It wouldn't sound very good, but you could do it if you wanted to; it wouldn't hurt your guitar.
Gretsch electric. Twelve string acoustic Guild. Six string acoustic Gibson.
there is acoustic, electric, base and steel string guitars
With a guitar pickup one can turn an acoustic guitar into an electric guitar. They use string vibrations generated from playing and turn it into electric current.
An electric guitar is as most guitars a string instrument. Not too much unlike the other string instruments; violin, banjo, cello, etc. The difference is that the electric guitar was designed to send string vibration signals to be amplified far beyond their acoustic capabilities... in fact, they have very little to no acoustic sound. There have been other sting instruments that use the same pickup methods, though are quite uncommon or "unconventional" for their use, ie. the electric violin.
they are both eqaully challenging
An acoustic electric guitar differs from a standard electric guitar in the fact that a standard electric guitar depends solely on the electricity of the amplifier to convert the string vibration. An acoustic electric guitar also has also a microphone which will magnify and convert the sound.
Acoustic Simulator pedal...
The kinds of guitars are acoustic, electric, electric-acoustic, twelve string, archtop, steel, resonator, bass, and double necked guitars. Acoustic- big hollow body Electric- blues, jazz, pop, rock; amplified Electric-acoustic- can be amplified Twelve string- acoustic usually; in place of one string there are 2 (6 sets of 2 strings) archtop- acoustic or electric with steel strings steel- played horizontally resonator- metal bodies; blues, country music bass- thicker strings for a lower octave; 4 strings total double necked- like 2 guitars on one body; 2 necks bolted to one body
The acoustic guitar is usually classified as a "string" instrument.
Yes, you can use an acoustic amp with an electric guitar, but the sound may not be optimal as acoustic amps are designed to enhance the natural sound of acoustic instruments. Electric guitars typically sound better through electric guitar amps designed specifically for them.
Yes, you can use acoustic strings on an electric guitar to achieve a different sound. Acoustic strings can produce a warmer and more natural tone on an electric guitar compared to traditional electric guitar strings.
For the same gauge designation, yes. "Standard" or "Regular" gauge acoustic strings are .013 to .056. Those would be considered very heavy strings on electric guitar, where "Standard" or "Regular" gauge strings would be .010 to .046.