/d/
This question is misguided. It is not the sound waves which are apart, but the particles of the medium. A place where the particles are further apart is called a rarefaction. Where they are crowded together is called a compression.
A region of high pressure in a sound wave is called compression. This is the part where air particles are pushed closer together, resulting in higher pressure.
The part of a sound wave where particles are bunched together is called compression. This is the region where air particles are pushed close together, creating an area of higher pressure.
Sound energy travels in a compression wave, where particles are pushed together to create areas of high pressure and rarefaction as they move through a medium.
By electro magnet ed waves
No. -ed makes it sound like an extra syllable but it isn't.
if by "cation" you mean action, then ate is an action verb that doesn't end in ed. so, no they don't all end in ed
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.
In the English language, a present-tense verb can be changed into a past-tense verb by ensuring that the verb ends with "-ed". If the verb ends with an "e", then all you need to do is add a "d" to the end. If the verb does not end with an "e", then "ed" must be added to the end of it. Since waste, smile, share and whistle end with an "e", only a "d" is needed to change them into: wasted, smiled, shared and whistled. As push, roam, want and appear do not end with an "e", then "ed" is added to change them into: pushed, roamed, wanted and appeared. To summarize: waste: wasted smile: smiled push: pushed roam: roamed want: wanted share: shared whistle: whistled appear:appeared
licked
Get Ed ended on 2006-04-24.
ED Láncara ended in 2006.
Verbs that end with -ed suffix and generally past tense..
It depends on the word. It sometimes adds a syllable but not always.
Don't push that button.
Shown is an irregular verb because shown is different to ending in -ed. Does shown end in -ed? No it doesn't end in -ed so which makes it an irregular verb.
a 3 ed sentence is when you have 3 adjectives that all end in ed