dulcimer teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
A stringed instrument, with strings stretched across a sounding board, usually trapezoidal. It's played on the lap or horizontally on a table. Some have their own legs. These musical instruments are played by plucking on the strings (traditionally with a quill) or by tapping on them (in the case of the hammer dulcimers)
The two classes of dulcimer are the Mountain or Appalacian dulcimer (plucked and played with a quill, usually a goose quill) and the hammer dulcimer (played by tapping on the strings with small hammers). See also: zither.
or hammered dulcimer Stringed musical instrument in which the strings are beaten with small hammers rather than plucked. Its soundbox is flat and usually trapezoidal; each pair of strings produces a single note, and the pairs slope upward alternately left and right to facilitate rapid playing. The Hungarian cimbalom is a large dulcimer with legs and a damper pedal, much used in Roma (Gypsy) orchestras. The Appalachian dulcimer is a narrow zither with a fretted fingerboard and three to five strings, which are stopped with one hand and plucked with a plectrum held in the other
an instrument, of a sound box with strings stretched across it, struck with two wooden hammers, still used in traditional folk music in Eastern Europe
a trapezoidal zither whose metal strings are struck with light hammers a stringed instrument used in American folk music; an elliptical body and a fretted fingerboard and three strings
A stringed instrument, with strings stretched across a sounding board, usually trapezoidal. Its played on the lap or horizontally on a table. Some have their own legs. These musical instruments are played by plucking on the strings (traditionally with a quill) or by tapping on them (in the case of the hammer dulcimers)
a musical instrument with wire strings of graduated lengths stretched over a sound box, played with two padded hammers or by plucking
A Zither which produces sounds by striking metal strings with wooden hammers Most commonly having two long brides or two rows of bridges Shaped like a shallow rectangular box
An instrument that originated in Persia Strings, which are stretched over a soundboard, are hit by hammers The type popular in the U S is the Appalachian dulcimer and is plucked, not hammered
(Italian dolcimello), according to Bishop (Musical Dictionary, p 45), is "a triangular chest strung with wires, which are struck with a little rod held in each hand;" but the word "symphonia," translated dulcimer in Daniel iii 5, was a species of bagpipe Fürst deduces it from the Hebrew smpn (a pipe) "The sound of cornet, flute, harp, sackbut psaltery, [symphony] or dulcimer, and all kinds of music " - Dan iii 5 Dulcinea A lady-love Taken from Don Quixote's amie du coeur Her real name was Aldonza Lorenzo, but the knight dubbed her Dulcinea del Toboso "I must ever have some Dulcinea in my head - it harmonises the soul " - Sterne Dulcinists Heretics who followed the teaching of Dulcin, who lived in the fourteenth century He said that God reigned from the beginning to the coming of Messiah; and that Christ reigned from His ascension to the fourteenth century, when He gave up His dominion to the Holy Ghost Dulcin was burnt by order of Pope Clement IV
A family of stringed instruments, with two very different branches: Hammer Dulcimers and Appalachian, or Mountain Dulcimers Hammer Dulcimers, including the Cimbalom and the Chinese Yang Ch'in, are trapezoidal boxes with strings stretched between tuning pegs on two sides The strings are struck with thin sticks, the hammers, which often have felt or some other substance to soften the hammer and change the timbre of the struck note Mountain Dulcimers have elongated hourglass-shaped bodies with melody and drone strings The mountain dulcimer is placed horizontally on the lap or on a table and strummed with one hand, while the melody strings are fretted from above with the other
Stringed instrument used by Blue grass bands Can be played with a pick or small cane like devices called hammers Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
(Heb sumphoniah), a musical instrument mentioned in Dan 3: 5, 15, along with other instruments there named, as sounded before the golden image It was not a Jewish instrument In the margin of the Revised Version it is styled the "bag-pipe " Luther translated it "lute," and Grotius the "crooked trumpet " It is probable that it was introduced into Babylon by some Greek or Western-Asiatic musician Some Rabbinical commentators render it by "organ," the well-known instrument composed of a series of pipes, others by "lyre " The most probable interpretation is that it was a bag-pipe similar to the zampagna of Southern Europe