That's like trying to fit into size 3 pants when you wear 4 regularly. It'll be a tight fit, if a fit at all.
Yes. An acoustic-electric guitar plugs into an amplifier the same way a regular electric guitar does.
Dreadnought - regular stringed acoustic guitar Resonator (Dobro) classical guitar - nylon stringed guitar a lap steel guitar without pickups mandolin is very close to a guitar as well
An Electric Acoustic Guitar is an acoustic guitar with the addition of a pickup or transducer that enables plugging it in to an amplifier. Type your answer here...
Well it depends. If you want a guitar to play like in most rock songs get a electric guitar. If you want a guitar like a regular guitar with the hole in the middle or if you are a beginner get a acoustic guitar.
Well.....the classical guitar strings are thicker....but i dont think it matters. maybe you can. XxLuciferExilexX
The acoustic guitar is over 5,000 old ,
Acoustic Simulator pedal...
Your acoustic guitar smells of course........
No, it is a real guitar.
For the same gauge designation, yes. "Standard" or "Regular" gauge acoustic strings are .013 to .056. Those would be considered very heavy strings on electric guitar, where "Standard" or "Regular" gauge strings would be .010 to .046.
A semi-Acoustic, or Electro-acoustic guitar, can be plugged into an amplifier and have FX pedals used with it, an acoustic guitar doesn't work with amp whatsoever, and it can only be played unplugged
The "wires" are called guitar chords or patch cables. And yes you can, if you have a guitar with an acoustic body (not an electric guitar, but acoustic or acoustic electric).