No, a chordophone is not a percussion instrument. Chordophones produce sound by vibrating strings that are stretched between two points, such as a guitar or violin. Percussion instruments produce sound by being struck, shaken, or scraped.
All can be considered as a percussion instrument but the Chordophone is not really a "Main" category in percussion. The two major category .
A chordophone is any musical instrument that makes sound when the strings vibrate or if the strings are stretched between two points. Examples are the violin and the guitar, so no, they are not percussion instruments.
i think it's a chordophone
A group of Musical Instruments is called a consort.
Guitar is a chordophone, Guiro is a idiophone, Bass Drum is a membranophone, and Bass Clarinet is a aerophone.
The violin, viola, cello, and upright bass are chordaphones because they get their sound from strings and can be bowed or plucked.
No
A Chordophone is 'any musical instrument that makes sound by way of a vibrating string or strings stretched between two points' so the Violin would be a good example. Other examples include the Guitar, Lyre and Harp although the term can also be stretched to include instruments that some may hesitate to call stringed instruments, such as the Musical Bow and the Piano.
The String and chordophone.
Chordophone
Samba instruments come from the Perrcussian family.