You can fill your rainstick with rice to make it sound more like the rain. Some people also like to add in beans mixed in with the rice to add more sounds. Make sure to tip the stick slowly to get the correct sound.
No, the words "ear" and "earth" do not have the same vowel sound. In phonetics, "ear" has the vowel sound /ɪər/ (as in "beer"), while "earth" has the vowel sound /ɜːr/ (as in "herd"). The vowel sound in "ear" is a diphthong, combining two vowel sounds, while the vowel sound in "earth" is a long monophthong.
Snow does not make any sound. When you are outside on a snowy day, or when there is a lot of snow on the ground, what sounds are in the air seem to be dampened somewhat because the snow, being soft, tends to absorb the sound waves. But the actual snowflakes, being tiny and wet, do not impact anything or each other with enough force to set up sound-vibrations, thus creating any sound waves. And, without sound waves, there can be no sound. Have you ever heard the famous saying, if a tree falls in the forest and there is no one there to hear it, is sound created? Well, of course sound is created. It makes no difference if a sound is actually heard by someone for it to exist.
The author of the saying "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" is often attributed to the philosopher George Berkeley. However, the exact phrase in that form may have originated from a similar idea posed by various thinkers over time.
psh psh psh psh is the sound a bonfire might make on a windy night.
It travels because of:The boom efect and what it does and how sound travels.
The Aztecs made rainsticks as a musical instrument to mimic the sound of rain. They believed that the sound of rain created by the rainstick could summon rain from the gods and bring good fortune to their crops. It held cultural significance in their rituals and ceremonies related to agriculture and fertility.
A dried up cactus with its needles driven into it, and either seeds, rice, pebbles or beans are filled inside, which is what makes the sound of falling rain. That is what the original rainstick is made from, but u can make it from nails and a tube of some sort with seals at the ends. :)
A rain stick can give that effect. It's a percussion instrument.
Some other person said that there are tiny little beads and slivers that make the sound. You could make one with a cardboard tube, cardboard caps to cover the ends, aluminum foil coiled into a spring, and rice/dried beans.
A cactus and pebbles. Or go to the related link listed below to make one at home without a cactus.
The ISBN of A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound is 0385746806.
Because the volume of air gets less as you fill it - making a higher sound.
A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound was created on 2004-09-28.
He make me fill like a loser like you
I think they do make a sound like buzzzzzzz
legend has it that the Chilean Indians invented the rain sticks to make rainy weather.It is now today a insturment
theyy make a sound like a normely dogg