Theoretically you could, but it would be very hard to find someone to agree to use the horse hair to do the rehair job. Also, the quality of the horse hair could be well below normal standards. For a violin, white horse hair is the predominant type of hair used and other varieties will not produce a brilliant sound.
They used to be but now they are made synthetically.
A day in the life - The Beatles ?
Playing only one violin from the violin section is what's meant by 'violin solo'. Other instruments may or may not be played. Singers may or may not sing. But the one violin that's played is the violin of the 'first desk man', who also may be called 'concert master'. The two terms apply whether the individual be female or male.
A four piece vionil enssemble is called a string quartet and has no gender preferences.
The violin does not sound at all as the trombone because firstly it is a wood and the trombone a brass instrument and second, the violin is out of treble clef and the trombone out of bass clef (however, trombonists also read treble clef in brass bands and alto and tenor clefs in orchestras) The sound of the trombone is much more similar to the cello - deep and sonorous, slightly similar to a male singing voice.
Keyboard, drum, and something that sounds like cello. There's also some guitar.
A male horse that is not neutered is a stallion, a male horse that is neutered is a gelding. A male horse that is 4 or under is called a colt.
a male horse that is nutered is called a gelding a male horse that can produce babies is called a stallion a young male horse is called a colt
An intact male horse has testes. A neutered male horse (also known as a gelding) does not.
Actually, the female seahorse delivers the babies, right after fertilization, but the male seahorse, carries the babies for the 9 (or however long) months.
A stallion is a male horse. There are only female and male horse. Colt- unfixed male horse under 2 Stallion-unfixed male horse over 2 Gelding- a fixed male horse Mare-female horse over 2 Filly-female horse under the age of two
The opposite of a female horse would be a male horse. A young male horse, under the age of four, is called a colt. An adult male horse, over the age of four, that has not been castrated is called a stallion or a stud. An adult male horse, over the age of four, that HAS been castrated is called a gelding.
A young male horse (<4 years old, typically) = colt A castrated male horse = gelding An intact male horse = stallion
A male horse with its testicles in tact is called a stallion, a male horse without them is called a gelding.
A male horse/pony is called a stallion. A 'fixed' horse is called a gelding. A young male horse is a Colt.
A male breeding horse is also known as a Stallion or a Stud. A young male horse is called a Colt.
A male horse is called a stallion, and a female horse is a mare. When a male horse is castrated, it is called a gelding.
A young male horse is called a colt.