Violins are tuned by twisting the tuning pegs so that they tighten the strings or loosen them. Tightening the strings makes the pitch higher, and loosening them makes the pitch lower. You tune the strings to G-D-A-E
You can tune a violin, but you can't tune a tuna!
So you can tune your violin with the pegs.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
you start with the A string and follow to the other strings
yea
The strings start to go out of tune.
Yes. It is not that different. Easier to do with low g.
Parts of a violin include: the scroll, the bridge, the finger board, the fine tune, the strings ( For violin E A D G) and i am sure the chin rest counts.
To tune the violin E string, use a tuner or a reference pitch to adjust the string until it matches the correct pitch of E. Turn the tuning peg clockwise to raise the pitch and counter-clockwise to lower it. Fine-tune by plucking the string and adjusting as needed until it sounds in tune.
A violin pitch pipe produces the tune a violin should be in, separately for each cord. These would only be able to be used if that person had a very, very good ear for tuning.
I suggest going to your violin teacher because beginners could pop a string. Or go to Quinlan and Fabish, they do it for free.
There are a number of books that helps one learn to play the violion. Some examples are "A Tune A Day Violin Book", "Essential Elements of Strings" or "Violin Primer".