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bagpiper

[ UK /bˈæɡpɪpɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈbæɡˌpaɪpɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who plays the bagpipe

How To Use bagpiper In A Sentence

  • They walked slowly, led by the bagpipers, past an honor guard of law enforcement officers standing stiffly at attention.
  • But however many bagpipers the organisers can persuade to march through New York as part of a record-breaking pipe band procession on Saturday, the whole basis of the festivities linking Scottish history with American is nonsense.
  • Tragically, it was too late to save the bagpiper. The Sun
  • I've just got nicely settled in when the bagpiper starts up. The Times Literary Supplement
  • She draws a klezmer band from Poland, a didgeridoo player from Australia, African dancers, and Scottish bagpipers, but the main competition comes from one family, all of whom have personal links to Her Ladyship.
  • The theatrical element of the show though never let up with various song and dance set pieces featuring trapeze artists, skateboarders, a tap dancer in top hat and tails, and even a dancing bagpiper.
  • Resident bagpiper Lt Stewart McMichael piped HMS Endurance into Buenos Aires, as her sailors lined the deck in formal tropical uniform.
  • The theatrical element of the show though never let up with various song and dance set pieces featuring trapeze artists, skateboarders, a tap dancer in top hat and tails, and even a dancing bagpiper.
  • Today, there is a lone bagpiper on the wharf to welcome us in. Times, Sunday Times
  • The other common cliché is the kilted bagpiper who eats haggis, neeps and tatties when he's not munching shortbread, and sips wee drams of whisky.
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