What is another word for pipers?

Pronunciation: [pˈa͡ɪpəz] (IPA)

Pipers are skilled musicians who play wind instruments like the bagpipes, flutes, or recorders. When searching for synonyms for "pipers," many options are available. Some common alternatives include flautists, players of the flutophone, and woodwind players. Other options might include bagpipers, piccolo players, or even brass players like trumpeters or trombonists. Some synonyms that might be less obvious could include musicians who specialize in medieval instruments, such as the hurdy-gurdy or the dulcian, or those who focus on traditional folk music with instruments like the fiddle or the mandolin. Whatever term best suits your needs, there are many talented musicians out there who fit the bill.

What are the paraphrases for Pipers?

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What are the hypernyms for Pipers?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Pipers

Sometimes in the Eden Gardens at sunset, when we draw up to listen to the band, I watch the faces of the youths-Scots boys come out from Glasgow and Dundee-dreaming there in the Indian twilight while the pipers play the tunes familiar to them since childhood.
"Olivia in India"
O. Douglas
"If I were rich," she went on, "I'd live in a castle in the Highlands, and I'd have it full, simply swarming, with pipers, playing me awake in the morning and to sleep at night."
"The Heather-Moon"
C. N. Williamson and A. M. Williamson
There are plenty of pipers there.
"The Heather-Moon"
C. N. Williamson and A. M. Williamson

Famous quotes with Pipers

  • A clock struck out the hour of twelve, and the bird in the hedgerow was still singing as we marched out to the roadway, and followed our merry pipers home to town.
    Patrick MacGill
  • A state of princes; a skulk of friars; a skulk of thieves; an observance of hermits; a lying of pardoners; a subtiltie of serjeants; an untruth of sompners; a multiplying of husbands; an incredibility of cuckolds; a safeguard of porters; a stalk of foresters; a blast of hunters; a draught of butlers; a temperance of cooks; a melody of harpers; a poverty of pipers; a drunkenship of coblers; a disguising of taylors; a wandering of tinkers; a malepertness of pedlars; a fighting of beggars; a rayful, (that is, a netful) of knaves; a blush of boys; a bevy of ladies; a nonpatience of wives; a gagle of women; a gagle of geese; a superfluity of nuns; and a herd of harlots. Similar terms were applied to inanimate things, as a caste of bread, a cluster of grapes, a cluster of nuts, &c.
    Joseph Strutt
  • The people of Sybaris, a city in Calabria, are proverbial on account of their effeminancy; and it is said that they taught their horses to dance to the music of the pipe; for which reason, their enemies the Crotonians, at a time when they were at war with them, brought a great number of pipers into the field, and at the commencement of the battle, they played upon their pipes; the Sybarian horses, hearing the sound of the music, began to dance; and their riders, unable to manage them as they ought to have done, were thrown into confusion, and defeated with prodigious slaughter. This circumstance is mentioned by Aristotle; and, if not strictly true, proves, at least that the teaching of animals to exceed the bounds of action prescribed by nature was not unknown to the ancients.
    Joseph Strutt

Related words: bagpipes, bagpipe players, bagpipe lessons, bagpipe music, play a pipe

Related questions:

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