English edit

 
Giraffe piano

Etymology edit

From the resemblance of the case to a giraffe.

Noun edit

giraffe piano (plural giraffe pianos)

  1. A piano that is built like a grand piano on its side with the small end at the top, often with a scroll at the top to suggest a giraffe's head;
    • 1940, Albert Ernest Wier, The Piano: Its History, Makers, Players and Music, page 55:
      The giraffe piano was made during the first fifty years of the nineteenth century, and was named from its obvious resemblance to the well-known animal.
    • 1968, Franz Josef Hirt, Stringed Keyboard Instruments, 1440-1880, page 147:
      The upright pianoforte by Domenico del Mela in 1739 is the unique example at that time of the upright giraffe piano.
    • 2001, Jiri Rak, Guido Lagomarsino, Biedermeier: Art and Culture in Central Europe, 1815-1848, page 178:
      His known pieces include a pyramid piano in Vienna in the “Sammlung alter Musikinstrument", two grand pianos and this giraffe piano; they were all made in Bohemia.