founder

1 of 4

noun (1)

found·​er ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
: one that founds or establishes
the founder of a company
the founder of psychoanalysis

founder

2 of 4

verb

foun·​der ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
foundered; foundering ˈfau̇n-d(ə-)riŋ How to pronounce founder (audio) ; founders

intransitive verb

1
of a horse : to become disabled
especially : to go lame
His horse foundered while he was still five miles from home.
2
: to give way : collapse
Every once in a while, perhaps as a consequence of small earthquakes or other tectonic movements … these muddy banks foundered and slid into the adjoining stagnant basin …Stephen Jay Gould
3
: to become submerged : sink
In the early hours of the 7th of December, a German liner named the Deutschland, sailing from Bremen to New York, foundered and broke up on the Kentish coast.Guy Davenport
4
: to encounter misfortune : fail
They were Hollywood's happiest couple right up to the moment the marriage foundered.John Gregory Dunne

transitive verb

: to disable (a domesticated animal, such as a horse or cow) especially as a result of excessive feeding or poor nutrition : to cause founder in
It can be caused by excess sugar in the horses' diet. … new spring grass is the most sugar-filled and, therefore, the most likely to founder a horse.Desirai Schild

founder

3 of 4

noun (2)

foun·​der ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
: inflammation of and damage to the laminae (see lamina sense 4) and coffin bone in the hoof of a domesticated animal (such as a horse or cow) that is typically caused by poor diet, obesity, or diseases associated with inflammation : laminitis
The laminae are what hold the bone to the hoof. When they become compromised and inflamed, they cause severe pain and lameness. If they start to separate from the bone, it will cause sinking of the bone within the hoof which is called founderLainie Kringen-Scholtz

founder

4 of 4

noun (3)

found·​er ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
: one that founds metal
especially : typefounder

Did you know?

Founder is related to Latin fundus, meaning "bottom" or "base." When something "founders," it usually hits the bottom in one sense or another. When a ship founders, it sinks to the bottom of the sea, for example, and if your endeavor is foundering, it isn't doing well and is therefore headed downward.

Examples of founder in a Sentence

Noun (1) Maria Montessori was the founder of an educational system dedicated to maximizing a child's creative potential Verb Her career foundered, and she moved from job to job for several years. trying to save a foundering career
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Noun
San Francisco Mayor London Breed, a Democrat, also lost a re-election bid to Levi Strauss heir and nonprofit founder Daniel Lurie, who campaigned aggressively on crime and street safety. Kimmy Yam, NBC News, 13 Nov. 2024 Working alongside a college fraternity represents a bold next step for the White Line and its founders, White’s parents, Michael and Jill. Frederick Dreier, Outside Online, 7 Nov. 2024
Verb
The director, an NYU hotshot whose career almost foundered after Going in Style, has a nice, leisurely way with the material. David Denby, Vulture, 3 July 2024 Similar challenges to the status quo in Iraq have foundered in the past. Renad Mansour, Foreign Affairs, 10 Nov. 2021 See all Example Sentences for founder 

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

Middle English foundour, borrowed from Anglo-French fundur, foundour, going back to Latin fundātor, from fundāre "to found entry 4" + -tor, agent suffix

Verb

Middle English fondrer "to fall to the ground, stumble, sink," borrowed from Anglo-French fundrer "to destroy," probably back-formation from enfondrer, esfondrer, affondrer "to sink, send to the bottom," prefixed forms based on Old French -fondrer, going back to Vulgar Latin *-fundorāre, verbal derivative of Late Latin fundor-, variant stem of Latin fundus "bottom, base" — more at bottom entry 1

Note: The simple verb fundrer (as opposed to prefixed forms) is marginally attested in Anglo-French, its senses partially merged with fondre going back to Latin fundere (see found entry 5), which in addition to its basic meanings "to pour, cast" had already in Classical Latin the extended meanings "to scatter, disperse, rout" and "to lay low, slay."

Noun (2)

derivative of founder entry 2

Noun (3)

Middle English foundour, borrowed from Anglo-French foundur, foundour, from fondre "to melt, cast, found entry 5" + -ur, -our -er entry 2

First Known Use

Noun (1)

14th century, in the meaning defined above

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 1

Noun (2)

circa 1547, in the meaning defined above

Noun (3)

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of founder was in the 14th century

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Dictionary Entries Near founder

Cite this Entry

“Founder.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/founder. Accessed 28 Nov. 2024.

Kids Definition

founder

1 of 3 noun
found·​er ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
: one that founds or establishes

founder

2 of 3 verb
foun·​der ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
foundered; foundering -d(ə-)riŋ How to pronounce founder (audio)
1
: to become lame
the horse foundered
2
: to sink below the surface of the water
a foundering ship

founder

3 of 3 noun
found·​er
: one that founds metal
Etymology

Verb

Middle English foundren "to fall to the ground, sink," from early French fondrer (same meaning), derived from Latin fundere "to pour, cast, disperse, lay low" — related to font entry 2, found entry 3

Medical Definition

founder

1 of 2 verb
foun·​der ˈfau̇n-dər How to pronounce founder (audio)
foundered; foundering -d(ə-)riŋ How to pronounce founder (audio) ; founders

intransitive verb

of a horse
: to become disabled
especially : to go lame

transitive verb

: to disable (a domesticated animal, such as a horse or cow), especially as a result of excessive feeding or poor nutrition : to cause laminitis in

founder

2 of 2 noun
foun·​der
: inflammation of and damage to the laminae (see lamina sense b) and coffin bone in the hoof of a domesticated animal (such as a horse or cow) that is typically caused by poor diet, obesity, or diseases associated with inflammation : laminitis

Legal Definition

founder

noun
found·​er
: one that founds or establishes: as
a
: one that establishes a foundation

More from Merriam-Webster on founder

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