swan
1
[ swon ]
/ swɒn /
noun
any of several large, stately aquatic birds of the subfamily Anserinae, having a long, slender neck and usually pure-white plumage in the adult.
Compare mute swan, trumpeter swan, whistling swan, whooper swan.
a person or thing of unusual beauty, excellence, purity, or the like.
Literary.
a person who sings sweetly or a poet.
(initial capital letter) Astronomy.
the constellation Cygnus.
Origin of swan
1
before 900; Middle English, Old English; cognate with German
Schwan, Old Norse
svanr
OTHER WORDS FROM swan
swan·like, adjectiveWords nearby swan
swamphen,
swampland,
swampscott,
swampy,
swamy,
swan,
swan dive,
swan lake,
swan lake, the,
swan maiden,
swan neck
Definition for swan (2 of 3)
swan
2
[ swon ]
/ swɒn /
verb (used without object)
Midland and Southern U.S. Older Use.
to swear or declare (used with I): Well, I swan, I never expected to see you here!
Origin of swan
2
1775–85,
Americanism; probably continuing dial. (N England)
I s'wan, shortening of
I shall warrant
Definition for swan (3 of 3)
Swan
[ swon ]
/ swɒn /
noun
Sir Joseph Wilson,1828–1914,
British chemist, electrical engineer, and inventor.
Example sentences from the Web for swan
British Dictionary definitions for swan (1 of 3)
swan
/ (swɒn) /
noun
any large aquatic bird of the genera Cygnus and Coscoroba, having a long neck and usually a white plumage: family Anatidae, order Anseriformes
rare, literary
- a poet
- (capital when part of a title or epithet)the Swan of Avon (Shakespeare)
verb swans, swanning or swanned
(intr; usually foll by around or about) informal
to wander idly
Derived forms of swan
swanlike, adjectiveWord Origin for swan
Old English; related to Old Norse
svanr, Middle Low German
swōn
British Dictionary definitions for swan (2 of 3)
Swan
1
/ (swɒn) /
noun
a river in SW Western Australia, rising as the Avon northeast of Narrogin and flowing northwest and west to the Indian Ocean below Perth. Length: about 240 km (150 miles)
British Dictionary definitions for swan (3 of 3)
Swan
2
/ (swɒn) /
noun
Sir Joseph Wilson. 1828–1914, English physicist and chemist, who developed the incandescent electric light (1880) independently of Edison