-
English word
bugle comes from a
combination of words. From French, it
reaches back to cor
buglèr and bugleret,
indicating a
signaling horn made from a...
-
horn, to
direct the
wings of the hunt.
Military use
dates from the
Seven Years' War,
where this
instrument was emplo**** as a
predecessor of the
bugle...
- is a br****
instrument used in
marching bands and drum and
bugle corps in
place of
French horns. It is a middle-voiced instrument,
typically pitched in the...
- five-ke****
bugle granted to
Yorkshireman Joseph Haliday,
entitled "Halliday's [sic]
Improvements in the
Musical Instrument called the
Bugle Horn." Shortly...
- The
Tenor horn (British English; Alto
horn in
American English,
Althorn in Germany;
occasionally referred to as E♭
horn) is a br****
instrument in the...
- to the UN
Mission to the
Congo in 1962. As a
rifle regiment, it uses a
bugle horn as its insignia, the same as the
British Light Division, but
unlike its...
-
known in
English as a
cowhorn or bullhorn) is an
extremely long
medieval bugle horn. The
instrument could be as much as 3 feet long. It was used from "antiquity"...
-
field of gules.
Later on, the
Princes of
Orange quartered the
legendary bugle-
horn as a
heraldic figure into
their coat of arms. The
lords of
Chalons and...
- and side hat; and on the
shako of the
regimental band and
bugles.
Bugle Horn – the
bugle horn badge of the
Light Infantry, now
surmounted by St. Edward's...
- Donkin: Gules, on a
chevron Argent between two
cinquefoils in
chief and a
bugle horn stringed in base Or,
three buckles Sable; a
chief embattled Argent thereon...