| 释义 | 
		Definition of charango in English: charangonounPlural charangostʃəˈraŋɡəʊCHəˈraNGɡō A small Andean guitar, traditionally made from an armadillo shell. 查兰戈琴,安第斯吉他(传统上以犰狳壳制成) Example sentencesExamples -  Instead, on lonely curves, we'd pass a young man in a tall, conical knitted hat and a bright embroidered jacket, walking along playing a tiny guitar, a charango, to himself.
 -  Originally, the soundbox of the charango was made from the shell of an armadillo, which gave it a unique sound and appearance.
 -  They cooked and washed, men drank and played charangos, older kids whined about the rustic boredom, and Fabrizio, age five, made a first disastrous experiment with chicha.
 -  All night, squads of dressed-up campesinos trotted through town, the men strumming charangos, the women shrilling praise-songs to whichever roadless hamlet they'd walked from.
 -  The haunting sound of the large pan pipes, the melodious sound of the charango and the moving atmosphere created by the violin bring this diverse repertoire beautifully together.
 
 
 Origin1920s: from South American Spanish. RhymesDurango, fandango, mango, Okavango, quango, Sango, tango    Definition of charango in US English: charangonounCHəˈraNGɡō A small Andean guitar, traditionally made from an armadillo shell. 查兰戈琴,安第斯吉他(传统上以犰狳壳制成) Example sentencesExamples -  They cooked and washed, men drank and played charangos, older kids whined about the rustic boredom, and Fabrizio, age five, made a first disastrous experiment with chicha.
 -  All night, squads of dressed-up campesinos trotted through town, the men strumming charangos, the women shrilling praise-songs to whichever roadless hamlet they'd walked from.
 -  Instead, on lonely curves, we'd pass a young man in a tall, conical knitted hat and a bright embroidered jacket, walking along playing a tiny guitar, a charango, to himself.
 -  Originally, the soundbox of the charango was made from the shell of an armadillo, which gave it a unique sound and appearance.
 -  The haunting sound of the large pan pipes, the melodious sound of the charango and the moving atmosphere created by the violin bring this diverse repertoire beautifully together.
 
 
 Origin1920s: from South American Spanish.     |