See Also:

son (oh) and Fig (medicine)


son (oh)



[Language: Old English; Origin: sunu]
[C] someone's male child
-see also daughter daughter
::Her son Sean was born in 1983.
::They have three sons and a daughter.
::In those days, the property went to the oldest son.
::their youngest son, George
son of
::the son of a poor farmer
-see also like father like son at father 1 (7)
[singular] spoken used by an older person as a way to address a boy or young man
::What's your name, son?
the Son
Jesus Christ, the second member of the group from the Christian Religion that also includes the Father and the Holy Spirit
[C usually plural] literary a man, especially a famous man, from a particular place or country
::Frank Sinatra, New Jersey's most famous son
my son
used by a priest to address a man or boy
-see also favourite son at favourite 1 (2)

Fig (medicine)


fig
Figure; dress; array. "Were they all in full fig, the females with feathers on their heads, the males with chapeaux bras?" (Prof. Wilson)

1. <botany> A small fruit tree (Ficus Carica) with large leaves, known from the remotest antiquity. It was probably native from Syria westward to the Canary Islands.

2. The fruit of a fig tree, which is of round or oblong shape, and of various colours.

The fruit of a fig tree is really the hollow end of a stem, and bears numerous achenia inside the cavity. Many species have little, hard, inedible figs, and in only a few does the fruit become soft and pulpy. The fruit of the cultivated varieties is much prized in its fresh state, and also when dried or preserved. See Caprification.

3. A small piece of tobacco.

4. The value of a fig, practically nothing; a fico; used in scorn or contempt. "A fig for Peter." Cochineal fig. See Conchineal fig. Fig dust, a preparation of fine oatmeal for feeding caged birds. Fig faun, one of a class of rural deities or monsters supposed to live on figs. "Therefore shall dragons dwell there with the fig fauns.

<zoology>" Fig gnat, a small fly said to be injurious to figs. Fig leaf, the leaf tree; hence, in allusion to the first clothing of Adam and Eve (Genesis III.7), a covering for a thing that ought to be concealed; especially, an inadequate covering; a symbol for affected modesty.

<botany> Fig marigold, any tree of the genus Ficus, but especially F. Carica which produces the fig of commerce.

Origin: F. Figue the fruit of the tree, Pr. Figa, fr. L. Ficus fig tree, fig. Cf. Fico.

Source: Websters Dictionary