No a trombone is verry different
Yes, tromba is latin for trumpet and one is latin for big. So trombone means big trumpet
The trombone originated in Europe in the middle ages. There is debate as to whether it was used first in Germany (where is is called the Posaune) or in France (where it was called the sacqebut). By the seventeenth century, it was common, and in use everywhere in Europe.
Trombone is trombone in Italian.
Yes, the Italian equivalents of the English "trombone" and "trumpet" are related. The former is la tromba, pronounced "la TROM-ba," whereas the latter is il trombone ("the big trumpet"), pronounced "eel trom-BO-ney."
I believe there is a typo in the question. If so, the answer is: 76 trombone in the big parade.
saxes, trumpet, trombone, bass, piano, drums and some clarinets
Trumpet and trombone, usually with four of each.
A trombone has no valve- only a slide. A valve trombone, or a marching trombone, though, have three valves.
it is a professional trombone
no. trombone is a musical instrument. I have not heard of a trombone sport before
The trombone player.