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No. The E is silent in plane, where the A has a long A sound, as in "plain."
You would hear the sound after the plane has passed.
When a supersonic plane goes faster than the speed of sound, it creates a shockwave causing a sonic boom. The sound you hear after the plane has passed is the shockwave catching up to the aircraft. This can create the illusion that the plane has disappeared along with the sound.
Yes, the letter "a" in the word "plane" is a long vowel sound, pronounced like "ay".
Because the speed at which you can see the plane is greater than the speed of sound.
No. The E is silent in plane, where the A has a long A sound, as in "plain."
Chuck Yeager piloted the plane that broke the sound barrier, but he didn't invent it.
The speed of light is faster than the speed of sound. This means that light waves, carrying visual information, will reach your eyes before sound waves reach your ears. This is why you see the fighter plane first before hearing it.
No. It has a long A sound as in sane and plane. The E is silent.
NEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWW
homonyms are words that are spelled and sound the same, but have different meanings. the homonym for "plane" is: a plane, such as an airplane or a biplane a coordinate plane, such as on a graph a wood plane, that shapes wood
no, not necessarily. the reason that the sound appears to be coming from way behind the jet is because light travels faster than sound. think of a firework show, the sound always comes after the flash depending on how far away you are. since the jet is far away, by the time the sound reaches you, the jet is already way out ahead of the sound. this might help. ---jet--> ) ) ) <---sound ) ) ) ) 0 \|/ | <----you --------------------------/ \--------------------------------------------- /