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throne (n.)

c. 1200, trone, "the seat of God or a saint in heaven;" c. 1300 as "seat occupied by a sovereign," from Old French trone (12c., Modern French trône), from Latin thronus, from Greek thronos "elevated seat, chair, throne," from suffixed form of PIE root *dher- "to hold firmly, support" (source also of Latin firmus "firm, steadfast, strong, stable," Sanskrit dharma "statute, law"). From late 14c. as a symbol of royal power. Colloquial meaning "toilet" is recorded from 1922. The classical -h- begins to appear in English from late 14c.

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Definitions of throne from WordNet
1
throne (n.)
the chair of state for a monarch, bishop, etc.;
the king sat on his throne
throne (n.)
a plumbing fixture for defecation and urination;
Synonyms: toilet / can / commode / crapper / pot / potty / stool
throne (n.)
the position and power of an exalted person (a sovereign or bishop) who is entitled to sit in a chair of state on ceremonial occasions;
2
throne (v.)
sit on the throne as a ruler;
throne (v.)
put a monarch on the throne;
Synonyms: enthrone
From wordnet.princeton.edu