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guitar

[ gi-tahr ]

noun

  1. a stringed musical instrument with a long, fretted neck, a flat, somewhat violinlike body, and typically six strings, which are plucked with the fingers or with a plectrum.


guitar

/ ɡɪˈtɑː /

noun

  1. music a plucked stringed instrument originating in Spain, usually having six strings, a flat sounding board with a circular sound hole in the centre, a flat back, and a fretted fingerboard. Range: more than three octaves upwards from E on the first leger line below the bass staff See also electric guitar bass guitar Hawaiian guitar
“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

guitar

  1. A stringed musical instrument ( see strings ) usually played by strumming or plucking. Guitars are widely used in folk music and, often amplified electronically, in country and western music and rock 'n' roll .
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Derived Forms

  • guiˈtar-ˌlike, adjective
  • guiˈtarist, noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of guitar1

1615–25; < Spanish guitarra < Arabic kītārah Greek kithára kithara
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Word History and Origins

Origin of guitar1

C17: from Spanish guitarra, from Arabic qītār, from Greek kithara cithara
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Example Sentences

The musician best known for playing the guitar riff in the James Bond theme tune has died.

From BBC

But the jolly tone gives way to something fiercer and more appropriately epic: a galloping rhythm on the drums, insistent bass and scorching guitar notes.

The very short headline set was pretty typical Carti–ripping live metal guitars, frantic redlined vocals and a scrum of new cuts like “Ketamine” that seethed with tension and circle-pit chaos.

As Yulia Navalnaya was whisked away by police, for security, the crowd gathered beside a memorial for those killed in Ukraine - chatting quietly and singing along with a young man playing guitar.

From BBC

His son Leo, now 25, plays guitar in the show’s band.

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