The bump was a primarily 1970s fad dance wherein the main move of the dance is to lightly "bump" hips on every other main beat of the music. As the dance (and the evening) progressed, the bumping could become more intimate, bumping hip to backside, low bending, etc. There were several songs that were inspired by the bump one of which was called "The Bump" by Kenny but the song that is most remembered is "Give Up The Funk (Tear The Roof Off The Sucker)" by George Clinton and Parliament, which was released in 1976. The lyric in the song is "we want the funk", but has been mistaken for "we want the bump".
It sounds like a high pitched e.
Its call is a series of complicated whistling and it sounds like a "hoo-e".
The autopilot on Wall-E is not a vocoder. It is a computer synthesized voice generated by the old MacTalk Macintosh application.
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Whip-poor-will_dtl.html#sound Sounds like whip-poor-will!
I e-mailed Gap and they said it's "Do Ya " by the Peaches.
The EA pair sounds like a long E (ee) and the other E is a short E.
Na - Zuh - RethNa (the A sounds like the A in APPLE)Zuh (the U sounds like the U in UP)Reth (the E sounds like the E in EVER)Accent on the FIRST syllable.
fete
It starts with an E, but sounds like "eye."
ferme sounds like farm except the e that sounds like the first e in shepherd or like the ê in french word même, the last e is not prononced
Its not e its "a' just sounds like "e" its Aerie
like this the same but the I sounds like an E
Yes, but not from the E. The E has the short E sound (eh) while the ending Y sounds like E.When the P is not sounded, the word sounds like (M-T) or (ehm-tee)
In terms of pronunciation it has two vowel sounds, ɜ: (sounds like "er" as in "her") and i: (sounds like "e" as in "he"). The IPA is /θɜ:ti:n/. In terms of spelling it has 3, an "i" and two "e"s
hi sounds like English he (with a short e) and then e sounds like ea in yeah, but also short so he-yeah with short vowels
A long e sound is pronounced like the letter "e" in the word "bee" or "see." It is a tense and elongated sound that is typically heard in words where the letter "e" is followed by a consonant at the end of a syllable.
monkey