The word "always" comprises two sounds: /ɔː/ and /weɪ/, making a total of two syllables.
Sound is sensed only when vibrations produced by a source is transferred to the ear drum by means of a material medium. If such a medium is absent then sound cannot be heard. But vibrations of the source are always there.
high frequency
Vibrations are essential for producing sound. When an object vibrates, it creates pressure waves in the air which our ears perceive as sound. The frequency of the vibrations determines the pitch of the sound, while the amplitude of the vibrations determines the loudness of the sound.
Cardboard is not typically used to hold sound. It is not an effective material for soundproofing or sound insulation.
The Sound of Waves by Yukio Mishima has 181 pages in its English translation.
Yes. The first A has an AW sound, but the second has a long A sound (ay).
They both have a long A sound (pail sounds like pale, and the AY in always).
There is no theroetical maximum sound. It can always get louder
Always is pronounced 'all ways' or 'awlways'. If by "short a" you mean the /æ/ sound in "cat" (/kæt/), then the answer is no: "always" is pronounced /ˈɔːlweɪz/.
Their product is always the speed of the sound.
First silent movies had no sound, but tv had always sound from the start.
No.
A monophthong is a speech sound characterized by a single, unchanging vowel sound.
TV always came with sound. There was never a "silent" TV. In fact by 1928 movies had sound.
Yes there's always a sound somewhere Like wind makes a sound cars makes a sound animals makes sound
A syllable is a whole word or part of a word that always has a single uninterrupted sound.
is it folly to raze a structurally sound building?