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  2. Kyorochan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyorochan

    Pafu (Puff) - a cloud/cat like creature who Kyoro-chan keeps as a pet in the second season. It is unknown where he came from. The only sound he can make is a whistle-like sound, which kind of sounds like "pafu", hence his name. His name also might come from the fact that he looks like a cloud, which are puffy in appearance.

  3. List of unexplained sounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unexplained_sounds

    This sound, dubbed the Whistle, was recorded by the eastern Pacific autonomous hydrophone deployed at on July 7, 1997 at 07:30GMT. According to NOAA, the Whistle is similar to volcanogenic sounds previously recorded in the Mariana volcanic arc of the Pacific Ocean. NOAA also stated that locating the source of an event requires at least three ...

  4. Buzzy Bee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buzzy_Bee

    The Buzzy Bee is a popular toy in New Zealand. It resembles a bee with rotating wings that move and make a clicking noise while the toy is pulled along the ground. Possibly based on another earlier concept, [ 1 ] it was designed and first produced in Newton, Auckland in the 1930s, by Maurice Schlesinger.

  5. Squeaky toy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squeaky_toy

    When the toy is squeezed, air is forced through the squeaker, resulting in a high-pitched sound, such as a squeak, or the sound of a toy horn or whistle. The tone and duration of the sound may depend on the size of the squeaker, the amount of air squeezed out of the toy, and the speed with which it is squeezed. When the toy is not being ...

  6. Kiwi! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiwi!

    Kiwi! is a 2006 computer-generated animation created by Dony Permedi, a student in the New York City School of Visual Arts, as his Master's Thesis Animation, with music composed and performed by Tim Cassell. The animation's story of a kiwi that aspires to fly created a major Internet phenomenon after it was hosted on the video sharing site YouTube.

  7. Kiwi (bird) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiwi_(bird)

    Kiwi eggs can weigh up to one-quarter the weight of the female. Usually, only one egg is laid per season. The kiwi lays one of the largest eggs in proportion to its size of any bird in the world, [34] [a] so even though the kiwi is about the size of a domestic chicken, it is able to lay eggs that are about six times the size of a chicken's egg ...

  8. Whirligig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whirligig

    The Saw-Mill, an American home-built buzz toy. [1] Buzzers are button whirligigs that make a sound which can be modulated by how quickly the button is spinning and by the tightness of the string. A buzzer is often constructed by running string through two of the holes on a large button and is a common and easily made toy.

  9. Party horn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_horn

    It is not consistently known by any single term in English, but by a number of local variations, neologisms and individual terms often containing variants and synonyms of blowing (puffing, blow-out etc.) and noise (whistle, squeak etc.). [citation needed] Children blow party horns at a birthday party

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