carillonning

listen to the pronunciation of carillonning
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of carillonning in Turkish Turkish dictionary

carillon
Verilen ezgiye bir ince bir kalın sesin sürekli olarak eşlik etmesi
English - English

Definition of carillonning in English English dictionary

carillon
A set of bells, often in a bell tower, sometimes operated by means of a keyboard (manual or pedal), originating from the Low Countries. Modern carillons are sometimes also operated by computer
carillon
{i} melody played on bells
carillon
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carillon
a site having at least 23 tower bells in at least two octaves of mostly chromatic series, but falling short of the "traditional" carillon either in the lack of tuning of the bells or in the type of mechanism (e g , electric keyboard or solely automatic operation) In these site data pages, the term non-traditional carillon is used when this definition is specifically intended
carillon
A collection of bells, which may be rung in rapid succession to play a tune
carillon
a set of bells in a tower that are controlled from a piano keyboard, or a tune played on these bells (quarregnon, from quaternio ). Musical instrument consisting of at least 23 cast bronze bells tuned in chromatic order. Usually located in a tower, it is played from a keyboard. Most carillons encompass three to four octaves. The carillon originated in Flanders 1480, and the art of carillon building reached its height in the Netherlands in the 17th century, when the tuning of the bells became highly refined
carillon
A tune played on a set of bells
carillon
a set of church bells; generally found only in churches large enough to have a tower or steeple strong enough to support the weight of the many bells; some of the bells may weigh a ton or more
carillon
set of bells hung in a bell tower
carillon
A tune adapted to be played by musical bells
carillon
playing a set of bells that are (usually) hung in a tower
carillon
The carillon is the set of bells that are in the bell tower
carillon
From medieval Latin quadrilionem, which refers to four stationary bells commonly used in France to indicate the time Three high-pitched bells chimed the quarter-hours, while a fourth- and deeper-toned one-tolled the hour A set of cast bronze bells arranged in chromatic order and so tuned as to be capable of concordant harmony They are normally played from a clavier of wooden keys and pedals but may also be played from an ivory keyboard with electric action
carillon
A chime of bells diatonically tuned, played by clockwork or by finger keys
carillonning
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