What's the difference between mander and maunder?

Mander


Definition:

  • (v. t. & i.) See Maunder.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Como Park Zoo and Conservatory came up with the idea in response to a common prank where people leave trick messages for friends from people named things like Don Key and Sally Mander, then including the phone number for the local zoo.
  • (2) "It helps that our front-line staff now has somewhere to quickly transfer these calls to instead of trying to explain that there is no one here with the name ‘Sally Mander,'" said zoo director Michelle Furrer in a release.
  • (3) My knowledge was based on the vivid depiction of Tyrone Power's Ferdinand de Lesseps meeting Miles Mander's prime minister and getting the money to complete his project in Alan Dwan's 1938 movie Suez .
  • (4) Instagram remains one of the fastest-growing networks in the UK, with a younger user base than any of the other major networks,” said Jason Mander of GlobalWebIndex.
  • (5) Probably HMV's branch in Wolverhampton's Mander Centre.
  • (6) Builders' tea: "The mainstream tea category has lost its sparkle," Neil Manders, Twinings' commercial director, told the Grocer recently.
  • (7) Indications and modalities for the use of expanders in the head and neck (Argenta et al., 1983; Manders et al., 1984) and the breast (Radovan, 1982; Argenta et al., 1983) are now well established, but severe skin loss in the distal part of the leg, particularly if due to trauma and accompanied by exposure of the neural structure, may create serious problems of reconstruction.
  • (8) • Jerry Mander is the founder of the San Francisco-based International Forum on Globalization.

Maunder


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To beg.
  • (v. i.) To mutter; to mumble; to grumble; to speak indistinctly or disconnectedly; to talk incoherently.
  • (v. t.) To utter in a grumbling manner; to mutter.
  • (n.) A beggar.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Perhaps he came with the intention of whipping up a controversy that his movie (a gorgeous, though maundering meditation on the end of the world) has singularly failed to provide.
  • (2) The film-maker maunders about inchoately in the documentary, showing a "different" slice of life, and at one stage trots out the extraordinary defence that if he hadn't done it, someone else would have.
  • (3) (1967) on 41 samples of fish, One Step Method, (Ahmad and Marolt (1986] on 86 samples of fish and Maunder et al.
  • (4) This scene is replayed across Britain each day: from the centre of Derby to the cluster of chicken factories owned by other companies in the Midlands, from Great Yarmouth to the Grampian production lines in East Anglia, from Exeter to the Lloyd Maunder factory in Devon where 18 nationalities work cutting and packing chicken for Sainsbury's.