Ontify

⌘S

Bagpipe

Pipes

Reed wind instrument which in its commonest forms consists of a chanter and one or more drones, all supplied with air from the bag, which is compressed under the player’s arm to provide a constant pressure.

Wikipedia logo

Wikipedia | Bagpipes

Statements about Bagpipe

Commons Gallery

Bagpipes

Described by Source

Vlastenský Slovník Historický
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q23903780
Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q24370475
Riemann's Music Dictionary
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q27773582
Encyclopædia Britannica Ninth Edition
Statement Is Subject Of
:
EB-9 / Bagpipe
Encyclopædia Britannica 11th Edition
Statement Is Subject Of
:
EB-11 / Bag-Pipe
Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q24004312
Metropolitan Museum of Art Tagging Vocabulary
(5/7/2021)
Subject Named As
:Bagpipes
Point in Time
: 5/7/2021
Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q107120584
Small Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
Statement Is Subject Of
:
Q24765978

Image

Audio

Used By

Bagpiper

Said to Be the Same As

Volynka

Different From

Dudy

Subclass Of

Double Reed Instrument

Instance Of

Type of Musical Instrument

Has List

List of Bagpipes

Depicted By

IOP 1951 Episode 45
Powered byWikidataWikidata

External Pages About Bagpipe

U.S. National Archives Identifier

U.S. National Archives

BabelNet ID

BabelNet

Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID

Encyclopædia Britannica Online

Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID

Encyclopædia Britannica Online

Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID

Encyclopædia Britannica Online

KBpedia ID

KBpedia

Fandom article ID

Fandom Article

Fandom article ID

Fandom Article

Fandom article ID

Fandom Article

Fandom article ID

Fandom Article

WordNet 3.1 Synset ID

WordNet 3.1 Synset

subreddit

Subreddit

BBC Things ID

BBC Things

Dewey Decimal Classification

Dewey Decimal Classification

Dewey Decimal Classification

Dewey Decimal Classification