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tuba
[too-buh, tyoo-]
noun
plural
tubas, tubaeMusic.
a valved, brass wind instrument having a low range.
an organ reed stop of large scale with tones of exceptional power.
an ancient Roman trumpet.
Meteorology., funnel cloud.
tuba
/ ˈtjuːbə /
noun
a valved brass instrument of bass pitch, in which the bell points upwards and the mouthpiece projects at right angles. The tube is of conical bore and the mouthpiece cup-shaped
any other bass brass instrument such as the euphonium, helicon, etc
a powerful reed stop on an organ
a form of trumpet of ancient Rome
tuba
The lowest-pitched of the brass instruments. In orchestras, the tuba is usually held across the player's lap. In marching bands, the sousaphone is generally used as a low brass instrument because it was designed to be carried.
Word History and Origins
Origin of tuba1
Example Sentences
Ipenga captures the tuba player of a local church group as he parades through the streets one Sunday morning.
“For a family to pay $25 a month to rent a violin or take responsibility for a $2,000 tuba, it’s not going to happen for most students, right?” he said.
I kept telling them, “The tuba is the hook.”
My earliest memories of the tuba were growing up hearing Texas Southern University’s marching band.
Born Brian Keith Flowers, he got his first taste for music in the Royal Air Force in the 1950s, where he served for nine years as a bandsman playing the tuba.
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