The difference between Ding Ling and Ding Ling

Ding Ling and Ding Ling are heteromorphic words and both are onomatopoeic words.

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Onomatopoeic words are words created by imitating natural sounds and are an integral part of all languages in the world. Although onomatopoeic words imitate natural sounds, they are subjective.

The voice of nature is infinite. Through the interpretation of our ears and brains, the recognition of the main Guanyin feeling, and then the simulation with the phoneme system of our own language, such simulation is often distorted. Therefore, it is different from the sound imitation of ventriloquism.

Onomatopoeia, a word that imitates sound, is also called onomatopoeia, onomatopoeia and onomatopoeia. This is a word that imitates natural sounds.

Usually, Chinese characters are regarded as phonetic symbols to form onomatopoeic words. It is similar to transliterated words and Lian Mian words in essence. Chinese characters are only used to express sounds, and have nothing to do with the meaning of words. So they are both "phonetic words" and "compound words" as relative concepts.

Because onomatopoeic words are mostly used for description and description, some people classify them as adjectives. Some people also put subjective feelings and emotions into their voices (for example, alas! Ouch! Ah! It is inappropriate to classify onomatopoeia words.

There are still boundaries between adjectives and onomatopoeia. The overlapping form of the former is emphasized and emotional, while the overlapping form of onomatopoeia is purely phonetic and does not produce any additional meaning (note 1). Different from adjectives, onomatopoeic words can be modified by adverbs of degree and negative adverbs in grammar.

For example, we don't say "it's raining heavily" or "the wind is blowing silently" Onomatopoeic words cannot express doubts in the way of "A is not A". Onomatopoeia can be combined with quantifiers, but adjectives cannot.

When two syllables overlap, onomatopoeic words can be AABB (Bang Bang), ABAB (Bang Bang) or ABCA (Dong Dong), and adjectives are usually just AABB. Onomatopoeic words are flexible and independent in sentences, while adjectives do not have such characteristics.