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Are you supposed to make a sound when kissing?

Are you supposed to make a sound when kissing?

The lip-smacking sound is primarily due to little air being sucked into the/your mouths when there are tiny gaps formed at our lips while kissing, even though the / your mouths are closed. This suction will produce a “smack” sound. This is because when pressure is applied to the lips, it creates a small gap.

Try not to make a smacking sound. If you can hear the infamous “smacking” sound — even if you’re not mic’d up on a reality TV show — you could be creating too much suction. A little sound is unavoidable, but try to go a little slower to eliminate these awkward moments.

How do you ask for a kiss on chat?

Creative ways to ask to kiss (or be kissed by) someone

  1. “Would it be okay if I kissed you on the lips?”
  2. “would you like me to lean closer and put my lips on your neck?”
  3. “Would you be willing to kiss me right now?”
  4. “Welcome to kissville, population us?”
  5. Our Favourite: “Can I kiss you?”
  6. “Can you kiss me?”

How to spell out the sound of a kiss?

It’s one of those sounds that cannot be adequately expressed in any written language. In English we have a few different ways to write the sound of a kiss: muah, smack, xxx. They get the idea across, but none of them imitate the actual sound of a kiss. Other languages have the same problem.

What do you need to know about Kiss sound?

What’s needed for a true kiss sound is a way to represent the smacking sound caused by the intake of air through closed lips. And linguistics has one! The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click.

Why is the sound of a kiss called a click?

The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click. “Bilabial” because of the lips, “lingual ingressive” because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and “click” for the pop of release from the pressure change.

Why is the sound of a kiss called bilabial?

“Bilabial” because of the lips, “lingual ingressive” because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and “click” for the pop of release from the pressure change. There are languages in the Tuu and Kx’a language families…

It’s one of those sounds that cannot be adequately expressed in any written language. In English we have a few different ways to write the sound of a kiss: muah, smack, xxx. They get the idea across, but none of them imitate the actual sound of a kiss. Other languages have the same problem.

What’s needed for a true kiss sound is a way to represent the smacking sound caused by the intake of air through closed lips. And linguistics has one! The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click.

The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click. “Bilabial” because of the lips, “lingual ingressive” because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and “click” for the pop of release from the pressure change.

“Bilabial” because of the lips, “lingual ingressive” because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and “click” for the pop of release from the pressure change. There are languages in the Tuu and Kx’a language families…

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