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Sound waves need matter to travel through, and wood is matter, so yes, sound waves travel through wood. They travel through wood faster than they do through air, as wood is denser than air.
Energy dissipation in wet paper is very low and hence Save less sound, in fact no sound.
That mixture might be a discordant sound or a dissonant sound. It might possibly be a cacophony.
The choroid and auricle are similar because one collects light and the other collects sound.
Think of them both as transmission of sound energy through a spherical body.
Tearing Down the Wall of Sound was created in 2007.
I don't believe there is such a condition, see here for a full list of recognized phobias: phobia-suffixThere's more here: phobia
A piece of paper being scrunched up.
silk cloth =P
Yes, "cloth" and "wash" is an example of half rhyme, also known as slant rhyme. While they do not have the same ending sound, the vowel sounds are similar enough to create a partial rhyme.
sound travels faster through steel
pear, bear, tear, wear, swear, underwear, tearing.
cloth fibers mute and absorb sound by blocking penetration of normal wave patters.
The cloth helps in masking the sound of an unwanted open string. The vibration of the string is what produces the sound of your guitar and the cloth cancels this vibration, thus cancelling the sound. It is a tool used by many shred guitarists because when playing high speed shred music, it is easy to hit an unwanted string so it's rather convenient when the cloth is there to help muffle the unwanted sound. The cloth also comes in handy when playing with lots of gain/volume because the unplayed strings have a tendency to produce some sound when not muted properly. Hope this helps.
Sound waves need matter to travel through, and wood is matter, so yes, sound waves travel through wood. They travel through wood faster than they do through air, as wood is denser than air.
water!
Energy dissipation in wet paper is very low and hence Save less sound, in fact no sound.