examples of low back vowels include the "ah" sound in "father" and the "aw" sound in "law."