the mouth piece is the part of a recorder that vibrates
It vibrates. The vibrations move through the dtring, then though the air and into your ear. In the ear the eardrum vibrates.
why do you need a sound recorder
The strings.
the string, and the waves go into the body and reverberate around, and come out the f holes and make the sound.
First the strings then the rest of it amplifies it.
vibration. all sound vibrates. if you whisper so quet the sound still vibrates.
it vibrates
No, not necessarily. In order for something that vibrates to make a sound, the vibrations need to create pressure waves in a medium, such as air, that can be detected by our ears. If the vibrations do not create these pressure waves, then no sound will be produced.
You blow it to make a sound.
It vibrates. The vibrations move through the dtring, then though the air and into your ear. In the ear the eardrum vibrates.
An object makes a sound when it vibrates and causes the air particles surrounding it to also vibrate. These vibrations create waves that travel through the air until they reach our ears, where they are interpreted by our brains as sound.
In a radio, it is the speaker that vibrates to create sound. The electrical signals from the radio's circuitry are converted into physical vibrations by the speaker's diaphragm, producing audible sound waves.
why do you need a sound recorder
The strings.
It vibrates against the inside of the clarinet to make the sound.
vibrating reeds
when you blow the reed vibrates which produces sound and by covering up the holes you change the pitch. the more holes open the higher the pitch. hope that helps you!