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the hands make a compression wave that travels through the air. Your ears pick up that compression wave and turns it into a neuron impulse that your brain registers as sound.
Because the deaf person can't hear you clap.
we hear an echo because its in our blood to hear things in a repeditive form but a lot quieter.
echo
the hands make a compression wave that travels through the air. Your ears pick up that compression wave and turns it into a neuron impulse that your brain registers as sound.
the hands make a compression wave that travels through the air. Your ears pick up that compression wave and turns it into a neuron impulse that your brain registers as sound.
The clap creates vibrations in the air that eventually reach our ears. A message is then sent to our brains, saying "a clap has occurred."
echo turns into the echo we hear today.
an echo
It makes you hear, by sensing vibrations, like a clap.
Your ears pick up the sound.
dolpins hear through an echo