Onomatopoeia are words that come from sounds and spelled the way they sound. For an animal farm, this might include Oink, Moo, Quack, Neigh, Gobble gobble, hee hon (donkey haha don't know how to spell that one), etc.
Well, honey, Animal Farm is full of onomatopoeia like "baa" for the sheep and "quack" for the ducks. The pigs also "oink" and the horses "neigh" their way through the story. So, if you're looking for some animal sound effects, this book has got you covered.
The onomatopoeia for a dog is bark. 'Moo' is an example of onomatopoeia. "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" is replete with examples of onomatopoeia.
Heyyy
Onomatopoeia is a word that originated from the Greek, it is a word that essentially describes a sound. Some common examples of words that are onomatopoeias are animal noises. "Oink" would be a onomatopoeia. Also if you are wording the sound of a clock, "Tick-tock" that is an onomatopoeia.
"Old MacDonald Had A Farm" is an excellent example of onomatopoeia.
swoosh
In the movie, "Animal Farm," examples of verbal irony are used about communism and dictatorship. One example is the line stating that "all animals are equal but that some animals have more authority than most."
'ugh', 'sigh', 'fizz', buzz', 'boom', and 'crash' are some. You can try searching it on Google.
Onomatopoeia : the written representation of sounds, chiefly those of animals (e.g. buzz, honking, beeping).
"may men of merit be motivated to act!" is an alliteration quote from Old Major in the book animal farm.
I learned this last year in 4th grade. Onomatatopoeias are words that describe sound. For example: Quack! The duck waddled away. The onomatopoeia is quack because it expresses sound. Also, onomatopoeia is spelled ONOMATOPOEIA not ONOMATOPIEIA, or it's incorrect grammar. Some other examples: arrf meow oink- doesn't necessarly have to be animal sounds. - %th grader who hopes to be a val victorian
Clacking of dance shoes.