Geckos do indeed chirp or squeak as many of them have vocal cords. However, other species in the order Squamata (scaled reptiles: lizards and snakes) do not possess them. Geckos will vocalize for many of the same reasons as other living things: mating and scaring off predators. Just today a Western Banded Gecko "yelled" at me as I sought to remove her from my classroom.
Example:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mating_call_of_a_male_Tokay_gecko_%28Gekko_gecko%29.ogg
Yes, the word 'chirp' is both a noun (chirp, chirps) and a verb (chirp, chirps, chirping, chirped).Examples:You can hear the chirp of the baby birds. (noun)They will chirp until their mother returns with food. (verb)
Chirp Chirp Chirp...
Chirp.
like a chirp chirp
NO the phone say no chirp it must not be
chirp chirp
Yes, feeder crickets chirp.
Grasshoppers and locusts are actually the same species at different times. Grasshoppers chirp, therefore to my knowledge locusts chirp.
How many phonemes in the word chirp
The past historic tense of "chirp" is "chirped".
Crickets - Chirp, Chirp....
The present tense of "chirp" is "chirps," as in "The bird chirps." The past tense is "chirped," as in "The bird chirped yesterday." The future tense is "will chirp," as in "The bird will chirp tomorrow."