D'Urville Island
A vibrating simple pendulum does not produce any sound because it oscillates at very low frequencies.
A vibrating pendulum does not produce sound because the air surrounding it is not being disturbed enough to create sound waves. Sound is produced when an object vibrates and creates pressure waves in the air, but a pendulum swinging back and forth does not generate enough force to create audible sound waves.
The lowest frequencies we can hear are about 20 Hz - 20 vibrations per second. If (for example) the pendulum moves back and forth once per second, it will produce sound at that frequency, which we are unable to hear. Also, the sound will be of a fairly low intensity.
I think the one you might be thinking of is montana jones, its got a pretty sweet sax intro that sound kinda like the sax in careless whisper. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cj_xin1LPsU
trumpets are the intro and then there is a quiet beat in the background
Yes, the article "an" is used before a word beginning with "i" in the past tense if the pronunciation of the word starts with a vowel sound. For example, "an island".
Assateague Island is pronounced as "As-uh-teeg." The emphasis is on the second syllable, with a soft "a" sound at the beginning. The name is derived from the Native American word for "swampy land."
The word "sugar" has a beginning sound that is sweet.
The metal pendulum inside a bell is called a clapper. It strikes the sides of the bell to produce sound when the bell is rung.
Yes. The A has an unstressed sound (uh) at the beginning of alone.
skip pitts on wa-wa pedal