You don't - if you're a good writer, you don't need to write out stuff like that. You make the scene descriptive enough so that the readers hear the sound inside their heads without you spelling it out.
Chicken "impressions" normally center on the "cluck cluck" sound (onomatopoeia), but the sound is actually closer to "buck buck".
Unfortunately, the deafening crash of the roaring surf drowned out the captain's final orders...
The usual expression is "honk".
chirp or trill
it crows
cluck
kuckruku
quack
The likely term is a "cockadoodling rooster" (crowing roosters are said to sound like cock-a-doodle-doo).
No, that is not how you spell it.It is called a whoopee cushion, not a whoop cushion.
Examples from contributors: Spuuushh ffftt shh-shh-shh
The sound a horse makes is a neigh.The verb tenses are:neighneighedneighingA horse can also whinny.
The spelling of the sound a baby makes when crying is "waaaah". Some babies might also be yelling "maaaaaaaa maaaaaaaa", as if they are asking for their mother.
The sound a rooster makes is typically spelled as "cock-a-doodle-doo."
cock-a-doodle-doo
crowed: sound made by a rooster bragging crowd: a group of people
A rooster, also known as a "cock," makes a sound called crowing. This sound is a loud and distinctive call that is often associated with waking people up at dawn.
caw because a rooster makes a crow and a crow makes a caw so they are opposites.
The sound a flute makes is typically spelled as "whistle" or "flutey."
rowr!
The sound a penguin makes is typically spelled "hok hok" or "bray."
Varooooom
The likely term is a "cockadoodling rooster" (crowing roosters are said to sound like cock-a-doodle-doo).
The sound a buzzer makes when the answer is wrong is typically spelled as "bzzz" or "buzz."
The typical written expression for a yawn sound is "ho hum."