Touch the string with your hand or finger.
The guitar makes sound when you pluck a string. The string vibrates down to the base of the guitar and travels in the hole, coming out as a sound we call a note.
It vibrates creating sound.
Because when you pluck/strum etc a string it vibrates, and this causes the sound. If you lengthen or shorten the string, the pitch changed (longer:lower, shorter:higher) Hope this helps!
You pluck a string, the string vibrates, the sound waves enter the soundhole, bounce off of the wood(different woods result in different tones)and it all bounces back out of the soundhole.Please see the related link for details.
sound
It vibrates to the pitch it is tuned to.
the string vibrates so the sound goes into the box and the sound comes out in a better way
each time you pluck or strum or bow a string, it vibrates. this vibration is at a specific frequency that your ear picks up as sound.
When you strum or pluck a string, the vibration from the string vibrates the air around it causing a sound to be made. The hole behind the strings is there so when the noise travels and hits off the back of it, it will make an echo.
A string is plucked and vibrates, the vibration is amplified by the sounding box, and behold, it makes sound.
When you pluck a thick string the sound the guitar makes comes out deeper then it does when you pluck a thin string.
The string makes the sound by transferring it's vibration to the top of the guitar. The top vibrates, and that is amplified by the body of the guitar. The round hole is to let that sound escape.