Thujone is a monoterpene found in certain essential oils, notably wormwood. It is best known for its historic association with absinthe and its psychoactive reputation, though its effects are limited and context-dependent. The term also appears in chemistry to describe specific diterpenoid-like frameworks related to thujone’s ring structure and stereochemistry.

"The bottle labeled absinthe contained thujone, which drew researchers' interest in the compound."
"Some herbal extracts claim to contain thujone, but concentrations are carefully regulated."
"The scientist discussed how thujone interacts with neurotransmitter systems in animal models."
"Herbalists caution about thujone content when using wormwood-derived preparations."
Thujone derives from the genus name Thuja (referring to the cedar family, especially Thuja occidentalis), with the suffix -one denoting a ketone or a class of organic compounds. The term appears in early 19th-century chemical literature as researchers began isolating volatile components from aromatic plants like wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) and cedarwood. Its discovery is tied to the broader study of terpenes and terpenoids produced by conifers and various herbs. The word likely entered English through multilingual scientific texts, incorporating Latinized forms of Thuja and the chemical suffix -one. Over time, thujone was studied for its structural features—a bicyclic monoterpene framework—with attention to its potential psychoactive properties. First widely referenced in pharmacological and forensic contexts in the late 19th to early 20th centuries, thujone’s notoriety peaked in the absinthe craze, when debates about its safety and effects amplified public interest. Contemporary literature distinguishes thujone from related compounds, emphasizing regulated levels and clarifying that reported effects depend on dosage, route of administration, and the presence of other constituents. In modern chemistry, thujone serves as a model compound for studying stereochemistry and ring systems characteristic of monoterpenes and related natural products.
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Words that rhyme with "Thujone"
-one sounds
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Pronounce as THU-jone, with primary stress on the first syllable. IPA US: ˈθuːˌdoʊn or ˈθjuːˌhoʊn depending on speaker; UK: ˈθuːdʒəʊn; AU: ˈθuːdʒəʊn. Start with an initial voiceless dental fricative plus a 'th' sound, move to a long 'oo' vowel quality, then a voiced 'j' onset before a long 'one' ending. Tip: blend the 'hu' with a soft 'j' to avoid a hard 'y' sound.
Common errors: (1) Misplacing stress as on the second syllable (thu-JONE). (2) Pronouncing the initial 'th' as a hard 't' or 'd' instead of thevoiced dental fricative /θ/ or /ð/. (3) Slurring the 'j' into a simple 'y' or 'z' sound, yielding 'thoo-yoan' or 'thooj-ohn'. Correction: begin with /θ/ or /ð/ depending on speaker, ensure a clear /uː/ vowel, then use /dʒ/ or /j/ for the 'j' portion, ending with /oʊn/. Practice with minimal pairs to separate the sounds.
US tends to favor /θuːˈdoʊn/ with a strong /θ/ and a bright /oʊ/ in the final syllable. UK often aligns with /ˈθuːdʒəʊn/, where /əʊ/ is common in non-rhotic accents and the second syllable is less stressed. Australian tends toward /ˈθuːdʒəʊn/ with a relaxed mid-central vowel in the second syllable and clear /dʒ/ articulation. Across accents, the main differences are vowel quality in the second syllable and the rhoticity (US rhotic, UK/AU non-rhotic). IPA references: US /ˈθuːˌdoʊn/; UK /ˈθuːdʒəʊn/; AU /ˈθuːdʒəʊn/.
The difficulty comes from the combination of a rare initial θ sound with a long back vowel /uː/ and the complex /dʒ/ onset in the second syllable. Speakers may substitute /t/ or /d/ for /θ/ or merge /j/ with /oʊn/. Also, its letter sequence can mislead into a ‘thu-jon’ or ‘thuw-join’ pronunciation. To master it, practice the dental fricative /θ/ followed by a long /uː/ and the affricate /dʒ/ before /oʊn/. Use IPA cues and tongue position guidance to refine articulation.
A unique aspect is the subtle transition from the dental /θ/ to the back rounded /uː/ before the /dʒ/ consonant. Avoid turning /θuː/ into an aspirated /t/ cluster; keep the throat relaxed and the tongue blade near the upper teeth, letting the /uː/ sustain before the /dʒ/ onset. Stress remains on the first syllable in most varieties; the second syllable carries a light secondary rise in American speech in compound contexts. IPA: US /ˈθuːˌdoʊn/; UK/AU /ˈθuːdʒəʊn/.
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