the sound of a violin is said to most closely resemble the sound of a human voice
The size of the lungs
it sounds like human :)
Stereo sound makes it possible for different sounds to come out of different speakers.
A mute is used to dampen the sound. Different mutes dampen different amounts but they do not stop the sound. Vibrato is used to vibrate the sounds
"Waking" has a short vowel sound. The 'a' in "waking" sounds like the 'a' in the word "cat."
'Woke' is the only verb, as it involves the action of waking. Where 'cry' and 'sleep' would normally be included, in this particular sentence they are actually nouns; cry was the sound made, therefore a noun, and sleep was used as a synonym for nap (or similar).
No, "waking" does not contain a short vowel. The vowel 'a' in "waking" is pronounced as a long vowel sound, similar to the 'a' in "cake."
NO they do not they are two different words that have different spelling
prostate cancer. usually as a rule if pain is waking you from sleep with no exceptional cause it is known as a "red-flag" in healthcare also if you commonly have sweats during sleep and this pain linked it is fairly likely to be a space occupying lesion - tumor. unless he hasn't defecated in a while..
I read around because i experienced the same thing earlier today after waking up from a nap. its called Sleep Paralysis. Apparantly it has something to do with your Brain waking up before your body. Its often accompanied with the feeling of not being able to breath, however even though you can't feel it you are indeed breathing. Usually it takes a sound or trying to move a finger then an arm and so on to wake up. From what i read it can be caused by stress or not having good "sleep hygiene".
The long vowel sound in the word "sleep" is the double E /iː/ sound.
i get my sleep by hearing music or any little sound
because we all have different voice boxes causing our voice to sound different
No, the word "sleep" does not have a long e sound. The e in "sleep" makes a short e sound.
No, the amplitude of a sound wave determines its intensity, not its perceived loudness. Loudness is subjective and depends on the sensitivity of the human ear to different frequencies at different sound pressure levels.
yep! plenty