It is not possible
French Horn they have some of the same fingerings and is extremely similar to the trumpet.
No it is not the same as a French or English horn.
Has to do with your lips and the emboucher ... that is how close or far apart the lips are when blowing.
Those are two terms for the same instrument.
No. A marching french horn, also called a mellophone, has a shape more like a trumpet with a large bell facing forward. A "regular" french horn has the bell facing backwards. You use your left hand to play the french horn and your right hand to play the mellophone. Fingering also changes to that identical to a trumpet, or a B-flat Horn (the E's and D's are fingered differently). Some mellophones are made to be used with a trumpet (cornet) mouthpiece, but there are adapters you can use to use your horn mouthpiece. Other mellophone are made to be used only with a horn mouthpiece.
The French horn is an F instrument. That means when a middle C is played on the horn, it sounds the same as an F a fifth below middle C on the piano.
Same as B-flat.
It depends on what you mean. But in general, the Trumpet, Tuba, Valve Trombone, and French Horn are all similar to the trumpet in the way they operate, but they don't all play the same clef
Yes, the octaves are the same notes but in varying pitches.
The Wagnor tuba and the American french horn are identical instruments. Their construction and sound are identical.
French horn is very hard- and that is both an advantage and a disadvantage. It is hard to learn and the music can be challenging to play, but many directors, composers, and colleges favor french horn over many other instruments because of its unique tone quality and sound. Scholarships are widely available to french horn players because it is such a hard instrument to master. It is a hard instrument to play because the space between notes of the same fingering, called partials, are very close together, making it hard to tell which note is being played. It also takes a lot of air and embouchure strength to play high notes, and even more air to play low notes. Another disadvantage is if you blow to hard your lungs and heart explode
France. It was originally a hunting horn, and is now one of the coolest brass instruments in the modern concert band. The French horn as we know it today comes from Germany. The french designation is only used in the english language, probably for the same reason french fries arent called geman fries (they came from germany)... and of course the ENGLISH horn is actually french....