If you're looking for "Cor Anglais", you probably know that "English Horn" is a mistranslation of "Cor Anglais".
Interesting info on the name from Wiki.
!The term cor anglais is French for English horn, but the instrument is neither from England nor related to the various conical-bore brass instruments called "horns", such as the French horn, the natural horn, the post horn, or the tenor horn. The instrument originated in Silesia about 1720 when a bulb bell was fitted to a curved oboe da caccia-type body by the Weigel family of Breslau. The two-keyed, open-belled, straight tenor oboe (French taille de hautbois, "tenor oboe"), and more particularly the flare-belled oboe da caccia, resembled the horns played by angels in religious images of the Middle Ages. This gave rise in German-speaking central Europe to the Middle High German name
engellisches Horn, meaning angelic horn. Because
engellisch also meant English in the vernacular of the time, the "angelic horn" became the "English horn". In the absence of any better alternative, the curved, bulb-belled tenor oboe then retained the name even after the oboe da caccia fell into disuse around 1760.[7] The name first appeared regularly in Italian, German, and Austrian scores from 1749 on, usually in the Italian form corno inglese.[8]
I've also read that the name stems from a mis-hearing and resultant mis-hearing of the French 'Cor Anglé', relating to the curved oboes mentioned above. Either seems plausible, but I guess almost everyone calls it English Horn these days.
Here's a link to some Timp multipads, programmed by an old friend some years ago. Sadly no longer with us, I'm sure he'd want his work to live on!
https://app.box.com/s/0o190q5r4r33e01i5h2911kzndp0o4ff