The tuba.
The sousaphone was actually invented by John Philip Sousa's protégé, J.W. Pepper in the early 1900s. It was designed to be a more practical and portable version of the tuba for use in marching bands.
The suffix of "instrument" is "-ment."
You should put a comma after "instrument" to separate the two independent clauses in the sentence: "My favorite instrument, the trumpet, has a long history."
The suffix -tome means "instrument used for cutting" or "cutting instrument," and is often used in medical terminology to refer to an instrument used for cutting or incising tissue, such as a dermatome or a biopsy.
"Instrument" is a masculine word in French.
The sousaphone
The sousaphone
Yes it is.
sousaphone
no, longer is piano, cello, bass, tuba, sousaphone
Baritone horn, Sousaphone, Euphonium, Contrabass bugle, and Alto Horn
it is because the guy who made it wanted to be the inventer of an instrument!!
Tuba! Tuba! Tuba! Tuba!
The Helicon was an early "Sousaphone" instrument developed in the late 1800s
Neither the violin nor the Eb Sousaphone does.
The sousaphone is a brass instrument that is a specialized type of tuba designed to be easier to carry and play while marching. It is played by blowing air through a mouthpiece, which creates vibrations in the instrument's tubing to produce sound. The sound is then amplified and projected out of the large, flared bell at the end of the instrument.
The sousaphone is a brass instrument and a type of tuba that is designed to be easier to carry and play than a traditional tuba. It produces sound by the vibration of the player's lips into the mouthpiece, which creates sound waves that resonate through the instrument's tubing, ultimately amplifying the sound. The bell of the sousaphone is facing forward and upwards, allowing the sound to project outwards and upwards, making it ideal for marching bands.