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horn |
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hornBroad term for hardened processes on the heads of some members of order Artiodactyla: deer, antelopes, cattle, goats, and sheep; and the rhinoceroses in order Perissodactyla. They are used usually for sparring rather than serious fighting, often between members of the same species rather than against predators. The structure of horn shows immense variation, some being primarily made of bone, as in the antlers of deer; others of the substance called horn, as in cattle or antelopes; and others of compressed hair, as in rhinoceroses. Antlers are usually shed and regrown every year, while true horns are grown for life. In most horned species they are possessed by both sexes, but in some species horns are limited to males. hornMember of a family of lip-reed wind instruments used for signalling and ritual, and sharing features of a generally conical bore (although the orchestral horn is of part conical and part straight bore) and curved shape, producing a pitch of rising or variable inflection. Many horns are based on animal horns, for example the shofar of Hebrew ritual and the medieval oliphant and gemshorn, and shells, for example the conch shell of Pacific island peoples. Horns made of metal originated in South America and also Central Asia (Tibet, India, Nepal), and reached Europe along with the technology of metalwork in the Bronze Age. The familiar hunting horn, unchanged for many centuries, was adapted and enlarged in the 18th century to become an orchestral instrument, its limited range of natural harmonics extended by a combination of lip technique and hand stopping within the bell and the use of extension crooks for changes of key. The modern valve horn is a 19th-century hybrid B flat/F instrument; the name French horn strictly applies to the earlier cor à pistons which uses lever-action rotary valves and produces a lighter tone. The Wagner tuba is a horn variant in tenor and bass versions devised by Wagner to provide a fuller horn tone in the lower range. Composers for horn include Mozart, Haydn, Richard Strauss, Weber, Schumann (Konzertstück for four horns, 1848), Ravel, and Benjamin Britten (Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings, 1943). How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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