Diple z mehom (f) (plurale tantum)
From Greek διπλός (dhyplos [double]), ("with [a] bag"); Bela Krajina [White Carniola] region; An 1838 questionnaire records bagpipes as dance accompaniment in Vinica; Last depicted, in a photo of the 1912 summer solstice procession of Vinica, accompanying a group of female singers; NB¹ (state 24 Oct. 2025): In its entry "Diple", Wikipedia oddly refers to its chanter as "Flute" (the description of which is equally dubious), failing to mention its original denomination (Compare, e.g., the bag ["called a mih/mêh/mijeh/mješina"] and the blowpipe ["dulac" (➺ homonyms, &c.) or [rather dubiously] "gajdenica" (which usually is the term for a "chanter": ➺ homonyms)]); NB²: In its entry "Dude", Wikipedia (which, oddly, contains deviating information), refers merely to the general term piščal (which translates as "pipe" [or, though only in combination with adjectives, "flute"]; Unfortunately, I was unable (yet) to find the local term for its chanter in any of the available sources (Compare Prebiraljka, &c.); NB³: Moreover, according to Wikipedia there are 2 types of Diple: [a] "Male" [i.e. small] belokranske [sic] & [b] "Velike" [i.e. large] belokranjske [sic], which "differs from the other in structure and way of playing"; NB4: ➺ homonyms, &c.
Širola, Božidar: Sviraljke s udarnim jezičkom [Aerophones with a beating tongue]. Zagreb, 1937, p.117.
Kumer, Zmaga: Die Volksmusikinstrumente in Slowenien (Handbuch der europ. Volksmusikinstr. 1/5). Ljubljana, 1986, p.37.
ws (➺ Dictionaries)