标签:Grunts 相关文章
Dear A Moment of Science, 亲爱的《科学一刻》栏目组: I know that humans and chimps share something like 98 percent of our DNA. But what does this really mean? At least on the surface, humans and chimps seem very different we live in hous
Dear A Moment of Science, I know that humans and chimps share something like 98 percent of our DNA. But what does this really mean? At least on the surface, humans and chimps seem very different we live in houses, they live in trees. We use complex l
Scientists have searched for the origins of human speech in the hoots, grunts, and other vocalizations made by primates. It would seem to make sense, after all, that such sounds may be related to the more varied and articulated sounds we humans make.
It feels like we've been friends forever 感觉好像一直以来我们都只是朋友 And we always see eye to eye 但是我们也经常凝视对方的眼 The more time we spend together 我们在一起的时间愈加长久 The more I wanna say what
Dont sleep Dont wake me up 不要叫醒我 Dont sleep 不要睡着 Dont wake me up 不要叫醒我 After all this time 经过了这么多时间 After all these vibes 拥有过这么多共鸣 After all these highs 感受过这么多快乐 Were still o
Taste the poison from your lips 品尝着你唇瓣的毒 They leave, we're as good as gone 当爱意退散我们也是时候离场 Oh, our love is drunken in 我们的爱却已迷醉 Singing me my favorite song 唱着那首我最爱的歌曲 Me and y
NOEL KING, HOST: There is a new star on Broadway. He's 20 feet tall, weighs 1.2 tons, and his name is King Kong. He's a puppet, and he's the centerpiece of a $35 million musical based on the original film that opens tonight on Broadway. Reporter Jeff
Ya?l: [In a baby talk cooing voice] Ready for a moment of science? D: Sure, Ya?l, but why are you talking to me like I'm a baby? Y: [Regular voice] Just making a point Don. Why did you think I was talking as if you were a baby? D: Hmmm. Because of th
A new study finds that sounds conveying negative emotions could be understood across cultural boundaries more readily than the sounds of positive emotions. Related Links Disa Sauter's paper in PNAS Things like laughter, crying, sighing, grunting ...
By Phil Mercer 07 November 2007 Researchers have uncovered a language used by migrating whales off the Australian coast. Thousands of hours of humpback whale sounds recorded off Queensland have revealed a vast repertoire of social sounds. From Sydney