No, "piano" is not plural. "Piano" is the singular form, and "pianos" is the plural form
The genitive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: piano's
Billy Joel plays the harmonica as well as the piano in Piano man.
Je joue du piano jazz.I play piano jazz.
je fais des études de piano - je m'exerce au piano - je travaille mes gammes au piano
449250
your Piano is between the 1950s-1960s
Manufactured between 1961 and 1966. See bluebookofpianos.com, piano age.
le piano I play the piano = Je joue du piano
Piano Jouer du piano - to play piano
Pinafore? Seriously? You must mean "pianoforte" rather than "pinafore"? Among other keyboard musical instruments, Gulbransen (no longer in business) made pianos. "Piano" is short for "pianoforte", which is the more formal name for the instrument. Hardly anyone nowadays uses the term "pianoforte". A pinafore, by the way, is a fancy sort of apron that girls and women wear over the front of a dress.
piano.
forte,piano,forte,piano,forte,piano,forte,piano,forte,piano,forte
No, "piano" is not plural. "Piano" is the singular form, and "pianos" is the plural form
on the piano
piano
The spanish word for piano is actually, piano.