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charango
[chuh-rang-goh]
noun
plural
charangosa small South American guitar made from the shell of an armadillo or similar animal and having two to five strings.
Word History and Origins
Origin of charango1
Example Sentences
A major element was traditional musical styles and instruments from all over the world: an Andean guitar-like charango, a Middle Eastern flute called a ney.
In “Ritmos Anchinos,” written for the Silk Road Ensemble, a Chinese pipa takes on the guise of a charango, a Peruvian mandolin.
Fireworks burst at the end of a ceremony that also included performers dressed as hunters, fishermen and warriors, a parade of athletes from the 41 competing countries, and a woman who played a tiny Andean guitar known as the charango.
SACABA, Bolivia — Julia Flores Colque still sings with joy in her indigenous Quechua tongue and strums the five strings of a tiny Andean guitar known as the charango, despite a recorded age of almost 118 years.
Balún, a band from Puerto Rico, sometimes used a reggaeton beat, but it was also ready to layer on deep electronic bass tones, the quick strumming of the small Andean guitar called a charango, pealing rock guitars and ethereal soprano vocals, adding up to songs full of positive aspirations.
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