: 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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In 2013, the auction house also sold a violin believed to have been played by bandleader Wallace Hartley as the ship sank.—Rebecca Rosman, NPR, 27 Apr. 2025 At a meeting in Miami, Shulman brought Estefan a recycled violin from the school, which helped seal the deal.—David Browne, Rolling Stone, 24 Apr. 2025 So all of this to say, is a fiddle just a country violin?—Katherine Polcari, Southern Living, 19 Apr. 2025 Listen to this article A Douglas neighborhood man was charged with robbery Thursday and accused of stealing an expensive violin on a CTA Blue Line train, Chicago police said.—Deanese Williams-Harris, Chicago Tribune, 17 Apr. 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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