harmonica

listen to the pronunciation of harmonica
English - Turkish

Definition of harmonica in English Turkish dictionary

<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
{i} mızıka

Tom mızıkasını cebine koydu. - Tom put his harmonica in his pocket.

Tom bir mızıka satın almak için ona para vermemi istiyor. - Tom wants me to give him money to buy a harmonica.

<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
ağız mızıkası
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
armonika

Tom bana Noel için bir armonika verdi. - Tom gave me a harmonica for Christmas.

Tom, armonika ve gitarı aynı anda çalabilir. - Tom can play the harmonica and the guitar at the same time.

<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
irili ufaklı cam bardaklar veya madeni parçalardan meydana gelen bir çeşit çalgı
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
ağız armonikası
English - English

Definition of harmonica in English English dictionary

<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a toy instrument of strips of glass or metal hung on two tapes, and struck with hammers
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a musical instrument, consisting of a series of hemispherical glasses which, by touching the edges with the dampened finger, give forth the tones
A <span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
harp
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a small rectangular free-reed instrument having a row of free reeds set back in air holes and played by blowing into the desired hole
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
A harmonica is a small musical instrument. You play the harmonica by moving it across your lips and blowing and sucking air through it. = mouth organ. or mouth organ Small rectangular wind instrument consisting of free metal reeds set in slots in a small wooden frame and blown through two parallel rows of wind channels. Successive notes of the diatonic (seven-note) scale are obtained by alternately blowing and sucking; the tongue covers channels not required. In chromatic (12-note scale) models, a finger-operated stop selects either of two sets of reeds tuned a semitone apart. The harmonica was invented in 1821 by Friedrich Buschmann (1805-64) of Berlin, who borrowed the basic principle from the Chinese sheng. It is widely used in blues as well as folk music and country music
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
Mouth organ; a small metal box on which free reeds are mounted, played by moving back and forth across the mouth while breathing into it
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a small, hand-held wind instrument on which tones are produced by exhaling and inhaling into recessed air slots In the Appalachian South, the harmonicas play an ordinary diatonic scale but not the "chromatic" intervals between the diatonic scale tones They are thus sold in separate models to play in different keys, and some musicians keep multiple harmonicas (a G-harmonica, a C-harmonica, a D-harmonica, and so forth) in order to play with other instruments Also known as French harp
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a musical wind instrument with a series of holes for the player to blow into, each hole producing a different note
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
a free-reed instrument consisting of a series of steel reeds arranged together horizontally in small channels Most consist of ten holes and twenty reeds, with separate blow and draw reed plates mounted on either side of a cedar comb utilizing a diatonic scale
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
Also known as the Mouth Organ Usually hand held, a free reed instrument, rectangular in shape Sound is produced by air passing through graduated reeds set back into a narrow frame
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
{i} mouth organ, small musical wind instrument played by inhaling and exhaling into a row of holes
<span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
(aka the Western mouth organ) A wind-blown instrument consisting of a casing containing a series of metal reeds It is played principally in popular and folk music, including the blues
harmonicas
plural of harmonica
the <span class="word-self">harmonicaspan>
harmonicon