Definition of Daundering

1. daunder [v] - See also: daunder

Lexicographical Neighbors of Daundering

daughterliness
daughterling
daughterlings
daughterly
daughters
daughters-in-law
daughters of the manse
daughtren
dault
daults
daunc't
daunce
dauncer
daunder
daundered
daundering (current term)
daunders
dauner
daunered
daunering
dauners
daunomycin
daunomycins
daunorubicin
daunorubicin-doxorubicin polyketide synthase
daunorubicine
daunorubicins
daunosamine
daunoxome
daunt

Literary usage of Daundering

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1868)
"Some idle daundering good- for-naught" (when Ruth was excited she often used the graphic diction of the country-side) " who takes no trouble for himself, ..."

2. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1872)
"... the pleasant Scores at St. Andrews, or daundering slowly over the bright Links, one of the prettiest and brightest scenes of Scottish out-of-door life ! ..."

3. Thomas Carlyle: A History of His Life in London, 1834-1881 by James Anthony Froude (1884)
"... wadna bide,' though they had sent for him; and so here he was with his old dame come daundering back again to beggary and the Hawick native soil! ..."

4. Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle by Jane Welsh Carlyle (1883)
"It would have touched you to the heart to see poor Jess Donaldson daundering about, opening drawers and presses to find something to give me. ..."

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