ask the `pied piper`
Flute sound waves travel through the air when a player blows air into the flute, causing the air inside the flute to vibrate. These vibrations create sound waves that travel through the air and reach our ears, where we perceive them as music.
A flute produces sound when a player blows air across a hole in the instrument, creating vibrations in the air column inside the flute. These vibrations travel through the flute and are amplified by the instrument's shape and material, producing the sound that we hear.
A flute produces sound energy when it is played. The air blown by the flutist vibrates within the instrument, creating sound waves that travel through the air and reach our ears.
A bassoon has a lower sound than a flute.
You blow into the Flute's mouth, The sound comes out the rear end.
exactly how a d note should sound on a flute
The Flute sound is very smooth, round, and mellow . . . sort of a "Who Who Whoooo" kind of sound.
an airy flute
Flute has a long U (long OO) sound, and a silent E. It rhymes with chute or shoot.
The sound a flute makes is typically spelled as "whistle" or "flutey."
that's a flute that has two ways of sound
the flute makes its sound when you blow and air rushes through and comes out of the holes in a rush making a sound.