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Onomatopoeia of the sound of punching to the flesh

Baaaa - Sheep

Moo - Cow

Woof - Dog

Quak - Frog

Cicada Zhizhi—cicada meow—cat

grasshopper—grasshopper

chichichi—chicken

Ouch Woo--tiger

Squeak--mouse

Uh-huh--donkey

Ooo--rooster.

Click, click - hen

Chichi - chick, bird

Ququ qū - ??cricket.

Chirp—insects, birds

Quak—ducks

Buzz—insects

Yo Yo—deer

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Eagle - Mountain Deer

Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeewew, oh-oh-chicken

Neigh-horse, insect

Howl-beast roar

Tat-tat—horse hoofs

Neighing—horse croaking

Butter—insects and dolphins

1. Bird calls Sound

1. The thrush's call

Gah-chirp - If the bird does not have its feathers standing up, it means that it wants to call but it dare not call; if the bird's feathers stand up, it means that the bird is scared. pole.

Ke.Ke.Ke - The thrush's continuous barking indicates fear of showing weakness.

O.O.O - The thrush shakes its head and barks, indicating a threat.

Woo. Woo. Woo - the thrush spreads its wings, saying that I want to fight. And when it spreads its wings and screams, it is saying I love you and I am so happy to see you. It will also do this when it sees the mother bird.

Valley. Valley. Valley - thrush and tail waving up and down means I want a girl's voice; and circling in place or shaking the head on the perch means this place is mine. Be careful I bite you.

Qiu. Qiu - the sound of the thrush reminding me of fear

Wa. Wa - the sound of the thrush reminding the same kind of danger

2. The calls of other birds Sound

Chirp - the cry of a magpie.

Chirp [zhōu] chirp [jiū] - the sound of birds chirping.

呖[lì]呖—describes the crisp calls of birds, such as the chirping of a warbler.

嘤[yíng]嘤——describes the sound of birds chirping.

Mistake - the sound of a sparrow flying.

Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, hoarse - describe the cries of crows.

呷[gā]呷—describes the cry of wild geese, also known as quack, the cry of ducks.

Gū [gū] - describes the cry of turtledoves and others.

Suddenly—mostly describes the loud and clear sound of birds, such as: Sudden and long chirping.

啾[jiū]啾—describes the sound of many birds chirping together, and also describes the shrill cry.

Shuala - describes a short sound that passes quickly, such as: with a swipe, a bird flew away from the willow tree.

Flapping - describes the sound of flapping wings, such as: with a flapping sound, a water bird flies up.

特[tēi]儿 - (square) describes the sound of a bird flapping its wings rapidly, such as: a sparrow flies away with a single sound.

牉[huā] - describes the sound of rapid movements, such as: the crow flies away with a squeaking sound.

Cuckoo - the cry of the cuckoo

chionk-chionk - the long-tailed nightjar, loud and loud like iron tools knocking together

tiyu-tiyu—— Call of the Blue Male Quail

The warning call of the White-breasted Quail, continuity, another call is "ruak-ruak-ruak-ruak-ruak"

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Kideedeedeedeedeeee - the sound made by the golden-backed three-toed woodpecker in flight

Toot-toot - the continuous sound of the red-breasted woodpecker like knocking on wood.

Goooo - The loud, continuous call of the Spotted Green Woodpecker.

Gu Gu Gu——The call of the Pearl-necked Turtle Dove, the third one is heavier and longer.

Abominable and abominable - the sound of a noisy male bird

Tweeper - the bird's gentle cry

Yongyong (yongyong) - onomatopoeia, describing the bird's cry Sound

Xiao Xiao - describes the sound of birds singing

Shazha - describes the sound of groups of fish and birds waiting to eat

Brush La - onomatopoeia, describing the short sound that passes quickly

Tei (tei)'er - onomatopoeia, describing the sound of a bird rapidly flapping its wings

1. Chirp, chirp Chirp, chirp, chirp, hiss, murmur, murmur, babble, hoot, hoot, hoot, tsk, chirp, gnaw, chirp, chirp, croak, croak, croak, croak, croak, croak, croak

2.

2. Human voices

Chi Chi Chi Ga Ga - used to write about laughter.

Jiligulu - used to write sounds that others cannot hear clearly or understand, and also used to write the sound of rolling objects.

Jili Guala - used to write the sound of speaking loudly.

Huchi, Xiuxi, Hengchi - used to write the sounds of breathing.

Ka - used to write the sound of vomiting and coughing.

Thumping - used to describe the sound of heartbeat.

Gurgling, chirping, mumbling, chirping, humming, chirping, chirping—used to write about talking in a low voice or talking to oneself.

Croak - a sound used to write applause, etc.

Puchi - used to write the sound of laughter, or the sound of water or air being squeezed out. Such as: Puff and smile; Puff and the ball deflates.

Snoring - used to write about the sound made by snoring or sucking liquid food.

Pū (pū) Lulu - used to write about tears falling down continuously.

Haha, hee hee, hehe, hee hee, gimmick, squeak, squeak, squeak, chee chee—laughter

vomit vomit, ee oh—forced laughter

Baby, croak, croak - baby's voice

Child - shouting loudly

Chicha, croak, croak, duh, brown - scold Sound, disdain

Swallowing, vomiting, groaning, wailing, hissing, 哓哓 (sounds made by fear) - wailing

Uh, eh, eh, um , 咒 - the sound of agreement

Fierce, 哓哓 - the sound of arguing

Xu Xu - the sound of forcing out one's breath

Err - the sound of reading

Chill - a sound made involuntarily by exerting force

Bah, bah - the sound of smashing the mouth

Chirp, gag - the noise

Yao—a shouting sound

哜哜哜停嚻—a sound of speaking quickly and chaotically

呔—a shout that attracts the other person’s attention

哻哻— —Describes the sound of panting

Whooping—the sound of rapid breathing

Howling—a long, crisp sound made by a person’s mouth

Curr—instructing a dog The sound made when speaking

Wowala - onomatopoeia, describing noisy sounds

Lililuoluo - describing wordy and unclear speech

呶呶 - describing speaking Endless and annoying

Grumble - describes someone who wants to speak but is hesitant to speak

Thump - the sound of heartbeat

Puff - blow

3.

4. The sounds of natural phenomena such as wind, rain, lightning, water, etc.

Xixixi - used to write about the slight sound of wind, rain, falling leaves, etc. .

Xili - used to write the sounds of slight wind, rain, snow, etc.

The sound of falling rain and buildings collapsing.

Huhu - used to write about the sound of wind.

Hula - used to write the sound of flags waving.

Gulong - used to write about the sound of thunder and big cars.

Gurgling, 山山, Wow, Wow, Wow, gurgle, Gulu - are used to describe the sounds of water flowing or things rolling.

Gurgling, gurgling - the sound of water pressure being discharged outward.

Gudu - the sound of boiling water and drinking water

Wuwu - used to write the sound of wind and whistle.

Tick-tock - used to write the sound of water drops falling or a clock swinging.

Dili - the sound of water dripping.

咿Wow, 咿偗, alas (ǎi) is - the sound of rocking an oar, the sound of singing while rowing a boat

Shasha - used to write about stepping on sand, flying sand hitting The sound of objects or wind blowing vegetation, etc.

SiSe - used to write slight sounds, such as: Autumn wind rustling.

Rough - describe the sound of waves

Xiao Xiao - describe the sound of wind

Shoushou - describe the sound of wind

4 .

5. Sounds such as landing, knocking, slapping, and impact

Dong-dong - used to write the sounds of drum beating and knocking on the door.

Crackling, crackling - the sound of burning firewood

Ka - used to describe the crisp impact sound of utensils. For example: close the drawer with a click.

Click, click, crunch, crunch - used to describe the sound of objects breaking.

Click - used to write about the slight collision sound of objects.

Zhizhi - used to write about certain high-pitched sounds, such as a mouse squeaking or a car squeaking to a stop.

Bang bang - used to write about the sound of impact or heavy object falling to the ground.

Bang, bang bang - used to describe the sounds of knocking on the door, hitting objects, etc.

Wow (Wow) - used to write the sound of impact. For example: The iron door slammed shut.

Long Cong (cōnɡ), Long Ling, Ding Ling - used to describe the sound of metal, jade, etc. hitting each other.

Dangdang, jingle, jingle - used to describe the sound of metal hitting.

Rumble - used to write about violent vibration sounds, such as: thunder rumbles, cannons rumble.

Gudong - used to describe the sound of heavy objects falling or taking gulps of water.

Gudu - used to describe the sound of liquid boiling, water gushing out or drinking water in large gulps.

Whoosh, dag, boom, swish, hiss, pop - used to describe the sound of bullets flying quickly through the air. For example: Bullets hissed overhead.

Tap-tat - used to describe the sound of horse hooves, machine guns, etc.

Quata - used to write crisp, short impact sounds. For example: The ground is frozen hard, and it makes a squeaking sound when you walk on it.

Ding Dong - used to describe the sound of metal, porcelain, jade ornaments, etc. hitting each other.

Ding dong - used to describe the sound of jade, metal, etc. hitting or water dripping.

Plop - used to describe the sound of heavy objects falling to the ground.

Plop - used to describe the sound of heavy objects falling to the ground or falling into the water.

Papa - used to describe sounds such as firing a gun, clapping, or hitting things. For example: The whip crackled loudly.

Crack - used to describe the sound of something falling to the ground, hitting the ground, or something breaking. For example: There was a bang, and the bowl fell to the ground and broke.

Bang Bang - the sound of knocking on wood.

Boom boom - used to write a beating or bursting sound.

Bachi - used to describe the sound of feet slapping against the muddy ground.

Squeak, vomit, squeak, bang, bang, bang, click - the sound of the door opening

Swallowing (rhythmic drum sound), squeaking (bells and drums) Harmony) - describes the sound of drums

哓啕(yueyue) - harmonious ringtones

叩阍-knocking, knocking on the door

噔唷—— The sound of heavy objects falling to the ground

Thump, thump - the sound of leather shoes

Baobao - the sound of feet hitting the ground

Thump, vomit - the sound of objects being pressed Sound

Ding Ding (zhengzheng) - onomatopoeia, describing the sound of cutting wood, playing chess, and playing the piano

Zhengzheng - onomatopoeia, the loud sound made by metal collision

Rolling (ya) - onomatopoeia, describing the sound made when the machine is started