- The
cittern or
cithren (Fr. cistre, It. cetra, Ger. Cister, Sp. cistro, cedra, cítola) is a
stringed instrument dating from the Renaissance.
Modern scholars...
- inhumanity,
especially when they
involve irregulars, but this is
rarely cither premeditated or systemic. The
German campaign in the
Soviet Union was both...
- grammar, glamor, grimoire; δίσκος discus: disc, dish, dais, and desk; κιθάρα
cither: guitar, zither, gittern, cittern, etc.; κρύπτη crypt: grotto, (under)croft;...
- classics. van Gulik, R.H. (1951). "Brief Note on the Cheng, the
Chinese Small Cither". Toyo
Ongaku Kenkyu: The
Journal of the
Society for the
Research of Asiatic...
-
parts of the apparatus'under each car. The
apparatus is
applicable for
cither direct current or
alternating current motors. Also
called Westinghouse electro-pneumatic...
- sense,
showing that they must be
esteemed to have lost
their sense, who
cither pursuing abundance, or
fearing lack of
temporal goods, lose
those which...
- ages. The "Zhetigen" ("Seven strings")
could be seen as a
member of the
cither family,
finding equivalents in China, with the
strings being divided each...
- both
named Thitis of whom one of them
distinguished as "best
known for her
cither". The
sisters receive the
dying Arthur from Taliesin,
delivered to them...
- was an
Irish luthier who
introduced a type of
bowed psaltery known as the
cither viol or sultana. He is
regarded as one of Ireland's most
influential violin...
- was
regarded as
excellent and comprehensive. He
learned how to
handle a
cither, to play the flute, and to dance, and,
while exercising in the gymnasium...