At night, there is typically less ambient noise and activity, which can allow you to hear sounds more clearly. Additionally, sound waves may travel further and more effectively in cooler, denser nighttime air. Our ears are also more sensitive to sound at lower light levels, enhancing our ability to perceive sounds more accurately.
You may hear a train at night because sound travels farther and more clearly in the quiet of the night, and trains often run more frequently during off-peak hours.
You may hear train horns at night because trains are required to sound their horns at railroad crossings to alert drivers and pedestrians of their presence for safety reasons.
The crackling of a fire is the most prominent sound you will hear on bonfire night. You will also hear talking between those at the bonfire.
The last sound you would hear in the word "abate" is the "t" sound.
When a sound wave is reflected, you may hear an echo or reverberation of the original sound. The reflected sound wave can create additional auditory cues that can affect how the sound is perceived in the environment.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in clear and rear.
the molecules in the air closer to us makes the sound clear.where as the distant sound is not as clear as the molecules will be far a part.
Yes. The EA vowel pair has a long E sound, as in hear and rear.
Neither. The A is not sounded. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in beer, near, or clear.
No, the EA in year has a form of long E sound called a caret I, as in hear and clear.
Neither. The A is not sounded. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in beer, near, or clear.
You may hear a train at night because sound travels farther and more clearly in the quiet of the night, and trains often run more frequently during off-peak hours.
They sound like babies crying. We hear them every night in the summer and they sound just like a newborn baby crying.
Neither. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in beer, near, or clear.
You may hear train horns at night because trains are required to sound their horns at railroad crossings to alert drivers and pedestrians of their presence for safety reasons.
oh absolutely. sometimes when i take my boat out on the water, on a clear moonlit night, you can hear them
I really don't get this question. I have been on thousands of night flights, and I have been through hundreds of airports, and I could always hear the engines, day or night. And, because your normal daylight traffic sounds are less, sound carries better at night, so you can hear the sounds of the aircraft farther at night, even farther than you can hear in the daytime. Higher frequencies definitely travel better at night, too. Unless ..., you were asleep, and didn't hear them? I am stumped.One possibility: There are fewer flights between midnight and 6 am: major airline traffic at most airports starts at about 7 o'clock in the morning. So, perhaps you don't hear so much aircraft sound, because they schedule fewer flights at night?