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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
bounder
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Clean out of the back door and away up the pasture toward home she ran, the lovely little bounder.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bounder

Bounder \Bound"er\ (bound"[~e]r), n.

  1. One who, or that which, limits; a boundary.
    --Sir T. Herbert.

  2. One who behaves dishonorably or objectionably; a cad.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
bounder

1560s, "one who sets bounds," agent noun from bound (v.1); British English slang meaning "person of objectionable social behavior, would-be stylish person," is from 1882, perhaps from bound (v.2) on notion of one trying to "bound" into high society, but earliest usage suggests one outside the "bounds" of acceptable socializing, which would connect it with the noun.

Wiktionary
bounder

n. 1 Something that bounds or jumps. 2 (context UK dated English) A dishonourable man; a cad. 3 A social climber. 4 That which limits; a boundary. 5 (context UK obsolete colloquial English) A four-wheeled type of dogcart or cabriolet

WordNet
bounder
  1. n. someone who is morally reprehensible; "you dirty dog" [syn: cad, blackguard, dog, hound, heel]

  2. an athlete who bounds or leaps (as in basketball) [syn: leaper, jumper]

Wikipedia
Bounder (video game)

' Bounder ' is an action game developed and published by Gremlin Graphics in 1985.

Bounder

Bounder may refer to:

  • Bounder (character), a dishonorable man
  • Bounder (video game), a 1985 computer game
  • The Bounder, a television show
  • Myasishchev M-50 (NATO reporting name "Bounder"), a Soviet Union prototype bomber aircraft
  • Pseudonym of Jon Bounds

Usage examples of "bounder".

Beneath her she felt Bounder picking his way carefully across the plain.

In the end, she dismounted, looping the reins over the branches of a clump of scrub in case Bounder had plans of his own.

She began to circle the horse, widening her path until Bounder was lost in a haze of dust.

She remembered a clear autumn night five years ago when she had led Bounder, docile as a lamb, to the front veranda of the homestead, where the boss sat in a straight-back chair watching her with his unflinching gaze.

And just as if he was performing in the circus, Bounder had gone down on his front legs as she swept off her hat in a graceful arc and bowed to her uncle.

The boss had known it, she had known it, and surely Bounder, with his brumby intelligence, had known it, too.

She had asked Bounder to perform since then, but not for a year at least.

The struggle to do so had not been one of her finest moments, and not until Bounder had risen to his feet and the man remained firmly across the saddle had she been certain her plan had worked.

But there was some dried up vegetation for Bounder to feed on and a bucket that she half-filled with water from her own supply.

At the trees, Mackenzie dismounted and left Bounder to drink and graze.

Then she finished her chores and mounted Bounder for the trip to the hut.

Patrick leaned over the side of the shelter where Bounder was hobbled and watched him eat the tufts of dried grass that Mackenzie had found for him.

Mackenzie waited for some sign that Bounder had tired of being domesticated and was ready to assert himself.

He continued stroking Bounder, but it was Mackenzie he watched, Mackenzie he wanted to touch.

She caught Gimme and Bounder, who had found his way back to the homestead after a week in the open, and was saddling them when she saw her uncle approaching.