Saturday, April 26, 2008

O-No! Ma-To-Po-ei-a!

remember that word?


Onomatopoeia (occasionally spelled onomateopoeia or onomatopœia, from Greek ονοματοποιία) is a word or a grouping of words that imitates the sound it is describing, suggesting its source object, such as "click," "clang," "buzz," or animal noises such as "oink", "quack", "flap", "slurp", or "meow". The word is a synthesis of the Greek words όνομα (onoma, = "name") and ποιέω (poieō, = "I make" or "I do") thus it essentially means "name creation", although it makes more sense combining "name" and "I do", meaning it is named (& spelled) as it sounds (e.g. quack, bang, etc.).

examples: woof woof, ribbet ribbet,miāo (喵), bang. [yes, apparently, there's chinese onomatopoeias, as well as German, Arabic, and other foreign languages.]

--adapted from Wikipedia

Just something random for the blog.

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