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viola's and bow
The viola's less responsive strings and the heavier bow warrant a somewhat different bowing technique, and a violist has to lean more intensely on the strings.

viola's and than
A full-size viola's body is between and longer than the body of a full-size violin ( i. e., between ), with an average length of.

viola's and which
Following the introduction on the flutes and clarinets, we are given the pure oboe's melody figurated by the viola's tender decorations, which expresses Gretchen's virginal innocence.

viola's and is
The viola's four strings are normally tuned in fifths: the lowest string is C3 ( an octave below middle C ), with G3, D4 and A4 above it.

bow and has
* The German-designed bow anchor, Bügelanker ( or Wasi ), has a sharp tip for penetrating weed, and features a roll-bar which allows the correct setting attitude to be achieved without the need for extra weight to be inserted into the tip.
A recurve crossbow is a bow that has tips curving away from the archer.
The compound bow has the string attached to the pulleys, one or both of which has one or more cables attached to the opposite limb.
In comparison with the French bow, the German bow has a taller frog, and it is held with the palm angled upwards, as is done for the upright members of the viol family.
In many situations, the standing bow has replaced the kowtow.
They have a ruff under the neck, which has black bars, is not very visible, and resembles a bow tie.
Traditionally it has been argued that prior to the beginning of the 14th century, the weapon was a self bow between four and five feet in length, known since the 19th century as the shortbow.
It has been proposed that the broad spectrum revolution of Kent Flannery ( 1969 ), associated with microliths, the use of the bow and arrow, and the domestication of the dog, all of which are associated with these cultures, may have been the cultural " motor " that led to their expansion.
The stone has an arcuated ( bow ) shape.
The trop shell consists of three people where the bow has a pair of sculling oars, and 2, 3 each a sweeping oar.
The technique of using a slide on a string has been traced to one-stringed African instruments similar to a " Diddley bow ".
The " frog " ( which holds the bowhair and adjusts its tension ) is also different from that of modern bows: whereas a violin bow frog has a " slide " ( often made of mother of pearl ), which pinches the hair and holds it flat and stationary across the frog, viol bows have an open frog that allows more movement of the hair.
The bow has a ground floor double staircase leading to a Ionic colonnaded loggia ( with the Truman Balcony at second-floor level ), known as the south portico.
As a representative of the National Rifle Association ( NRA ) explained, " he NRA has always maintained that fair chase, being in the field with your firearm or bow, is an important element of hunting tradition.
If the dressage rider has long hair, it is typically worn in a bun with a hair net or show bow.
However, most traditional bows are not center-shot and the arrow has to deflect around the handle in the archer's paradox ; such bows tend to give most consistent results with a narrower range of arrow spine that allows the arrow to deflect correctly around the bow.
Menorquí also has a few English loan words dating back to the British occupation such as " grevi ", " xumaquer ", " boinder " and " xoc " taken from " gravy ", " shoemaker ", " bow window " and " chalk ", respectively.
* Baleog's bow and arrow has been replaced with a bionic arm which can smash enemies from distance.
The viola d ' amore usually has six or seven playing strings, which are sounded by drawing a bow across them, just as with a violin.
The compound bow has its string applied to pulleys ( cams ), and one or both of the pulleys have one or more cables attached to the opposite limb.

bow and wider
Using two anchors set approximately 45 ° apart, or wider angles up to 90 °, from the bow is a strong mooring for facing into strong winds.
Because these don't have wider fingerboards, some players find them more difficult to finger and bow.
It is common for some players to use a wider and more intense vibrato in the left hand, facilitated by employing the fleshier pad of the finger rather than the tip, and to hold the bow and right arm further away from the player's body.
In the 1950s, colored and patterned jackets, cummerbunds and bow ties and narrow lapels became very popular ; the 1960s and 1970s saw the color palette move from muted to bright day-glow and pastel, as well as ruffled-placket shirts as lapels got wider and piping was revived.
Chinese junks carried cannon as well as other weapons unfavoured in the West but because of their construction and wider beam ends, were not as vulnerable to being fired on at the bow and stern as European ships were, and as a result there was no impetus to develop similar tactics.
In the 1860s, men started wearing wider neckties that were tied in a bow or looped into a loose knot and fastened with a stickpin.
The hair ( on the Cramer bow ) is wider than the Corelli model but still narrower than a Tourte, the screw mechanism becomes standard, and more sticks are made from pernambuco, rather than the earlier snakewood, ironwood, and china wood, which were often fluted for a portion of the length of the stick.
Undoubtedly the emphasis on cantabile, especially the long drawn out and evenly sustained phrase, required a generally longer bow and also a somewhat wider ribbon of hair.
Shirts of linen or cotton featured high upstanding or turnover collars, and neckties grew wider and were tied in a bow or looped into a loose knot and fastened with a stickpin.
The bow drill uses the same principle as the hand drill ( friction by rotation of wood on wood ), but the spindle is shorter, wider ( about the size of a human's thumb ) and driven by a bow, which allows longer strokes.
In a flatbow, the flat belly and back ensures that all of the most highly strained material is a uniform distance from the neutral axis, spreading the load over a wider limb, minimizing stress and making weaker woods far less likely to fail ( break or become permanently bent and lose the springiness needed in a bow ).
Compared to a narrow, rounded longbow design, the bowyer needs to start with a wider stave, take more time to achieve an approximately-rectangular cross-section, and may need to cut through growth rings on the back of the bow.

bow and band
Johnson claimed to have started " slapping " the strings of his bass ( a more vigorous technique than the classical pizzicato ) after he accidentally broke his bow on the road with his band in northern Louisiana in the early 1910s.
For the Arcadia incarnation of their ever-changing band aesthetic, Le Bon, Rhodes, and Roger Taylor donned an upmarket ' gothic ' look of black tuxedos, vintage formal wear, and bow ties.
At the end of the concert, Cornell took a bow with the band along with Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains.
By June 1969, in the section where Page plays guitar with a violin bow, the rest of the band dropped out completely, allowing him to perform a lengthier free-form improvisation, though by January 1970, the main structure of the section was already formed.
Ready-tied bow ties are available, in which the distinctive bow is sewn into shape and the band around the neck incorporates a clip.
A derecho ( from Spanish: " derecho " meaning " straight ") is a widespread and long-lived, violent convectively induced straight-line windstorm that is associated with a fast-moving band of severe thunderstorms usually taking the form of a bow echo.
After the hat has fully dried, the brim is curled and bound with silk grosgrain ribbon, and a hat band ( either silk grosgrain with or without a bow, or a black wool mourning band without a bow ) is installed.
For the song " Living Without You ", the band was brought out wearing white zoot suit dinner jackets with red velvet bow ties.
In 1993, the Yale-Harvard halftime show included the " assassination " of the Energizer Bunny ( a bass drum player ) -- the band formed a forty-yard bow and arrow, and " shot " the arrow at the Bunny.
By the time he made it to New York in 1955, he had progressed from a " diddly bow " made from a cigar box and an elastic band to a Fender Telecaster and Standel amplifier.
This interlude consisted of approximately fifteen to twenty minutes during the dance when John dressed in a black suit, white shirt and black bow tie, would join with the band on stage and sing such romantic songs as " Have you ever been lonely " the popular Jim Reeves song " He'll have to go " and others.

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