Plucked-string instrument originally made of wood with a hollow resonating body and a fretted fingerboard; types include acoustic and electric
A universal term for the popular stringed instruments from Spain (but dating back to the Greek Kithara), with a large, flat-backed sound box, Violin-like curved shape, a fretted neck, and six strings
A stringed instrument of music resembling the lute or the violin, but larger, and having six strings, three of silk covered with silver wire, and three of catgut, played upon with the fingers
A guitar is a musical instrument with six strings and a long neck. You play the guitar by plucking or strumming the strings. Plucked stringed instrument. It normally has six strings, a fretted fingerboard, and a soundbox with a pronounced waist. It probably originated in Spain in the early 16th century. By 1800 it was being strung with six single strings; 19th-century innovations gave it its modern form. Modern classical guitar technique owes much to Francisco Tárrega (1852-1909), and Andrés Segovia gave the instrument prominence in the concert hall. However, it has always been primarily an amateur's instrument, and it remains an important folk instrument in many countries. The 12-string guitar is strung in six double courses. The Hawaiian, or steel, guitar is held horizontally and the strings are stopped by the pressure of a metal bar, producing a sweet glissando tone. The electric guitar represented a major development. Electric pickups were attached to the acoustic guitar in the 1920s. In the 1940s Les Paul invented the solid-body guitar; lacking a soundbox, it transmits only the string vibrations. With its long-sustained notes, affinity for strong amplification, and capacity for producing wailing melodic lines as well as harshly percussive rhythms, it soon became the principal instrument of Western popular music
This is a stringed instrument The modern guitar has 6 strings, which may be plucked or strummed, and are stretched along a fretted fingerboard The guitar spred through Europe from Spain in the 14th-century
a six-stringed instrument plucked or strummed with either fingers or picks In the Appalachian South, guitars are flat-backed and are typically picked or strummed with a single flatpick In this collection the guitar, when it is used, provides chords and rhythm in accompaniment to the fiddle