: a glass showcase or cabinet especially for displaying fine wares or specimens
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The history of "vitrine" is clear as glass. It comes to English by way of the Old French word vitre, meaning "pane of glass," from Latin vitrum, meaning "glass." "Vitrum" has contributed a number of words to the English language besides "vitrine." "Vitreous" ("resembling glass" or "relating to, derived from, or consisting of glass") is the most common of these. "Vitrify" ("to convert or become converted into glass or into a glassy substance by heat and fusion") is another. A much rarer "vitrum" word - and one that also entered English by way of "vitre" - is vitrailed, meaning "fitted with stained glass."
Examples of vitrine in a Sentence
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Cohen is said to have paid $8 million for what amounts to a dead fish in a vitrine of embalming fluid, giving Saatchi quite the return on his investment.—Anthony Crupi, Sportico.com, 18 July 2025 Those traditional, extended glass vitrines that create more of a separation between shoppers and staff are being replaced, and the color palettes of store interiors are changing from dark brown to tourmaline, sunstone and topaz.—David Moin, Footwear News, 16 June 2025 The black marble facade has been in place ever since, and now includes an unusual oval vitrine displaying eight emblems.—Kathleen Beckett, New York Times, 20 May 2025 Guitars should be played, not hoarded, or stranded in vitrines.—Nick Paumgarten, New Yorker, 19 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for vitrine
Word History
Etymology
French, from vitre pane of glass, from Old French, from Latin vitrum
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