bağırmak (fil)

listen to the pronunciation of bağırmak (fil)
Turkish - English
{f} trumpet
To sound loudly, be amplified

The music trumpeted from the speakers, hurting my ears.

In an orchestra or other musical group, a musician that plays the trumpet

The trumpets were assigned to stand at the rear of the orchestra pit.

To play the trumpet

Cedric made a living trumpeting for the change of passersby in the subway.

H7782 showphar, sho-far'; or sho-phar, sho-far'; from H8231 in the orig sense of incising; a cornet (as giving a clear sound) or curved horn: --cornet, trumpet
Of an elephant, to make its cry
A musical instrument of the brass family, generally tuned to the key of B-flat
utter in trumpet-like sounds; "Elephants are trumpeting"
A type of interchange used where one road terminates on another (ie, a three-way interchange) The most basic way to grade-separate a T-junction See the Interchange Dictionary page
A three-way interchange with no crossing movements, featuring one 270-degree loop ramp opposite the terminating roadway, and a semidirectional ramp following the loop to the outside See the Trumpet page
A high-pitched member of the brass instrument family, with the following stages of sound production: energy source: air vibrating element: the player's lips resonating chamber: the instrument's body
Its scale in the lower octaves is limited to the first natural harmonics; but there are modern trumpets capable, by means of valves or pistons, of producing every tone within their compass, although at the expense of the true ringing quality of tone
A trumpet is a musical instrument of the brass family which plays quite high notes
To proclaim loudly; to promote enthusiastically
An integral member of the brass family The soprano brass trumpet is composed of a cupped mouthpiece, bent tube formed into a rectangular shaped body, and ending with a small flared bell Trumpets are available in many sizes with various pitch classes Piccolo Trumpets carry the very highest register The trumpet's louder and more brilliant sound replaced the Coronet in the 1920s
If someone trumpets something that they are proud of or that they think is important, they speak about it publicly in a very forceful way. The government has been trumpeting tourism as a growth industry Nobody should be trumpeting about chemical weapons It was trumpeted that the nation's health was improving. Brass instrument with tubing twice-folded in an elongated shape. (In its broad sense, trumpet may refer to any lip-vibrated instrument.) The modern trumpet has a mostly cylindrical bore, three valves, and a cup-shaped mouthpiece, and it is usually a B-flat or C instrument. The trumpet had taken its basic modern shape, with its ovoid loop, by 1500. In the 17th-18th centuries it employed crooks (removable lengths of tubing) to enable playing in different keys. The valved trumpet was developed in the 1820s. The trumpet has been associated with ceremonial and military uses since the 16th century. It joined the standard orchestra by 1700, though it was only selectively used, usually with the timpani. Its brilliant sound has since made it indispensable in a wide variety of ensembles. See also cornet; flügelhorn
proclaim on, or as if on, a trumpet; "Liberals like to trumpet their opposition to the death penalty"
To sound loudly, or with a tone like a trumpet; to utter a trumplike cry
bağırmak (fil)
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