Progeny

  • 41progeny — prog|e|ny [ pradʒəni ] noun VERY FORMAL 1. ) singular or uncount a person s child or children a ) the young animals or plants produced by a particular parent 2. ) uncount things that develop from something else …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 42progeny — prog·e·ny || prÉ‘dÊ’É™nɪ / prÉ’d n. descendant, offspring; descendants or offspring (in general); result, outcome …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 43progeny — [ prɒdʒ(ə)ni] noun [treated as sing. or plural] offspring. Origin ME: from OFr. progenie, from L. progenies, from progignere (see progenitor) …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 44progeny — n. Offspring, children, issue, descendants, race, breed, stock, lineage, young, scion, offshoot, posterity …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 45progeny —   Offspring of a single mating or of an asexually reproducing individual …

    Expanded glossary of Cycad terms

  • 46progeny — n descendants, offspring, offshoots, issue, seed, posterity, scions; successors, heirs, heirs apparent; lineage, succession, progeniture, younger or rising generation; family, children, Inf. kids, sons, daughters, brood; young, spawn, litter,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 47progeny — prog·e·ny …

    English syllables

  • 48progeny — UK [ˈprɒdʒənɪ] / US [ˈprɑdʒənɪ] noun [singular/uncountable] very formal a) a person s child or children b) the young animals or plants produced by a particular parent …

    English dictionary

  • 49progeny — prog•e•ny [[t]ˈprɒdʒ ə ni[/t]] n. pl. ny, for plants or animals, nies. 1) a) gen offspring collectively; children b) (broadly) descendants 2) something that originates or results from something else; outcome; issue • Etymology: 1250–1300; ME… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 50progeny — /ˈprɒdʒəni / (say projuhnee) noun (plural progenies) offspring; issue; descendants. {Middle English progenie, from Old French, from Latin prōgenies} …