tabour

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Tabour - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms - Vocabulary.com
a musical percussion instrument; usually consists of a hollow cylinder with a membrane stretched across each end. www.vocabulary.com
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Tabor (instrument) - Wikipedia
A portable snare drum, typically played either with one hand or with two drumsticks. The word "tabor" (formerly sometimes spelt "taber") is an English variant ... en.wikipedia.org
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TABOR Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of TABOR is a small drum with one head of soft calfskin used to accompany a pipe or fife played by the same person. www.merriam-webster.com
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tabour
tabour, -er var. tabor n. and v., taborer. Oxford English Dictionary
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tabour - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
tabour · Contents · English · Cornish. edit. Etymology. edit. From Old French tabour, from Arabic طُنْبُور (ṭunbūr). Pronunciation. edit · IPA: /ˈtabur/. Noun. en.wiktionary.org
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How To Pronounce Tabour - YouTube
Learn how to say Tabour with EmmaSaying free pronunciation tutorials. Improve your English pronunciation with our short tutorials. www.youtube.com
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Taboret
The name is derived from its resemblance to a drum (diminutive of Old French tabour). wikipedia.org
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tabour - Middle English Compendium - University of Michigan
1. (a) A drum; also fig.; ~ skin; (b) a small drum used on a festive occasion, at a revelry, etc.; ~ bete (beting); (c) a larger drum used in a processional. quod.lib.umich.edu
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tabour - American Heritage Dictionary Entry
A small drum, traditionally played with one hand while playing a pipe with the other. [ Middle English tabour, from Old French, variant of tambour; ... ahdictionary.com
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tabour - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder
1. a small drum with one head of soft calfskin [syn: {tabor}, {tabour}] WordNet ® Princeton University. scrabblewordfinder.org
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SND :: tabour - Dictionaries of the Scots Language
TABOUR, v., n. Also tab(b)er. [′tɑbər]. I. v. To beat, belabour, thrash (Fif. c.1850 Peattie MS.; Rxb. 1923 Watson W.-B.; m. and s.Sc. 1972). www.dsl.ac.uk
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TABOR definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
tabor in American English ; noun. 1. a small drum formerly used to accompany oneself on a pipe or fife ; intransitive verb. 2. to play upon or as if upon a tabor; ... www.collinsdictionary.com
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tabor
▪ I. tabor, tabour, n.1 Now rare. (ˈteɪbə(r)) Also 4 tabre, 4–5 tabur, 5 -yr, 5–6 taboure, 4–8 taber, 6–9 tabber. See also taborn. [a. OF. tabur (11th c.), tabour (13–16th c.), beside tanbor, tambur (14–15th c.), tambour (16th c.–) = Pr. tabor, tanbor, Sp. tambor (OSp. atambor), It. tamburo: the rel... Oxford English Dictionary
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Rahonem
She was the director of the female singers and tabour (drum) players in her temple. wikipedia.org
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tabroun
▪ I. † ˈtaborn, tabroun, n. Obs. Forms: 4 taborne, 4–5 taburn(e, 5–6 Sc. taberne, 6 Sc. tabro(u)n, tabberone, 7 tabern, Sc. tabbern; also Sc. 4 tawburn, 5 tawberne, talburn, 6 tau-, tawbron, tawbern, talbrone. [A by-form of tabor, chiefly north. Eng. and Sc., in med.L. tabornum (Du Cange). The inser... Oxford English Dictionary
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