Circular breathing is much easier than one might think. All you do is puff your cheeks up with air, then breath in through your nose while pushing the air out of your cheeks.
Circular breathing is in no way necessary to play the trumpet. Most music does not actually require you to master the technique. At most, circular breathing is a useful technique that can aid in playing. There are other more important things to master.
Yes, its called "Circular Breathing" where you blow out through your mouth and breath in through your nose at the same time. Many Didgeridoo players use this. I myself have tried to learn but I find it an impossible task.
Circular breathing has been practiced for centuries in various cultures around the world, particularly in indigenous Australian and Tibetan traditions. It is difficult to pinpoint an exact date of creation as it has been a technique passed down through oral tradition and cultural practices over generations.
You can use circular breathing where you breath in through your nose and store it in your cheeks ( I think, I can't do it)
Hard.
lack of exercise.
Yes
tired, trouble breathing, something wrong with the water, scared
Breathing can be either a verb or noun, It is the present participle of the verb "to breathe." Examples: VERB- She was breathing hard. ('she' is the subject, 'was breathing' is the verb) NOUN- The patient's breathing was uneven. ('breathing' is the subject, 'was' is the verb)
No. It is not. The alphabets are the same as English and grammar is not hard to learn.
How hard a language is to learn really depends on your motivation.
Specie Circular