A violin is hollow. The hollowness of the violin allows it to make sound; a solid violin will not play unless it is electric. If you look inside the f-holes on a violin you can see the inner wood of the violin.
The violin is not A orchestra, but it is PART of one. Usually orchestras have violins, violas, cellos, and basses. But there are some situations where some instruments are missing. One violin is called a solo, two is a duet.
Well it look hollow and man made
It isn't. A violin bow is longer than a bass bow, although the bass bow has is much wider with a thicker wooden shaft, and is thus two or three times heavier. Violin bows are longer because the higher in pitch a string is, the faster bow you need. Basses have very thick strings, so they don't need to move their bows very fast, and don't need as long a bow. Besides, if it were as long as a violin bow, it would be too heavy for most people to play!
It depends on your electric violin. A hollow-body violin with an acoustic pickup (basically, a traditional violin with a microphone built into it) will make sound just like a standard acoustic violin. A solid-body electric violin will make sound without an amp...but unless you're the violin player, you won't hear it.
I'm going to have to say, the Violin, Cellos (+String Basses?), Recorder/Some type of flute, that's all I can recognize. uwu
The double bass has 4 strings. It is a classical instrument that is related to the violin and cello, but is the largest in this family.There are basses that have more strings, but they are usually electric instruments, such as 5 or 6 stringed basses. As well, there are 8 and 12 string basses that have "duplicate strings" that are tuned to a higher octave to it's root string (similar to a 12-string guitar).
Viols were used in the 15th through 17th centuries. They are of the same family as the violin but different in that they have five or six strings. Modern violins (and violas, cellos, and basses) have four strings. The earliest made surviving four-string violin is one of a set of 24 made for King Charles IX of France in the 1560's.
4 violins, 2 violas, 1 cello and 2 double basses. If you listen to it carefully, there is also a harpsichord playing in the background.
Mourvilles-Basses's population is 61.
No absolutely not the bridge is what transfers the vibrations of the strings into the hollow inside of the violin resonating the sound, if you were to play it without the bridge it would sound similar to an electric guitar without an amp.
No the violin's have there own clef and viola's also have there own clef but cello and bass have the same clef.