No
AA 'Long" O.
"better" isn't really the right word. Noise travels faster through water than in air, OTOH you need a sound source capable of generating sound while submerged.
Yes infact every time somthing vibrates it makes sound even if you can't hear it.
no trust me there isn't don't make me go in to explaning it
the sound travel fast....
That might be true.
True seals have ears, just not external ears. Their ears are simple holes on the sides of their heads, but they have the same general internal ear structures as any other mammal. Sound carries very well in water, so true seals can hear perfectly well when submerged. Note that other marine mammals - whales, dolphins, manatees and such - also lack external ears. In air, they can still hear, but perhaps not as well as some other mammals.
True.
they can make sound i just don't know what sound i work at a local zoo and ive heard them its kinda weird tho go to the Chicago zoo and then u can hear them...
You don't. If it is a gas water heater and you have hard water, the sound you hear is the lime deposits being heated and releasing gases. The only way to fix this is to buy a new water heater and install a water softener. This is also true for electric water heaters.
yes, but nobody is around to hear it. I know it sounds stranger, but the answer is no, its not the tree hitting the ground that makes the sounds but the air it displaces, (a tree falling in a vacuum would make no sound). It's the ear and brain which convert these vibrations into sound. Hence no-one around, no sound. Strange but true.
A person will hear a hissing bottle when they open a Coke bottle because the drink is carbonated. This is true of all carbonated beverages and it generally means that they are fresh.