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词汇 trombone
释义

Definition of trombone in English:

trombone

noun trɒmˈbəʊntrɑmˈboʊn
  • 1A large brass wind instrument with straight tubing in three sections, ending in a bell over the player's left shoulder, different fundamental notes being made using a forward-pointing extendable slide.

    长号,长喇叭,伸缩长号

    Example sentencesExamples
    • While they were eating, a small jazz band in the corner, made up of only a trumpet, trombone, clarinet, tuba, flute, and drums, provided music.
    • They are also accomplished musicians too, playing saxophone, trumpet, trombone, harmonica and acoustic guitar.
    • Various songs also make use of mouthbow, harmonica, sousaphone and trombone.
    • My mother played some piano and my father was able to play violin, some piano, saxophone, clarinet, trumpet and trombone.
    • The orchestra comprises a 26-piece fusion of trumpets, trombones and saxophones plus a large string section and, of course singers.
    • Soon afterwards, he joined the local brass band, learning first the trombone, then the trumpet and cornet.
    • Many pifferi ensembles consisted of five players, comprising three cornettos and two trombones.
    • The works required four trumpets, three trombones, one tuba, and several percussion instruments including bells & whistles!
    • Cello, saxophone, contra-bass, viola, trombone and piano converse in a tone at once astringent and oddly assuasive.
    • With an organ providing a solid backing for the song, trombones and melodicas weave interlacing melodies.
    • With 320 students in snappy blue and white uniforms playing shiny trumpets, trombones and tubas as they march in briskly changing formations, the band's numbers are full of razzmatazz.
    • Children also get to learn the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, guitar, violin, and drums, among other things.
    • Take two trumpets, a French horn, a trombone and a tuba and you have a lot of brass!
    • It's always performed by big bands, with trumpets, trombones and saxophones, sometimes with flutes, and always with Cuban percussion - the congas, bongos and timbales.
    • The expanded orchestra, with added bass trumpet, contra bass trombone, special Wagner tubas and five harps which give this work its distinctive timbre, at turns scintillating and louring, played with admirable finesse.
    • The band currently has vacancies for young cornet, trombone and tuba players between the ages of eight - 20.
    • A full ensemble goes full tilt, starting with a small string section, accordion and then swooping trombones and a squealing clarinet, as the pace of the piece doubles and then doubles again before ending in a wild frenzy.
    • He felt an affinity for the subtlety of the slide trombone and related to its connecting influence and to its relatively low profile as a lead instrument.
    • By the age of 4, he was able to play the balalaika, accordion, and guitar, and by 8, the oboe as well as the trombone and other brass instruments.
    • After a quiet intro where the interweaving trombone and sax establish the melancholy theme, the full band of drums, piano, congas, bass clarinet, trombone, and tenor sax aggressively joins in.
    1. 1.1 An organ stop with the quality of a trombone.
      有长号音色的管风琴音栓

Origin

Early 18th century: from French or Italian, from Italian tromba 'trumpet'.

Rhymes

alone, atone, Beaune, bemoan, blown, bone, Capone, clone, Cohn, Cologne, condone, cone, co-own, crone, drone, enthrone, flown, foreknown, foreshown, groan, grown, half-tone, home-grown, hone, Joan, known, leone, loan, lone, mephedrone, moan, Mon, mown, ochone, outflown, outgrown, own, phone, pone, prone, Rhône, roan, rone, sewn, shown, Simone, Sloane, Soane, sone, sown, stone, strown, throne, thrown, tone, Tyrone, unbeknown, undersown, windblown, zone

Definition of trombone in US English:

trombone

nountrɑmˈboʊnträmˈbōn
  • 1A large brass wind instrument with straight tubing in three sections, ending in a bell over the player's left shoulder, different fundamental notes being made using a forward-pointing extendable slide.

    长号,长喇叭,伸缩长号

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Take two trumpets, a French horn, a trombone and a tuba and you have a lot of brass!
    • He felt an affinity for the subtlety of the slide trombone and related to its connecting influence and to its relatively low profile as a lead instrument.
    • After a quiet intro where the interweaving trombone and sax establish the melancholy theme, the full band of drums, piano, congas, bass clarinet, trombone, and tenor sax aggressively joins in.
    • The band currently has vacancies for young cornet, trombone and tuba players between the ages of eight - 20.
    • Children also get to learn the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, guitar, violin, and drums, among other things.
    • My mother played some piano and my father was able to play violin, some piano, saxophone, clarinet, trumpet and trombone.
    • They are also accomplished musicians too, playing saxophone, trumpet, trombone, harmonica and acoustic guitar.
    • While they were eating, a small jazz band in the corner, made up of only a trumpet, trombone, clarinet, tuba, flute, and drums, provided music.
    • By the age of 4, he was able to play the balalaika, accordion, and guitar, and by 8, the oboe as well as the trombone and other brass instruments.
    • Many pifferi ensembles consisted of five players, comprising three cornettos and two trombones.
    • With an organ providing a solid backing for the song, trombones and melodicas weave interlacing melodies.
    • It's always performed by big bands, with trumpets, trombones and saxophones, sometimes with flutes, and always with Cuban percussion - the congas, bongos and timbales.
    • The expanded orchestra, with added bass trumpet, contra bass trombone, special Wagner tubas and five harps which give this work its distinctive timbre, at turns scintillating and louring, played with admirable finesse.
    • Soon afterwards, he joined the local brass band, learning first the trombone, then the trumpet and cornet.
    • The works required four trumpets, three trombones, one tuba, and several percussion instruments including bells & whistles!
    • A full ensemble goes full tilt, starting with a small string section, accordion and then swooping trombones and a squealing clarinet, as the pace of the piece doubles and then doubles again before ending in a wild frenzy.
    • The orchestra comprises a 26-piece fusion of trumpets, trombones and saxophones plus a large string section and, of course singers.
    • Various songs also make use of mouthbow, harmonica, sousaphone and trombone.
    • With 320 students in snappy blue and white uniforms playing shiny trumpets, trombones and tubas as they march in briskly changing formations, the band's numbers are full of razzmatazz.
    • Cello, saxophone, contra-bass, viola, trombone and piano converse in a tone at once astringent and oddly assuasive.
    1. 1.1 An organ stop with the quality of a trombone.
      有长号音色的管风琴音栓

Origin

Early 18th century: from French or Italian, from Italian tromba ‘trumpet’.

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