Clone
early 20th century: from Greek klōn ‘twig’.
wiktionary
Coined (in botany) in 1903, based on Ancient Greek κλών(klṓn, “twig”). Figurative use from the 1970s.
etymonline
clone (n.)
1903, in botany, "group of cultivated plants each of which is a transplanted part of one original," from Latinized form of Greek klōn "a twig, spray," related to klados "sprout, young branch, offshoot of a plant," possibly from PIE root *kel- (1) "to strike, cut" (see holt). Meaning "person or animal replicated from a single cell of another and genetically identical to it" is by 1970 (theoretical). Figurative use, "one who slavishly imitates another," is by 1978.
clone (v.)
1959, from clone (n.). Extension to genetic duplication of animals and human beings is from 1970. Related: Cloned; cloning.