Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "It's typically played indoors ", 11 letters:
harpsichord

Alternative clues for the word harpsichord

Word definitions for harpsichord in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But Marcos chooses to stay behind the harpsichord and leggy ficus. ▪ It is impossible to fault the engineering on L'Oiseau-Lyre's disc of Bach works for harpsichord played by Christophe Rousset. ▪ Mention must be made here of ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Harpsichord \Harp"si*chord\ (-k[^o]rd), n. [OF. harpechorde, in which the harpe is of German origin. See Harp , and Chord .] (Mus.) A harp-shaped instrument of music set horizontally on legs, like the grand piano, with strings of wire, played by the fingers, ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a clavier with strings that are plucked by plectra mounted on pivots [syn: cembalo ]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1610s, from French harpechorde "harp string," from Modern Latin harpichordium (source also of Italian arpicordo ), from harpa (see harp (n.)) + chorda "string" (see cord ). The -s- is unexplained, but it is attested in the earliest English forms.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A harpsichord is a musical instrument played by means of a keyboard . It produces sound by plucking a string when a key is pressed. "Harpsichord" designates the whole family of similar plucked keyboard instruments, including the smaller virginals , muselar ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (context musici English) An instrument with a piano-like keyboard, which produces sound by plucking the strings

Usage examples of harpsichord.

Observing that she delighted in music, he betook himself to the study of that art, and, by dint of application and a tolerable ear, learned of himself to accompany her with a German flute, while she sung and played upon the harpsichord.

Erard, the son of a Strasbourg upholsterer, went to Paris, a poor orphan of sixteen, in the year 1768, and, finding employment in the establishment of a harpsichord-maker, rose rapidly to the foremanship of the shop, and was soon in business for himself as a maker of harpsichords, harps, and pianos.

At these words, Catinella, laughing heartily, said that she regretted the accident because it would deprive her friends of the pleasure they would have enjoyed in hearing me play the harpsichord.

I had even run into a harpsichordist who was relentlessly assembling ensembles so she could eventually say she had played the harpsichord part in every one of the 1500 cantatas Allesandro Scarlatti composed.

I left Dresden soon after that, bidding adieu to my mother, to my brother Francois, and to my sister, then the wife of Pierre Auguste, chief player of the harpsichord at the Court, who died two years ago, leaving his widow and family in comfortable circumstances.

She therefore not only desired to be excused from her attendance at the harpsichord, but likewise begged that he would suffer her to absent herself from supper.

The lights flickered over the machines, copper and ruby, to arpeggios recalling harpsichords.

And those men who wer supposed to come last week to move the harpsichord dow from the attic--they arrived, but one of them sprained his bac so we had to shove it in the boxroom.

But she became another piece of human flotsam before I could tell her the harpsichord was stuck in the boxroom.

The harpsichord, from which she hadliberated that beautiful tune, looked alive now it had been playedupon, but the chessmen and the workbox were still frozen.

Around the time Star began placing her son into foster care, Suki experimentally married a harpsichord player in the Albertus Music Department and moved to Popham, Ohio, where her husband had been appointed artist in residence at an obscure liberal arts college.

There are the baby grands, similar in shape and dimensions to an harpsichord, that require, for a perfect sound, a larger room, and then there is non plus ultra of instruments, the concert grand, whose sonority makes them perfect for concert halls.

Seating himself at his out-of-tune harpsichord, Arnie opened a book of Scarlatti sonatas and began to bang away at one of his favorites, a cross-hand one on which he had been practicing for months.

The wind off the Chesapeake gains strength, whips the candle flames until they gutter out, sings through the strings of the harpsichord in the dark-now an accidental tune, now a thin scream from long ago.

It had a lot of harps and harpsichords and carillons and xylophones in it.