Yes, "grunt" is considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of a short, low, guttural noise made by a person or animal. It represents the actual sound it describes.
Yes, "huff" can be considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of someone exhaling loudly or forcefully.
Yes, adding "ed" to an onomatopoeia does not change its classification as onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate the sound they represent, and adding "-ed" still reflects a sound.
The onomatopoeia for a dog is bark. 'Moo' is an example of onomatopoeia. "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" is replete with examples of onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia.
onomatopoeia
Possibly "my head hurts now". Could also be a grunt sound (onomatopoeia).
Yes, "huff" can be considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of someone exhaling loudly or forcefully.
No, they store it in the stem. In other words, the part you eat. In dumb people words, the crunchy part. In caveman, Grunt Grunt gruntgrunt GRUNT! or was it grunt grunt GruntGrunt GRUNT!
a sentence with the word grunt is.....She grunt me!
a grunt.
Yelled is not an onomatopoeia:)
Yes it is an onomatopoeia
grunt is the correct spelling
No but you can be a grunt in halo1
a muffin thats a grunt
Yes, adding "ed" to an onomatopoeia does not change its classification as onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate the sound they represent, and adding "-ed" still reflects a sound.
they are onomatopoeia's with christmas themes