English edit

Noun edit

scien

  1. Obsolete spelling of scion
    • 1658: John Milton, To the Evangelick Cities of the Switzers; reprinted in:
    • 1851: John Mitford, The works of John Milton in verse and prose, printed from the original editions with a life of the author by the Rev. John Mitford, volume VIII (Prose works, volume VI), § 3 : “ Letters written in the Name of Oliver The Protector,” page 404 (London : William Pickering)
      It ſeems to be only in your Power, next under God, to prevent the extirpation of this moſt antient Scien of the purer Religion, in theſe remainders of the Primitive Believers; whoſe preſervation, now reduc’d to the very brink of utter ruin, if you neglect, beware that the next Turn be not your own.

Anagrams edit

Old English edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-West Germanic *skiuhijan, derived from *skeuh (Old English sċēoh).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

sċīen

  1. to be frightened or startled; recoil in fear
    • c. 996, Ælfric's Lives of Saints
      Þā sċīedon þā mūlas þe þæt cræt tugon, þurh his tōcyme āfyrhte, and tōmengdon þā ġetogu þæt hīe tēon ne meahton.
      The mules pulling the chariot jumped back, frightened at his approach, and tangled the traces so that they couldn't pull.

Conjugation edit