A Basketball can't talk but when you bounce it, it sort of sounds like a heart beat.
comma between basketball and as
dribble dribble
The term Drained in basketball refers to shooting the basketball and having it cleanly go through the net making a "swish" sound. Usually highlight reel shots
boing, bomp, donka;donka;donka, bewm, just some that I imagine when I hear a basketball dribble.
The sound of a ball going through the net is a "swish" or a "swoosh."
Referees in football, basketball and soccer use a whistle for various signals.
The basketball buzzer sound is significant because it signals the end of a game and determines the winner. It marks the final moments of play and adds excitement and tension as teams compete to score before time runs out.
The second person to break the sound barrier was Clarence "Chuck" Manning. He was my great-grandfather; he fought in three wars and played professional Basketball for Alabama.
The squeek-y sound that you hear when basketball players cut or jump-stop on a court along with the sound that rubber or metal makes when they apply opposite force on one another with, is called a "screech". Much like the shriek of an owl or the character in the TV show "Saved By The Bell", a Screech, is a highly undesirable thing.
his name makes him sound black, so im guessing basketball
Certainly! Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words. Here are five examples related to basketball: 1. "Dribble in the middle" - repetition of the short "i" sound. 2. "Shoot hoops in groups" - repetition of the "oo" sound. 3. "Pass fast on the court" - repetition of the short "a" sound. 4. "Swish with skill" - repetition of the "i" sound. 5. "Score more before the buzzer" - repetition of the long "o" sound.
The word "basketball" contains 8 phonemes. In English, each individual sound is represented by a phoneme. Breaking down the word "basketball" into its individual phonemes, we have /b/ /æ/ /s/ /k/ /ɪ/ /t/ /b/ /ɔːl/. Each of these sounds represents a phoneme in the word "basketball."