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vignette
[ vin-yet ]
noun
- a decorative design or small illustration used on the title page of a book or at the beginning or end of a chapter.
- an engraving, drawing, photograph, or the like that is shaded off gradually at the edges so as to leave no definite line at the border.
- a decorative design representing branches, leaves, grapes, or the like, as in a manuscript.
- any small, pleasing picture or view.
- a small, graceful literary sketch.
verb (used with object)
- Photography. to finish (a picture, photograph, etc.) in the manner of a vignette.
vignette
/ ɪˈɛ /
noun
- a small illustration placed at the beginning or end of a book or chapter
- a short graceful literary essay or sketch
- a photograph, drawing, etc, with edges that are shaded off
- architect a carved ornamentation that has a design based upon tendrils, leaves, etc
- any small endearing scene, view, picture, etc
verb
- to finish (a photograph, picture, etc) with a fading border in the form of a vignette
- to decorate with vignettes
- to portray in or as in a vignette
Derived Forms
- ˈԱٳپ, noun
Other 51Թ Forms
- ·Աt noun
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of vignette1
Example Sentences
Its 13 vignettes - vivid snapshots of Indian village life - reflect his distinctive blend of Indian folk traditions and modernist influences.
In an especially poignant vignette, Wolf recalled the last time he saw George Harrison.
It’s one of many vignettes throughout the book that ground abstract lessons in particular details.
It presents three imagined vignettes from the composer’s life.
The scenes play out like vignettes, with cuts to black in between each one — “like mini plays,” Soderbergh says, each revealing more about the family’s emotional turmoil and the ghost itself.
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More About Vignette
What doesvignette mean?
A vignette is a small illustration or design, especially one that appears on a book’s title page or between chapters.
This primary meaning of vignette has been extended in several ways, such as to refer to other small illustrations or images done in a similar style, or to brief scenes from literature or other works. Vignette can also be used as a verb, meaning to create such a thing or to do something in the style of a vignette.
Example: I love these old books that have lovely vignettes at the beginning of each chapter.
Where doesvignette come from?
The first records of vignette in English come from around the mid-1700s. It is formed with the diminutive suffix -ette, which is commonly used in French loan words to indicate smaller versions of things, as in kitchenette and novelette. Vignette was borrowed into English directly from the French vignette, meaning “little vine,” a reference to early vignettes, which often depicted vines and trees in small sketches.
Such sketches often did not have defined borders, and the word vignette was extended to refer to any image, such as a drawing or photograph, that was gradually shaded at its edges so that it had no definite border. A common example is a portrait (painting or photo) that only shows a person’s head and shoulders. More generally, vignette can refer to any small sketch, picture, or view. The term also eventually came to refer to a brief, memorable scene in a fictional work such as a novel or a play—or, more recently, a movie. Some movies consist entirely of vignettes. One example is the 2018 movie The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, which features several short tales, each corresponding with a story from a book. Each scene in the movie is introduced by showing an illustrated vignette from the corresponding chapter in the book. (In the book, they’re called plates, which is a term for full-page illustrations.)
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to vignette?
- vignettes (plural)
- vignettist (noun)
What are some synonyms for vignette?
What are some words that share a root or word element with vignette?
What are some words that often get used in discussing vignette?
How isvignette used in real life?
Vignette is used in a variety of ways, but most of them have to do with small illustrations or brief sketches, such as in books or movies.
The contents of that book are crazily compelling – even if, I suspect, the author Chas Sampson, didn’t base them on very strong folkloric/historic foundations… I’ve got a lovely 1931 1st Ed which has these lovely vignette illustrations at each chapter end.
— Edward Parnell (@edward_parnell)
Parenting: A Vignette
11yr old: Did you tell mom happy birthday?
Me: He didn't
17yr old: Yes I did mom, when I climbed into your bed after I threw up in the middle of the night. Remember? I said "I'm gonna die on your birthday. Happy birthday."
— Ijeoma Oluo (@IjeomaOluo)
I really enjoyed IT Chapter Two but it didn't feel like a movie as much as a series of disconnected vignettes which further reinforces my notion that it should've been a miniseries rather than two films.
— Doryen Edward Chin (they/them) (@HeyDoryen)
Try using vignette!
Is vignette used properly in the following sentence?
I added a small vignette at the beginning of each chapter to show what each character looks like.
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