Word of the Day

founder

foun·der 1 (foundr)

v. foun·dered, foun·der·ing, foun·ders

v.intr.

1. To sink below the surface of the water: The ship struck a reef and foundered.

2. To cave in; sink: The platform swayed and then foundered.

3. To fail utterly; collapse: a marriage that soon foundered.

4. To stumble, especially to stumble and go lame. Used of horses.

5. To become ill from overeating. Used of livestock.

6. To be afflicted with laminitis. Used of horses.

v.tr.

To cause to founder.

n.

See laminitis.


[Middle English foundren, to sink to the ground, from Old French fondrer, from Vulgar Latin *funderre, from *fundus, *funder-, bottom, from Latin fundus, fund-.]

Usage Note: The verbs founder and flounder are often confused. Founder comes from a Latin word meaning “bottom” (as in foundation) and originally referred to knocking enemies down; it is now also used to mean “to fail utterly, collapse.” Flounder means “to move clumsily, thrash about,” and hence “to proceed in confusion.” If John is foundering in Chemistry 1, he had better drop the course; if he is floundering, he may yet pull through.

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.


founder

Verb

1. to break down or fail: his negotiations have foundered on economic grounds

2. (of a ship) to sink

3. to sink into or become stuck in soft ground

4. (of a horse) to stumble or go lame [Old French fondrer to submerge]

USAGE: Founder is sometimes wrongly used where flounder is meant: this unexpected turn of events left him floundering (not foundering).

Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006 © HarperCollins Publishers 2004, 2006

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Posted on October 12, 2008 by admin

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