QUOTE(violin111 @ Apr 7 2008, 10:52 AM)

The curved bit of the violin is in the way, so I have to push my elbow forward and twist my arm round. My intonation sounds terrible. I'm not sure if it's because I have small hands, so it feels like I really have to stretch. My teacher said it's all down to practice and if I'm really struggling, I should get a smaller violin.
Firstly, it's completely normal and a good sign that you have to twist your elbow - just let it happen and don't try to restrict it, there's no way of playing otherwise. The problem comes when you go back down, make sure you "untwist" and your elbow is pointing at the floor again in 1st position.
Intonation just needs practice - try and find some scales that go into 5th position (ask your teacher) and that should help. Your intonation probably sounded rubbish in every position when you started them, but you may have got more self-critical since then and anyway, 5th pos is harder.
I don't think small hands should really restrict you that much. Mine are tiny - really tiny, so that I can't get past 6th position without putting my left thumb on the rib of the violin rather than the neck (and that's on the E string) but I play a 4/4 and have managed pieces like Paganini's Moses Variations which is all on the G string and goes off the fingerboard. It's a matter of increasing flexibility, familiarity with the violin, and being inventive. If your teacher has small hands he/she can help, but assuming they don't you might like to seek out fellow shorties and ask what they do. It might jsut be that you need to go round onto the rib of the violin rather than keep your thumb on the beck.