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Ice melts faster by a blow dryer
technically, it is an onomatopoeia sound, but its not a word, and an onomatopoeia is a word which sounds similar (colloquially/vocally) to its meaning.
In France in 1890, but the hand-held blow dryer was invented in the 1920s.
No. A blow dryer sucks in air, heat/cools it, then blows it back out again. Without atmosphere, there is no air, and without air, there is no blow dryer.
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where was the hand held blow dryer invented
No, "held" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeias are words that sound like the noise they describe, such as "buzz" or "boom." "Held" is a verb used to indicate past tense of holding something.
Capabilities vary by different brands and models of dryer.
Ice melts faster by a blow dryer
technically, it is an onomatopoeia sound, but its not a word, and an onomatopoeia is a word which sounds similar (colloquially/vocally) to its meaning.
Onomatopoeia.
Don't use a blow dryer
In France in 1890, but the hand-held blow dryer was invented in the 1920s.
you go into the garage and the there should be an orange leafblower (a.k.a) blow dryer
No. A blow dryer sucks in air, heat/cools it, then blows it back out again. Without atmosphere, there is no air, and without air, there is no blow dryer.
The English onomatopoeia word for the sound of a duck is "quack". This has sometimes been shortened to "wak".