释义 |
foundering
foun·der 1 F0279100 (foun′dər)v. foun·dered, foun·der·ing, foun·ders v.intr.1. To sink below the surface of the water: The ship struck a reef and foundered.2. To cave in; sink: The platform swayed and then foundered.3. To fail utterly; collapse: a marriage that soon foundered.4. To stumble, especially to stumble and go lame. Used of horses.5. To become ill from overeating. Used of livestock.6. To be afflicted with laminitis. Used of horses.v.tr. To cause to founder: A large wave foundered the boat.n. See laminitis. [Middle English foundren, to sink to the ground, from Old French fondrer, from Vulgar Latin *funderāre, from *fundus, *funder-, bottom, from Latin fundus, fund-.]Usage Note: The verbs founder and flounder are often confused. Founder comes from a Latin word meaning "bottom" (as in foundation) and originally referred to knocking enemies down; it is now also used to mean "to fail utterly, collapse." Flounder means "to move clumsily, thrash about," and hence "to proceed in confusion." If John is foundering in Chemistry 101, he had better drop the course; if he is floundering, he may yet pull through.
found·er 2 F0279100 (foun′dər)n. One who establishes something or formulates the basis for something: the founder of a university.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | foundering - (of a ship) sinkinggoing undership - a vessel that carries passengers or freightsinking - a descent as through liquid (especially through water); "they still talk about the sinking of the Titanic" | EncyclopediaSeefounderfoundering
Synonyms for founderingnoun (of a ship) sinkingSynonymsRelated Words |