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Webster 1913 Edition


Scion

Sci′on

,
Noun.
[OF.
cion
, F.
scion
, probably from
scier
to saw, fr. L.
secare
to cut. Cf.
Section
.]
1.
(Bot.)
(a)
A shoot or sprout of a plant; a sucker.
(b)
A piece of a slender branch or twig cut for grafting.
[Formerly written also cion, and cyon.]
2.
Hence, a descendant; an heir;
as, a
scion
of a royal stock
.

Webster 1828 Edition


Scion

SCION.

[See Cion.]

Definition 2024


scion

scion

English

Alternative forms

Noun

scion (plural scions)

  1. A descendant, especially a first-generation descendant.
  2. A detached shoot or twig containing buds from a woody plant, used in grafting; a shoot or twig in a general sense.
  3. The heir to a throne.
  4. A guardian.

Quotations

  • 1956, Delano Ames, chapter 9, in Crime out of Mind:
    Rudolf was the bold, bad Baron of traditional melodrama. Irene was young, as pretty as a picture, fresh from a music academy in England. He was the scion of an ancient noble family; she an orphan without money or friends.
  • 1966, Sholem Aleichem, An Early Passover, Clifton Pub. Co., paperback edition, page 24
    It was said to him that those people were the scions of Zion.
  • 1986, David Leavitt, The Lost Language of Cranes, Penguin, paperback edition, page 72
    He could show his parents Eliot, scion of Derek Moulthorp, and then how could they say he was throwing his life away?
  • 1826, Mary Shelley, The Last Man, volume 3, chapter 1
    No senate seats in council for the dead; no scion of a time-honoured dynasty pants to rule over the inhabitants of a charnel house; the general's hand is cold, and the soldier has his untimely grave dug in his native fields, unhonoured, though in youth.

Translations

Anagrams

Trivia

One of three common words ending in -cion, the rest of which are coercion and suspicion.[2][3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 scion” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd Ed.; 1989]
  2. Notes and Queries, Vol. VI, No. 10, 1889, October, p. 365
  3. Editor and Publisher, Volume 9, 1909, p. 89

French

Etymology

From Frankish *kid-, from Proto-Germanic *kidon, from Proto-Indo-European *geie (to split open, to sprout).

Noun

scion m (plural scions)

  1. scion (detached twig)
  2. tip of a fishing rod

Synonyms

See also

  • (tip of fishing rod): canne