Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- A Middle English form of
sundry .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word sondry.
Examples
-
To ferne halwes faraway rondes, to Qywwnes, yJersye, and sondry londes;
From The BSNYC Culture Desk: Art and Transience BikeSnobNYC 2008
-
Wherby it hath happened, that sondry kynges by the repugnynges of the people haue lien vntoombed: and haue lacked the honoure of bewrialle, that the good are wonte to haue.
-
One maner of speache serueth not througheout the whole contry, but sondry and diuerse, aswel in phrase as in naming of thinges.
-
Their spiritualtie is deuided into many and sondry sortes of religions.
-
Thondre, and lightening in somer so terrible, that sondry do presently die for very feare.
-
And after by the same power puffed and swollen in the vppermoste parte, there gathered manye humours in sondry places, which drawing to ripenesse enclosed them selues in slymes and in filmes, as in the maresses of Egipt, and other stondynge waters we often se happen.
-
They glory in nothing but in one litle stone, wherin appere thre skore sondry colours: which we therfore calle Exaconthalitus.
-
Gelasius, Ambrose, and many other holy fathers, deuise, and put furthe, not at one time but at sondry.
-
They vse a kinde of voided shoes (whiche aftrewarde the Grieques toke vp, and called sandalium) very finely made, and of sondry colours.
-
They dwell not as the other Icthiophagi doe, all in one maner of cabanes, but sondry in diuers.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.