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Onomatopoeia

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UniqueFD

IS-IT--Management
Jan 18, 2005
215
GB
I've just heard the word [red]Chortle[/red] in conversation :-D! As it put a smile on my face (it's just such a lovely, oldie-worldie, innocently funny word to describe the sound), I thought I'd share it.

And I began wondering if anyone else could think of some other great 'words that imitate the sound they represent', for a chuckle.



Tony
___________________________________________________
Reckless words pierce like a sword,
but the tongue of the wise brings healing (Solomon)
 
squish is pretty good at sounding just what it means.

pop!

slurp

Screech

~Thadeus
 
Similar to squish, I like 'squelch'


Geraint

Let's think the unthinkable, let's do the undoable, let's prepare to grapple with the ineffable itself, and see if we may not eff it after all
 
Hi,
and then there is 'plop'

( Remember 'plop,plop,fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is'?)



[profile]

To Paraphrase:"The Help you get is proportional to the Help you give.."
 
Anyone seen the new underarmour commercials with my boy Vernon Davis??


Click! Clack!

--------------------------------------
Steve

Don't Be :-(
 
squash, crack, boom, crash, splash, growl, hum...

"That time in Seattle... was a nightmare. I came out of it dead broke, without a house, without anything except a girlfriend and a knowledge of UNIX."
"Well, that's something," Avi says. "Normally those two are mutually exclusive."
-- Neal Stephenson, "Cryptonomicon"
 
I've long been convinced that "snicker-snack" (as in "The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!" from Lewis Carroll's "Jabberwocky") is onomatopoetic.


But then again, I've also long maintained that a pizza, when slid upside down from its delivery box onto linoleum, makes the sound "pizza", which makes that word onomatopoetic, too.



Want the best answers? Ask the best questions! TANSTAAFL!
 
You guys are funny! Snort, snort.


James P. Cottingham
-----------------------------------------
I'm number 1,229!
I'm number 1,229!
 
I believe the word "chortle" was also invented by Lewis Carroll in "Jabberwocky". It has long been one of my favorite words too.

I used to use the word "squnchy" to describe cooked mushrooms. A cross between squishy and crunchy.

Other onomatopoeiac words: flush, crack, slam, thud, squeak, thump, snap, crackle, pop, tee hee, cough, click, whirr, tsk, ding, dong, clang.

Tracy Dryden

Meddle not in the affairs of dragons,
For you are crunchy, and good with mustard. [dragon]
 
flit
twang
zip
hoot
whack

__________________________
UniqueFD,

I've always loved the word chortle, but until your post, I've only heard it once before. And I've always pronounced it "chortle-chortle-chortle".

Many, many years ago Loudon Wainwright was singing his "Suicide Song" on Saturday Night Live (details are fuzzy - it was the 70's).

Lyrics were along the lines of "You don't love me and I don't know what to do... I'll kill myself and then the laugh will be on you... Hah, hah, hah... hee, hee, hee... giggle, giggle, giggle... chortle, chortle, chortle... [tt]and my personal favorite[/tt] Guffaw, guffaw, guffaw"

John


Life is short.
Build something.
 
I think Flush is, because it sounds like what it is describing.

Atleast to me it does.


----------

Steve Budzynski


"So, pass another round around for the kids. Who have nothing left to lose and for those souls old and sold out by the soles of my shoes"
 
This is a little (very) off-topic, but it's all about sounds, so I thought I would share it with those of you who didn't know it yet. It's a small poem, author unknown, about computers..

<> !*''#
^"`$$-
!*=@$_
%*<> ~#4
&[]../
|{,,SYSTEM HALTED

The poem can only be appreciated by reading it aloud, to wit:

Waka waka bang splat tick tick hash,
Caret quote back-tick dollar dollar dash,
Bang splat equal at dollar under-score,
Percent splat waka waka tilde number four,
Ampersand bracket bracket dot dot slash,
Vertical-bar curly-bracket comma comma CRASH.


__________________
As far as onomatopeias go, 'hiss' as well as any other "animal sound" like woof, moo, etc.

"That time in Seattle... was a nightmare. I came out of it dead broke, without a house, without anything except a girlfriend and a knowledge of UNIX."
"Well, that's something," Avi says. "Normally those two are mutually exclusive."
-- Neal Stephenson, "Cryptonomicon"
 
Trevoke

If it weren't for a few subtle differences, I would have thought that you got that off of one of my webpages that I put up on 9 Sep 1998. [smile]


mmerlinn

"Political correctness is the BADGE of a COWARD!"

 
That's possible. On 9 sept 1998 I had been in the US for less than a month and, in addition, I didn't know the Internet very well. I found this poem one or two years ago, but I do not remember well. I'll gladly give you credit for the original if you show it to me :)

"That time in Seattle... was a nightmare. I came out of it dead broke, without a house, without anything except a girlfriend and a knowledge of UNIX."
"Well, that's something," Avi says. "Normally those two are mutually exclusive."
-- Neal Stephenson, "Cryptonomicon"
 

Arnibus said:
Um sorry TSDragon but is Flush really onomatopaeic??

Not really. Sometimes you still have to flip the handle.

Tim


[blue]________________________________________________________
"To be rather than to seem"
- Official Motto of the State of North Carolina[/blue]
 
I thought it was onomatopaeic. Mad magazine used to use:

furglursk! gurgle, lurgle, lurgle, GALOOK!

for the same function.

Tracy Dryden

Meddle not in the affairs of dragons,
For you are crunchy, and good with mustard. [dragon]
 
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