bagpipes

listen to the pronunciation of bagpipes
English - Turkish
gayda

Bana gayda çalmayı öğretebileceğini düşünüyor musun? - Do you think you could teach me to play the bagpipes?

Gaydalar çok garip bir ses çıkarırlar. - Bagpipes produce a very strange sound.

tulum
bagpipe
İskoçlarım tulum çalgısı
bagpipe
(isim) gayda
bagpipe
{i} gayda

Gaydaları duyuyor musun? - Do you hear bagpipes?

Mary evde olmadığı zaman Tom sadece gayda çalar. - Tom only plays the bagpipes when Mary isn't at home.

bagpipe
gaydak
bagpipe
i., müz. tulum, gayda
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of bagpipes in Turkish Turkish dictionary

bagpipe
Tulumlu flavta
English - English
A musical wind instrument having a flexible bag inflated by a tube or bellows, a double-reed melody pipe and up to four drone pipes. There are several types from different national traditions, each having peculiar characteristics

Bagpipes are traditionally played in most Celtic regions and many former parts of the British Empire.

The form bagpipe is used as a modifier. Bagpipes are a musical instrument that is traditionally played in Scotland. You play the bagpipes by blowing air through a pipe into a bag, and then squeezing the bag to force the air out through other pipes. a musical instrument played especially in Scotland in which air blown into a bag is forced out through pipes to produce the sound
a musical instrument having a flexible bag inflated by a tube or bellows, a double-reed melody pipe, and up to four drone pipes. There are several types from different countries, each having its own peculiar characteristics. The variety shown in the picture is from Scotland
bagpipe
Singular of bagpipes (normally used in plural)
bagpipe
To play the bagpipes
bagpipe
{n} a common Scottish musical instrument
Bagpipe
bagpipe
bagpipe
A musical wind instrument, now used chiefly in the Highlands of Scotland
bagpipe
The bagpipe is the national instrument of Ireland and Scotland It is made out of a leather air bag and three sounding pipes The player fills the bag through a mouthpiece and presses the air out the sounding pipes Two of the sounding pipes produce fixed tones, called the bass or key tone, and the drone The third pipe, the chanter, produces the melody
bagpipe
A reed instrument with several drone pipes and a melody pipe, or "chanter", all attached to a bag held under the arm The player blows air into the bag and squeezes with the arm, creating a constant flow of air to feed the pipes, allowing a continuous drone Most often associated with Scotland, many cultures have bagpipes, including the central European Gaida, the Spanish Gaita, the Italian Zampogna and many others ranging from Europe, through North Africa and into India
bagpipe
{i} wind instrument
bagpipe
To make to look like a bagpipe
bagpipe
Wind instrument consisting of two or more single-or double-reed pipes, the reeds being vibrated by wind fed by arm pressure on a skin or cloth bag. The pipes are held in wooden sockets tied into the bag, which is inflated either by the mouth or by bellows strapped to the body. Melodies are played on the fingerholes of the melody pipe, or chanter, while the remaining pipes, or drones, sound single notes. Bagpipes existed by about AD 100. The early bag was an animal bladder or a nearly whole sheepskin or goatskin. Bagpipes have always been folk instruments, but after the 15th century some were used for court music, and others have survived as military instruments. An important related instrument is the Irish union (or uilleann) pipe
bagpipe
a wind instrument; the player blows air into a bag and squeezes it out through pipes
bagpipes
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