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firstly its spelled :onomatopoeia and it means a word that is a sound effect or noise such as buzz or BOOM or CRASH
The word is spelled onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like what it is describing. A good example of this is the word quack. The sound that a duck makes is "Quack." The word sounds like the sound it is describing.
It depends. If the 'X' is at the beginning of a word, it makes the zzz sound (as in "xylophone") or a sound kind of like eggs (as in "Xavier"). However, if it is preceded by vowel, it makes the -cks sound. In "Xerox" it makes both the "z" and a "cks" sound.
It makes the sound euuh, like in eeew! or jew. It's a French word.
I think aw sound gas a different vowel so it makes different sound.Aw sounds like *OR*
No. Onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like the noise it describes, like buzz or whoo. Nothing actually naturally makes the sound " boo"
An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the sound it represents. Examples include words like "buzz," "hiss," and "meow."
no, onomatopoeia is when a word imitates the sound of which it is describing, like buzz, or crash
Onomatopoeia is a literary device in which the word imitates the sound it represents, like "buzz" or "sizzle." It is commonly used in poetry and storytelling to create vivid images and sensory experiences for the reader.
firstly its spelled :onomatopoeia and it means a word that is a sound effect or noise such as buzz or BOOM or CRASH
The sound "knee deep" is not an onomatopoeia because it does not imitate a sound like words such as "buzz" or "meow." Onomatopoeias are words that resemble the sound they represent. "Knee deep" is a descriptive phrase, not an onomatopoeic word.
Onomatopoeia, the formation of a word by imitation of the sound it makes. For example, cuckoo, meow, hiss, buzz and bang
Any word which is an approximation of the sound an animal makes is called an Onomatopoeia, such as buzz for bees and perhaps "clip clop" for the sound of animal hooves.
The definition of onomatopoeia is: an imitation of sound in words or the formaton or use of words that imitate the sound associated with something. In other words, it is a word that makes the same sound as it sounds like. For example: "buzz" "hiss" "tick tick tick" Those are all words that sound like how they are pronounced.
Sure! "Buzz" is an example of onomatopoeia because the word itself sounds like the noise a bee makes.
The etymology of the word busy is from the generic sound ' 'buzz', a sound image for insects like bees that collect nectar in hectic activity.The phonological changes from the word 'buzz' to 'busy' occured in the historical evolution of the word to mean hectic activity.
"Buzz" is an example of onomatopoeia, a literary device where a word imitates the sound it represents, like the buzzing noise of a bee or a phone vibrating.