Word of the Day
for Sunday,
March 17, 2013
Sundry \SUHN-dree\, adjective:
various or diverse: sundry
persons.
The early counts in
the indictment will be thrown out: they concern sundry words spoken, at sundry
times, about the act and the oath, and More's treasonable conspiracy with
Fisher—letters went between the two of them, but it seems those letters are now
destroyed.
-- Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall, 2009
-- Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall, 2009
He looked like an
Italian, was dressed like an Englishman, and had the independent air of an
American—a combination which caused sundry
pairs of feminine eyes to look approvingly after him, and sundry
dandies in black velvet suits, with rose-coloured neckties, buff gloves, and
orange flowers in their buttonholes, to shrug their shoulders, and then envy
him his inches.
-- Louisa May Alcott, Little Women, 1868
-- Louisa May Alcott, Little Women, 1868
Sundry first appeared in English before the year 900. It is derived
from the Old English syndrig
meaning "separate," "apart," and "special." While
sundi
and sundrie
were acceptable spellings between the thirteenth and seventeenth centuries,
since then they have fallen out of use in favour of sundry.
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