Quick answer
Scone means a small baked bread or cake, often slightly sweet and commonly served with tea. It is usually pronounced , and today it is still readable to modern audiences, even if it sounds more deliberate than everyday speech.
Word page
Scone means a small baked bread or cake, often slightly sweet and commonly served with tea. It belongs to food and bodily oddities and works best in comic description, bodily discomfort, and odd old domestic vocabulary. It is still understandable today, but it usually sounds more vivid and deliberate than ordinary modern vocabulary.
Scone means a small baked bread or cake, often slightly sweet and commonly served with tea. It is usually pronounced , and today it is still readable to modern audiences, even if it sounds more deliberate than everyday speech.
In plain English, scone refers to a small baked bread or cake, often slightly sweet and commonly served with tea. It is most useful when a plain label would tell the truth but miss the tone, flavor, or comic edge.
Scone feels absurd because it has more texture than the plain alternative, giving the idea an extra bit of theatrical, comic, or overbuilt energy.
Scone is generally traced to origin uncertain. In modern use, the history matters less than the strong tone the word still carries.
Scone is uncommon today, but it still makes sense to modern readers because the tone and meaning come across quickly once you see it in context.
Use scone when you want a more vivid, characterful choice than the plain everyday alternative. It works especially well in comic description, bodily discomfort, and odd old domestic vocabulary.
aspic, belch, blancmange, blubber, bubble-and-squeak
comfort, steadiness, bodily ease
Edited by Absurd Words. Last updated: May 9, 2026. See the editorial policy for how definitions, examples, labels, and update checks are handled on the site.