Synonym: cornet, horn, trump. Similar words: trumpets, trump, imperfect competition, grumpy, rumpled, crumple, jumper, bumped. Meaning: ['trʌmpɪt] n. a brass musical instrument with a brilliant tone; has a narrow tube and a flared bell and is played by means of valves. v. 1. proclaim on, or as if on, a trumpet 2. play or blow on the trumpet 3. utter in trumpet-like sounds.
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(31) Franco had classical piano lessons for eight years until he was sixteen, and was self-taught on trumpet from seventeen.
(32) I don't want to blow my own trumpet, but it was me who came up with the idea for the project in the first place.
(33) Most trumpet players now possess a small trumpet in D which much facilitates the performance of baroque trumpet parts.
(34) She wonders what it is called and asks Zampano if he will teach her to play it on the trumpet.
(35) The actor Anthony Quinn has reminisced about his playing trumpet in the pit band.
(36) Louis Armstrong and Bunny Berigan may have been trumpet talents of a similar mettle but there the resemblance stopped.
(37) Less obvious rock fare was pulled over to the jazz side by trumpet legend Miles Davis.
(38) Tonight, he could have shouted through the streets, blown a trumpet, waved a banner.
(39) I had the good sense to let go of the trumpet case and try and keep rolling out of range.
(40) The fizzing guitars were joined by a trumpet and violin, contributing to the sombre mood.
(41) She placed the record on the turntable and the muted trumpet of Jonah Jones softly assailed the room.
(42) An old-fashioned kind of hearing aid was called an ear trumpet.
(43) Clinton was playing trumpet in his high school band when Dole was matching wits against the lions of the Congress.
(44) A white plaster trumpet vase joins the white plaster face chair on set.
(45) He did not stop playing the trumpet or taking singing lessons.
(46) The D trumpet has been increasingly used by modern composers, notably Britten.
(47) It's easier to whisper your feelings than to trumpet them forth out loud. Anne Frank
(48) An angel hovered over their heads, blowing a yellow trumpet.
(49) And I got my first lessons from a trumpet player. Sentencedict.com
(50) Gillespie's cheeks puffed out as he blew into his bent-bell trumpet.
(51) Alternate them, next row up, with trumpet daffodils or papery-fine narcissi.
(52) One of the pieces is a jazz concerto by the legendary trumpet player Harry James.
(53) Once, the King sent a herald with banner, trumpet and tabard, to invite the captain of Famagusta to surrender.
(54) If trumpet girl was your only prospect of a date wouldn't you see Wellard in a warmer light?
(55) I don't like to blow my own trumpet but My Better Half could eat it to a band playing.
(56) Allen's trumpet solo rather puts his leader in the shade.
(57) Below mezzo-forte, 1 horn is sufficient to compete successfully with 1 trumpet or 1 trombone.
(58) Gordy started blowing on the trumpet in rhythm with her cries.
(59) The remaining 14 selections are equally familiar baroque trumpet fare and they are all articulated with dazzling clarity and enthusiasm.
(60) On top of all that, he played the trumpet with all the skill of a modern-day Joshua!
More similar words: trumpets, trump, imperfect competition, grumpy, rumpled, crumple, jumper, bumped, lumpen, dumped, slumped, compete, antrum, scrumptious, impetus, nostrum, rostrum, tantrum, competent, plectrum, spectrum, competency, competence, competitor, incompetent, impetuous, colostrum, competition, competitive, instrument.