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hurdy-gurdy
[ hur-dee-gur-dee, -gur- ]
noun
- a barrel organ or similar musical instrument played by turning a crank.
- a lute- or guitar-shaped stringed musical instrument sounded by the revolution against the strings of a rosined wheel turned by a crank.
hurdy-gurdy
/ ˈhɜːdɪˈɡɜːdɪ /
noun
- any mechanical musical instrument, such as a barrel organ
- a medieval instrument shaped like a viol in which a rosined wheel rotated by a handle sounds the strings
Other Words From
- hurdy-gurdist hurdy-gurdy·ist noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of hurdy-gurdy1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hurdy-gurdy1
Example Sentences
Plinking, cascading xylophone and marimba sounds and the nasal, pumping string tones of a hurdy-gurdy circle through “Walker,” a meditation on getting through grief that’s named after the songwriter Scott Walker.
Soon after, all of us, freshly unmuted, recited a hurdy-gurdy version of the Serenity Prayer in something far less than unison.
“Without you knowing about it, there can be hundreds or thousands of musical niches – from hurdy-gurdy players to kora players to pedal steel players.”
We see how the early sketches and etchings of street beggars, half-naked women and hurdy-gurdy musicians transform later in his career into figures that populate his biblical scenes.
The show will offer a musical history of the waterway, performed on period instruments, including a hammered dulcimer, a banjo, a hurdy-gurdy and a squeeze box.
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