The easiest way to make the sound of hooves is to use empty coconut shells on the same surface as the horse would be moving on. Keep in mind that the gallop is a four beat gait, so there must be four distinct, but fast hoofbeats. If that fails to work, then you could simply record the sounds of another horse moving and use that.
say neigh with an on and off ahhh hhh hhhh
Coconuts.
Sound effects Like two coconut halves together to make horse trotting sound.
Horses do not speak Tagalog or any other Philippine dialect. They speak horse and sound the same as always.
That would be a Foley artist. Very cool job. Well, actually, there are many people involved. A Foley artist is the person that creates the sounds (e.g. claps the coconuts to make horse galloping sounds). That's the fascinating part to me! They work with a recording engineer who captures the sounds. There is also a person who does the sound editing in a movie (the mixer, I think). That is the person who decides what audio to use from the original shoot, from the foley artist, from a sound effects database, overdubbed with music, etc. etc. Technically that would be the person who "puts them in" the movie. interesting interview with a foley artist at http://woodyssoundadvice.com/?p=22
Horses.
Relinchh !
A horse makes a whinny sound.
Color-copied! There is no Fantasy Horse or Present Horse.
The warning sound a horse would make in this situation is a loud blowing out, nostrils flared, eyes wide, ears forward and alert. This blowing sound will get the attention of any horse in the immediate vicinity.
WHINNY or NICKER
Ed
a mule makes a sound that is similar to a donkey's but also has the whinnying characteristics of a horse
well yeah it's used to make the horse go faster so if when you're walking and you squeeze and kick the horse and it doesn't go you hit its butt with the crop and it usually starts trotting (or cantering) the racehorse jockeys use them when their horse is galloping