If you're talking about vibrato....you have to relax your grip a lot on the neck of the violin and rely on your chin to hold the instrument up. When your grip is loosened, just move your hand back and forth, away from and towards your face. It will sound like the pitch of the note is constantly going sharp and flat. This makes longer notes have more style and sound better withing a piece or even a scale.
The simple answer is no, you have to know exactly where to place your fingers.
you were very vauge in your question but i will answer it the best i can. to play a violin you would use a bow ( a long stick with horsehair on it) and your fingers.
If you need them, put them on the fingerboard wherever you need your fingers to go.
A ukulele is played by strumming the strings, which are in a flat across arrangement. A violin is played using a rosined bow pulled and pushed across the strings, which are in a curved arrangement.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
put your fingers on it
your bone longer
2 fingers on A
Yes, violinists can develop calluses on their fingers from playing the violin regularly.
wiggle your fingers on the roof of the inside of the vagina
The simple answer is no, you have to know exactly where to place your fingers.
Half step is where your fingers are touching on the string, and a whole step is when your fingers are not touching.
They're used for placing your fingers on so that you can play notes.
Yes, it is possible to play the violin left-handed by restringing the instrument and reversing the positioning of the bow and fingers.
you were very vauge in your question but i will answer it the best i can. to play a violin you would use a bow ( a long stick with horsehair on it) and your fingers.
If you need them, put them on the fingerboard wherever you need your fingers to go.
You can pluck the strings with your fingers. This method is called pizzicato.