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The name cello is an abbreviation of the Italian violoncello, which means " little violone ", referring to the violone (" big viol "), the lowest-pitched instrument of the viol family, the group of string instruments that went out of fashion around the end of the 17th century in most countries except France, where they survived another half-century or so before the louder violin family came into greater favour in that country too.
Thus, the name carries both an augmentative "- one " (" big ") and a diminutive "- cello " (" little ").
By the turn of the 20th century, it had grown customary to abbreviate the name violoncello to ' cello, with the apostrophe indicating the six missing prefix letters.
It is now customary to use the name " cello " without the apostrophe and as a full designation.
The word derives ultimately from vitula, meaning a stringed instrument.

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