Some voice qualities are:
1) jitter - pitch sounds rough
2) pressed - harsh, often loud (strident) quality
3) pulsed - sounds similar to food cooking in a hot frying pan
4) resonant - brightened or 'ringing' sound that carries well
5) rough - uneven, bumpy sound appearing to be unsteady short-term, but persisting over the long-term
6) shimmer - crackly, buzzy
7) strained - effortfulness apparent in voice, hyperfunction of neck muscles, entire larynx may compress
8) strohbass - popping sound; vocal fry during singing
9) tremerous - affected by trembling or tremors
10) twangy - sharp, bright sound
11) ventricular - very rough (Louis Armstrong-type voice)
12) wobble - wavering or irregular variation in sound
13) yawny - <span>quality is akin to sounds made during a yawn</span>
Answer:
I'm not sure what you're asking but let me see if I can help. I think it would be an animator is to an artist what a pediatrician is to a doctor.
Explanation:
An animator makes art and moves it while an artist just makes art. A pediatrician helps children while a doctor could help anyone.
The correct answer is C. Delighted
It is a part of the compound predicate that also involves the verb amused.
According to sociologists, for example Emile Durkheim from France, we learn implicit rules because we live in a world that restraints us. We grow under the protection of our parents who teach us how to speak first and how to behave. We wear clothes, use knife and fork to eat, go to school, get a job.Nobody tells us that we cannot be naked.Nobody tells us that we have to pay for things. We live the experiences , we learn to copy and adopt what we think of as universal .As we grow up we imitate what others do and consider it is a natural way of acting.We do not think of our performances in life as following a set of rules.It is what we assume as spontaneous and also innate.