cygnet
(ˈsɪgnɪt)
Forms: 5 sygnett, syngnett, 5–7 signett, 6 singnett, 6–7 signet, 6–8 cignet, 7 cygnette, 7– cygnet.
[A dim., of Eng. or (?) Anglo-Fr. formation, of F. cygne or L. cygnus swan. OF. had the dim. cignel, cigneau (Godef.).
F. cygne is found in end of 14th c., but the ordinary OF. form was cine, earlier cisne, cinne. Cisne appears to be cognate with Sp. cisne, and OIt. cecino swan, which Romanic scholars derive from L. cicinus = cycnus, a. Gr. κύκνος swan. L. cycnus appears to have split into two types: *cicinus, found in Plautus (and app. in late popular Latin), whence the Romanic forms, and cygnus, which was long the accepted form in later MSS. and texts. Under the influence of the latter OF. cine became cygne (cf. mod. It. cigno).]
1. A young swan. In Her. see quot. 1825.
| c 1430 Two Cookery-bks. 57 Conuiuium domini Henrici Regis quarti, In coronacione sua apud Westmonasterium..Graund chare. Syngnettys. 1481–90 Howard Househ. Bks. (Roxb.) 281 That brout venison and ij. signetts to my Lady. 1562 W. Bullein Bk. Simples (1579) 78 The Signets bee better than the old Swannes. 1591 Shakes. 1 Hen. VI, v. iii. 56 So doth the Swan her downie Signets saue. 1616 R. C. Times' Whistle vii. 2938 Her skin sleek sattin or the cygnettes brest. 1634 Althorp MS. in Simpkinson Washingtons xv, For 1 dozen of signetts. 1707 Fleetwood Chron. Prec. (1745) 86 For 8 Cignets or young Swans. 1825 W. Berry Encycl. Herald. I, Cygnet..properly, a young swan, but swans borne in coat-armour are frequently blazoned cygnets. 1856 Kane Arct. Expl. I. xxxi. 424 It now rejoices in a drapery as grey as a cygnet's breast. |
2. Comb., as cygnet-down; cygnet-royal (Her.), see quot.
| 1795 Wolcott (P. Pindar) Liberty's Last Squeak Wks. 1812 III. 423 Lone silence..Her shoes of cygnet-down shall lend. 1847 H. Gough Gloss. Heraldry, Cygnet royal, a swan gorged with a ducal coronet, having a chain affixed thereunto and reflexed over its back. |