Yes, "tick" is an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of a clock ticking or a small object making repetitive tapping noises.
Onomatopoeia is a word that originated from the Greek, it is a word that essentially describes a sound. Some common examples of words that are onomatopoeias are animal noises. "Oink" would be a onomatopoeia. Also if you are wording the sound of a clock, "Tick-tock" that is an onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia (written sound) is a word that imitates or sounds like the sound that it describes. For example: "oink", "meow", "chirp", "squeek", "tick-tock".For the school bell ringing:BongDingBingBuzz (for modern bell)ClingClash
Yes it is an onomatopoeia
Yelled is not an onomatopoeia:)
An onomatopoeia is a sound word, such as Slam! or Woof!Therefore, an onomatopoeia for bees is Bzzz.
Tick-tock.
The onomatopoeia of a wall clock is typically "tick-tock."
tick, tock, click, clack
The onomatopoeia sound of a clock ticking is usually described as "tick-tock."
Nope it is not Onomatopoeia examples are: boom bam buzz bing boing tick tock
No. Onomatopoeia is words that imitate a sound, such as "tick tock". Quaint and curious are not imitative of sounds
The word tick is an example of onomatopoeia. These are words that are derived from sounds, like snap, crackle and pop.
It's called an onomatopoeia.
No. Crash Clink Zoom Swish Sizzle Sparkle Zap Boing Tick tock -These are examples of onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia is the use of words that sound like the word they are associated with. Some examples of onomatopoeia include:- The ball went swish through the net.- The dynamite exploded with a boom.- The clock went tick-tock.
"Tick-tock" is the general English onomatopoeia for the sound made by an analog clock.
The definition of onomatopoeia is: an imitation of sound in words or the formaton or use of words that imitate the sound associated with something. In other words, it is a word that makes the same sound as it sounds like. For example: "buzz" "hiss" "tick tick tick" Those are all words that sound like how they are pronounced.