: a keyed woodwind instrument consisting of a cylindrical tube which is stopped at one end and which has a side hole over which air is blown to produce the tone and having a range from middle C upward for three octaves
2
: something long and slender: such as
a
: a tall slender wineglass
b
: a grooved pleat (as on a hat brim)
3
: a rounded groove
specifically: one of the vertical parallel grooves on a classical architectural column
This is a woodwind instrument whose sound is produced by blowing against a sharp edge. Flutes may be end-blown, like the recorder, or may have a round shape, like the ocarina; however, the term usually refers to the transverse flute of Western music. The transverse flute, a tubular instrument held sideways to the right, appeared in Greece and Italy by the second century ce. By the 16th century, flutes with finger holes but no keys were in use in Europe. Keys began to be added in the late 17th century. Later 19th-century innovations resulted in the modern flute. The cylindrical tube may be made of wood or, more often, a precious metal or alloy. The flute family also includes the piccolo, the alto flute, and the rare bass flute.
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Noun
The Top of the Standard (known colloquially as the Boom Boom Room) instantly commands your attention with the bar’s gilded centerpiece, reminiscent of a trumpet flute, and its floor-to-ceiling windows that provide incredible panoramic views of New York City and the Hudson River.—Christina Liao, Vogue, 19 Apr. 2025 Kirill earned his master’s and doctorate in piano at the University of Southern California, and has been on the piano faculty at USC and Pepperdine University.
Sophia, who began playing concerts with her parents at age 5, plays guitar, ukulele, flute and percussion.—Regina Elling, San Diego Union-Tribune, 15 Apr. 2025
Verb
Other fragments from the site appear to have flaked off large columns that once supported the villa’s porticoed garden: They’re composed of curved stucco gouged with decorative vertical lines, meant to make the columns fluted.—Sonja Anderson, Smithsonian Magazine, 22 Apr. 2025 Opt for a vanity that works with your existing decor and has furniture-like details like cane, fluting, and turned legs.—Patricia Shannon, Better Homes & Gardens, 15 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for flute
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English floute, from Anglo-French floute, fleute, from Old French flaüte, probably of imitative origin
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