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Onomatopoeia

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In rhetoric, linguistics and poetry, onomatopoeia is a figure of speech that employs a word, or occasionally, a grouping of words, that imitates the sound it is describing, and thus suggests its source object, such as “bang” or “click”, or animal such as “moo”, “oink”, “quack”, or “meow”.

Onomatopoeic words exist in every language, although they are different in each. For example:

  • In Latin, tuxtax was the equivalent of “bam” or “whack” and was meant to imitate the sound of blows landing.
  • In Ancient Greek, koax was used as the sound of a frog croaking.
  • In Korean, meong meong is onomatopoeia for the sound of a dog barking.
  • In Japanese, doki doki is used to indicate the (speeding up of the) beating of a heart (and thus excitement).
  • Whereas in Hindi, dhadak (pronounced /ˈd̪əɖək/) is the word for a person's heartbeat, indicative of the sound of one single beat.

Sometimes onomatopoeic words can seem to have a tenuous relationship with the object they describe. Native speakers of a given language might never question the relationship; however, because words for the same basic sound can differ considerably between languages, non-native speakers might be confused by the idiomatic words of another language. For example, the sound a dog makes is bow-wow (or woof-woof) in English, wau-wau in German, ouah-ouah in French, gaf-gaf in Russian, hav-hav in Hebrew, wan-wan in Japanese and hau-hau in Finnish.

Some animals are named after the sounds they make, especially birds such as the cuckoo and chickadee. In Tamil, the word for crow is Kaakaa. This practice is especially common in certain languages such as Māori and therefore in names for birds borrowed from these languages.

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[edit] Uses of onomatopoeia

Some other very common English-language examples include bang, beep, splash, and ping pong. Machines and their sounds are also often usually described with onomatopoeia, as in honk or beep-beep for the horn of an automobile and vroom for the engine. For animal sounds, words like quack (duck), roar (lion), and meow (cat), are typically used in English. Some of these words are used both as nouns and as verbs.

Occasionally, words for things are created from representations of the sounds these objects make. In English, for example, there is the universal fastener which is named for the onomatopoeic of the sound it makes: the zip (in the UK; zipper in the U.S.). Many birds are named from the onomatopoeic link with the calls they make, such as the Bobwhite Quail, Chickadee, the Cuckoo, the Whooping Crane, and the Whip-poor-will.

Advertising uses onomatopoeia as a mnemonic so consumers will remember their products, as in Rice Krispies (US and UK) and Rice Bubbles (AU) which make a “snap, crackle, pop” when one pours on milk; or in road safety advertisements: “clunk click, every trip” (click the seatbelt on after clunking the car door closed; UK campaign) or "click, clack, front and back" (click, clack of connecting the seatbelts; AU campaign) or "click it or ticket" (click of the connecting seatbelt; US DOT campaign).

[edit] Manner imitation

Main article: Ideophone

In some languages, onomatopoeia-like words are used to describe phenomena apart from the purely auditive. Japanese often utilizes such words to describe feelings or figurative expressions about objects or concepts. For instance, Japanese barabara and shiiin are onomatopoeic forms reflecting a scattered state and silence, respectively.<ref>Crystal pg. 176</ref> It is used in English as well with terms like "bling", which describes the shine on things like chrome, or precious stones and metals.

[edit] Onomatopoeia in pop culture

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[edit] References

Crystal, David (1997) The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language, Second Edition ISBN 0-521-55967-7ca:Onomatopeia de:Onomatopoesie es:Onomatopeya eo:Onomatopeo eu:Onomatopeia fa:نام‌آوا fr:Onomatopée gl:Onomatopea ia:Onomatopeia it:Onomatopea he:אונומטופיה nl:Onomatopee no:Lydord pl:Onomatopeja pt:Onomatopeia ru:Ономатопея simple:Onomatopoeia fi:Onomatopoeettinen sv:Onomatopoesi uk:Ономотопея

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