0 a tube-shaped musical instrument with a hole that you blow across at one end while holding the tube out horizontally to one side
1 a champagne flute
2 a tube-shaped musical instrument with a row of holes along its side that are covered by the fingers to vary the notes and played by blowing into a hole near one end, or this type of instrument generally
Her presence is felt more in the flute motif, paradoxically a motto of departure and absence.
In some sonatas the texture is varied by woodwind doublings of strings with flute or oboe, alternating with solo passages for different groups.
The flute section grew to three players, and there was one additional bassoon.
He soon realised that his flute lessons were not just about the creation of good flute players.
Long-standing conventions governed associations between instrument types and particular settings: trumpets and drums evoked warfare, flutes divinities, oboes the pastoral.
As an example, the theory is applied in detail to the flute modes.
The commercial artist had replaced the temple's original fluted baseless columns with columns resembling the world's most famous bottle.
A white-bearded man played a flute, acknowledged coins dropped at his feet.
中文繁体
長笛, (同 champagne flute)…
More中文简体
长笛, (同 champagne flute)…
MoreEspañol
flauta, flauta [feminine]…
MorePortuguês
flauta (transversal)…
More日本語
フルート…
MoreTürk dili
flüt…
MoreFrançais
flûte [feminine], flûte…
MoreCatalan
flauta…
More