musette

Etymology
From both of the following:


 * Late, from , (modern 🇨🇬), from  + .  is derived from , perhaps from  (alluding to a bagpipe player puffing out the cheeks), from ; further etymology uncertain, perhaps expressive of protruding lips and/or influenced by , from ,.
 * Borrowed from in the 18th century.

Sense 2 (“small bag or knapsack with a shoulder strap”) is due to the resemblance of the original knapsack to the bag of bagpipes.

Noun

 * 1)  Any of various small bagpipes having a soft sound, especially with a bellows, which were popular in France in the 17th and early 18th century.
 * 2)  A pastoral air or tune that has a drone imitating such an instrument; also, a dance performed to this music.
 * 3)  An organ stop using reed pipes with cone-shaped resonators, found in organs in France in the 17th and 18th centuries.
 * 4) A small oboe without a cap for its reed, which evolved from the chanter or pipe of bagpipes; a piccolo oboe.
 * 5)  In full musette bag: a small bag or knapsack with a shoulder strap, formerly used by soldiers, and now  chiefly by cyclists to hold food and beverages or other items.
 * 1) A small oboe without a cap for its reed, which evolved from the chanter or pipe of bagpipes; a piccolo oboe.
 * 2)  In full musette bag: a small bag or knapsack with a shoulder strap, formerly used by soldiers, and now  chiefly by cyclists to hold food and beverages or other items.
 * 1)  In full musette bag: a small bag or knapsack with a shoulder strap, formerly used by soldiers, and now  chiefly by cyclists to hold food and beverages or other items.

Translations

 * Catalan:
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: musetti
 * French:
 * German: Musette
 * Spanish:


 * Catalan:
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: musetti
 * French:
 * German: Musette
 * Spanish:


 * Catalan:
 * Finnish: musetti
 * French:
 * German: Musette
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: musette
 * Spanish:


 * Catalan:
 * Finnish: musetti
 * French:
 * Spanish:


 * Catalan:
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: olkapussi, olkapussukka
 * French:
 * Hungarian:
 * Spanish:

Etymology
,, from. is a of, perhaps from  (alluding to a bagpipe player puffing out the cheeks), from ; further etymology uncertain, perhaps expressive of protruding lips and/or influenced by , from ,.

Noun

 * 1) bagpipe
 * 2) haversack small bag for provisions
 * 3) nosebag round sack or bag to feed for a horse
 * 1) haversack small bag for provisions
 * 2) nosebag round sack or bag to feed for a horse
 * 1) nosebag round sack or bag to feed for a horse