English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

With my normal speaking voice, I sound like Ian Beale. When I have a heavy cold (like right now) I sound like Barry White. What has happened to which part(s) of my body to change my voice like this?

2006-12-13 04:04:19 · 6 answers · asked by bruttolondra 1 in Health Other - Health

6 answers

Have you ever noticed that in a piano, the lowest notes are the longest, heaviest steel cords and the high notes are short and small gage piano wire? Sound exists as a wavelenth. Long waves produce a lower pitch, while shorter waves produce a higher pitch.

When we have a cold (and I WISH i could keep my baritone even when I don't have a cold), mucous membranes and vocal cords SWELL with blood and become inflamed. Although the length of the modulating part in the larynx doesn't change, the MASS of the "chord" changes. These swollen, heavier vocal chords cannot vibrate as quickly as they used to, just like a heavy piano cord cannot make the higher pitch as the tinier wires. When the swelling goes down and the NORMAL amount of blood exists in the vocal mechanism, your usual pitch will return.

2006-12-13 04:16:38 · answer #1 · answered by DellXPSBuyer 5 · 1 0

Our voice is generated in voice box "larynx" but is modulated and modified into speech by the wind pipe, mouth, oral cavity, tongue, back of nose, nasal cavity and sinuses. The sound generated in larynx is made to vibrate or resonate in our upper face by all the above structures when it exits out. So in cold, the changes that occur in above structures like nose block or sinus block causes a perticular change in voice.

2006-12-13 04:11:27 · answer #2 · answered by SASTRY P 1 · 0 0

lmao you said Barry White lololol

2006-12-13 04:23:39 · answer #3 · answered by Brian 4 · 0 0

the least complicated element is hydrogen, and it incredibly is replaced into helium in stars (including the photograph voltaic) for that reason of nuclear fusion. that's now no longer wherein we get the helium that is going into balloons, whether. That helium comes from the radioactive decay of heavier factors -- now no longer the fusion of hydrogen.

2016-10-05 06:35:25 · answer #4 · answered by marceau 4 · 0 0

u sound like joe pesqualue cos uve had bumm fun

2006-12-13 04:17:51 · answer #5 · answered by andy cambell in greenock 1 · 0 1

either puberty or the cold its self.

2006-12-13 04:11:50 · answer #6 · answered by zktnl27 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers