He says that, a century ago, linguists insisted that the words we assign to various objects and actions are essentially arbitrary and that words don’t necessarily resemble or sound like the things to which they refer. 他表示,一个世纪前,语言学家坚持认为,我们赋予各种物体和行为的词语本质上是任...
clunk, thud, thump, thumping, clump - a heavy dull sound (as made by impact of heavy objects) thrum - a thrumming sound; "he could hear the thrum of a banjo" thunk - a dull hollow sound; "the basketball made a thunk as it hit the rim" tick, ticking - a metallic tapping sound;...
This suggests that the effect seems to be driven by some correspondence (对应关系) between the spoken words and the shapes, which might bring us closer to how the first words came. 1. What may Marcus Parlman believe about the words of objects? A. Words sounding like objects don’t exist...
Marcus Perlman,a lecturer at the University of Birmingham, says that, a century ago,linguists(语言学家)insisted the words used to refer to various objects and actions are arbitrary(随意的) and that words don't necessarily look or sound like the things they refer to. That makes sense ...
Marcus Perlman, a lecturer at the University of Birmingham, says that, a century ago,linguists(语言学家)insisted the words used to refer to various objects and actions are arbitrary(随意的) and that words don't necessarily look or sound like the things they refer to. That makes sense ...
analogue form such as document objects, images, textsandsoundsthatare converted or transformed into a digital format so as to be directly processed [...] daccess-ods.un.org daccess-ods.un.org 电子通信’指本《规则》所适用的任何人使用经由电子手段、电磁 ...
Marcus Perlman, a lecturer at the University of Birmingham, says that, a century ago,linguists(语言学家)insisted the words used to refer to various objects and actions are arbitrary(随意的) and that words don't necessarily look or sound like the things they refer to. That makes sense ...
A new study suggests not only that it can but that the same word can do so across many languages. Marcus Perlman,a lecturer at the University of Birmingham, says that, a century ago,linguists(语言学家)insisted the words used to refer to various objects and actions are arbitrary(随意的) ...
The vibration of sound sources may be excited by a blow (in the case of a bell) or by plucking (in the case of a string); a self-excited vibration mode can be maintained in such objects by a current of air (in wind instruments). Electroacoustic transducers, in which mechanical ...
GA [g]: a squeak of onomatopoeia, describe the objects by pressure and sound. Goo [g game] loo: onomatopoeia, the voice of rolling things. Big stones roll down the hill. Bang: onomatopoeia, such as sudden bang. Crash: onomatopoeia, such as a sound, the wall collapsed. It can be ...