1 syconia | Definition of syconia

syconium

noun
sy·​co·​ni·​um | \ sī-ˈkō-nē-əm How to pronounce syconium (audio) \
plural syconia\ sī-​ˈkō-​nē-​ə How to pronounce syconia (audio) \

Definition of syconium

: the multiple fleshy fruit of a fig in which the ovaries are borne within an enlarged succulent concave or hollow receptacle

First Known Use of syconium

circa 1856, in the meaning defined above

History and Etymology for syconium

Latinization of French sycône, a vernacularized form of New Latin syconus, derivative of Greek sŷkon "fig" (probably erroneously construed as *sykon-, *sýkōn, an n-stem, from which *sykṓnion, Latinized as syconium, would be formally a diminutive) — more at fig entry 1

Note: The form syconium perhaps first appears in Elements of Botany and Vegetable Physiology (Edinburgh, 1831), an English translation by W. MacGillivray of Achille Richard's Nouveaux élémens de botanique et de physiologie végétale, 4. édition (Paris, 1828), where it renders Richard's sycône. Richard attributes the coinage (p. 332) to the botanist Charles François Brisseau de Mirbel (1776-1854), who does in fact use sycône in his Élémens de physiologie végétale et de botanique (Paris, 1815), p. 347 and p. 825, where he gives the Latin equivalent as syconus.

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More from Merriam-Webster on syconium

Britannica.com: Encyclopedia article about syconium