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ponder

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

Etymology

From Middle English ponderen, from Old French ponderer (to weigh, balance, ponder) from Latin ponderare (to weigh, ponder), from pondus (weight), from pendere (to weigh); see pendent and pound.

Pronunciation

Verb

ponder (third-person singular simple present ponders, present participle pondering, simple past and past participle pondered)

  1. To wonder, think of deeply.
  2. To consider (something) carefully and thoroughly.
    Synonyms: chew over, mull over; see also Thesaurus:ponder
    I have spent days pondering the meaning of life.
  3. (obsolete) To weigh.

Translations

Noun

ponder (plural ponders)

  1. (colloquial) A period of deep thought.
    I lit my pipe and had a ponder about it, but reached no definite conclusion.

Further reading

Anagrams

Middle English

Etymology

From Middle English ponderen, from Old French ponderer (to weigh, balance, ponder) from Latin ponderare (to weigh, ponder), from pondus (weight), from pendere (to weigh).

Noun

ponder (plural ponders)

  1. (glassblowing, obsolete) A fourteenth-century unit of glass.

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