Oboe 
The Double-Reed Instrument May Be A Soprano-Ranged, Double Reed Device Of The Wood Family Made Of A Wood Tube Roughly Sixty Cm Long, With Metal Keys, A Cone like Bore And Flaring Bell. Sound Is Created By processing Into The Reed And Vibratory A Column Of Air. The Distinctive Double-Reed Instrument Tone Is Flexible, And Has Been Delineate As "Bright".
The Double-Reed Instrument May Be A Soprano-Ranged, Double Reed Device Of The Wood Family Made Of A Wood Tube Roughly Sixty Cm Long, With Metal Keys, A Cone like Bore And Flaring Bell. Sound Is Created By processing Into The Reed And Vibratory A Column Of Air. The Distinctive Double-Reed Instrument Tone Is Flexible, And Has Been Delineate As "Bright".
In English, Before 1770, The Instrument Was Known As "Hautbois" (French Compound Word Made From Haut ("High, Loud") And Bois ("Wood, Woodwind"),
"Hoboy", Or "French Hoboy". The Writing System "Oboe" Was Adopted Into English Ca. 1770 From The Italian Oboè,
A Written Text Therein Language's Writing System Of The 17th-Century Pronunciation Of The
French Name.
A Musician UN Agency Plays The Double-Reed Instrument Is Named Associate Degree Instrumentalist.
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