an insect having nasty string
A chirping insect is an insect that produces sound by rubbing body parts together, such as wings or legs. Examples of chirping insects include crickets, grasshoppers, and katydids. These sounds are typically used for mating rituals and communication with others of the same species.
By rubbing their wings together
Katydid insects produce sounds by rubbing their wings together. The sound is not produced by rubbing a pen on a comb, but by rubbing the top of one wing against the bottom of the other. The unique structure of their wings creates the distinctive chirping noise.
There are many different words for sounds that insects make. Some of the loudest insect noises are made by grasshoppers and crickets by rubbing parts of their bodies together, and this is called stridulation. Other insect noises are simply the sound of the wings beating. Most people would call this buzzing, but that is not a scientific word!
The sound crickets make is called chirping. They make it by rubbing their wings together as they are looking for a mate.
Some types of fish known to make sounds underwater include croakers, grunts, and toadfish. These fish produce sounds by vibrating their swim bladders or rubbing their body parts together.
singing well You sing well sounds nice.
Laos and Kampuchia are directly east of Thailand, with Vietnam being east of these two countries. Kampuchia sounds similar to an insect name.
The "Buzzlegum"
children singing
The word insect has a short I sound and a short E sound.
Insects can make buzzing sounds by fluttering their wings, or sounds called Stridulation, made by rubbing body parts together (for example, grasshoppers rub their legs against their wings). Often we can't hear the sounds many insects make, unless they are recorded and amplified.