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Helium is an inert gas and is not harmful to your body. When you breathe it you are depriving your body of oxygen which is harmful. When you inhale it you increase the speed of the sound of your voice, which is why your voice sounds funny.
Wow that sounds like an exam question. Maybe distance from the sun, axis tilt and I suppose either the moons orbit or the speed of our spin. Your choice!
make you dizzy
Which sentence sounds the strongest?
Sounds like a brake wear indicator. If it changes while braking then it is. Recommend a brake inspection.
Sounds to me that he's really into you.
It sounds like you're talking about the pericardium.
If your heartbeat speeds up slightly then this is respiratory sinus arrhythmia - this is normal, healthy heart-rate variation and is nothing to worry about. It is an indicator of health.
Although the name Kingdom of hearts sounds cool, the game is called Kingdom hearts.
The word "changes" has seven sounds: ch, a, n, j, e, z, es.
It is a gas that weighs 6 pound. sulfurhexafluoride helium weighs -6 pounds. that's why when you inhale helium, your voice goes up. and when you inhale sulfur hexafluoride your voice is weighed down to a lower voice. it sounds awsome.
microphone
Helium is an inert gas and is not harmful to your body. When you breathe it you are depriving your body of oxygen which is harmful. When you inhale it you increase the speed of the sound of your voice, which is why your voice sounds funny.
They made those (and all other sounds) themselves, not rip them from elsewhere.
microphone
He doesn't scream, he uses a computer to make it sound like he is screaming and then he lip syncs live... the only song he ever screamed in was "the gunsling" and in that song he did inhale screams
Some phonological changes from Old to Modern English include the Great Vowel Shift, where long vowels underwent significant changes in pronunciation, such as the shortening of the vowel "i" in words like "bite." Consonant sounds also underwent changes, such as the loss of certain sounds like the "k" in "knight." Overall, these changes resulted in the modern English sound system we have today.