It makes a beat type of sound
It sounds like another person hitting a different person.
A drum makes sound by being applied a hit or a pat if necessary.
A bass drum creates a very low and deep sound. The bigger the bass drum, the lower and deeper the pitch.
I think a drum. I'm not sure, though.
The ropes are very tightly on the drum so that a system of metal rings bring the skin over the drum shell. Also the drum is hollow so that there would be sound when you hit it and vibrates with the air inside the drum.
The imitation of natural sounds or words that sound like the sound they are supposed to make is called onomatopoeia.
Yes, "sigh" is an example of onomatopoeia because the word imitates the sound it represents.
Describing a sound using words is called onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia is when words imitate the sound they represent, helping to make written or spoken descriptions more vivid and expressive.
The onomatopoeia for the sound of silence is "shhh."
Yes. Onomatopoeia is a form of sound or 1-word exclamation such as, boom or ouch! In your case. To be honest with you, ouch is not an onomatopoeia, but a form of onomatopoeia. Sorry to correct you.
No, "latched" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia refers to a word that imitates the sound it represents, such as "buzz" or "boom." "Latched" is a verb that describes the action of securing something closed.
No, I don't think that sighing is an onomatopoeia because when you hear somebody sigh they it sounds nothing like the word. An onomatopoeia is a word that resembles a sound such as BANG! Because when you actually hear the word you automatically then think about the sound.
hit it
By vibrations.
The sound of sleep is often represented as "zzz" in onomatopoeia.
It sounds like another person hitting a different person.
No, the word "shattered" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate the sound they represent, such as "boom" or "meow." "Shattered" describes breaking or fragmenting into pieces, but it does not mimic the sound of the action itself.