sound vibrations
The eardrums are like an omnidirectional microphone. The sound pressure vibrates the membrane (diaphragm) of the eardrum and the microphone only from one side.
To vibrate air into the inner ear so that the sound waves can eventually be interpruted (lots to it) by your brain
The sound waves (which have to travel through some kind of matter to exist) travel in your ear, then hit your eardrums, making them vibrate. These vibrations of your eardrums send a signal to your brain, telling it what sound has been made.
It makes you hear, by sensing vibrations, like a clap.
The player makes the strings vibrate, which makes the body of the guitar vibrate, which makes the air vibrate. And vibrations in the air, at a certain set of frequencies, is what sound is.
The player makes the strings vibrate, which makes the body of the guitar vibrate, which makes the air vibrate. And vibrations in the air, at a certain set of frequencies, is what sound is.
you have apparently set it to vibrate instead of ring.
your mom makes it virbrate
(Rosin) makes (a horse hair running against a violin string) vibrate
because when you blow though it the air bounces down the sides and makes it vibrate
when you hit the head if it
nô they do not have small eardrums.