A Dove generally makes a "coo"-ing sound,it may not exactly sound like a "coo" but it is...
If you're referring to a coo sound, pigeons and doves
A dove or pigeon! or maybe a cuckoo?
a duck
a cow makes the sound moo
Cattle are animals that make the low sound when they moo.
There are all kinds of animals that make the toot sound. Humans for example are one animal that makes that sound.
The very rare and dangerous snukki!!
Yes there's always a sound somewhere Like wind makes a sound cars makes a sound animals makes sound
wild geese makes a hissing sound
The joke is that it is backwards. Kcauq is quack and knauq is a misspelling that should be kcauq. Kcauq kcauq is quack quack backwards, which is the sound a duck makes.
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
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.
quack quack
The word is spelled onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like what it is describing. A good example of this is the word quack. The sound that a duck makes is "Quack." The word sounds like the sound it is describing.
a quack.
A ducks quack is made by a duck makeing a sound that reflects around it's beak, making a quack.
a cow makes the sound moo
No. Loons make a strange yodeling like sound. Also a gutteral "kwuk."
Quack
Generally speaking, they quack. For a great way to hear a variety of duck calls or other bird calls, please see the related link below: