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		Definition of dulcian in English: dulciannoun ˈdʌlsɪənˈdəlsēən 1An early type of bassoon made in one piece. 旧式低音管 Example sentencesExamples -  Sackbuts are the forerunners of the modern trombone, and dulcians of the modern bassoon.
 -  As for Alvanchez, he shall play tenors and the dulcian.
 -  Another marked difference between the bassoon and the dulcian is that as was common with other Renaissance instruments, it came in a consort or family.
 -  Follow Piffaro on an enchanting journey into the musical world of shawms, sackbuts, slide trumpets, dulcians, racketts, krummhorns, recorders, bagpipes, lutes, guitars, and all manner of percussion.
 -  Early dulcians were often carved from a single piece of wood; the modern bassoon has four wooden joints together with a curved metal crook or ‘bocal’ and double reed.
 -  The curtal (or dulcian as it was known in Germany) has a conical bore doubled into a ‘U’ to produce a much more compact instrument than for example the larger shawms.
 -  Developed from the dulcian, the bassoon has never acquired a fashionable status among woodwind instruments.
 -  The shawm, baroque oboe, baroque bassoon and dulcian can overblow without the use of a thumbhole.
 -  Their difference is the shawm has only one bore, the dulcian has two and it is folded at the bottom.
 -  The band includes 3 cornetti, 2 trombones, 3 dulcians, chitarrone, and organ in various configurations.
 -  The dulcians have a removable plug to convert their instruments from open to closed bell models.
 -  One of the set of seven dulcians from the Este collection in Catajo, now in Vienna, is built in three separate joints like a bassoon.
 -  Shawms, sackbuts, dulcians, recorders, krummhorns, bagpipes, lutes, guitars and percussion provide the fascinating aural dimensions to an entertaining Piffaro performance.
 -  The Gabrieli Players, an ensemble of cornetts, shawms, dulcians, sackbuts, and recorders, bring to life here the rich world of the Spanish wind band, used often in Spanish cathedrals.
 -  As a result of this attention to detail, our dulcians are delicate instruments which can be played with many nuances and which always produce a full and rich tone.
 -  Bring your crumhorns, cornamusen, racketts and dulcians to play and share.
 -  The dulcian was made in several sizes and has a range of about two and one-half octaves.
 -  Voice, shawms, and dulcians will bring to life the rarely heard music of early Guatemalan manuscripts, found in Bloomington's own famed Lilly Library.
 
 2Any of various organ stops, typically with 8-foot funnel-shaped flue pipes or 8- or 16-foot reed pipes. (管风琴)音栓(尤指带8英尺长漏斗形风管或8或16英尺簧管的音栓) 
 OriginMid 19th century: from German Dulzian, or a variant of dulciana.    Definition of dulcian in US English: dulciannounˈdəlsēən 1An early type of bassoon made in one piece. 旧式低音管 Example sentencesExamples -  Their difference is the shawm has only one bore, the dulcian has two and it is folded at the bottom.
 -  The Gabrieli Players, an ensemble of cornetts, shawms, dulcians, sackbuts, and recorders, bring to life here the rich world of the Spanish wind band, used often in Spanish cathedrals.
 -  One of the set of seven dulcians from the Este collection in Catajo, now in Vienna, is built in three separate joints like a bassoon.
 -  Developed from the dulcian, the bassoon has never acquired a fashionable status among woodwind instruments.
 -  As for Alvanchez, he shall play tenors and the dulcian.
 -  As a result of this attention to detail, our dulcians are delicate instruments which can be played with many nuances and which always produce a full and rich tone.
 -  The dulcians have a removable plug to convert their instruments from open to closed bell models.
 -  Sackbuts are the forerunners of the modern trombone, and dulcians of the modern bassoon.
 -  The band includes 3 cornetti, 2 trombones, 3 dulcians, chitarrone, and organ in various configurations.
 -  Voice, shawms, and dulcians will bring to life the rarely heard music of early Guatemalan manuscripts, found in Bloomington's own famed Lilly Library.
 -  Follow Piffaro on an enchanting journey into the musical world of shawms, sackbuts, slide trumpets, dulcians, racketts, krummhorns, recorders, bagpipes, lutes, guitars, and all manner of percussion.
 -  The shawm, baroque oboe, baroque bassoon and dulcian can overblow without the use of a thumbhole.
 -  The curtal (or dulcian as it was known in Germany) has a conical bore doubled into a ‘U’ to produce a much more compact instrument than for example the larger shawms.
 -  Shawms, sackbuts, dulcians, recorders, krummhorns, bagpipes, lutes, guitars and percussion provide the fascinating aural dimensions to an entertaining Piffaro performance.
 -  The dulcian was made in several sizes and has a range of about two and one-half octaves.
 -  Bring your crumhorns, cornamusen, racketts and dulcians to play and share.
 -  Early dulcians were often carved from a single piece of wood; the modern bassoon has four wooden joints together with a curved metal crook or ‘bocal’ and double reed.
 -  Another marked difference between the bassoon and the dulcian is that as was common with other Renaissance instruments, it came in a consort or family.
 
 - 1.1 Any of various organ stops, typically with 8-foot funnel-shaped flue pipes or 8- or 16-foot reed pipes.
(管风琴)音栓(尤指带8英尺长漏斗形风管或8或16英尺簧管的音栓)  
 
 OriginMid 19th century: from German Dulzian, or a variant of dulciana.     |