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[[File:Hitoyogiri.jpg|right|thumb|320px|Two examples of ''hitoyogiri'' in the Metropolitan Museum collection]]
*''Japanese'': 一節切 ''(hitoyogiri)''
The ''hitoyogiri'' is a traditional style of Japanese end-blown flute, which fell out of common use in the 19th century, giving way to the ''[[shakuhachi]]'' as the dominant form of Japanese endblown flute.
It has four finger holes plus a thumb hole. Like the ''shakuhachi'', which developed out of the ''hitoyogiri'', the blowhole is formed through a cut into the edge of one end.
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==References==
*Gallery labels, Metropolitan Museum.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/9896554133/in/dateposted-public/]
[[Category:Art and Architecture]]