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French horn

American  

noun

French horns plural
  1. a musical brass wind instrument with a long, coiled tube having a conical bore and a flaring bell.


French horn British  

noun

  1. music a valved brass instrument with a funnel-shaped mouthpiece and a tube of conical bore coiled into a spiral. It is a transposing instrument in F. Range: about three and a half octaves upwards from B on the second leger line below the bass staff See horn

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

French horn Cultural  
  1. A mellow-sounding brass instrument, pitched lower than a trumpet and higher than a tuba.


Other Word Forms

Noun Inflected Forms

Etymology

Origin of French horn

First recorded in 1735–45

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Example Sentences

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Working his acoustic guitar with a French horn accompaniment — French horns! — he dares us to balance our relentless socioeconomic drive with our deep need to hang out, to while away the hours.

From Salon Mar. 6, 2026

Loris Amiga, French horn, agreed: “We will stand firm for as long as it takes.”

From The Wall Street Journal Feb. 19, 2026

He played the French horn to get a college scholarship, but found he didn’t want to play in orchestras for the rest of his life.

From MarketWatch Feb. 9, 2026

It was a summer day in 2020, a peak of the coronavirus pandemic, and Mr. Milando, a French horn player, had been driving through a locked-down, emptied-out Times Square.

From New York Times Mar. 12, 2024

The Ring also called for the invention of subsequently dubbed 'Wagner tubas, a hybrid that combined elements of the French horn, trombone and euphonium.

From "The Story of Music" by Howard Goodall

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