What types of sounds do cars make?
Solution 1:
Vroom is really the specific onomatopoetic word for the sound of a car starting up. According to some sources it is cross-linguistic.
There are many options, though. Depending on connotations desired, in rough mild-to-wild order, "The car [ blank ] to life":
- Came
- Spun (up)
- Cranked
- Whispered
- Purred
- Whirred
- Hummed
- Chortled
- Stuttered
- Sputtered
- Whined
- Coughed
- Buzzed
- Rumbled
- Grumbled
- Growled
- Snarled
- Revved
- Zoomed
- Vroomed
- Screamed
- Roared
- Blasted
- Thundered
- Detonated
- Exploded
My favorite is: The car grumbled to life.
Some of these feel a little awkward, but can be improved by rephrasing, such as "the car came to life with a quiet whine." Or perhaps "When he turned the key, the car briefly chortled, then began to purr."
Solution 2:
You may say
The car vroomed to life.
Solution 3:
A driving car makes a different sound than a car that is starting up. A driving car might purr if it's a good car, or hum or drone.
If it's starting up, as you seem to indicate by your example sentence, rev or roar fits, though naturally roar would only work for some cars.
The onomatopoeic vroom is usually used of a driving car, though as Will Hunting indicates, it's vague enough to be used in describing the car starting.
You're right in that whir doesn't fit (or at least is not used to describe) a car's noise. It may be used to describe its motion, e.g. the car whirred past and sped down the road.
For your example sentence, I would say:
The car's engine revved to life.
Solution 4:
Expensive luxury (rather than sports) cars are often described as "purring", although I'm not sure that would quite apply to a Honda Civic :)
Rather than "roaring" to life, a car could perhaps be described as "revving", although it wouldn't normally do that once it was up and running normally.