A slug
All Snakes Make A Quiet Hissing Sound.
No - the don't 'chirp' ! The only sound they make is the occasional hiss.
Snakes hiss as a warning to keep away - as a dog would growl at you.
Snakes hiss by exhaling air hard from the mouth, much the same way a cat or an alligator would. Hope it helps. :3
Snakes hear through their ribs, the part of them that resonates with the ground. This is why it's so easy to trip over a sleeping snake. They don't communicate vocally with other snakes. "Hiss" is a popular conception of a snakey noise. Snakes generally try to make no sound at all since their livelihood depends upon sneaking up on things. This is one cause of other creatures' fear of snakes: you can hear a wolf or a wildcat coming, but a snake is just suddenly, silently there and, very likely, wishing it was a long way away from you, but those unexpectedly sharing space with a snake don't see it that way. Rattlesnakes and their relatives do make noise, but it's a defensive reaction designed to make things too big to eat go away.
Snakes. Geese, if you make them mad enough.
If you make them feel threatened, or they mistake you for food, yes. If you are respectful and you're smart around them, you won't have a reason to fear. Many people own snakes who have never struck or hissed at them, and I have caught several snakes that didn't strike or hiss.
Wolverines, cats ,snakes.by lauren lee
When snakes look like they are laughing, they may be yawning, stretching and or realigning their jaws. Their jaws have the ability to sort of dislocate from their normal position. This allows them to swallow large prey.
It actually makes no sound at all, except when: They strike an animal that will be eaten (not always). When it does not want to be bothered. When it feels threatened. The only sound it makes is the same for the three instances above: a rather loud hissing sound that it achieves by filling its lungs with air and then exhaling it all in one large huff.
hiss
Because all snakes make a hissing sound due to air being released between the forks of their tongue.