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volute
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
From French volute, from Italian voluta, from Latin volūta, from the feminine of volūtus, perfect passive participle of volvō. Doublet of vault.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /vəˈluːt/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- Rhymes: -uːt
Noun
volute (plural volutes)
- (architecture) The characteristic spiral curve on an Ionic capital, widely copied in other styles and in neoclassical architecture.
- 1856, Edward Shaw, The Modern Architect, Or, Every Carpenter His Own Master:
- This example is much richer, yet no less elegant, than the other; the volute, instead of a single spiral, is formed by three; the sculptured echinus beneath is surmounted by a guilloched moulding, and separated from the shaft by a neck […]
- (zoology) The spirals or whorls on a gastropod's shell.
- (zoology) Any marine gastropod of the family Volutidae.
- (engineering) The casing in a centrifugal pump, whose shape is somewhat similar to architectural volutes.
- (art) A spiral or scroll form.
- (music) A scroll-shaped carving at the tuning head of a stringed musical instrument, similar to architectural volutes.
Derived terms
Translations
spiral on Ionic capital
|
spirl on a gastropod's shell
a type of shellfish
|
Adjective
volute (not comparable)
- (engineering) Of a spring: having a spiral curve on its tail.
- (biology) Rolled up in any way.
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French
Pronunciation
Noun
volute f (plural volutes)
- (architecture) volute
- (music, lutherie) scroll (of a musical instrument)
Further reading
- “volute”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Italian
Participle
volute f pl
Latin
Participle
volūte
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