Its onomatopoeiae...you can also use onomatopoeias.
Onomatopoeia isn't a part of speech; it's a rhetorical device. Onomatopoeia can be present in several parts of speech - nouns, verbs, or adjectives. The common thread is that words all sound like their meaning. For example, the word "buzz" actually sounds like the buzzing noise that is its meaning. The word onomatopoeia is a noun.
"Shh" is an *onomatopoeia and is regarded as a noun .*Definition : the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named (e.g., cuckoo, sizzle ).
Yes it is an onomatopoeia
Yes, yawn is an onomatopoeia.
is a statement that tells what the problem is.
Nope. It could of decended from onomatopoeia (i think i spelt that right), but it's now a verb or noun.
No. Onomatopoeia is the adjective used to describe a word that is a sound. For example: Oink is an onomatopoeia, and so is moo. So the actual word "onomatopoeia" is not a verb, but the words that it describes can be. Onomatopoeia could also be a noun. "The cow made a strange onomatopoeia."="The cow made a strange noise"
no, impact is a verb (though it can be used as a noun). It describes the actual event of one object hitting another, not the sound it makes (which would be an onomatopoeia). "Bam" might be the onomatopoeia best describing an impact.
....There isn't an adjective form of every word. Onomatopoeia is only a noun, and it is in the context of the English language, so it's sorta 2nd person
Onomatopoeia isn't a part of speech; it's a rhetorical device. Onomatopoeia can be present in several parts of speech - nouns, verbs, or adjectives. The common thread is that words all sound like their meaning. For example, the word "buzz" actually sounds like the buzzing noise that is its meaning. The word onomatopoeia is a noun.
Thud is a noun (a thud) and a verb (to thud).
The proper noun, an aircraft manufacturer, is spelled Boeing. The onomatopoeia, a sound by a spring, or a bouncing object, is spelled "boing."
"Shh" is an *onomatopoeia and is regarded as a noun .*Definition : the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named (e.g., cuckoo, sizzle ).
Yes it is an onomatopoeia
Yelled is not an onomatopoeia:)
No it isn't. It is an abstract noun and an adjective.
Yes, adding "ed" to an onomatopoeia does not change its classification as onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate the sound they represent, and adding "-ed" still reflects a sound.