Noun
the couple's generous donation was a great boon to the charity's fund-raising campaign
a softhearted man who finds it hard to deny any boon, whether it be for friend or stranger Adjective
I and my boon companions celebrated that afternoon's victory on the gridiron with a night at a local dance club.
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Noun
The revenues from the $1,500 permits have been a boon for Rwanda, but have also pushed travelers into less expensive, more permissive markets such as Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.—Adam Erace, Fortune, 24 May 2026 Hotel rooms in Los Angeles and other FIFA World Cup host cities could sit empty, despite high expectations that the global sporting event would be a boon to the city.—Los Angeles Times, 23 May 2026 The ability to launch these from all three of its carriers would be a huge boon to the PLAN.—Christopher McFadden, Interesting Engineering, 23 May 2026 Filmed entirely in Colombia, the series has been a major boon for the local industry.—Stewart Clarke, Deadline, 20 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for boon
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English bone prayer, request, the favor requested, from Old Norse bōn request; akin to Old English bēn prayer, bannan to summon — more at ban entry 1
Adjective
Middle English bon, from Anglo-French, good — more at bounty