Son
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A son is a male offspring; a boy or man in relation to his parents. The female counterpart is a daughter.
Contents
Social issues regarding sons
In pre-industrial societies and some current countries with agriculture-based economies, a higher value was, and still is, assigned to sons rather than daughters, giving males higher social status, because males were physically stronger, and could perform farming tasks more effectively.
In China, a One-child Policy is in effect in order to address rapid population growth. Official birth records have shown a rise in the level of male births since the policy was brought into law. This has been attributed to a number of factors, including the illegal practice of sex-selective abortion and widespread under-reporting of female births.
In patrilineal societies, sons will customarily inherit an estate before daughters.[1]
In some cultures, the eldest son has special privileges. For example, in Biblical times, the first-born male was bequeathed the most goods from their father. Some Japanese social norms involving the eldest son are: "that parents are more likely to live with their eldest child if their eldest child is a son" and "that parents are most likely to live with their eldest son even if he is not the eldest child".[2]
Specialized use of the term son
Christian symbolism
Among Christians, "the Son" or Son of God refers to Jesus Christ. Trinitarian Christians view Jesus as the human incarnation of the second person of the Trinity, known as God the Son. In the Gospels, Jesus sometimes refers to himself as the Son of Man.
In Semitic names
The Arabic word for son is ibn. Because family and ancestry are important cultural values in the Arab World and Islam, Arabs and most Muslims (e.g. Bruneian) often use bin, which is a form of ibn, in their full names. The bin here means "son of." For example, the Arab name "Saleh bin Tarif bin Khaled Al-Fulani" translates as "Saleh, son of Tarif, son of Khaled; of the family Al-Fulani" (cf. Arab family naming conventions). Accordingly, the opposite of ibn/bin is abu, meaning "the father of." It is a retronym, given upon the birth of one's first-born son, and is used as a moniker to indicate the newly acquired fatherhood status, rather than a family name. For example, if Mahmoud's first-born son is named Abdullah, from that point on Mahmoud can be called "Abu Abdullah."
This is cognate with the Hebrew language ben, as in "Judah ben Abram HaLevi," which means "Judah, son of Abram, the Levite." Ben is also a standalone name.
Notable people who come from families of many only sons
- Rowan Atkinson, one of four sons
- Ehud Barak, one of four sons
- Wes Bentley, one of four sons
- Tod Bowman, one of five sons
- Steve Buscemi, one of four sons
- Henry Cavill, one of five sons
- John Cena, one of five sons
- Gideon Coe, one of four sons
- Lane Davies, one of four sons
- Willie Degel, one of four sons
- Charles Edwards, one of four sons
- Dwight D. Eisenhower, one of seven sons
- Evan Ellingson, one of four sons
- Joe Farnsworth, one of five sons
- Tom Felton, one of four sons
- Carlos Franco, one of six sons
- Simon Glendinning, one of four sons
- Stuart Grimes, one of six sons
- Ron Hayter, one of six sons
- Josh Holloway, one of four sons
- Jason Isaacs, one of four sons
- Rollin Jarrett, one of four sons
- Blake Jenner, one of four sons
- Rocky Johnson, one of five sons
- Jonas Brothers, four sons
- James Max, one of four sons
- David Monasterio, one of four sons
- Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer, one of four sons
- Žarko Olarević, one of four sons
- Ehud Olmert, one of four sons
- Clive Owen, one of five sons
- Ron Paul, one of five sons
- Bronson Pelletier, one of five sons
- Jonathan Rhys Meyers, one of four sons
- Ryan Rome, one of four sons
- Sakis Rouvas, one of four sons
- Julian Sands, one of five sons
- Craig Sauer, Reagan Rome, Aaron Rome and Ashton Rome, four sons
- Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin, two of four sons
- Luis Suárez, one of seven sons
- Staal brothers, four sons
- Andrew Stock and Jon Stock, two of four sons
- Don Taylor, one of four sons
- Billy Twelvetrees, one of four sons
- Peter Vanderkaay and Alex Vanderkaay, two of four sons
- Ace Young, one of five sons
- Paul Youll and Stephen Youll, two of five sons
- David Zepeda, one of four sons
Notable people who being parents of many only sons
- Andrew Gissinger, father of five sons
- Jorge Higuaín, father of four sons
- Ekrem Jevrić, father of four sons
- Nancy Karetak-Lindell, mother of four sons
- Iris Krasnow
- Polly Peterson Bowles, mother of four sons
- Mitt Romney, father of five sons
- Martin Lacey, father of four sons
Indications in names
Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). In many cultures, the surname of the family means "son of", indicating a possible ancestry—i.e., that the whole family descends from a common ancestor. It may vary between the beginning or the termination of the surname.
- bin or ibn. Example: "Ibn Sina" ("son of Sina"), "Ibn Khaldun" ("son of Khaldun"), etc.
- U (often misspelled as: ou). Examples: "Usadden" ("son of Sadden"), "Uâli" ("son of Âli").
- Ayt (often misspelled as: ait or aït). Examples: "Ayt Buyafar" ("sons of Buyafar"), "Ayt Mellul" ("sons of Mellul").
- N ayt or Nayt (often misspelled as: nait or naït). Examples: "N ayt Ndir" ("son of the Ndir tribe/family"), "Naït Zerrad" ("son of the Zerrad tribe or family").
- Sen. Example: "Henriksen" ("son of Henrik"), "Jensen" ("son of Jens"), "Andersen" ("son of Anders"), etc.
- Sen. Example: "Jansen" ("son of Jan"), "Petersen" ("son of Peter"), "Pietersen" ("son of Pieter")
- Zoon. Example: "Janszoon" ("son of Jan"), "Peterszoon" ("son of Peter"), "Pieterszoon" ("son of Pieter")
- s. Example: "Edwards" ("son of Edward"), "Williams" ("son of William"), "Jeffreys" ("son of Jeffrey")
- Son. Example: "Jefferson" ("son of Jeffrey"), "Wilson" ("son of William"), "Edson" ("son of Edward"), "Anderson" ("son of Ander"), etc.
- es. Example: "Fernandes" ("son of Fernand"), etc.
- ot. Example: "Pierrot" ("son of Pierre"), etc.
- de. Example: "Danton" ("son of Anton"), etc.
- ben or bin before 1300 BC. Example: "Benjamin" ("son of a right-hand man"). Also, the Hebrew word for "person" is ben Adam, meaning "son of Adam".
- -fi or -ffy. Example: "Petőfi" ("son of Pető"), "Sándorfi" ("son of Sándor"), "Péterffy" ("son of Péter") (archaic spelling, indicates aristocratic origins), etc.
- Mac or Mc. Example: "MacThomas" ("son of Thomas"), "MacDonald" ("son of Donald"), "MacLean" ("son of Lean"), etc.
- di. Example: "di Stefano" ("son of Steven"), "di Giovanni" ("son of John"), "di Giuseppe" ("son of Joseph"), etc.
- de. Example: "de Paolo" ("son of Paul"), "de Mauro" ("son of Maurus"), "de Giorgio" ("son of George") etc.
- d`. Example: "d'Antonio" ("son of Anthony"), "d'Adriano" ("son of Adrian"), "d'Agostino" ("son of Augustine") etc.;
- -i, which comes from Latin ending for Genitive. Example: "Paoli" ("son of Paolo"), "Richetti" ("son of Richetto, a short name for Enrico") etc.;
- Son. Example: "Magnusson" ("son of Magnus"); "Sigurdsson" ("son of Sigurd"), "Odinson" ("son of Odin"), etc.
- pur/pour. Example: "Mahdipur" ("son of Mahdi").
- zadeh. Example: "Muhammadzadeh" ("son/daughter of Muhammad").
- Anak Example: mga Anak ni Pedro (son and daughter of Pedro)
- ski. Example: "Janowski" ("son of John"), "Piotrowski" ("son of Peter"), "Michalski" ("son of Michael"), etc.
- Es. Example: "Gonçalves" ("son of Gonçalo"), "Henriques" ("son of Henrique"), "Fernandes" ("son of Fernando"), etc.
- a as prefix (except for female names that start in a and probably for others that start in vowels) & ei as suffix. Example: "Amariei" ("son of Mary"), "Adomnitei" ("son of Domnita"), "Alenei" ("son of Elena/Leana"), etc.
- escu or sometimes aşcu comes from the Latin -iscus which means "belonging to the people". Example: "Petrescu" ("Petre's son"), "Popescu" ("Popa's son" Popa meaning Priest), "Constantinescu" ("son of Constantin"), etc.
- ski or sky, pronounced /ski/, meaning simply "of". Example: "Stanislavski" ("son of Stanislav").
- ov /ɒf/, ovich /əvɪtʃ/, or ovski /ˈɒfskiː/. Example: "Ivanov" ("son of Ivan"), "Davidovich" ("son of David"), "Petrovski" ("son of Peter"), etc.
- ev /ɛf/, evich /ɨvɪtʃ/, or evski /ˈɛfskiː/. Example: "Dmitriev" ("son of Dmitri"), "Danilevich" ("son of Daniel"), "Vorobyevski" ("son of a sparrow"), etc.
- Ez. Example: "González" ("son of Gonzalo"), "Henríquez" ("son of Henrique"), "Fernández" ("son of Fernando"), Gómez ("son of Gome"), Sánchez ("son of Sancho"), etc.
- oğlu. Examples: "Elbeyioğlu" ("son of foreigner Bey"), "Ağaoğlu" ("son of Ağa"), "Yusufoğlu" ("son of Yusuf"), etc.
- zade. Examples: "Beyzade" (son of a Bey), "Aşıkpaşazade" ("son of Ashik Paşa), "Mehmedzade" (son of Mehmet), etc.
- -enko or -ko, meaning simply "son of". Example: "Kovalenko" ("son of Koval")
- ap or ab. Example: "ap Rhys" ("son of Rhys", anglicized to "Price"), "ab Owain" ("son of Owen", anglicized to Bowen) etc.
References
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External links
The dictionary definition of son at Wiktionary