viola

listen to the pronunciation of viola
English - Turkish
viyola

Viyola çaldığını duydum ve sen çok iyi değilsin, değil mi? - I've heard you play the viola and you're not very good, are you?

Bu bir keman değil. O bir viyola. - This isn't a violin. It's a viola.

{i} hercai menekşe
diz viyolası
i., müz. viyola
viola da gamba altı telli eski usul viyolonsel
menekşe/viyola
alto
violas
keman
violist
{i} viyolacı

Onun biri piyanist ve diğeri bir viyolacı olan iki kızı vardır. - He has two daughters, one is a pianist and the other is a violist.

violist
(isim) viyolacı
violist
viyola çalan kimse
Turkish - Turkish
Menekşe
English - English
A female given name, from Latin violet

Were you a woman as the rest goes even, / I should my tears let fall upon your cheek, / And say, 'Thrice welcome, drowned Viola!'.

A stringed instrument of the violin family, somewhat larger than a violin, played under the chin, and having a deeper tone
A 10-string steel-string acoustic guitar, used in Brazilian folk music
An organ stop having a similar tone
Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Viola, including the violets and pansies
a musical instrument somewhat larger than a violin
from Latin "violet"
A viola is a musical instrument with four strings that is played with a bow. It is like a violin, but is slightly larger and can play lower notes. Stringed instrument, the tenor member of the violin family. In appearance it is almost identical to the violin but slightly larger; its strings are tuned a fifth lower. It is a member of many chamber music ensembles, and the modern orchestra uses 6 to 10 violas. Its tone is darker, warmer, and less powerful than the violin's, and it is rarely employed as a solo instrument. The viola d'amore is an 18th-century instrument with six or seven melody strings, under which are strung several sympathetic strings that resonate in concord with the sounded pitches
An instrument in form and use resembling the violin, but larger, and a fifth lower in compass
Bowed-string instrument of middle range; the second-highest member of the violin family
In the violin family, the alto instrument, played under the chin
A WWW client for XWindows Virtual Reality (VR): Computing system that simulates real life by creating an environment with objects that can be manipulated; currently only in the text-based stage
{i} four-stringed instrument from the violin family that is larger than a violin but smaller than a cello and is held under the chin
A genus of polypetalous herbaceous plants, including all kinds of violets
a bowed stringed instrument slightly larger than a violin, tuned a fifth lower large genus of flowering herbs of temperate regions any of the numerous plants of the genus Viola
An instrument of the violin family, larger then the violin and of lower pitch
(1724) a bowed string instrument of the violin family that is intermediate in size and compass between the violin and cello and is tuned a fifth below the violin
a stringed instrument somewhat larger than a violin, played under the chin, and having a deeper tone
large genus of flowering herbs of temperate regions
a bowed stringed instrument slightly larger than a violin, tuned a fifth lower
any of the numerous plants of the genus Viola
viola da gamba
A viol, usually much larger than the violin, played while seated and supported between the legs. The instrument was developed in Europe in the 1400s and used primarily in the Renaissance and Baroque periods
viola da gambas
plural form of viola da gamba
viola d'amore
viol that is the tenor of the viol family
viola da braccio
a member of the viol family with approximately the range of a viola
viola da gamba
viol that is the bass member of the viol family with approximately the range of the cello
viola da gamba
{i} viol, six-stringed violin-shaped instrument from the 16th and 17th centuries
violist
{n} one who plays upon the viol or violin
violist
a musician who plays the viola
violist
a person who plays the viol or the viola
violist
{i} player of the viola
violist
A player on the viol
viola

    Hyphenation

    Vi·o·la

    Turkish pronunciation

    vayōlı

    Pronunciation

    /vīˈōlə/ /vaɪˈoʊlə/

    Etymology

    () From Italian viola, from Old Provençal viola (modern Occitan viula), from Medieval Latin *vitula (“stringed instrument”).
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