A small drum with one head of soft calfskin.
Sinônimos
Examples for "tabor"
Examples for "tabor"
1Humble people had folksongs and instruments like the pipe and tabor for dancing.
2Morgiana then held the tabor out to his son, who did the same.
3They are a tabor and pipe that I do not understand.
4Our music consisted of two fiddles, with a pipe and tabor.
5Next came the minstrels, playing merrily on tabor, fife, sacbut, rebec, and tambourine.
1Thou hast also the tabour.
2The sound of pipe, tabour, and psaltery in melodious combination arose from the valley, and all hearts, save one, were happy.
3First of all that of King Rene's band, with tabour, pipes, and tambourines, escorting the "prud' hommes" fishermen dressed in Henri Quatre costumes.
4It was during this interval that Hump-back came half drunk before my shop, where he sung and taboured.
5Then conches, and kettle-drums, and tabours, and large drums, and cymbals, and Dindimas, and Jharjharas, were loudly blown and beaten on all sides!