Balalaika is a Russian folk stringed musical instrument. The sound is sonorous, but soft. The most common techniques for extracting sound are: clanking, pizzicato, double pizzicato, single pizzicato, vibrato, tremolo, fractions, guitar techniques. It is curious that the very name of the instrument, typically folk, is the sounding of the wording conveying the character of the game on it. The root of the words "balalaika", or, as it was also called, "balabayka", has long attracted the attention of researchers to kinship with such Russian words as balakat, balabonit, balabolit, joking, which means chattering, ringing (go back to the common Slavonic * bolbol of the same meaning ). All these concepts, complementing each other, convey the essence of the balalaika - an instrument of light, funny, "rapacious", not very serious. Balalaika is one of the tools that have become (along with the harmony and, to a lesser extent, a pity) musical symbol of the Russian people.
1. The Queen likes to read detective stories by Agatha Christie 2. As a child the queen was called Lilibeth, because she could not pronounce Elizabeth properly. 3. The Queen starts her every day with a cup of tea at 7:30 in the morning. 4. The Queen takes a keen interest in Scottish dancing. 5. The Queen made her first flight in an airplane in 1945. 6. In 2009 the Queen received an IPod from President Barack Obama. 7. The Queen received five astronauts at Buckingham Palace 8. The Queen keeps coupons of her wedding dress.
2. As a child the queen was called Lilibeth, because she could not pronounce Elizabeth properly.
3. The Queen starts her every day with a cup of tea at 7:30 in the morning.
4. The Queen takes a keen interest in Scottish dancing.
5. The Queen made her first flight in an airplane in 1945.
6. In 2009 the Queen received an IPod from President Barack Obama.
7. The Queen received five astronauts at Buckingham Palace
8. The Queen keeps coupons of her wedding dress.