One entry found for
oboe.
Main Entry:
oboe 
Pronunciation:

-b
Function:
noun
Etymology: from Italian
oboe "oboe," from French
hautbois (same meaning), from
haut "high" and
bois "wood"
: a musical instrument in the form of a slender tube that has a distinctive bright sound and that is played by blowing into a mouthpiece holding two reeds
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obo·ist 
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b
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nounWord History The musical instrument we now call an
oboe was developed in France in the 17th century. The French called it a
hautbois, a word pronounced something like English "o boy" and made up of
haut, meaning "high," and
bois, meaning "wood." The
hautbois was the highest pitched member of a group of woodwind instruments played with a reed. For a time the English simply used the French word for the instrument. Sometimes they spelled it
hautbois, sometimes
hautboy, and sometimes they changed the spelling to
oboy or
hoboy. Meanwhile, the Italians took the French word as
oboe, a spelling closer to the way they pronounced it. In the 18th century it became fashionable in England to prefer Italian musical terms. The English then started using the form
oboe instead of
hautbois, and so
oboe is the form we use today.
[oboe illustration]
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oboe."