You shake it till you make it!
The player makes the strings vibrate, which makes the body of the guitar vibrate, which makes the air vibrate. And vibrations in the air, at a certain set of frequencies, is what sound is.
you sweat
the wings vibrate "bee"cause they move
It's a common misperception that the body of the guitar vibrates to create the sound. Actually it the column of sound around the guitar and in the guitar which vibrates to create the sound. When you vibrate the strings, the air around it vibrates causing the air in the guitar to vibrate.
The bow makes the string vibrate. The vibrations are transferred through the bridge to the instrument top. Vibrations are transferred from the top to the back side through a sound post. So, pretty much the whole body vibrates.
It is the heart. It is the first cell the begins to vibrate and begin to "contact" The body's first cell is the heart.
you hit them and they vibrate which causes an echo to go up the neck of the guitar and into the body.
You have badly worn brake pads or rotors or both. I would get them fixed ASAP.
When the bow is pulled across the strings, it causes them to vibrate. This in turn causes the air around the strings to vibrate, creating sound. This sound is amplified by resonating inside the violin body, it then travells out of the body loud enough for people to hear.
skeletal system supports the whole body
Well, it's not necessary for the whole object to vibrate, but the part of it that's producing the sound does. Example: I'm not vibrating when I produce sound, but my vocal chords are, otherwise there's no sound. So the answer to what you're trying to ask is: No.
you hit them and they vibrate which causes an echo to go up the neck of the guitar and into the body.