No! onomatopoeia makes a sound
Ex: Splat, Boom, Crash!
Therefore GAZE cannot be onomatopoeia, because its an action
Yes, the word cling is an onomatopoeia.
No, the word "lipstick" is not an onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the sound it represents, like "buzz" or "hiccup."
The word hiss is an example of onomatopoeia - when a word is formed from the sound of something.
The word that is a homophone of "gaze" and "step" is "stare."
an onomatopoeia is the use of word that denotes a thing that produces such a sound that is suggested by the phonetic quality of the word..
No, the word "microwave" is not an onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the natural sound of a thing.
Onomatopoeia is when a word's pronunciation imitates the sound it describes. An example of onomatopoeia is the word "buzz" because the sound of bees buzzing is captured through the pronunciation of the word.
There are 7 phonemes in the word "onomatopoeia": /ˌɒ.nə.mæ.təˈpiː.ə/.
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.
No, the word 'gazed' is the past tense of the verb 'to gaze'.The word gaze is a noun form, a word for a steady, fixed look.The noun forms for the verb to gaze are gazer and the gerund, gazing.
The word 'gaze' is a noun (gaze, gazes) and a verb(gaze, gazes, gazing, gazed). Examples:Noun: His gaze followed the plane until it was out of sight.Verb: All I could do was gaze in amazement at what he had accomplished.
Onomatopoeia.