: a bowed stringed instrument having four strings tuned at intervals of a fifth and a usual range from G below middle C upward for more than 4¹/₂ octaves and having a shallow body, shoulders at right angles to the neck, a fingerboard without frets, and a curved bridge
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The set finds her playing guitar, bass, violin and banjo, while singing songs that feel both raw with emotion yet refined in delivery.—Jessica Nicholson, Billboard, 29 Sep. 2025 The comedian uses the staccato rim shot of a drum; the cinematic tearjerker uses legato strains of violins.—Big Think, 23 Sep. 2025 Erin Slaver, who played violin on the show in addition to acting as one of Panettiere’s back-up singers, hit it off with Carmack on a night out.—Avalon Hester, PEOPLE, 18 Sep. 2025 Soundtracking Case’s words are windswept arrangements and contagious melodies where baritone guitar, violin swells, and steady percussion crumple up feelings of dread and anxiety.—Nina Corcoran, Pitchfork, 16 Sep. 2025 See All Example Sentences for violin
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Italian violino, from viola "viola, viol" + -ino, diminutive suffix, going back to Latin -īnus-ine entry 1
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