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  2. File:The Whistle- A Poem WDL3388.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_Whistle-_A_Poem...

    Burns had little formal education, but he read English literature and absorbed the traditional, largely oral Scots-language folk songs and tales of his rural environment. He began to compose songs in 1774, and published his first book, Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, in 1786. The work was a critical success, and its poems in both Scots ...

  3. Whistle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whistle

    A party whistle A metal pea whistle. A whistle is a musical instrument which produces sound from a stream of gas, most commonly air. It may be mouth-operated, or powered by air pressure, steam, or other means. Whistles vary in size from a small slide whistle or nose flute type to a large multi-piped church organ.

  4. Whistling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whistling

    An offstage whistle audible to the audience in the middle of a performance might also be considered bad luck. Transcendental whistling ( chángxiào 長嘯) was an ancient Chinese Daoist technique of resounding breath yoga, and skillful whistlers supposedly could summon supernatural beings, wild animals, and weather phenomena.

  5. Whistled language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whistled_language

    Whistled languages are linguistic systems that use whistling as a form of speech and facilitate communication between individuals. More than 80 languages have been found to practice various degrees of whistling, most of them in rugged topography or dense forests, where whistling expands the area of communication while movement to carry messages is challenging. [1]

  6. Fipple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fipple

    That word is used variously to designate the block, the edge, the full block-duct-edge structure, and the entire instrument. This ambiguity is detailed in the article headed Fipple in Grove Music Online , which concludes, "Since nobody can agree what the term means, to avoid further confusion its use should be abandoned."

  7. Transcendental whistling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcendental_whistling

    The Chinese language has two common words meaning "to whistle": xiào 嘯 or 啸 "whistle; howl; roar; wail" and shào 哨 "warble; chirp; whistle; sentry". Word usage of xiào 嘯 (first occurring in the c. 10th century BCE Shijing, below) is historically older than shào 哨 (first in the c. 2nd century BCE Liji describing a pitch-pot's "wry mouth"). [1]

  8. Physics of whistles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physics_of_whistles

    A trailing edge tone occurs when an exterior flow passes over a trailing edge. There is a whistle that is a combination of an edge tone and a trailing-edge tone and might be called a wake-edge tone. It occurs in rotating circular saws under idling conditions and may be called the circular-saw whistle. Under load conditions, blade vibration ...

  9. Lisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp

    A strident lisp results in a high-frequency whistle or hissing sound caused by stream passing between the tongue and the hard surface. In the extensions to the IPA, whistled sibilants are transcribed [s͎] and [z͎].