What's the difference between bagpipe and miskin?

Bagpipe


Definition:

  • (n.) A musical wind instrument, now used chiefly in the Highlands of Scotland.
  • (v. t.) To make to look like a bagpipe.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The phenomenon has been called the "bagpipe" stomach.
  • (2) This is not, perhaps, an essential stop-off on strict craft beer terms, but it is worth seeing for the building and – if such music is your bagpipes - the nightly traditional folk sessions that the Onion hosts with cultural centre An Droichead .
  • (3) About half a dozen of the vocal minority were camped outside the Ineos compound on Tuesday, one playing his own set of bagpipes with impressive flames shooting out of them.
  • (4) The lack of drama – the merciful absence of bagpipes-and-Braveheart-bullshit – at the paper’s launch was quite deliberate.
  • (5) "Paul, as I understand it, the situation with the vuvuzelas is rather as if the World Cup was played in Scotland, and thousands of people bought plastic, imitation bagpipes made in China and played them continually through every match," summarises Alan Cooper. "
  • (6) Gathering outside their tents in the shadow of St Paul's soaring facade, the Occupy London protestors are a motley crowd, with their bagpipes, dogs and earnest discussion groups at the "University of Tent City", but their anger is heartfelt.
  • (7) Hugh Jackman sang Quiet Please, There’s a Lady On Stage at the end of the ceremony and bagpipers from the New York City police department played on the streets as mourners filed out of Temple Emanu-El, many dabbing their eyes.
  • (8) It is an argument, in that case, which might easily, without bagpipes or warriors, appeal to residents of any impoverished and resentful region of the United Kingdom, if only they had the means and a similar certainty that, left to themselves, a more equal society would result.
  • (9) Johnson resolutely declined to emerge from his home to greet a gathering press, a bagpiper in full musical flow, and Kay Burley of Sky News knocking on his door at 4.50am.
  • (10) The latest additions include a Mongolian camel coaxing ritual, bagpipe culture in Slovakia and Tinian marble craftsmanship in Greece.
  • (11) In an interview with the American financial magazine Bloomberg Money Markets, he said that people abroad associate Scotland with 'whisky, tartan, bagpipes, and golf'.
  • (12) Drums and bagpipes were also played during the occupation of the store, which lasted a number of hours.
  • (13) It is not long since Salmond attended the premiere of Pixar's Brave (with its acclaimed bagpipe soundtrack) in tartan trews.
  • (14) Accompanied by the sound of a lone Scottish bagpiper, the Insight slid serenely under the Forth Bridge in the blue dawn light, bound inexorably for Grangemouth.
  • (15) We’ve all said this so many times: The one person who would really think this is the greatest thing ever is the lady who it’s all about and she’s not here,” said Norville afterward, amid the throngs of well-wishers and sound of bagpipes.
  • (16) Bagpipes, of course, have been banned by the tournament organisers.
  • (17) The man was wearing a backpack, top zip tugged open to make room for the bits of bagpipe he had stashed inside.
  • (18) In reality, they were the bagpipes played by Scottish soldiers.
  • (19) But, for now, the spotlight is on McAllister, who marched, Braveheart-style, out of the campaign rally to the CDU's election anthem, a punchy bagpipe rock number whose lyrics include the line: "Our chieftain is a Scot and we are a strong clan."
  • (20) Prince William and the royal party could have been forgiven for not noticing, but there was a part of Quebec that had no intention of welcoming him and his wife, except with whistles, saucepan lids, vuvuzelas and, incongruously, bagpipes.

Miskin


Definition:

  • (n.) A little bagpipe.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Beragam skema dan desain untuk memperbaiki daerah miskin, dengan tidak melakukan penggusuran, telah diajukan.
  • (2) Jol Miskin Sheffield • There are three, not two, credible options for UK membership of the EU.
  • (3) Facebook Twitter Pinterest A Muslim-owned fish shop stands looted in the Miskin district of Bangui.
  • (4) A girl walks through the rubble of demolished Muslim homes in the Miskine district of Bangui.
  • (5) Dalgliesh is a frustrated poet, a graduate capable of the sort of introspection that, for the last three books, has been offset by the more modish preoccupations of kate Miskin.
  • (6) Photograph: Peter Bouckaert Bleasdale said: "Jerome was taking pictures in Miskin, which is the Muslim quarter where Fosso lived – although he's not a Muslim himself.
  • (7) I was concentrating on Dalgliesh, and also by this point had Kate Miskin [Dalgliesh's sidekick], who's very like Cordelia – a gutsy girl from a deprived background.
  • (8) Two of your own advisers, Ruth Miskin, who has been such a stalwart supporter of some of your other ideas, and grammar expert Prof Debra Myhill, of Exeter University, have told you that too.
  • (9) Jol Miskin Sheffield • I see that the governance of schools is to be put exclusively in the hands of those with the “right skills” – thereby leaving out those (parents) with the greatest interest in their proper running.
  • (10) The violence that has left CAR verging on anarchy showed few signs of abating in the Miskine district of the capital, where about a dozen Muslim men with machetes faced off against a group of Christian youths.
  • (11) A photograph by Jerome Delay of a woman running for cover as heavy gunfire erupts in the Miskin district of Bangui on 3 February.
  • (12) James's vehicle is Adam Dalgliesh, a chief inspector on his first outing in Cover Her Face (1962), now a commander at the Met aided by two detectives, Kate Miskin and Piers Tarrant, characters through whom James has tried to modernise her gentle depiction of the police force.
  • (13) For the purposes of balance, Miskin was brought up on a predominantly black council estate in south London after being abandoned by her mother.

Words possibly related to "bagpipe"

Words possibly related to "miskin"