The term "anglais" is French for the word "English".
En Anglais vous dites wings.
It means "put some spin on it." In this context, English probably derives from the French anglé "bent, at an angle," which is pronounced the same as anglais "English." Likewise the so-called English horn, from the French cor anglé "bent horn"
Anglais à huit heures means 'English (class) at eight o'clock'.
Look in cockney slag would be "butcher's hook". As in "I'm gunna have a butchers hook at it". Sometimes it is shortened to "Cor! have a butcher's at that!"
The cor anglais is related to the oboe. This instrument looks like the oboe and is a double reed instrument. The sound of the cor anglais is deeper than a regular oboe and sounds like a French horn.
The cor anglais is related to the Oboe. This instrument looks like the oboe and is a double reed instrument. The sound of the cor anglais is deeper than a regular oboe and sounds like a French horn.
The obeo plays the cor anglais.
Cor anglais music is read in treble clef.
No, a cor anglais is a member of the woodwind family of musical instruments.
A cor anglais is a double-reeded woodwind musical instrument in the Oboe family.
The oboe is the instrument that is usually played by the musician who plays the Cor Anglais in an orchestra.
Yes
About 1/2 of a man
No, it's formally bridgeless.
- The term cor anglais is French for English horn, but the instrument is neither English nor a horn. - The reed in the cor anglais doesn't use a cork but is put straight into the bocal.
clarinets (and cor anglais)