What is microphone
what is am i
what is arrow
Answers
Answer:
→1)apiece of electrical equipment that is used for making sounds louder or for recording them.
→2)I,or i, is the ninth letter and the third vowel letter of the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet. Its name in English is i, plural ies.
→3) a thin piece of wood or metal, with one pointed end and feathers at the other end, that is shot by pulling back the string on a curved piece of wood (a bow) and letting go.
Answer:
➤ ---- A microphone is a transducer that converts mechanical wave energy (sound waves) into electrical energy (mic/audio signals). There are many types of mics, and they nearly all utilize a diaphragm (reacts with sound), transducer element (converts energy), and circuitry (carries/outputs mic signal).
➤ There are three contexts in modern English, off the top of my head, in which one would use “am I” (which seems to be more restricted than other subject-auxiliary inversions):
Questions:
“Am I a sailor?”“How am I to solve this?”“Why am I floating down the river?”
Preceded by “so” or “such”:
“He’s a sailor, and so am I.”“So curiously am I constructed that this might be expected of me.”“In such a fashion am I floating down the river.”
Preceded by topicalized phrases (sounds archaic):
“No sailor am I.”“What a rogue and peasant slave am I!”
“Down the river floated the boat” is fine, but “*Down the river am I floating” is terrible. “?Not down the creek am I floating, but down the river” is better but still bad to me. In my dialect of Canadian English, one may say “I am done my homework/the dishes” (which is unacceptable in most other Englishes), but “*Done my homework am I” is awful to my ear. This suggests that the stative “to be” can be inverted, but not the auxiliary.
Most Germanic languages have verb-second word order V2 word order - Wikipedia, which means that in finite clauses, the verb must be the second item in the sentence. If you’ve studied German, you would recall the rules that the subject comes before the verb in simple finite clauses, but the moment you put some other item before the subject, you must invert subject and verb. This is because this item now occupies the first place in the sentence, and you must move the verb to the second place:
Wir gehen zu Schule - We are going to school.Zu Schule gehen wir - We are going to school. *In die Schule wir gehen - is incorrect.Aber gehen wir zu Schule - But we are going to school. *Aber wir gehen zu Schule - is incorrect.
(German clauses are a story in themselves, but the simple finite ones follow V2.)
English also used to have verb-second word order, many scholars believe. But it gradually lost it on the path from Old English to Modern English, which is why “No sailor am I” or “What a rogue and peasant slave am I!” sounds Shakespearean. It remains obligatory in questions, and permissible for emphasis.
➤ __a thin piece of wood or metal, with one pointed end and feathers at the other end, that is shot by pulling back the string on a curved piece of wood (a bow) and letting go