In depends in what context you are using the onomatopoeia, do what seems right. When using it as a hook at the beginning of an essay or short story, I would. ex. "Bang!" Alex's body lay motionless in the soil. Usually you would, but in some instances it is not nessecary. ex. The book fell off the shelf, boom! Quotations could still be used here, but are not required.
Yes, "wail" is considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound it represents.
I don't think Wail is an onomatopoeia. It is more of a verb because a person can wail but a person can not BOOM or CLICK CLACK. So no wail is not an onomatopoeia, it is a verb.
I believe it's "boo-hoo"
No. It is a an abstract noun.
yes
yes it is
A wail
The definition of the word lament is to wail loudly.
A wail is a prolonged cry of despair, or the sound made by emergency vehicle sirens.
The Igbo meaning for the word wail is "Kwa arịrị."
Wail al-Shehri died on 2001-09-11.
Wail al-Shehri was born on 1973-07-31.
Vetting Wail - 2009 was released on: USA: May 2009
wail........... i think
Some of us can hear the whale wail. Others feel it from afar.
The homophone for "shout loudly" is "shout loudly." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different spellings and meanings.
sirenwind
A person could wail when they are very sad, such as after a death in the family. Wailing is loud crying.