Organs are Musical Instruments commonly used in churches to accompany hymns and worship songs. They provide a powerful and reverent sound that enhances the overall worship experience. Organs are also versatile, capable of producing a wide range of tones and dynamics to suit different parts of the church service.
photosynthesis
Vestigial organs. These are remnants of structures that had important functions in our evolutionary past but are no longer needed in modern humans. Examples include the appendix and wisdom teeth.
You have sense organs on the tongue that are able to sent that information to your brain. You can't read a book with your tongue but you have to use the organs that do (eyes).
They use the parts of their brains which the sense organs send information to.
You use your sense organs of touch, such as your skin, to feel sensations like pressure, temperature, and texture. They help you detect the environment around you by sensing vibrations, pain, and different surfaces through receptors in your skin that send signals to your brain for interpretation.
yes
If you are referring to the system of borrowing and unification: Virtually all of them. Only the very earliest cinema organs did not use this system - they were simply church style organs set up in a theater - not to imply that church organs do not use borrowing and unification but at the time the key action of organs had not developed enough to use this system.
Pipe organs
Andrew Freeman has written: 'The organs of Lambeth Parish Church' -- subject(s): Lambeth Parish Church (Lambeth, London, England), Organs
Because they had no organs!
Pipe organs have different sized pipes because they can then make different sounds.
what is choir stalls and organs
Church organ and Digital organs
All living things have and use organs just like humans. They may have more or less than us but they still have and use organs.
Adrian Mumford has written: 'The organs of St Mary's Parish Church, Twickenham' -- subject(s): History, Organists, Organs, St Mary's Parish Church (Twickenham, London, England)
One of the characteristics of the theater organ is the tremulant. Also, whilst the prevalent stop on a church pipe organ is the Diapason or Principal, on the theater organ it is the Tibia Clausa, a pure flute tone. Theater organs also have stops not commonly found on church organs such as the Kinura and Post Horn. The strings are usually quite a bit keener and louder as well as typified by the typical Wurlitzer Viol de Orchestra. One commonality is the Vox Humana. However the voicing of theater organs is usually quite different than church organs, particularly if the church organ in question was built after the Organ Reform Movement. A Church organ built during the romantic or orchestral period may make a fairly good imitation of a theater organ simply by turning on the tremulants. However the tremulants of theater organs are usually quite a bit faster and deeper than church organ tremulants. The best bet is to make maximum use of the strings, trems and reeds. Do not be afraid to use the mutations as well. Don't forget that theater organs were highly unified so that many stops played at every conceivable pitch.
Ya mum