son

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
3
Words With Friends
4
Letters
3
Pronunciation
/sʌn/
See all 3 pronunciations
/sʌn/ · /sʊn/ · /sɒn/

Definition of son

16 senses · 4 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. One's male offspring.
    “Before the birth of the man's child, he said: "I want a son, not a daughter."”
    “From what conſummate vertue I have choſe / This perfect Man, by merit call'd my Son,”
    ““We are pleased that LSST has now been named the Vera C. Rubin Observatory,” said Rubin’s sons Allan Rubin, David Rubin, and Karl Rubin in a statement.”
    “Cristiano Ronaldo’s eldest son has earned his first call-up for the Portugal Under-15 national squad, the team announced on Tuesday.”
See all 16 definitions

noun

  1. One's male offspring.
    “Before the birth of the man's child, he said: "I want a son, not a daughter."”
    “From what conſummate vertue I have choſe / This perfect Man, by merit call'd my Son,”
    ““We are pleased that LSST has now been named the Vera C. Rubin Observatory,” said Rubin’s sons Allan Rubin, David Rubin, and Karl Rubin in a statement.”
    “Cristiano Ronaldo’s eldest son has earned his first call-up for the Portugal Under-15 national squad, the team announced on Tuesday.”
  2. A male adopted person in relation to his adoptive parents.
  3. A male person who has such a close relationship with an older or otherwise more authoritative person that he can be regarded as a son of the other person.
    “Eli called Samuel his son. Be plain, good son, and homely in thy drift.”
  4. A male person considered to have been significantly shaped by social conflict.
    “He was a son of the mafia system.”
  5. A person regarded as the product of some place.
    “I hold it to be true, that the people are the sons of the soil; and we are only their instruments here.”
  6. A familiar address to a male person from an older or otherwise more authoritative person.
    “Son, can't you see that she's just a little girl?”
    “Shepard: Stay with me. We're almost through this. Admiral Anderson: You did good, son. You did good. I'm proud of you. Shepard: Thank you, sir. Anderson?”
  7. (New-York-City, UK, colloquial)An informal address to a friend or person of equal authority.
  8. The current version of a file, derived from the preceding father file.
    “Three generations of file are usually kept, being the grandfather, father and son files.”
    “After the update, the new file master file is the son. The file from which the father was developed with the transaction files of the appropriate day is the grandfather. The grandfather and son files are stored in different locations.”
  9. (uncountable)Son cubano, a genre of music and dance blending Spanish and African elements that originated in Cuba during the late 19th century.
    “When son first emerged in the streets of Havana, in the early twentieth century, it was shut down by the police, as were most forms of African culture. Son groups, conjuntos, caught playing on the street, as was the tradition, had their instruments confiscated.”
  10. (abbreviation, alt-of, initialism)Initialism of supraoptic nucleus.

verb

  1. (transitive)To produce (i.e. bear, father, beget) a son.
    “I sonned a father who would not be sonned, […]”
  2. (transitive)To address (someone) as "son".
    ““Don't 'son' me.” “I'm old enough to be your father,” he said with a dismissive wave of his hand.”
    ““Son—now's not the time, please.” “It's the perfect time—it's the best time fucking time I ever had. There's not gonna be another time, so don't son me, you bastard. […]””

name

  1. One of the three persons of the Trinity, believed to have become incarnated as Jesus Christ.
  2. A surname.
  3. (abbreviation, alt-of)Abbreviation of Sonora: a state of Mexico.

phrase

  1. (abbreviation, alt-of, initialism)Initialism of socked on the nose.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English sonn, sone, sun, sune, from Old English sunu (“son”), from Proto-West Germanic *sunu, from Proto-Germanic *sunuz (“son”), from Proto-Indo-European *suHnús (“son”), from Proto-Indo-European *sewH- (“to bear; give birth”).

Anagrams of son

3 plays · some not in Scrabble

Best play nos 3 points

Words you can make from son

6 playable · top: NOS (3 pts)

Best play nos 3 points

3-letter words

1 word

2-letter words

4 words

Hooks

3 extensions · 3 back

A single letter you can add to son to make another valid word.

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