请教高人中国乐器的英文译名

Guqin (Chinese: 古琴; pinyin: gǔqín) - Seven-stringed zither

Se (Chinese: 瑟; pinyin: sè) - 25 stringed zither with moveable bridges (ancient sources say 13, 25 or 50 strings)

Guzheng (古筝) - 16-26 stringed zither with movable bridges

Konghou (箜篌) - Chinese harp (much like a Western one)

Pipa (琵琶) - 4 or 5 stringed pear-shaped lute

Sanxian (三弦) - A plucked lute with body covered with snakeskin and long fretless neck

Ruan (Chinese: 阮; pinyin: ruǎn) - Moon-shaped lute in five sizes: gaoyin-, xiao-, zhong-, da-, and diyin-

Liuqin (柳琴) - A small plucked lute with a pear-shaped body and four strings

Yueqin (月琴) - A plucked lute with a wooden body, a short fretted neck, and four strings tuned in pairs

Qinqin (秦琴) - A plucked lute with a wooden body and fretted neck

Duxianqin (Traditional Chinese: 独弦琴; Simplified Chinese: 独弦琴) - A plucked zither with only one string

Huqin (胡琴) - Family of vertical fiddles

Erhu (二胡) - Two-stringed fiddle

Zhonghu (中胡) - Two-stringed fiddle, lower pitch than erhu

Gaohu (高胡) - Two-stringed fiddle, higher pitch than erhu

Banhu (板胡) - Two-stringed fiddle with a coconut resonator and wooden face

Jinghu (京胡) - Two-stringed fiddle, very high pitched, used mainly for Peking Opera

Erxian (二弦) - Two-stringed fiddle, used in Cantonese, Chaozhou, and nanguan music

Yehu (椰胡) - Two-stringed fiddle with coconut body

Huluhu (Traditional Chinese: 葫卢胡; Simplified Chinese: 葫芦胡) - Two-stringed fiddle with gourd body

Maguhu (Traditional Chinese: 马骨胡; Simplified Chinese: 马骨胡; pinyin: mǎgǔhú) - Two-stringed fiddle with horse bone body

Tuhu (土胡) - Two-stringed fiddle used by the Zhuang people of Guangxi

Jiaohu (角胡) - Two-stringed fiddle used by the Gelao people of Guangxi

Sihu (四胡) - Four-stringed fiddle with strings tuned in pairs

Zhuihu (Traditional Chinese: 坠胡; Simplified Chinese: 坠胡) - Two-stringed fiddle with fingerboard

Leiqin (雷琴) - Two-stringed fiddle with fingerboard

Dihu (低胡) - Low pitched two-stringed fiddles in the erhu family, in three sizes:

Xiaodihu (小低胡) - Small dihu, tuned one octave below the erhu

Zhongdihu (中低胡) - Medium dihu, tuned one octave below the zhonghu

Dadihu (大低胡) - Large dihu, tuned two octaves below the erhu

Dahu (大胡) - Another name for the xiaodihu

Cizhonghu - Another name for the xiaodihu

Gehu (革胡) - Four-stringed bass instrument, tuned and played like cello

Diyingehu (低音革胡) - Four stringed contrabass instrument, tuned and played like double bass

Laruan - Four-stringed bowed instrument modeled on the cello

Matouqin (马头琴) - Mongolian two-stringed "horsehead fiddle"

Yazheng (牙筝) - Bowed zither

Yangqin (扬琴) - Hammered dulcimer of varying strings struck using two bamboo hammers

Zhu (筑) - Ancient zither, struck or plucked with a stick

Jiaoweiqin (焦尾琴)

Dizi (笛子) - Transverse bamboo flute with buzzing membrane

Xiao (箫) - End-blown flute

Paixiao (Traditional Chinese: 排箫; Simplified Chinese: 排箫) - Pan pipes

Chi (篪) - Ancient Chinese flute

Xindi (新笛) - Modern transverse flute with as many as 21 holes

Dongdi (侗笛)

Koudi (口笛) - Very small transverse bamboo flute

Guan (Chinese: 管; pinyin: guǎn) - A cylindrical double reed wind instrument; also called bili

Suona (Traditional Chinese: 唢呐; Simplified Chinese: 唢呐) - A double reed wind instrument with a flaring metal bell

Bawu (Traditional Chinese: 巴乌; Simplified Chinese: 巴乌; pinyin: bāwū) - Side-blown free reed pipe with finger holes

Mangtong (芒筒) - End-blown free reed pipe producing a single pitch

Zhu (Chinese: 柷; pinyin: zhù) - A wooden box that tapers from the bottom, played by hitting a stick on the inside, used to mark the beginning of music

Yu (Chinese: 敔; pinyin: yǔ) - A wooden percussion instrument carved in the shape of a tiger with a serrated back, played by hitting a stick with an end made of around 15 stalks of bamboo on its head three times and across the serrated back once to mark the end of the music

Muyu (Traditional Chinese: 木鱼; Simplified Chinese: 木鱼; pinyin: mùyú) - A rounded woodblock carved in the shape of a fish, struck with a wooden stick. Often used in Buddhist chanting

Bianqing (simplified: 编磬; traditional: 编磬; pinyin: biānqìng) - A rack of hung stone tablets struck using a mallet

Zenghou Yi Bianqing (曾侯乙编磬)

Chuzeng Baizhong (楚曾百钟) - 100 bronze bells hung on a rack, struck using poles

Bianzhong (编钟) - 65 bronze bells hung on a rack, struck using poles

Fangxiang (Traditional Chinese: 方响; Simplified Chinese: 方响; Hanyu Pinyin: fang1 xiang3; Wade-Giles: fang hsiang) - A set of tuned metal slabs (metallophone)

Shangnao (商铙)

Bo (钹) - A flat plate of metal struck with a mallet

Luo (锣) - Gong

Yunluo (云锣; 云罗) - "Cloud gongs" 10 or more small tuned gongs in a frame

Shimianluo - 10 small tuned gongs in a frame

Laba (喇叭) - A long, straight trumpet without valves

Xun (埙; pinyin: xūn) - Ocarina made of baked clay

Fou (缶; pinyin: fǒu) - Clay pot played as a percussion instrument

Sheng (Chinese: 笙; pinyin: shēng) - A free reed mouth organ consisting of varying number of bamboo pipes inserted into a gourd chamber with finger holes

Yu (Chinese: 竽; pinyin: yú) - An ancient free reed mouth organ similar to the sheng but generally larger

Lusheng (Traditional Chinese: 芦笙; Simplified Chinese: 芦笙; pinyin: lúshēng) - A free reed mouth organ with five or six pipes, played by various ethnic groups in southwestern China and neighboring countries

Hulusi (Traditional Chinese: 葫卢丝; Simplified Chinese: 葫芦丝; pinyin: húlúsī) - A free reed wind instrument with three bamboo pipes which pass through a gourd wind chest; one pipe has finger holes and the other two are drone pipes; used primarily in Yunnan province

Hulusheng (Traditional Chinese: 葫卢笙; Simplified Chinese: 葫芦笙; pinyin: húlúshēng) - A free reed mouth organ with a gourd wind chest; used primarily in Yunnan province

Daigu - (大鼓) - Large drum

Huzuo Dagu (虎座大鼓)

Huzuo Wujia Gu (虎座鸟架鼓)

Jian`gu (建鼓)

Paigu (排鼓)

Gudi (骨笛) - An ancient flute made of bone

Lilie (唎咧) - A reed wind instrument with a conical bore played by the Li people of Hainan

Lusheng (芦笙) - A free reed mouth organ with five or six pipes, played by various ethnic groups in southwestern China and neighboring countries

Kouxian (口弦) - A Jew's harp, made of bamboo or metal