""'Grrr " "'is an onomatopoeic word which imitates the growling sound of predatory animals, and is often used with other related meanings.
12.
A well known instance of ideophones are onomatopoeic words words that imitate the sound ( of the event ) they refer to.
13.
The Greeks used the term " barbarian " for all non-Greek-speaking peoples, including the Egyptians, ????????, which is an echomimetic or onomatopoeic word.
14.
The example he uses is the French and English onomatopoeic words for a dog's bark, that is " ouaoua " and " Bow Wow ".
15.
However, Saussure argues that, on closer etymological investigation, onomatopoeic words can, in fact, be unmotivated ( not sharing a likeness ), in part evolving from non-onomatopoeic origins.
16.
The name comes from Rimbaud's 1870 poem " Ma Boh�me ", and is a French onomatopoeic word originally meaning the swishing noise made by skirts on dancing women.
17.
It can scarcely be an accident onomatopoeic words like ruach, ruch, roho ( Hebrew, Arabic, Swahili ) mean spirit no less clearly than the Greek ?????? and the Latin spiritus .
18.
Some theories say that the term Geg?is derived from the onomatopoeic word for " babbling ", in contrast to " Shqiptare " which is the Albanian word for those who speak clearly.
19.
One is onomatopoeia : for example, the suggested root for'smell'listed above, * " una ", may simply be a result of many languages employing an onomatopoeic word that sounds like sniffing, snuffling, or smelling.
20.
The letters of onomatopoeic words like " blam " are often incorporated into scenes via lighting effects, or are suggested by the negative space between panels, or are created by the outline of the panels themselves.