What's the difference between clarinet and clarion?

Clarinet


Definition:

  • (n.) A wind instrument, blown by a single reed, of richer and fuller tone than the oboe, which has a double reed. It is the leading instrument in a military band.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The clarinet and trumpet versions were best discriminated in isolated contexts, with discrimination progressively worse in single-voice and multivoice patterns.
  • (2) commisure of lips and differences were found depending on the parts being studied and the sound played on the clarinet.
  • (3) An embouchure aid was constructed as a means of bringing relief to the many clarinet and saxophone players who suffer chronic lip irritation as the result of playing their instruments.
  • (4) Gardner recorded and engineered Cabinet of Curiosities at his Shadow Shoppe Studio in Holland, playing every instrument himself save the drums, having mastered recorder, clarinet, bass, guitar, keyboards and violin as a child.
  • (5) In 46 years as a director, he hasn't budged on his position that there's only one response: watch a basketball game, play the clarinet.
  • (6) The subjects don't have identical midline, comparing lower midline to dentofacial midline, when playing, the angle of clarinet to the body was eccentric according to maxillary incisors in frontal cephalo.
  • (7) In case of mandibular prognathism, when playing, the subjects pressed on their teeth with the clarinet.
  • (8) However, measurements of the vocal tract impedance (looking into the mouth) give values an order of magnitude less than the impedances of the clarinet air column resonances.
  • (9) His most recent UK productions have been a staged clarinet concerto and a collaboration with video artist Bill Viola on an acclaimed version of Tristan und Isolde.
  • (10) Three instrumental timbres were tested in all contexts: clarinet, trumpet, and bassoon.
  • (11) Concerning the lateral cephalo, we noticed that the angle of the clarinet in relation to the body axis increased in accordance with the prognathism and decreased with the retrognathism.
  • (12) I locked myself up for six weeks and listened to the music over and over, forcing myself to try to understand what each clarinet and trumpet, each wacky drum beat was saying.
  • (13) Advances in musical instrument manufacture--particularly the development of the concert piano and the clarinet--may have played a part in the prevalence of overuse syndrome in musicians.
  • (14) Bush disseminated a new web video on Saturday entitled Judgement [sic], which uses a whimsical clarinet soundtrack and interview lowlights to portray Trump as a clownish figure not suited to the grave responsibilities of the presidency.
  • (15) For the particular multiphonics analyzed, the correlation dimension ranges from 2.5 to 2.9 for the saxophone and from 1.3 to 2.2 for the clarinet.
  • (16) For the saxophone and clarinet multiphonics investigated, the two basis frequencies of the biperiodic spectrum are phase locked, that is, their ratio is equal to a ratio of small integers.
  • (17) The purpose of this experiment is to understand the influence of playing the clarinet on the dentomaxillofacial morphology and function.
  • (18) The rising clarinet opener conjures up New York in full heat.
  • (19) His Sonata for Oboe and Clarinet, inspired by a Kurt Schwitters poem, was heard at the Aeolian Hall in London, while his Sonatina for Piano had been performed in New York.
  • (20) Pain in the regular school was most often attributed to writing, whereas in the music school it was associated with the playing of all instruments, but most particularly with cello, clarinet, and flute.

Clarion


Definition:

  • (n.) A kind of trumpet, whose note is clear and shrill.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Luleå’s Clarion Sense Hotel was my base for the night and before venturing out for some evening reconnaissance I checked out its Skybar restaurant – for some surprisingly tender reindeer, and sea buckthorn sorbet.
  • (2) The next few days may well determine whether, this time, such loyalty will be in vain; but, while yearning for a clarion call and what was described as "vision" in this paper's leading article yesterday, I need to pose some pretty stark questions to Guardian readers.
  • (3) The Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator's bosses at Marvel are also bringing sequels to Thor and Captain America to the big screen over the next year, a fact which would also appear to clash with Whedon's clarion call for originality.
  • (4) A clarion call for change may arise, when Rolnik announces her preliminary findings in London on Wednesday.
  • (5) There are other banks out there and it’s really simple to make the switch.” Maria McCaffery, chief executive of RenewableUK said: “This report should act as a clarion call to the government to ensure that we’re not backing the wrong horse, and the UK should be committing to further investment in low carbon technologies.
  • (6) The first Clarion recipient has recently been implanted at UCSF, initiating the Clarion's investigational clinical trials.
  • (7) The European court's decision in the el-Masri case is a clarion call for accountability for the flagrantly illegal CIA rendition program.
  • (8) So let us turn from Cameron's bold clarion call for the big society in the Observer to another story in the Mail on Sunday .
  • (9) Taxation is also a clarion call for NGOs, many of which met over the weekend to agree their positions before meeting with members of the UN panel.
  • (10) The president's support for the mosque was welcomed by New York City's mayor, Michael Bloomberg,, who described Obama's speech as a "clarion defence of the freedom of religion".
  • (11) Let the images of these people be our clarion call.
  • (12) Barack Obama delivered the most impassioned speech of his presidency on Sunday night, addressing the grieving families of Newtown , Connecticut with words of comfort while delivering a clarion call to the nation that enough was enough and that the "carnage" of mass shootings must end.
  • (13) This year's PPA conference was optimistically titled Re-invented, an apt clarion call given the number of printed magazines sold in the UK has plummeted from 1.21bn in 2007 to 781m last year.
  • (14) The living embodiment of John Waters' clarion casting-call for "faces that startle, not soothe", actor Ron Perlman has the hardest-working face in show-business.
  • (15) But it was the clarion call of his voice and his capacity for glacial irony that, on stage, allowed him to shake hands with greatness.
  • (16) It's I think a clarion call to industry to make sure they take a great deal of care in their drilling practices," said Steve Jones with the Wyoming Outdoor Council.
  • (17) In this letter, the "automatic" moral and intellectual decay of "left brain" modern society was predicted, and a clarion call for the reinsertion of "whole brain" values into our over-mechanized culture was sounded.
  • (18) When the news reached Belfast’s Northern Star, a newspaper of the republican Society of United Irishmen, they said of Scots Wha Hae: “Originally a clarion call for Scottish radicals in the political circumstances of 1794, but now a call to rebellion in the Ulster of 1796.” So how would Burns have voted on 18 September?
  • (19) We fought hard to keep tackling extreme poverty as the clarion call for the world.
  • (20) Bernie Sanders , the Vermont senator whose clarion warnings on climate change and full-throated calls for banking reforms have made him a favorite among progressives, plans on Thursday to announce that he will challenge Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination for US president, his advisers have indicated.

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