Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Scion
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 stockWebster 1828 Edition
Scion
SCION.
[See Cion.]Definition 2024
scion
scion
English
Alternative forms
Variant spellings[1]
Noun
scion (plural scions)
- A descendant, especially a first-generation descendant.
- A detached shoot or twig containing buds from a woody plant, used in grafting; a shoot or twig in a general sense.
- The heir to a throne.
- 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
descendant
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(detached) shoot or twig
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heir to a throne
Anagrams
Trivia
One of three common words ending in -cion, the rest of which are coercion and suspicion.[2][3]
References
- 1 2 3 “scion” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd Ed.; 1989]
- ↑ Notes and Queries, Vol. VI, No. 10, 1889, October, p. 365
- ↑ 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)
- scion (detached twig)
- tip of a fishing rod
Synonyms
- (detached twig): greffon
See also
- (tip of fishing rod): canne