• Vitrine

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /vɪˈtɹiːn/, /vəˈtɹiːn/

    Origin

    From French vitrine, from vitre ("pane of glass"), from Old French, from Latin vitrum ("glass").

    Full definition of vitrine

    Noun

    vitrine

    (plural vitrines)
    1. A glass-paneled cabinet or case, especially for displaying articles such as china, objets d'art, or fine merchandise.
      • 1896, Edward L. Wilson (ed.), "The Review of the Year Past", Photographic Mosaics, page 82Lastly, when great numbers of the plates are treated with the hot or boiling water, it should be done in a vitrine or cabinet ventilated directly into the open air.
      • 1919, Brand Whitlock, Belgium: A Personal Narrative, volume I, page 256The Princess offered us tea and wine, and we talked for a long time, and then she must show us her house, filled with tapestries, paintings and bibelots and, in a vitrine in a room upstairs, a wonderful collection of fans painted by Carlo van Loo...
      • 1996, Leslie Glass, Hanging TimeChecking behind him nervously, the dealer was trying to concentrate on showing Bouck some small art-glass pieces in a vitrine in the middle of the booth.

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