NoiseAddicts.com — For those of you who liked "Can You Hear Like a Teenager" here is a list of tones that go from 8Hz all the way up to 22,000Hz and should let you know just how much damage to your ears all those concerts, your Ipod and your mom screaming at you have done so far.
Mar 4, 2009 View in Crawl 4
lamiaconfitorMar 5, 2009
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mihkelttMar 6, 2009
my right ear started to bleed a little - should i be concerned?
srodolffMar 6, 2009
Dang if this didn't bring back memories. I have a defect in my right ear where the hearing bones are not fully developed.I didn't realize this until I drove the hearing test people nuts at my elementary school listening to these very tones.BTW, I can't hear past 17.
uberkittyMar 7, 2009
These sounds made me feel a little sick actually. I could hear all of them though.
imcrMar 11, 2009
I'm blind and wasn't sure which one I'd clicked
hongjingMar 13, 2009
Chinese learning tips (part I) The simplest answer to the essential question by learners about how to improve spoken-Chinese is to speak as much and as efficient as possible. I have suggestions, including some learning methods and tips, for English-speaking learners to efficiently practice spoken-Chinese. Paraphrase, a recommended way of practicing spoken-Chinese To paraphrase is a highly recommended way of practicing spoken-Chinese. After intensely reading an essay, retell it. There are two points to back up this approach; the one is that fragments of the original essay would flow into mind and those fragments applied in paraphrase would be more likely to be permanently kept in mind; the other is paraphrase helps to comb through the information in mind and work out a logical structure for sentences to be uttered. The latter would do major help for improving spoken-Chinese. The best way to carry it out is a teacher at a class writes down key words of an essay, such as function words and conjunctions, and phrases first. After students paraphrase it, the teacher could erase some words and students are recommended to retell it for another time. The way mostly used for practicing spoken-Chinese is free talk that only contributes limited improvements. The limitation of free talk is that a talker is inclined to repeat the words or phrases he/she is most familiar with and the vocabulary for spontaneous responses can hardly be expanded. But by paraphrasing, one couldn’t get away just with regularly used words or phrases but has to beat brains out for it. If you are interested in Chinese culture or related topics, take a FREE one-on-one live online lesson with a professional teacher in Beijing! Learn more at <a class="user" href="http://www.echineselearning.com/?ecl=ptEEEEEEdicl0313" rel="nofollow">http://www.echineselearning.com/?ecl=ptEEEEEEdicl0 ...</a>
aroundtown27Mar 14, 2009
Exactly, the blip is in the sound file.
jollyspaceMar 29, 2009
I heard 20
andjewApr 7, 2009
oops forgot i had done this (unsurprisingly because i was drunk)could still hear the full 8 - 22 khz range
jollyspaceDec 12, 2009
Several months later, and I can now hear 22.