Question 2: What do onomatopoeia mean? It is expressed by words that are both onomatopoeic words and onomatopoeic words. The same economical words not only improve the expressive force of words and enrich the content of the article, but also increase the activity and agility of sentences, improve the artistry of the article, stimulate people's association and imagination, and activate people's thinking. Monosyllabic: cat, crow, frog, oh, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. Whoops, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck. Crack, click, click ABAB type: click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click ABCD type: Li Long, click, click, click, click, click, click. The sound of boiled eggs: GeA 3. The voice of thunder: the sudden cage 4. Footsteps downstairs: Gordon 5. The sound of hiccups: attic 6. The sound of fried beans: Parker 7. The sound of locking the door. 0 1. Slipping noise: flapping 12. Crisp laughter: Gelow 13. Pole noise: Gezhi 14. Ring noise: black wave 15. Belly noise: bones. Head voice: Peng Dong 19. Squeak: Buji 20. Bleeding sound: pounce on this 2 1. Guns: Gu Dong 22. The sound of the house collapsing: suddenly past 23. The sound of falling out of bed: Buden 24. The sound of water boiling: Abu 25. Book landing sound: pounce. Dynamic sound: sudden speed 29. The sound of bricks falling to the ground: fluttering 30. The sound of branches scraping clothes: pull 3 1. The hen's voice after laying eggs: poor 32. The voice of the pig eating the child: black rub 33. The soup overflowed. Soup fire extinguishing sound: onomatopoeia sound table at the beginning and end (2) 1, tinkling sound of metal 2, tinkling sound of metal 3, tinkling sound of metal and porcelain 4, drumming sound, knocking sound 5, crunchy sound (door closing sound) 6, banging sound of wood.
Question 3: What do onomatopoeia mean? Words that imitate sounds, such as "flower", "cha" and "cha".
Question 4: What do onomatopoeia mean? What do onomatopoeia mean? Onomatopoeia is also called onomatopoeia, onomatopoeia and onomatopoeia. This is a word that imitates natural sounds. Usually, Chinese characters are regarded as phonetic symbols to form onomatopoeic words. It is similar to transliterated words and Lian Mian words in essence. Chinese characters are only used to express sounds, and have nothing to do with the meaning of words. So they are both "phonetic words" and "compound words" as relative concepts. Because onomatopoeic words are mostly used for description and description, some people classify them as adjectives. Some people also put subjective feelings and emotions into their voices (for example, alas! Ouch! Ah! ) is classified as onomatopoeia. Is inappropriate. There are still boundaries between adjectives and onomatopoeia. The overlapping form of the former has emphasis and color, while the overlapping form of onomatopoeia is purely phonetic and does not produce any additional meaning (note 1). Different from adjectives, onomatopoeic words can be modified by adverbs of degree and negative adverbs in grammar. For example, we don't say "raindrops are falling violently" or "the wind is blowing silently". Onomatopoeic words cannot express doubts in the way of "A is not A". Onomatopoeia can be combined with quantifiers, but adjectives cannot. When two syllables overlap, onomatopoeic words can be AABB or ABAB, and adjectives are usually only AABB. Onomatopoeic words are flexible and independent in sentences, while adjectives do not have such characteristics. There is a clear boundary between onomatopoeia and exclamations, except that the former is an external objective voice and the latter is an internal subjective emotion. The exclamations have no ability to combine with other words, while onomatopoeia can. Exclamation is always an independent component, not a sentence component, and onomatopoeia can be an independent component ("touch! Touch! The gun rang twice "), which is often used as an attribute, an adverbial and a predicate ("The car is stumbling, Ma Xiaoxiao "and" Birds are twittering in the branches "). Exclamation marks can answer questions separately, such as "Have you been there?" "hmm!" Onomatopoeia doesn't work. Therefore, it is inappropriate to classify exclamations and question-and-answer words as onomatopoeic words. The study of onomatopoeia rose in 1950s, such as Chu Sijing's Onomatopoeia (Note 2), Ren Mingshan's On Onomatopoeia (Note 3), Liao Huajin's On Onomatopoeia (Note 4) and Liu Bingwen's On Onomatopoeia (Note 5). It reached * * * in the 1980s. Apart from general grammar monographs, single papers such as Shao Jingmin's A Preliminary Study of Onomatopoeia (Note 6), Zhao Jinming's Onomatopoeia in Yuan Zaju (Note 7), Jaco's Introduction to Onomatopoeia (Note 8), Li Shuyan's On the Grammatical Status of Onomatopoeia (Note 9) and Bing Nan and Wen Tong's Onomatopoeia should be of its own kind (Note/. Zheng Degang, dorri's Onomatopoeia in Modern Chinese (note 14), Meng Cong's Onomatopoeia in Beijing dialect (note 15), and Xu Hui's On the Grammatical Status of Onomatopoeia in Modern Chinese (note 16). However, the study of onomatopoeia has been focused on grammar and rhetoric, and the internal structure of onomatopoeia, especially the phonetic structure, is rarely discussed in depth, which is the focus of this paper. However, Guo Gan and Liu Jinhua's "Structural Types and Grammatical Features of Imitation Words" (Note 17) once touched on the internal structure and divided it into 1. One type (Dong! ), 2.AA type (giggle, woof), 3. AB style (rumbling), 4. ABB style (screaming, pattering), 5. AAB style (cracking), 6. AABB style (Tick-tock), 7. A Li AB type (whoa, whoa), 8. A Li BC style (. 10.AABA type (dadada) 1 1. AAAB type (Didi, the above two are less), 12. ABCD type (jingle bells). Meng Cong's onomatopoeic words in Beijing dialect (note 18) are divided into 1. Type a (swish! ) and its overlapping type; 2.AB type (plop), which can be overlapped as ABAB type or partially overlapped as ABB type; 3.A+B (disyllabic compound words, such as Jingling) can overlap into AABB, with the same initials, the first syllable vowel is I, and the last syllable vowel is A or U; 4.ABCD pattern, in which A and C, B and D are disyllabic, and vowel CD and AB also have a corresponding relationship. The initials B/P, D/T and J/Q can be used interchangeably. Montessori is divided into four categories, not a flat list, but an observation and analysis of their structural relations, hierarchical classification and description of some laws. The analysis is very appropriate. However, none of the above clauses can contradict each other ... >; & gt
Question 5: What do onomatopoeia mean? Onomatopoeic words describing the wind? (13). 1. Onomatopoeia is a vocabulary created by imitating natural sounds and is an integral part of all languages in the world. Although onomatopoeic words imitate natural sounds, they are subjective. The sound of nature is infinite. Through the interpretation of our ears and brains, the recognition of Guanyin's subjective perception, and then through the phonemic system of our own language, such simulation will be distorted. Therefore, it is different from the sound imitation of ventriloquism.
2, whoosh, rustling, rustling, rustling
Question 6: What are onomatopoeic words? Onomatopoeia: also known as onomatopoeia, onomatopoeia and pictophonetic characters. This is a word that imitates natural sounds. Such as: ping, pong, Didi, answer, whoosh, woof, whoosh, yaya, etc.
Question 7: What do onomatopoeia mean? They describe sounds, such as "giggle" and "bang".
Question 8: What are onomatopoeic words? Onomatopoeic words are onomatopoeic words, also called onomatopoeic words and pictophonetic words, which imitate natural sounds.
In Chinese, onomatopoeic words only regard Chinese characters as "phonetic symbols" to express sounds, which has nothing to do with the meaning. Such as: sloped, mumbling, wow, wheezing, snoring, clicking, scrolling, Ding Dong, rushing, jingling, rumbling, jabbering, clicking, thumping and banging. ...
Question 9: What do onomatopoeia mean? Onomatopoeia is also called onomatopoeia, onomatopoeia and onomatopoeia. This is a word that imitates natural sounds. The accurate use of onomatopoeic words will greatly enhance the vividness and vividness of our speaking and writing. In Chinese, only Chinese characters are used as "phonetic symbols" to express sounds, which has nothing to do with the meaning.
Take-off sound:
(1) wooshing
(2). Call-
(3) Hula dancing
(4) skimming the floating foam
5. claws
[6] Peng
5. The bird flapped its wings:
(1) poop-poop ......
⑵.⑵ .......
[6] Bird alarm: Crash-
1. Pheasant:
1. Cry: (1). Giggle (1). Goo goo ga ga.
Take-off sound: flapping the edge
2. Duck calls: (1). Gaga-(2). Gaga.
3. Pulsatilla calls: Gollum.
4. The crow cries:
1. Scrape! Scrape! 2. Gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung, gung.
[6] Ya Ya Ya 7. Scrape! 8. Bitter! Bitter! 9. Dumb-
5. Peacock calling: 1. Goo goo 2. Family.
6.magpie
1. cry:
(1). Magpie! Magpie!
Step 2 chirp
(3) check. Check. tea
Scream: tickle, tickle, tickle.
I. Pigeons:
1. Cry: (1). Goo goo-(2). Goo goo (3). Goo goo, goo goo
2. mumble.
The sound of pigeons taking off: pa pa pa.
2. The cuckoo calls:
1. Goo goo goo goo .........
4. cuckoo! Bugu!
3. Goo goo-
4. patronize the hoe, patronize the hoe.
3. The call of the grass warbler: falling and hissing.
4. Mandarin ducks cry: (1) quack (2) cluck.
5. Larks sing: (1) Didi, Didi (2) Twitter.
6. Red-crowned cranes (cranes and white cranes) call:
1. Cry: Cough-Cough-
4. Male crane cries: Hiccup-
[13] Female crane cries: Hiccup-
1. The song of kiwi: How many dimensions-how many dimensions-
2. Cried the partridge:
I can't be my brother.
1. Goo goo! Cuckoo!
3. Birds singing on a spinning float: cicada knows cicada.
4. Thrush cry: (1). Goo goo, goo goo. cluck
5. Owl calls:
1. Goo goo, goo goo.
Hum. Sniff.-Kirk. Kirk.
[13] floor by floor, floor by floor.
4. bluff.
Six. Yellow-bellied pheasant calls: quack, quack.
1. Turtledove calls:
1. toot toot toot. Breathe toot.
2. dripping, dripping.
[13] goo goo.
⒋⒋-
5. Autumn-
2. Sunbirds sing: squeak, squeak, squeak, squeak.
3. Cormorants call: ga-ga-ga-
4. Bamboo cock crow: Ji Ji
5. Red-billed gull calls: ah-oh-ah-oh-
6. Buji cries: quack.
1. Black-necked crane calls: fruit-fruit-
2. Stork call: ga-ga-ga-
3. Pigeons are calling: Goo, Goo.
4. Qin birdsong: Ding Dong, Ding Dong ......
5. Seagull (water owl) cries: Goo Goo! Goo goo! Giggle ......
6. Penguin cry: Oh, oh. ......
Seven. Dai Sheng birdsong: Hoo-vigorous.
Eight. Carving sound: quack
Nine. The turkey barks: giggle
1. Swan: (1). Goo goo. Quack quack (3). Ga ga ga.
2. The nightingale's cry: chirp
3. Eagle call: Goo Goo
4. The osprey cried: Quack-quack.
5. The sound of woodpeckers eating insects: Benedict.
6. The golden eagle call way:
(1). Hippo Chef-Goo Goo-
(2). Whew-whew
Seven. The blackbird sings: Ah-Hurt-
Eight. The kingfisher calls: Haw.
9. Cried the oriole:
(1). Quack quack.
(2). Come on-buy-mountain-medicine.
(3). Come and fly-
(4) Ah-er-
5. Zhao is chattering.
[6]. Didi Li, Didi Li
1. Goose calls:
1. Ow -2. crazy
[13] ah! Ah! Sip.
5. Tickle, tickle, tickle
2. The sparrow cried:
1. The sparrow's name is: (1) Haw (2) Haw.
3. Twitter, Twitter-
4. Twitter -5. Twitter.
Take-off sound: Sparrows fly into the room with voices.
3. Swallow and talk:
⒈ ⒈ ⒈ 2.⒈
4. Twitter, Twitter-
5. chat 6. Chatter, chatter ... live. ......
4. The parrot calls: (1) cluck, quack, quack.
5. Seagulls call: Goo, Goo, Goo. ......
Cuckoo: Onomatopoeia, imitating the cuckoo's call like "Cuckoo".
Cha [zhā]: Onomatopoeic words, such as: magpie chirping.
Zhao [zh bu u...> & gt