Want this question answered?
The two ways I can think of are "boing" as in the noise a spring makes, and "Boeing" as in the airplane manufacturer.
It has no meaning, simply serving as an Onomatopeia. (It sounds like the noise it represents) Quite simply it serves as a reverberating sound, in paticular the noise a compressed spring makes when released.
== ==
Check your ball joints and your spring hangers
The phrase, "A Noisy Noise Annoys An Oyster" should be credited to Dr Seuss, the famous expert on rhymes, who wrote the first Gerald McBoing Boing cartoon in the 50s. In the episode entitled "How Now Boing Boing" the phrase, "A noisy noise annoys an oyster" is written on a wall. The wordplay is typical Seuss: A noise-y noise a-noise a-noise-ster! Not so. My dad used to enjoy teaching this to me in the mid '40s when I was about 10 years old. I don't know the origin, but it antedates Seuss.
it could be that your rear end is boing out and you need to drive carefully or go to an auto shop Check to see if there is a broken suspension link, it connects from the chasis to the rear stabilizer bar, they are cheap to buy and you could possibly install it yourself
no because a flash isn't a noise. No, Onomatopoeia's are words like, Boing, Splash, Swish, Drip, Splat, Pow!
mine doing the same when turning been to garage could be broke spring or strut top bearing .
well spring peeper frogs make a noise to attract other lonely mates
Check your lifters, sounds like you could have a loose spring, if it has variable valve timing check the center dead rocker return spring.
A continuous thumping noise and floor shaking while driving on a 2000 Honda Accord could mean a loose exhaust system. It could also mean a bent frame or a broken spring.
this is an easy fix. the problem is the iacv. just ask for that part at dealer change it out and the problem is fix.