Maunderer vs Maundered - What's the difference?
maunderer | maundered |
(maunder)
To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle.
* Sir Walter Scott
* 1834 , , v. 3, ch. V:
* 1871 , , ch. IV:
* 1889 , , ch. XVII:
* '>citation
To wander or walk aimlessly.
As a noun maunderer
is a babbler, a mumbler, one who speaks incessantly.As a verb maundered is
past tense of maunder.maundered
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
*maunder
English
Verb
(en verb)- He was ever maundering by the how that he met a party of scarlet devils.
- "Not so fast, Lady Cecilia; not yet;" and now Louisa went on with a medical maundering . "As to low spirits, my dear Cecilia, I must say I agree with Sir Sib Pennyfeather, who tells me it is not mere common low spirits "
- On the following day my friend's exhaustion had become so great that I began to fear his intelligence altogether broken up. But toward evening he briefly rallied, to maunder about many things, confounding in a sinister jumble the memories of the past weeks and those of bygone years.
- "What are you maundering about? He's going out from here a free man and whole—he's not going to die."