English
Etymology
From earlier bagpipe, from Middle English bagpipe; equivalent to bag + pipes.
Pronunciation
Noun
bagpipes pl (normally plural, singular bagpipe)
- A musical wind instrument possessing a flexible bag inflated by bellows, a double-reed melody pipe and up to four drone pipes; any aerophone that produces sound using air from a reservoir to vibrate enclosed reeds.
Bagpipes are traditionally played in most Celtic regions and many former parts of the British Empire.
2005, Jennifer Worth, Shadows of the Workhouse, Weidenfeld & Nicholson (2009), page 250:“Iʼll tell you something: there is nothing in the world like the sound of the bagpipes to raise a manʼs morale, to lift his spirits, and give him strength.”
Synonyms
- (musical wind instrument): bagpipe, pipes; the pipes (usually Scottish)
Meronyms
- (musical wind instrument): mouthpiece, neck, chanter, chanter reed, chanter reed protector, bass drone, tenor drone
Derived terms
Translations
musical wind instrument
- Arabic: مِزْمَار اَلْقِرْبَة m (mizmār al-qirba), قِرْبَة f (qirba)
- Armenian: պարկապզուկ (hy) (parkapzuk)
- Asturian: gaita (ast) f
- Belarusian: валы́нка f (valýnka)
- Breton: biniou (br)
- Bulgarian: га́йда (bg) f (gájda)
- Catalan: cornamusa (ca) f, gaita (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 風笛 / 风笛 (zh) (fēngdí)
- Cornish: pibow sagh
- Czech: dudy (cs) pl
- Danish: sækkepibe
- Dutch: doedelzak (nl) m
- Esperanto: sakŝalmo
- Estonian: torupill, sikupill (archaic)
- Faroese: sekkjapípa f
- Finnish: säkkipilli (fi)
- French: cornemuse (fr) f
- Galician: gaita (gl) f
- Georgian: გუდასტვირი (gudasṭviri)
- German: Dudelsack (de) m, Sackpfeife (de) f
- Greek: γκάιντα (el) f (gkáinta)
- Hebrew: חֵמֶת חֲלִילִים (he) pl (ḥémet ḥalilím)
- Hindi: बैगपाइप (baigpāip)
- Hungarian: duda (hu)
- Icelandic: sekkjapípa f
- Ido: kornamuzo (io)
- Ingrian: rakkopilli
- Irish: píb f, píb mhála f
- Italian: cornamusa (it) f, zampogna (it) f, pive f
- Japanese: バグパイプ (ja) (bagupaipu)
- Kazakh: желбуаз (jelbuaz)
- Korean: 백파이프 (baekpaipeu)
- Latvian: dūdas, somas stabules f pl
- Lithuanian: dūdmaišis f
- Luxembourgish: Duddelsak (lb)
- Macedonian: гајда (mk) f (gajda)
- Malay: begpaip
- Maori: pūngawī
- Mirandese: gaita de fuolhes
- Nahuatl: ehuatlapitzalli
- Norman: pouque à vent f
- Norwegian: sekkepipe m or f
- Ottoman Turkish: غایده (gâyda), طولوم (tulum)
- Persian: نیانبان
- Polish: dudy (pl) pl
- Portuguese: gaita de foles (pt) f
- Romanian: cimpoi (ro) n, cimpoaie f, gaidă (ro) f
- Russian: волы́нка (ru) f (volýnka)
- Scottish Gaelic: pìob f, (Scottish) pìob-mhòr f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: дуде f, гајде f
- Roman: dude (sh) f, gajde (sh) f
- Slovak: gajdy (sk) f pl
- Slovene: dude (sl) f pl
- Spanish: gaita (es) f
- Swahili: bagpipes, gaida
- Swedish: säckpipa (sv) c
- Tagalog: gayta
- Turkish: gayda (tr)
- Ukrainian: воли́нка f (volýnka)
- Vietnamese: kèn túi
- Welsh: pibgod (cy) f
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References
See also