Ambiguous.
Most likely though, a horn in F, a double horn, or, less often, a Bb horn. Or, not a marching horn.
The actual name for the "marching F-Horn" is a Mellophone. The fingerings are identical to that of a trumpet. On a Horn, you finger the E open and the D first. On a Mellophone (marching horn) the E is first and second, and the D is first and third.
No. A marching french horn, also called a mellophone, has a shape more like a trumpet with a large bell facing forward. A "regular" french horn has the bell facing backwards. You use your left hand to play the french horn and your right hand to play the mellophone. Fingering also changes to that identical to a trumpet, or a B-flat Horn (the E's and D's are fingered differently). Some mellophones are made to be used with a trumpet (cornet) mouthpiece, but there are adapters you can use to use your horn mouthpiece. Other mellophone are made to be used only with a horn mouthpiece.
The reason why the french horn is called a french horn is because, even if it started to develop in Germany it was completed in France, heinz the name French Horn
The French horn is a brass.
The French horn. Though a brass instrument it most often sits with the woodwinds.
A horn is 'une corne' (fem.) in French.
ang french horn ay./.........
no they didn't have a F horn (French Horn) in their music
No, horn does not need to be capitalised.
If you uncoil all of a regular french horn's tubing, in total it would be 12 feet long!
A French Horn has no meaning, it is simply a musical instrument.
you melt brass into shapes that the french horn need