Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q15307471> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 triples per page.
- Q15307471 subject Q8266666.
- Q15307471 subject Q8449392.
- Q15307471 subject Q8545414.
- Q15307471 subject Q8602312.
- Q15307471 subject Q8878045.
- Q15307471 subject Q9582445.
- Q15307471 abstract "Bulbul tarang (Hindi: बुलबुल तरंग) (Punjabi: بلبل ترنگ ) Shahmukhi) literally "waves of nightingales", alternately Indian or Punjabi banjo) is a string instrument from India and Indian and Pakistani Punjab which evolved from the Japanese taishōgoto, which likely arrived in South Asia in the 1930s.The instrument employs two sets of strings, one set for drone, and one for melody. The strings run over a plate or fretboard, while above are keys resembling typewriter keys, which when depressed fret or shorten the strings to raise their pitch.".
- Q15307471 thumbnail Bulbul.JPG?width=300.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q1009633.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q1166068.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q133800.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q169132.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q1798603.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q302497.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q3481213.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q354158.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q370915.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q406704.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q4701390.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q4889535.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q5640976.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q636309.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q745887.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q750240.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q8266666.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q8449392.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q8545414.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q8602312.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q8878045.
- Q15307471 wikiPageWikiLink Q9582445.
- Q15307471 comment "Bulbul tarang (Hindi: बुलबुल तरंग) (Punjabi: بلبل ترنگ ) Shahmukhi) literally "waves of nightingales", alternately Indian or Punjabi banjo) is a string instrument from India and Indian and Pakistani Punjab which evolved from the Japanese taishōgoto, which likely arrived in South Asia in the 1930s.The instrument employs two sets of strings, one set for drone, and one for melody.".
- Q15307471 label "Bulbul tarang".
- Q15307471 depiction Bulbul.JPG.