[
UK
/pˈændɐ/
]
[ US /ˈpændɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈpændɝ/ ]
VERB
- yield (to); give satisfaction to
- arrange for sexual partners for others
NOUN
- someone who procures customers for whores (in England they call a pimp a ponce)
How To Use pander In A Sentence
- Well, the often interesting BSS bunch pandered to the crowd and although they did do some self-indulgent jams, it was all by the book.
- Your dentist will likely need to place a crossbite "expander" for a few months to correct that.--very common orthodontic correction. Pacifiers
- His films do not pander to escapism or to the audiences settled expectations about entertainment.
- She's been out pricing new cases, protective screens, memory expanders - you name it, she's got a quote for it.
- Try to take into account reasonable preferences which do not pander too much to their whims. The Sun
- Less belligerent in its audience pandering than its predecessors (less fart jokes, less homophobic subtext, and - thank Jesus - less squawking from Eddie Murphy), Shrek the Third may not give haters a migraine, but its lobotomized sense of comic brinkmanship is still without fun. GreenCine Daily: Shrek the Third.
- Bringing it back to Freshwater: it looks as though he was given a simplistic test scheme which he could game by playing the short-term rote memorisation card with his classes, while pandering to his own religious prejudices. Freshwater: The Board's rebuttal case - The Panda's Thumb
- Anyone who thinks it through or reads about economics will come to the conclusion this pander is a farce. Schneider: Gas tax suspension proves popular
- Some have sidecar expanders for more faders, knobs, meters or a joystick; some units are entirely self-contained.
- They also continue to pander to the successionist crazies who have elevated state patriotism to a religion. `Under God' in Texas pledge is constitutional, federal judge rules | RELIGION Blog | dallasnews.com