Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Concertina
Conˊcer-ti′na
,Noun.
[From It.
concerto
a concert.] A small musical instrument on the principle of the accordion. It is a small elastic box, or bellows, having free reeds on the inside, and keys and handles on the outside of each of the two hexagonal heads.
Definition 2024
concertina
concertina
English
Noun
concertina (plural concertinas)
- (music) A musical instrument, like the various accordions, that is a member of the free-reed family of musical instruments, typically having buttons on both ends.
- 1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, chapter 8, in Mr. Pratt's Patients:
- That concertina was a wonder in its way. The handles that was on it first was wore out long ago, and he'd made new ones of braided rope yarn. And the bellows was patched in more places than a cranberry picker's overalls.
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- Something resembling a concertina, such as a folded book, a bus door or a set of picture frames that are folded together.
- Coiled barbed wire for use as an obstacle.[1]
- A type of booklet label, consisting of up to 32 pages of booklet as an insert.
Derived terms
- concertinist
- concertina book
- concertina frame
Translations
the musical instrument
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Verb
concertina (third-person singular simple present concertinas, present participle concertinaing, simple past and past participle concertinaed)
- to become compressed into a shape reminiscent of a concertina
- The car concertinaed into the wall.
- 2012, Amy Schoeman, Skeleton Coast, page ii
- Millions of years ago the mica schists surrounding the old Brandberg West Mine became folded and concertinaed by enormous horizontal pressures.
- to be drawn closer and farther apart repeatedly, or up and down, as if situated on a working concertina's folds
- 2007, David W Cameron, 25 April 1915: The Day the Anzac Legend Was Born, page 36
- This resulted in some fragmentation of the line as the boats in some cases closed to just 50 metres as they concertinaed in and out of sight of each other.
- 2007, David W Cameron, 25 April 1915: The Day the Anzac Legend Was Born, page 36
See also
References
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- ↑ Webster's New Dictionary And Thesaurus, Geddes & Grosset Ltd., New Lanark, Scotland 1990