- A law or rule. - A law, or rule of doctrine or discipline, enacted by a
council and confirmed by the pope or the sovereign; a decision,
regulation, code, or constitution made by ecclesiastical authority. - The collection of books received as genuine Holy Scriptures,
called the sacred canon, or general rule of moral and religious duty,
given by inspiration; the Bible; also, any one of the canonical
Scriptures. See Canonical books, under Canonical, a. - In monasteries, a book containing the rules of a religious
order. - A catalogue of saints acknowledged and canonized in the
Roman Catholic Church. - A member of a cathedral chapter; a person who possesses a
prebend in a cathedral or collegiate church. - A musical composition in which the voices begin one after
another, at regular intervals, successively taking up the same subject.
It either winds up with a coda (tailpiece), or, as each voice finishes,
commences anew, thus forming a perpetual fugue or round. It is the
strictest form of imitation. See Imitation. - The largest size of type having a specific name; -- so
called from having been used for printing the canons of the church. - The part of a bell by which it is suspended; -- called also
ear and shank. - See Carom.
Meaning of 'canon' (Princeton's WordNet)
1 . canon
[ n]
Meaning (1): - a rule or especially body of rules or principles generally established as valid and fundamental in a field of art or philosophy
Lloyd Morgan's Canon Lloyd Morgan's Canon is the principle, suggested by the British comparative psychologist LIoyd Morgan in 1894, that any interpretation of an animal’s behaviour