What is the sound of an arrow?
What is the sound of an arrow?
Usually, I'd use 'thuck/thunk' when the arrow hits a target, 'thwish' from the sound of the string, and sometimes a 'woosh/fsh' when it zips through the air. Btw, those 'sound words' are called onomatopoeia.
How would you describe the sound of footsteps?
If the sound is not necessarily high-pitched (ruling out "click") and is not heavy (ruling out "clomp"), then you might use tapping or patter (repeated tapping) or pitter-patter/pit-a-pat. See footstep. A footfall is the sound that is made by someone walking each time they take a step.
What are sounds in writing called?
Although in the English language the term onomatopoeia means 'the imitation of a sound', the compound word onomatopoeia (ὀνοματοποιία) in the Greek language means 'making or creating names'. For words that imitate sounds, the term ὴχομιμητικό (echomimetico) or echomimetic) is used.
How would you describe an arrow?
Here are some adjectives for arrow: well-placed green, evil-looking metal, sharpest and truest, old messy, strong thermodynamic, feeble and lifeless, powerful radiant, well-defined thermodynamic, open fitting, good icy, furiously flaming, fly thine, cruel miraculous, keen, barbed, terrible pliant, next stinging,