on, by

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tree123

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In the same thread created by myself.

What do you call a piece of music which is played [STRIKE]with[/STRIKE] on a Chinese flute and piano?
source: my sentence corrected by emsr2d2

You can call it a rendition of the music by piano and flute.
source: tedmc's comment


Question:

Does 'play' collocate with 'on' a certain instrument while the word 'render' should go with 'by'?

played on piano
rendered by piano

e.g. I hear the waves which are rendered by the piano sigh for him. - correct?

(P.S. Because of one question per thread, so I create this new one.)
 
On second thoughts, I'd like to change the preposition with musical instruments to "on".
 
The piece of music is played on a piano and a flute; it is played by a pianist and a flautist.
 

Question:

Does 'play' collocate with 'on' a certain instrument while the word 'render' should go with 'by'?

played on piano
rendered by piano

e.g. I hear the waves which are rendered by the piano sigh for him. - correct? I've no idea what this means.
Forget 'rendered by piano'. It's an unnatural collocation, unhelpful, and the player performs the music anyway—not the instrument.
 
'Flutist' is also common (and more logical).

In this link, I'm curious to know about that massive spike in the 1950s when I was at high school.
 
Last edited:
'Flutist' is also common.

In this link, I'm curious to know about that massive spike in the 1950s when I was at high school.

The spike is just for 1952. I think it just takes the publication of one book with a lot of instances of the word to produce such a spike.
 
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