answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

An object vibrates to produce sound. So a soundmaking object is different from the one that is silent because it produces vibrations that the silent object does not.

User Avatar

Jarred Krajcik

Lvl 10
1y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How does a sound making object differ from one that is silent?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How does a sound making object differ from the one that is silent?

An object vibrates to produce sound. So a soundmaking object is different from the one that is silent because it produces vibrations that the silent object does not.


Did the sound produced by the object differ?

did the sound produced by the objects differ


What is the silent letter in yawn?

Yawn


What happens to sound as it gets farther away from the object making the sound?

It popes


What is the meaning of khamosh in Hindi?

"Khamosh" is a Hindi word that translates to "silent" or "quiet" in English. It refers to a state or quality of being silent or making no sound.


What is the spanish work for ski?

Esqui - the object - A ski Esquiar - the action - To ski Remember Spanish pronunciation, the U is silent in this case, making the work sound nearly the same as its English counterpart. Es-KEE


How does an object making a sound move?

it's either a human moving the object or it is just vibrating itself.


What happens to the sound as it gets farther away from the object making the sound?

the sod makes a higher pitch


What is the difference between silent film and sound film?

The difference between silent film and sound film is because that silent film has no sound whatsoever and a sound film has sounds in it


What is found in the kitchen but spelt differently?

A cupboard can be found in a kitchen. The P is silent making it sound differently than it is spelled.A knife can also be found in a kitchen. The K is silent.


Is the L silent in the word folk?

Not exactly. Although the L is not distinctly sounded in some dialects, its presence affects the sound of the O, making it OAK. You can see this in the AWK sound in "talk" and the AW sound in "solder." The L is actually silent in the words salmon, calf, half, could, and would.


Is silent a long or short vowel word?

The I in silent has a long I sound as in mile. The -ent has a schwa sound.