No, an onomatopoeia is a sound, such as... Boom Plunck Squeek Tute Chirp...
Onomatopoeia (written sound) is a word that imitates or sounds like the sound that it describes. For example: "oink", "meow", "chirp", "squeek", "tick-tock".For the school bell ringing:BongDingBingBuzz (for modern bell)ClingClash
Chirp Chirp Chirp...
No. Well, it could be, but it's pretty lame. Jangle is a better example, or chirp. Or bleat, or buzz.
Yes, the word cling is an onomatopoeia.
The word hiss is an example of onomatopoeia - when a word is formed from the sound of something.
The onomatopoeia "ker-chung" is used in "Alas, Babylon" to describe the sound of a lock being opened.
Yes, the word 'chirp' is both a noun (chirp, chirps) and a verb (chirp, chirps, chirping, chirped).Examples:You can hear the chirp of the baby birds. (noun)They will chirp until their mother returns with food. (verb)
No, sweep is not an onomatopoeia.
No, the word "microwave" is not an onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the natural sound of a thing.
technically, it is an onomatopoeia sound, but its not a word, and an onomatopoeia is a word which sounds similar (colloquially/vocally) to its meaning.
Onomatopoeia.