Speak (about unimportant matters) rapidly and incessantly.
Talk indistinctly; usually in a low voice.
1 Tyson could speak, Tyson could write, where other men maunder and drivel.
2 Apian continued to maunder over the Ptolemaic theory and astrology in his lecture-room.
3 And while you maunder about restoring competition, the trusts go on destroying you.
4 All of which it is a comfort somehow to maunder away on here.
5 That is what his life has turned, but he will not maunder about it.
6 And while they maunder along they stifle the forces of life which are trying to break through.
7 I hate to hear him maunder on about imagination, while he leaves his tenantry to take their chance.
8 Let her maunder and mumble.
10 Among the occultists who maunder today in the universal decomposition of ideas he is the only one who interests me.
11 Though of course-Oh ,howone does maunder on and to think, to think of the people who are really poor.
12 As sure as he was there thinking over John Gordon and Mary Lawrie, would he maunder away his mind in softnesses.
13 No, no, I won't maunder , I won't be a romantic zany-nottill to-morrownight- Iknowthe very spot for our camp....'
14 Nevertheless, maunder he must; and he recurred to it in a way so utterly unlike himself that Laetitia stared in his face.
15 A man may maunder away his mind in softnesses till he ain't worth nothing, and don't do no good to no one.
16 Now that I can do nothing, I maunder over old subjects, and your approbation of my climbing paper gives me VERY great satisfaction.
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Verb
Indicative · Present