Yes. Some amplifiers have a "Line Out" jack. However, it's also been said that the Line Out of an amplifier tends to sound like crap, because an amplifier's signal was meant to go through the speakers. For recording direct to a computer, you are probably better off using an amp modeller such as the Line 6 Pod.
You can, but it just will not have the same sound quality.
you will have a firewall protecting it from connecting
Yes. While there are many different types of instrument chords meant for different instruments and even styles, all can be used to connect any instrument to any amplifier. The only exception is that a speaker cable (connecting an amp to a cabinet/speaker), will NEVER work to connect an instrument to an amplifier. Note that, in emergency situations, you can use any instrument cable as a substitute for a speaker cable. This substitution is mildly risky for your speaker, so try to avoid it. Also, NEVER use a bass guitar with a guitar amplifier. It can't handle the low frequencies of a bass guitar. You can use a guitar with a bass amplifier safely, but the tone will not be as good.
Mixer main out (two XLR connectors) to PA amplifier inputs.
In my opinion it is the drums that have the loudest raw sound, but if you connect your guitar to an amplifier then the sound will have increased.
You can look at the in and out connectors on the TV and the amplifier. You have choices that depend on the tv and amplifier, basic stereo, surround sound and tos-link. As you know in and out are connected and out and in are connected. Do not connect in and in to each other and do not connect out and out to each other.
Connecting "col wait sion" doesn't spell anything grammatical.
You connect the mixers main outputs to the inputs of the amplifier and the outputs of the amplifier to speakers
Connect the sub woofer to the equalizer or amplifier. The positive wire will need to be connected to a power source. Connect the ground wire. Connect the auxiliary wire to the amplifier.
If the amplifier is not rated for 4 ohms impedence, you will quickly over-current the amp, burning out components. The power handling of the speaker and power output of the amplifier does not matter in this case. It must be compatible with the impedence load that you are connecting.
Depends on what your definition of "receiver" is, but most of the time - to the amplifier. Consider: if the receiver is some form of a device that receives some signal, and then decodes it to audio, then the receiver will hook into the amplifier, which in turn will drive the speakers (so the speakers go to the amplifier) if, on the other hand, the receiver is a part of a wireless connection between the amplifier and speaker, then it really serves the role of a cable, so in essence you're again connecting the speakers to an amplifier (only using the receiver as an intermediary) You would have to specify your case.
No, you connect the to an amplifier.
Yes you can with the converter.Even i have to buy that .
Check the datasheet for pinout.
You can look at the in and out connectors on the TV and the amplifier. You have choices that depend on the tv and amplifier, basic stereo, surround sound and tos-link. As you know in and out are connected and out and in are connected. Do not connect in and in to each other and do not connect out and out to each other.
crankshaft
there is a plug in on the back of your computer that says amplifier but not all computers have that connection maybe not yours check.