Don't try. Just write "the rooster crowed" and the readers will imagine the sound for themselves. You don't want to try to put animal noises into your writing unless you're writing for very young children.
A chicken will cluck and a rooster will crow. The sound made by a rooster is often louder and more distinct than the sound made by a chicken.
rooster
The sound a rooster makes is typically spelled as "cock-a-doodle-doo."
Roosters crow.
Yes.
You are a rooster is 'tu es un coq' in French.
First, you must specify the language. For example, English cock-a-doodle doo (the rooster sound) is French cocorico, Spanish quiquiriquí, Italian chicchirichì.
A rooster.
A rooster is a male chicken. It is a domesticated bird often raised for meat and eggs. Roosters are known for their distinctive crowing sound.
Not typically. Any breed of hen can make a crowing sound but it is often done by hens in a flock that has no rooster. The alpha hen in a flock of chickens without a rooster will often take over the "guard" duties of a rooster.
It means that the sound of the crowing of the rooster (cockerel) in the mornings woke the soldiers up. The rooster acted like an alarm clock. 'Alarm clock' is therefore a metaphor for 'rooster'. Had the sentence read 'The far-off rooster was like an alarm clock for the sleeping soldiers' it would have been a simile.
ROOSTER SOUNDCock-A-Doodle-Doo