Gue

The gue is an extinct type of two-stringed bowed lyre or zither from the Shetland Isles. Now extinct, the instrument was alive as recently as 1809, and was described in the writings of Sir Arthur Edmondstone.

The exact details of the gue are unclear, but it possibly resembled extinct bowed lyres such as the Norwegian giga, or the extant Swedish and Estonian talharpa or Finnish jouhikko. However, other ethnomusicologists believe the gue more resembled the Icelandic fiðla, a two-stringed bowed zither. Peter Cooke notes the prevalence of the tautirut bowed zither among the Inuit peoples in areas of Canada influenced by Orkney and Shetland sailors, as possible evidence that the Inuit bowed zither is based on a Shetland model.

The first person to recreate the Shetland Gue for modern musicians was instrument maker and musician Corwen Broch of Ancient Music, who began making them in 2007. What he freely admits is a tentative reconstruction made initially for the purposes of experimental music archaeology was based largely on Scandinavian bowed lyre design and the surviving written descriptions as discussed in the works of Otto Andersson. In 2009 Corwen was commissioned to make a reconstruction for the Shetland Museum. In 2012 luthier Michael J King asked to use Corwen's design in a CD Rom of instrument plans. So far all subsequent interpretations of the instrument by other makers draw heavily on Corwen Broch's initial design.

List of Latin-script trigraphs

A number of trigraphs are found in the Latin script, most of these used especially in Irish orthography.

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  • A

    aai is used in Dutch to write the sound /aːi̯/.

    abh is used in Irish to write the sound /əu̯/, or in Donegal, /oː/, between broad consonants.

    adh is used in Irish to write the sound /əi̯/, or in Donegal, /eː/, between broad consonants, or an unstressed /ə/ at the end of a word.

    aei is used in Irish to write the sound /eː/ between a broad and a slender consonant.

    agh is used in Irish to write the sound /əi̯/, or in Donegal, /eː/, between broad consonants.

    aim is used in French to write the sound /ɛ̃/ (/ɛm/ before a vowel).

    ain is used in French to write the sound /ɛ̃/ (/ɛn/ before a vowel). It also represents /ɛ̃/ in Tibetan Pinyin, where it is alternatively written än.

    aío is used in Irish to write the sound /iː/ between broad consonants.

    amh is used in Irish to write the sound /əu̯/, or in Donegal, /oː/, between broad consonants.

    GUE

    GUE may refer to:

  • Gue, an extinct type of bowed lyre from the Shetland Isles, presumably resembling the extinct Norwegian Giga or extant Swedish Estonian Talharpa.
  • Global Underwater Explorers, a SCUBA diving organization
  • the Great Underground Empire, a kingdom in the fictional Zork universe
  • in the Zork calendar, the name of the epoch
  • Gaussian unitary ensemble in random matrix theory
  • Left wing of the European United Left–Nordic Green Left (GUE-NGL) group in the European Parliament
  • an abbreviation for Guernsey (rather than GG, GBG or GGY).
  • Acronym for Geneon Universal Entertainment.
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