ves·tige
noun
a trace of something that is disappearing or no longer exists
The current definition of ‘vestige’ stems from Latin ‘vestigium’ meaning footprint or trace and from 17th century French ‘vestige’ meaning a mark, trace, or sign.
The biological definition, used to describe an non-functioning body part that was once functional in an evolutionary ancestor, is still common today. However ‘vestige’ is mainly used in its figurative sense to describe the trace of something that has since vanished.
Though the usage of ‘vestige’ has been on a relatively steady decline since the mid-19th century, one can still find it used in works of literature, poetry, and even news sources, often relating to the loss of the last vestige of landmarks, historic sites, and well-known companies.
“The last vestige of the Rockhill Theater quietly disappears.”—pitch.com
“Happy, indeed, and sweet our pain, / However torn, however tost, / If, like the rose, our hearts retain / Some vestige of the heaven we've lost.”—‘The Progress Of The Rose’ by Denis Florence MacCarthy
“Through this cowardly act of yours, the last vestige of your power over me is gone.”—‘The Seats Of The Mighty, Complete’ by Gilbert Parker
“The earth without a vestige; Fate decrees It shall be otherwise, and I submit.”—‘The Poetical Works of Henry Kirke White’ by Henry Kirke White
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=vestige
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/vestige
http://www.finedictionary.com/vestige.html












