Noisy animals such as frogs, howler monkeys, parrots, dogs, ect. You get the point
Some non-living things that make sound include alarm clocks, musical instruments (such as a piano or guitar), and electronic devices like cell phones or laptops that produce alert notifications. These objects create sound through mechanical or electronic means without being alive.
Literally speaking, non-living things only make sound or noise. Only living things have a voice.However, figuratively speaking (as you'd find in, say, a novel), things can have a voice. For example, an author might write, "The brakes were screaming," thus figuratively giving the brakes a voice. This adds some flavor to language.
No, it is a physical phenomena.
The fake sound you hear when you have tinnitus. Also, any device that is permanently on will produce a constant sound.
Only living things can hear sounds, because only living things can hear. Sound is simply our way of interpreting a detected vibration in the air. Contact causes sound waves which are essentially vibrations which we pick up in out ears. Sounds don't naturally "sound" like anything. But somehow our brain interprets these "sounds" and that is what we hear. I believe your sense of smell works the same way.
wheels..clink......on the stone roads
Clouds do not produce sound. Sound is created by vibrations in the air or another medium. Thunder, for example, is caused by the rapid expansion and contraction of air around a lightning bolt.
Well, it's not necessary for the whole object to vibrate, but the part of it that's producing the sound does. Example: I'm not vibrating when I produce sound, but my vocal chords are, otherwise there's no sound. So the answer to what you're trying to ask is: No.
radio
A kind of shearing sound with high resonance , for example if motor is started with bubbles it would produce the sound what is like shearing
Musical instruments such as guitars, pianos, and drums produce sound when played. Electronic devices like speakers, televisions, and smartphones also create sound when they are in use. Additionally, natural sources like animals, thunderstorms, and waves crashing on the shore produce sound.
The seven characteristics of living things are: organization (cells in a human body), metabolism (digestion in animals), responsiveness (plants bending towards sunlight), growth (increase in size of a puppy), reproduction (mating in birds), homeostasis (regulation of body temperature in mammals), adaptation (camouflage in chameleons).