wounder









wounder


wounder n.

late 15c., agent noun from wound (v.).

Examples from the Web for wounder Historical Examples of wounder

  • That canyon must be a wounder, and the sea and the misty mountains and the brown hills.

    The Hive

    Will Levington Comfort

  • Indras, as an ant, is the wounder, the biter of the serpent.

    Zoological Mythology (Volume II)

    Angelo de Gubernatis

  • I lay a long time just in the wounder of the wounderful free air and rain.

    The Hive

    Will Levington Comfort

  • The wound would not close, and an oracle told Telephus “the wounder shall heal.”

    Euripedes and His Age

    Gilbert Murray

  • Marko cannot now open his hand, but his wounder was sped to the happy hunting-grounds there and then, as he modestly relates.

    The Land of the Black Mountain

    Reginald Wyon

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