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maund

[ US /ˈmɔnd/ ]
NOUN
  1. a unit of weight used in Asia; has different values in different countries
    the official maund in India is 82.6 pounds avoirdupois

How To Use maund In A Sentence

  • The ASA said the complaints had cited the cartoon depiction of Christ and the Sacred Heart, the use of the term "miraculous" for describing a mobile phone deal, and the fact that it was published on Maundy Thursday. BBC News - Home
  • Otherwise this irritable maunderer would have known that, everything else apart, I am heartily tired of the responsibilities of youth under any such constant surveillance. Jurgen A Comedy of Justice
  • The first known record of Royal Maundy took place here, when King John fed and clothed 13 paupers in 1210.
  • He was instead maundering about his room, thinking about silly things and wishing he knew what was going on.
  • Tromp would maunder over and over of how Johannes Maartens and the cunies robbed the kings on Tabong Mountain, each embalmed in his golden coffin with an embalmed maid on either side; and of how these ancient proud ones crumbled to dust within the hour while the cunies cursed and sweated at junking the coffins. Chapter 15
  • The Maundy recipients told the Evening Press that they were determined not to sell the coins.
  • I looked up "maunder" and I think it would make an excellent stage name: -) 9: 28 PM skookumchick said ... Added to the Blogroll
  • The fame of whose name made all men quake and tremble, and who then had commaunded all the troupe of the Gentlemen of his Court, to go and seeke the forlorne louers, so long time lost and vnknowen. The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1
  • All very well to poetize and maunder about in quiet The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 28, February, 1860
  • Every issue has a cluster of stories that vary wildly in style and tone, from maundering musings to cold silence, from freehand swirls to suffocating realism.
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