亚洲网紅露点

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View synonyms for

orchestra

[ awr-kuh-struh ]

noun

  1. a group of performers on various musical instruments, including especially stringed instruments of the viol class, clarinets and flutes, cornets and trombones, drums, and cymbals, for playing music, as symphonies, operas, popular music, or other compositions.
  2. (in a modern theater)
    1. the space reserved for the musicians, usually the front part of the main floor or顎僣hestra pit顎.
    2. the entire main-floor space for spectators.
    3. the parquet.
  3. (in the ancient Greek theater) the circular space in front of the stage, allotted to the chorus.
  4. (in the Roman theater) a similar space reserved for persons of distinction.


orchestra

/ 蓴藧藞k蓻str蓹l; 藞蓴藧k瑟str蓹 /

noun

  1. a large group of musicians, esp one whose members play a variety of different instruments See also symphony orchestra string orchestra chamber orchestra
  2. a group of musicians, each playing the same type of instrument

    a balalaika orchestra

  3. Also calledorchestra pit the space reserved for musicians in a theatre, immediately in front of or under the stage
  4. the stalls in a theatre
  5. (in the ancient Greek theatre) the semicircular space in front of the stage
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

orchestra

  1. A group of musicians who play together on a variety of instruments, which usually come from all four instrument families 鈥 brass , percussion , strings , and woodwinds . A typical symphony orchestra is made up of more than ninety musicians. Most orchestras, unlike chamber music groups, have more than one musician playing each musical part.
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Derived Forms

  • orchestral, adjective
  • 辞谤藞肠丑别蝉迟谤补濒濒测, adverb
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of orchestra1

1590鈥1600; < Latin 辞谤肠丑脓蝉迟谤补 < Greek 辞谤肠丑岣梥迟谤补 the space on which the chorus danced, derivative of 辞谤肠丑别卯蝉迟丑补颈 to dance
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of orchestra1

C17: via Latin from Greek: the space in the theatre reserved for the chorus, from orkheisthai to dance
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The top orchestras in Berlin, Vienna, New York, Munich and elsewhere play popular concerts in parks, often awaking new audiences to their wares.

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To accompany her flamboyant sermons, she employed a brass band, an orchestra and a 100-person choir.

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Musicians at the Welsh National Opera orchestra have accepted a new agreement following a year of negotiations and industrial action.

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The other love of my life is the orchestra and all the amazing things it can do.

From

"I told to the orchestra, 'I'm so happy conducting, but I wish I could be in the middle of the crowd and enjoy the moment,'" Dudamel told Variety magazine ahead of the show.

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Related 亚洲网紅露点s

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Orchestra Vs. Symphony Vs. Philharmonic

What鈥檚 the difference between an orchestra, a symphony, and a philharmonic?

In popular use, orchestra, symphony, and philharmonic are often used interchangeably to refer to a large group of musicians assembled to play music, especially classical music.

The most common (and general) term is orchestra. Most large orchestras include many different instruments and classes of instruments, including strings, woodwinds, brass, and percussion.

The word symphony primarily refers to a complex, multipart musical composition (like Beethoven鈥檚 fifth symphony), but it鈥檚 also a short way of referring to a symphony orchestra鈥攁 large orchestra, the kind that performs symphonies. (Smaller orchestras鈥攖hose with about 25 people鈥攁re often called chamber orchestras). As a noun, the word philharmonic can refer to a symphony orchestra or to the organization that sponsors it (sometimes called a philharmonic society, in which philharmonic is used as an adjective). The word orchestra most commonly refers to the group of musicians, but it can also refer to the space reserved for them, usually the front part of the main floor (sometimes called the orchestra pit).

Both symphony and philharmonic are sometimes used in the names of orchestras, as in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, and the London Philharmonic Orchestra.

Here鈥檚 an example of orchestra, symphony, and philharmonic used correctly in a sentence.

Example: I鈥檝e attended performances of this symphony by the Berlin Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra.聽

Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between orchestra, symphony, and philharmonic.

Quiz yourself on symphony vs. orchestra vs. philharmonic!

Should orchestra, symphony, or philharmonic be used in the following sentence?

Mozart composed this _____ in 1786.

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