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Answer for the clue "Recklessly waste ", 8 letters:
squander

Alternative clues for the word squander

Word definitions for squander in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Squander \Squan"der\, n. The act of squandering; waste.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1580s (implied in squandering ), "to spend recklessly or prodigiously," of unknown origin; Shakespeare used it in "Merchant of Venice" (1593) with a sense of "to be scattered over a wide area." Squander-bug , a British symbol of reckless extravagance and ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. To waste, lavish, splurge; to spend lavishly or profusely; to dissipate.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Squander (written as "$QUANDER" on the box and in the rules) is an Avalon Hill board game published in 1965. It is based loosely on the game Monopoly , but in reverse. As in Monopoly, players roll dice and move around a board, encountering opportunities ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN chance ▪ Chelsea squandered enough chances to have won by six goals. ▪ Wynalda squandered two solid chances in a scoreless first half. ▪ Wolves' Steve Bull squandered a host of chances . ▪ Alton increased the pressure ...

Usage examples of squander.

His fattier had squandered the family fortune while gambling and departed the earth a few days after Brock uncovered his debts, while his mother had a softness of the mind and required expensive doctors.

The Christians of Maine, facing tasks of evangelization more than sufficient to occupy all their resources even when well economized and squandering nothing on needless divisions and competitions, have attained to the high grace of saying that sectarian interests must and shall be sacrificed when the paramount interests of the kingdom of Christ require it.

He had seduced his wife, or rather his mistress, who had been driven away by her husband, and after he had squandered everything she possessed, and he found himself at the end of his wits, he had tried to turn her prostitution to advantage.

I then discharged my debts and found I was eighty guineas to the good, this being what remained of the fine fortune I had squandered away like a fool or a philosopher, or, perhaps, a little like both.

The landlord would not squander precious dried-dung fuel on anything like a hammam or hot water for washing clothes.

Repeatedly, he visited Kinder, by then company president, and pounded his desk, saying Enron was squandering its one great opportunity.

Lord Edward Mitton, who had squandered his inheritance by the time he was twenty and had sponged off his dwindling circle of friends ever since.

And I squandered yesterday afternoon when I had that pepperoni double cheese pizza.

What ought to be mine is to be squandered on the scaff and raff of the back-slums!

There had been money, but most of it had been squandered before Tolley had been born, the rest lost in the Wall Street Crash.

Evult squandered five hundred-score in armsmen, and Vult is buried under molten rock.

Grecian, surely he would never so far misspend his precious time, and squander his precious intellect upon old dusty quarrels, never of more value to a philosopher than a tempest in a wash-hand bason, but now stuffed with obscurities which no man can explain, and with lies to which no man can bring the counter-statement.

Some three or four hundred diggers arrived from Creswick-creek, a gold-field famous for its pennyweight fortunes--grubbed up through hard work, and squandered in dissipation among the swarm of sly-grog sellers in the district.

Iowa Democrats have never put on a shuck to equal the August 1999 Republican straw pollan overhyped dress rehearsal for the caucuses that prompted candidates to squander so much money on buses, barbecue and big-name entertainers like Crystal Gayle that the effort prematurely drove Lamar Alexander and Elizabeth Dole from the race.

Glimpses of these lost things--these squandered treasures, these wasted possibilities, these pearls and gems of life that have gone down into the sea of our past--we may have when the reefs are left bare by the refluent tides, but glimpses only can we see.