Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What is the sound of "chicken, pigeon, frog, duck"? How do you pronounce it?

What is the sound of "chicken, pigeon, frog, duck"? How do you pronounce it?

The chicken's cry: cluck, pronounced [gē gē]. The pigeon's cry: coo, pronounced [gū gū]. The frog's call: quack, pronounced [guāguā]. The duck's call: quack, pronounced [ gā gā ].

Clucking

Sentence-making:

The hen clucked when she saw the cat.

Children laugh easily, so try to make them cackle.

Coo-coo

Conjugation:

Flocks of pigeons pecked along the road, nodding their heads frequently, cooing and cooing and calling, and moving their feet silently; they weren't afraid of people, except that when people came near, as if to give way, they coaxed and flew up, whirled around, and then swished and landed far in front of them.

A kind of heavenly silence and millions of kinds of music melted **** exist, the cooing in the bird's nest, the buzzing of the swarm of bees and the soughing of the wind.

Croak

Sentence:

The "croak" of a frog is a wonderful lullaby on a summer night.

The frogs in the pond accompanied the croaking.

Quacking

Sentence:

The mother duck quacked and quacked, and only four ducklings returned home.

The ducks, quacking and quacking, climbed up the bank and were hurrying home in a flock.