Want this question answered?
Ker-plunk is a word used to describe a sound like splash.
Cacophony is the proper spelling. It is the word used to describe a harsh discordance of sound.
The best word to use to describe someone who is mentally healthy and sound is stable. This means that they are sane and sensible and not likely to fail.
Both. The use of the word paper for the substance on which you for example write, draw, or to wrap things is uncountable. Units of paper are expressed as sheets of paper, rolls of paper, stacks of paper, etc. The use of the word to describe an intellectual piece of work is countable.
That is the correct spelling of the word brake (to slow or stop, or a mechanism to do so).The homophone (sound-alike word) is break, to split or render inoperable.
Echo
No, "paper" is not a short vowel word. It contains two short vowels: the first 'a' in "paper" is a short vowel sound, while the second 'e' is also a short vowel sound.
Ripple
a word to describe a sound 9like a honking horn )
A sound written as a word is called an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeias are words that imitate or suggest the source of the sound they describe, such as "buzz" or "boom."
The word you are referring to is an onomatopoeia. These words sound like the noises they describe, such as "meow," "buzz," or "boom."
Generally the word microscopic cannot be used to describe a sound. The word microscopic is often a dictation of visual size - i.e requiring a microscope to view, or invisible to the naked eye.
No, the word "limp" is not an example of onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate or suggest the sound of the action they describe, whereas "limp" does not directly imitate the sound of something.
Yes, the letter "a" in paper is a short vowel sound.
Music
Pitch.
Yes! "Achoo" is an onomatopoeia because it is used to describe the sound it resembles (in this case, "achoo" is the word used to describe the sound of someone sneezing).