Onomatopoeia.
The imitation of natural sounds or words that sound like the sound they are supposed to make is called onomatopoeia.
Onomatopiea.
The opposite of onomatopoeia is perhaps "obfuscation." Onomatopoeia creates a direct connection between a word's sound and its meaning, while obfuscation involves making something unclear or hard to understand.
Onomatopoeia is the name for words formed from an imitation of natural sounds. Words like bang and hiss imitate the sounds they describe and are examples of onomatopoeia.
"Sound that is an imitation of another sound" can be an echo, a recording, or an imitation.
Onomatopoeia is the formation or use of words that imitate natural sounds associated with an object, action, or reproduction of a sound. Some examples are tinkle, buzz, and chickadee. onomatopoeia is the imitation of nature sounds; such as zip, buzz shhhh while you are talking about an object you can relate it with natural nature sounds.
musique concrète
Crow is well know for imitation of different sounds.
Improvisation; applying a "theme and variation" form like a canon uses; starting with a melody from folk or other music and orchestrating/varying it; imitation of natural sounds (bird calls, running water, etc.)...
It's proprietary and natural so the manufacturer won't say. Not sure if it's even listed on their containers. Sounds like just plant and food oils that are supposed to create a smell that repels.
A pattern of stressed and unstressed sounds in language is called rhythm. This rhythmic pattern is created by organizing syllables into stressed (accented) and unstressed (unaccented) beats. It helps to create a natural flow and musicality in speech.
No; you don't need to split a crow's tongue to enable it to speak. The imitation sounds that crows make come from their throat.
My name is ---. Jag heter ---. (Sounds natural) Or Mitt namn är ---. (Sounds less natural, but literally means My name is ---.)