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sundry

[ US /ˈsəndɹi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. consisting of a haphazard assortment of different kinds
    assorted sizes
    a motley crew
    miscellaneous accessories
    sundry sciences commonly known as social
    assorted sizes
    an arrangement of assorted spring flowers
    a mixed program of baroque and contemporary music

How To Use sundry In A Sentence

  • Daniel Defoe, The Consoli - dator: or Memoirs and Sundry Transactions from the World in the Moon (London, 1705). COSMIC VOYAGES
  • But there was understandable outrage when sundry fund managers and regional stockbrokers were confronted with the hat. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a big man and a strong, the sightliest of men and a good skald; and when he was fully grown he fared between sundry lands, and was well accounted of wherever he came. The Story Of Gunnlaug The Worm-Tongue And Raven The Skald 1875
  • The room was full of shilpit pointy-heids and sundry technocrats.
  • Withal she bought them three good horses and another sumpter-horse; which last was loaded with sundry wares that she deemed that she needed, and with victual. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • I could go on and on about the many herons, egrets, gulls, terns, and various and sundry other species we spotted yesterday.
  • Poor Sundry Buyers continually pressed his abdomen as he toiled around the deck-capstans; and never was Nancy's face quite so forlorn as when he obeyed the Maltese Cockney's command and went up to loose the mizzen-skysail. CHAPTER L
  • (Christopher and Charles Marshall received $4,151 on May 2, 1777, "for sundry medicines and chirurgical instruments supplied by them for the use of different battalions of continental forces.") [116] _Pennsylvania Journal_, January 29, 1777. Drug Supplies in the American Revolution
  • His editor would not challenge and tolerate him, the various and sundry contacts and stoolies would not squeal to him.
  • But these shortcomings tend to be bundled together with broader concerns over spam, viruses, hacking, and all the other sundry ills of the world.
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