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THORN

In botany, a thorn is a sharp, pointed projection that arises from a plant stem. Thorns are typically modified branches that include wood and vascular tissue, and they can be simple spines or branched structures. They differ from spines, which are modified leaves or leaf parts, and from prickles, which are outgrowths of the epidermis. Thorns are a common defense against herbivores and can vary in size, persistence, and mechanism of formation across plant families. Examples include the long spines of cacti, the thorns on many citrus trees, and the branched thorns of hawthorns and acacias. Some thorns are deciduous while others persist for years; in some species, thorns may regenerate after damage.

In writing, thorn refers to the letter Þ/þ, known as thorn, used in Old English and Icelandic

Beyond biology and linguistics, Thorn is used as a surname and as a place name. There are

to
represent
the
sounds
/θ/
or
/ð/.
The
letter
survived
in
Icelandic
but
disappeared
from
modern
English,
replaced
by
'th'.
The
name
thorn
is
used
to
describe
that
character
in
historical
and
linguistic
contexts.
people
with
the
surname
Thorn
and
places
named
Thorn
in
various
countries,
including
a
town
in
the
Netherlands.
The
term
also
appears
in
literature
and
cultural
references
as
a
proper
noun.