(n.) One who places goods under bond or in a bonded warehouse.
(n.) A bonding stone or brick; a bondstone.
(n.) A freeholder on a small scale.
Example Sentences:
(1) Any walker on the Beacons knows the familiar lines of altitude runners, triathletes, adventure vacationers and company bonders, all taking serious risks in the hope of physical (and perhaps corporate) improvement.
(2) Haemolytic zones up to 6 mm must be considered seronegative even when some of the bloods or sera have bonder line haemagglutination inhibition titres.
(3) Veteran Reggie Evans, self-styled team-bonder, has looked increasingly vigorous while urging his team on, and yet has seen less-and-less playing time despite the holes in Brooklyn's roster.
(4) The antimitotic activity of oxidized derivatives of cholesterol was investigated using an assay developed by Van Scott and Bonder.
(5) These observations confirm and extend those of Bonder and Mooseker [Bonder, E. M., & Mooseker, M. S. (1986) J.
Yonder
Definition:
(adv.) At a distance, but within view.
(a.) Being at a distance within view, or conceived of as within view; that or those there; yon.
Example Sentences:
(1) Free, free as the sunshine trickling down the morning into these high windows of mine, free as yonder fresh young voices welling up to me from the caverns of brick and mortar below – swelling with song, instinct with life, tremulous treble and darkening bass.” A signature sentence “If it is true that there are an appreciable number of Negro youth in the land capable by character and talent to receive that higher training, the end of which is culture, and if the two-and-a-half thousand who have had something of this training in the past have in the main proved themselves useful to their race and generation, the question then comes, What place in the future development of the South ought the Negro college and college-bred man to occupy?” Three to compare Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man (1952) James Baldwin: The Fire Next Time (1963) Barack Obama: Dreams from My Father (1995) • The Souls of Black Folk by WEB Du Bois is published by Yale University Press (£7.99).
(2) Debt will rise as austerity stretches further into the yonder with ever more cuts.
(3) If universal credit collapses or is delayed to beyond the blue yonder, it will be a shame that a project every government considers, but shies away from in its enormity, is wrecked by incompetence, arrogance and a political imperative to rush.
(4) We now have a system that would not allow the Liberal Democrats to be bounced into a position that came out of the pale blue yonder.
(5) But he insisted that much UK money vanished “into the wide blue yonder.
(6) We start by marching on the spot, which gradually turns into a sort of gliding on the spot, rather than trying to head off too fast into the wild yonder of the rink.
(7) One of the mainest ways is by singing … No matter who makes it up, no matter who sings it and who don't, if it talks the lingo of the people it's a cinch to catch on, and will be sung here and yonder for a long time after you've cashed in your chips."
(8) A false step yonder means death,” evil Stapleton warns in the book.