bagpipe

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The meaning (definition) of the word bagpipe
a Scottish music maker with pipes and a puffy air bag tucked under the arm
The word bagpipe used in a sentence
“A man played loud music on his bagpipe.”
The plural of the word bagpipe
bagpipes
How the word bagpipe is said around the world
| French | cornemuse |
| Spanish | cornamusa |
| Mandarin | 风笛 |
| Hindi | मशक बाजा |
| Arabic | مزمار القربة |
| Russian | волынка |
| Portuguese (EU) | gaita de foles |
| Portuguese (BR) | gaita de foles |
| Japanese | バグパイプ |
| German | Dudelsack |
| Urdu | بیگ پائپ |
| Punjabi | ਬੈਗਪਾਈਪ |
| Korean | 풍적 |
| Hebrew | חֵמַת חֲלִילִים |
| Greek | γκάιντα |
| Dutch | doedelzak |
| Filipino | bagpipe |
| Vietnamese | kèn túi |
| Turkish | gayda |
| Persian | نی انبان |
| Polish | dudy |
| Ukrainian | волинка |
| Bengali | ব্যাগপাইপ |
| Swedish | säckpipa |
| Italian | cornamusa |
Learn bagpipe with pictures, sound and writing practice
Hear bagpipe spoken aloud, trace how it is written, and explore it in 25 languages in the Little Wordsmiths dictionary.
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