The house tops clatter and clang figure of speech
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Answer
All of these words are onomatopoeias, or words that sound like what they describe.
Onomatopoeia (pronounced ˌ’AH-nuh-mah-tuh-PEE-uh’) refers to words whose pronunciations imitate the sounds they describe. A dog’s bark sounds like “woof,” so “woof” is an example of onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia can be used to describe the gears of machines working, the horn of a car honking, animals croaking or barking, or any number of other sounds.
However, thereare some words like munch, sigh, or chew that are commonly mistaken for onomatopoeias, but they are not. Does the word ‘munch’ really sound like munching, at all? Or do we just think so because that’s what we call it? Does a sigh really sound like “sigh”? People disagree about these things. Of course, if it works, poetically, it doesn’t really matter. But, when you study literature, you should remember that words for sounds are not always onomatopoeia