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sarrusophone

[ suh-roo-zuh-fohn, -ruhs-uh- ]

noun

  1. a metal double-reed wind instrument with a conical bore, related to the oboe and used especially in military bands.


sarrusophone

/ səˈruːzəˌfəʊn /

noun

  1. a wind instrument resembling the oboe but made of brass
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Words From

  • sar·ruso·phonist noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of sarrusophone1

1870–75; named after Sarrus (19th-century French bandmaster); -o-, -phone
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Word History and Origins

Origin of sarrusophone1

C19: named after Sarrus, French bandmaster, who invented it (1856)
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Example Sentences

When the heavy-set Don Iñigo arrives on the scene, the sarrusophone, a large and deep metallic reed instrument, has some hilariously flatulent solos.

At one point, Ravel instructs the sarrusophone player to remove his mouthpiece and play as loudly as possible on it, in imitation of a rooster crowing.

Lipnick normally plays a contraforte, a variant on the bassoon, but for this piece he brandished an elongated metal instrument — a sarrusophone, a double-reed instrument invented in the mid-19th century, now almost completely forgotten, for which both this piece and the Dukas were originally scored.

One needs explanation: the sarrusophone, a brass instrument played with a reed.

The sarrusophone player blows and squeaks through the mouthpiece in a comically tuneless, pitchless manner.

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