A stringed instrument and a member of the lute family, having eight strings in four courses, frequently tuned as a violin. They have either a bowl back or a flat back
A member of the string instrument family, part of the subfamily of unbowed strings The mandolin is tuned like the violin, except it has eight strings, rather than four (the four pitches of the violin are each doubled on the mandolin) Often found in folk music ensembles, the mandolin is smaller than the guitar It has the following stages of sound production: energy source: muscle vibrating element: the strings resonating chamber: the instrument's body
Plucked-string instrument with a rounded body and fingerboard; used in some folk musics and in country-western music
A mandolin is a musical instrument that looks like a small guitar and has four pairs of strings. Small stringed instrument related to the lute. It evolved in the 17th century in Italy, but its present form was strongly influenced by the 19th-century maker Pasquale Vinaccia (1806-82) of Naples. It has a pear-shaped body with a deeply vaulted back, a short fretted fingerboard, and four pairs of steel strings. (The American folk mandolin is a shallow, flat-backed version.) It is played with a plectrum; each pair of strings is strummed rapidly back and forth to produce a characteristic tremolo
Stringed instrument similar to, but smaller than, the lute It evolved in 18th-century Italy It has four pairs of strings, which are plucked with a plectrum