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A trombone is a brass instrument, therefore its sound is produced by you blowing air through your mouth and vibrating your lips. the octave is changed by how fast or slow you vibrate your lips.
When you play a trumpet, you buzz your lips. It creates a vibration that goes through the trumpet, and through the valves that you have pressed down (if you have pressed down any) and it comes out of the bell.
Has to do with your lips and the emboucher ... that is how close or far apart the lips are when blowing.
Kiss - To touch or press with the lips slightly pursed, and then often to part them and to emit a smacking sound, in an expression of affection, love, greeting, reverence, etc.: He kissed his fiance.
Make your lips like your are giving someone a raspberry (or like making a farting noise) and put you lips in the mouthpiece. Then take a deep breath with your diaphragm and don't raise your shoulders when you do. Blow into the mouthpiece with your lips as described earlier to make them vibrate. This then leads to you making a noise.
She pursed her lips in scorn. His lips were tightly pursed.
"Pursed" can be used several ways, the most common of which refers to the pursing of one's lips. Usually used to display disappointment, disgust, or annoyance. For example, "Sandra pursed her lips at the new mail boy, who threw the paper into a puddle yet again."
A trombone is a brass instrument, therefore its sound is produced by you blowing air through your mouth and vibrating your lips. the octave is changed by how fast or slow you vibrate your lips.
An air kiss is a gesture in which the lips are pursed as if kissing someone, but without making contact.
"Pursed" can be used several ways, the most common of which refers to the pursing of one's lips. Usually used to display disappointment, disgust, or annoyance. For example, "Sandra pursed her lips at the new mail boy, who threw the paper into a puddle yet again."
Burning fuel in the cardboard tube, open on one end, rushes out an open end, like whistling through pursed lips.
a raspberry
The word pursing is used almost exclusively to describe a certain facial expression, when someone is pursing their lips. The lips remain closed, but become more circular, with the ends drawing in and the center getting fuller. (This sounds like puckering, which is another thing people do with their lips, and it is actually quite similar, but puckering is more extreme. You might call it the exaggerated form of pursing.) Pursed lips generally convey that someone is thinking about something, perhaps a bit distractedly.
How to do pursed lip breathing:1. Breath in (inhale) slowly through your nose for 2 counts.2. Feel your belly get larger as you breathe in.3. Pucker your lips, as if you were going to whistle or blow out a candle.4. Breathe out (exhale) slowly through your lips for 4 or more counts.Exhale normally. Do not force air out. Do not hold your breath when you are doing pursed lip breathing. Repeat these steps until your breathing slows.Reviewed ByReview Date: 02/14/2009David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine.
This phrase is often used as an instruction for whistling. It suggests pursing your lips and blowing air through them to create a whistling sound.
We pucker our lips while blowing candles to concentrate the flow of air at the target (candles),if the lips are not puckered then it would lead to the dispersal of air and desired result might not be achieved.
You could say, "Her lips were pursed." It means her lips were tightly closed.