Two tuning forks produce sound waves with the same frequency. If one tuning fork is struck harder, what aspect of the sound will change?
Two tuning forks produce sound waves with the same frequency. If one tuning fork is struck harder, what aspect of the sound will change?
Explanation
Basic Hausa word order: Subject-Verb-Object (like English). “Audu ya ga mota” = Audu saw (a) car. Pronoun subjects often incorporated into verb phrase: “Ya ga mota” (He saw a car).
Questions formed by tone change or question words: “Wane” (which-masc), “Wace” (which-fem), “Yaushe” (when), “Ina” (where), “Me/Menene” (what), “Yaya” (how). Question word usually comes first.
Relative clauses use “da” or “wanda/wadda”: “Mutumin da ya zo…” (The man who came…). Complex sentences use connectors: “domin” (because), “idan” (if), “sai” (until/then). Word order remains important for meaning.