moulder
Multiple Entries:moulder mould
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
moulder /ˈməʊldə(r)/ (US molder)
▶verb (often as adj. mouldering) slowly decay.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
mould1 (US mold)
▶noun
- 1 a hollow container used to give shape to molten or hot liquid material when it cools and hardens.
- 2 a dish made in a mould, such as a mousse.
- 3 a distinctive form, style, or character: a superb striker in the same mould as Lineker.
- 4 a frame or template for producing mouldings.
- 1 form (an object) out of a malleable substance.
■ give a shape to (a malleable substance).
- 2 influence the formation or development of.
- 3 (as adj. moulded) (of a column, ceiling, etc.) having a decorative moulding: a moulded cornice.
– phrases
break the mould end a restrictive pattern of events or behaviour by doing things differently.
break the mould end a restrictive pattern of events or behaviour by doing things differently.
– derivatives
mouldable adjective,
moulder noun.
mouldable adjective,
moulder noun.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
mould2 (US mold)
▶noun a furry growth of minute fungi occurring typically in moist warm conditions on organic matter.
■ a fungus of this kind.
– origin ME: prob. from obs. mould, past part. of moul ‘grow mouldy’, of Scand. origin.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
mould3 (US mold)
▶noun chiefly Brit. soft loose earth, especially when rich in organic matter.
'moulder' also found in these Oxford entries:

