akordeona benzer körüklü ufak bir çalgı

listen to the pronunciation of akordeona benzer körüklü ufak bir çalgı
Türkçe - İngilizce
concertina
Coiled barbed wire for use as an obstacle.Webster's New Dictionary And Thesaurus, Geddes & Grosset Ltd., New Lanark, Scotland 1990
to become compressed into a shape reminiscent of a concertina

The car concertinaed into the wall.

Something resembling a concertina, such as a folded book or a bus door
A musical instrument, like the various accordions, that is a member of the free-reed family of musical instruments, typically having buttons on both ends
A small musical instrument on the principle of the accordion
free-reed instrument played like an accordion by pushing its ends together to force air through the reeds
It is a small elastic box, or bellows, having free reeds on the inside, and keys and handles on the outside of each of the two hexagonal heads
collapse like a concertina
free-reed instrument played like an accordion by pushing its ends together to force air through the reeds coiled barbed wire used as an obstacle collapse like a concertina
A concertina is a musical instrument consisting of two end pieces with stiff paper or cloth that folds up between them. You play the concertina by pressing the buttons on the end pieces while moving them together and apart. a musical instrument like a small accordion, that you hold in both hands and play by pressing in from each side (concert). if something concertinas, it folds together on itself. Portable bellows-operated musical instrument. The first concertina was patented by Sir Charles Wheatstone in London in 1829, and he later produced an instrument with full chromatic capacity. Like the accordion, its sound is produced by free reeds, but it uses buttons rather than keys. The very similar Argentinian bandoneon is square rather than hexagonal
coiled barbed wire used as an obstacle
{i} small hexagonal accordion
A musical instrument, like the various accordions, that is a member of the free-reed family of musical instruments, typically having buttons on both ends. Concertinas are distinguished from accordions (piano or button) by the direction of the button travel when pushed. On a concertina, the buttons travel in the same direction as the bellows; on an accordion, the buttons move at a right angle to the direction of bellows travel
akordeona benzer körüklü ufak bir çalgı