Yes.
The french spelling for violin is violon
violon
Masculine becomes the gender of the word "violin" when translated from English to French. The French equivalent, violon, may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular le since French employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(luh) vyo-lo" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.
Un cours de violon
je joue du violon électrique
I' ; le VE a toujours voulu jouer le violon.
Cela fait huit ans que je joue du violon
On a *violin, there are four strings. From lowest to highest: G, D, A, E
Jean-Baptiste Cartier has written: 'L' art du violon' -- subject(s): Violin, Violin music, Sonatas (Violin and continuo), Instruction and study
No, it is just 'the violin' in French.
Compagnon is the French word for companion, if that helps.
The Chinese word for violin is "Xiǎotíqín".