If pitch means frequency, then they differ in wave length and if pitch means wave length, then they differ in frequency.
one or more octaves.
wavelengths
sound waves are created by things that make sounds like sombody speaking or instruments. water waves are created by wind.
Pleasant sounds are nice to hear and unpleasant sounds are not nice to hear.
The human ear cannot detect all possible frequencies. It has evolved to detect frequencies of sounds that are the most useful to humans, and has a maximum frequency range of about 20Hz to 20kHz, which decreases as you get older, particularly at the higher end. Infrasonic describes sounds that are too low in frequency to be heard by the human ear, and ultrasonic describes sounds that are too high in frequency to be heard by the human ear. These sounds cannot be heard by the human ear because they are outside of its range of capability.
wavelengths
one or more octaves.
wavelengths
differenciate between vowel and consonant
No, I do not. Phonetics describes the specific sounds made by human languages. Linguistics then takes these sounds and phonetic data to add the dimension of meaning to language through phonology. Phonology describes how sounds are used and organized in a particular language. You cannot organize and distinguish between sounds and words without first having the phonetic data of each sound.
The pitch of a note describes how high or low a note sounds.
There are a few differences between a and b. A is a vowel and b is a consonant. A and b both have different sounds when pronounced.
Sounds that are barely audible are describes as very quiet. To hear sounds that are very quiet your ears will usually have to strain.
The Duplex theory provides an explanation for the ability of humans to localise sounds by time differences between the sounds reaching each ear (ITDs) and differences in sound level entering the ears (interaural level differences, ILDs). The duplex theory states that ITDs are used to localise low frequency sounds, in particular, while ILDs are used in the localisation of high frequency sound inputs.
The Duplex theory provides an explanation for the ability of humans to localise sounds by time differences between the sounds reaching each ear (ITDs) and differences in sound level entering the ears (interaural level differences, ILDs). The duplex theory states that ITDs are used to localise low frequency sounds, in particular, while ILDs are used in the localisation of high frequency sound inputs.
the differences between imf and world bank is imf has an burger king next to it. also because cooler people like to go to imf just because world bank sounds gay :)
Gibberish