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  1. intransitive. To move blindly or stupidly; to flounder, stumble. Often with on; also to blunder one's way along; and in senses partaking of 7, as to blunder into, blunder against. c1386. Bayard the blynde, That blundreth [variant reading blondreth] forth, and peril casteth noon.

  2. blunder (n.) late 14c., blonder, blunder, "disturbance, strife; trouble, distress;" apparently from blunder (v.). The original sense is obsolete. The meaning "a mistake made through hurry or confusion" is from 1706.

  3. Where does the noun blunder come from? Earliest known use. Middle English. The earliest known use of the noun blunder is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for blunder is from around 1375, in the writing of John Barbour, ecclesiastic and verse historian. blunder is apparently formed within English, by conversion.

  4. Dec 23, 2015 · The long list goes all the way from flow, flutter, flicker, and flounce to flip-flop. It appears that one of the false leads in the search for the etymology of blunder was provided by the noun blunderbuss “a gun.”. Blunderbuss came to English from Dutch, where its form is donderbus (donder “thunder” and bus “gun”).

  5. Origin of Blunder. From Middle English blunderen to go blindly perhaps from Old Swedish blundra have one's eyes closed from Old Norse blunda. From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition. Old Norse blunda (“to shut the eyes”). Cognates include Danish blunde (“to blink”). From Wiktionary.

  6. Nov 9, 2024 · blunder (third-person singular simple present blunders, present participle blundering, simple past and past participle blundered) (intransitive) To make a clumsy or stupid mistake. to blunder in preparing a medical prescription. (intransitive) To move blindly or clumsily.

  7. If so, it won’t surprise you to learn that blunder comes from the Old Norse word blundra, meaning to “shut one's eyes.” It wasn’t until the eighteenth century that blunder came to refer to a stupid or embarrassing mistake, or as a verb, to describe making such a mistake, as in “I tend to blunder when I'm nervous.”

  8. The meaning of BLUNDER is to move unsteadily or confusedly. How to use blunder in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Blunder.

  9. A blunder is a stupid or careless mistake. I think he made a tactical blunder by announcing it so far ahead of time. American English : blunder / ˈblʌndər /

  10. BLUNDER meaning: 1. a serious mistake, usually caused by not taking care or thinking: 2. to move in an awkward way…. Learn more.