Oui.
"Quack" can be used as a noun to refer to the sound a duck makes or as a term to describe someone pretending to be a medical professional. For example, "The duck let out a loud quack" versus "It's dangerous to trust your health to a quack doctor."
QUACK QUACK QUACK QUACK
Foster Brown sings waddle waddle quack quack. That is a different song then what is on noggin. who sings the noggin song? Curious Buddies (from Jack's Big Music Show) sing "Quack Quack Waddle Waddle." It is also available on the DVD "Curious Buddies - Let's Go to the Farm!"
Duck :) (Quack Quack)
quack quack
Sure! The duck let out a loud quack as it waddled across the pond.
Actually the answer given is usually a duck. This is, however, wrong.The sound (Quack) is only the representation, in English, of a duck's sound. Other languages hear it differently. A examples:In Albanian, mak-makIn Cantonese, gua, guaIn French, coin coinIn Polish, kwa kwa kwaIn Vietnamese, cạp cạp
A stupid Duck! Quack Quack!
Did it quack like a duck? That doctor is a quack. One "Quack!" from the duck was all it took to startle the curious puppy.
(in duck) Quack Quack Quack Quack Quack Quack and its to your left
a quack.
to quack (to utter the cry of a duck) is translated by the verbs 'cancaner' or 'craquetter': le canard cancane, le canard craquette > the duck quacks. A quack (noun: cry of the duck) is 'un cancanement' ; the sound is illustrated by 'coin-coin' in French.