sundry

1 of 2

adjective

sun·​dry ˈsən-drē How to pronounce sundry (audio)
: including many things of different kinds : miscellaneous, various
sundry items/articles
The interior was padded and crammed with little pockets and nets for hatboxes and sundry possessions.Graham Robb
Served up with these, were sundry greens, —lichens, mosses, ferns, and fungi.Herman Melville
It's not just books on sale anymore—it's CD's, DVD's, greeting cards, stationery, sundry gifts, coffee and baked goods …Charles Taylor
… to protect us from colds, broken crockery, and the sundry inconveniences of a royal household.Gail Carson Levine
At the same time the populace, reading the news items of his doings and hearing him speak on various and sundry occasions, conceived a great fancy for him.Theodore Dreiser

sundry

2 of 2

pronoun

plural in construction
: an indeterminate number
usually used in the phrase all and sundry to mean "everyone"
Whenever a crowd gathered, as it did at every stop, we interrogated all and sundry about the events of 1943.Samuel Eliot Morison
Cluny lashed out at all and sundry with his tail, foaming at the mouth and cursing wildly …Brian Jacques
compare sundries

Examples of sundry in a Sentence

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.
Adjective
The Hornets traded 7-footer Mark Williams to the Los Angeles Lakers in the wee hours of Thursday morning, leaving the team with various and sundry spare parts at center. Scott Fowler, Charlotte Observer, 7 Feb. 2025 Mickey knows everybody—the real housewives of Mumbai, feminists who work with his charity, sundry hot guys who are strewn in his path. Lynn Yaeger, Vogue, 5 Feb. 2025 This won’t stop the market from trading each flash headline about the cadence and scope of tariffs, the breadth of any immigrant deportation plans and sundry deregulatory declarations. Michael Santoli, CNBC, 21 Jan. 2025 The city has burned, after all, at various historical flash points — the Watts Riots, the 1992 Uprising, the sundry Malibu fires over the years — and the image has reinscribed itself upon us over and over, as in Ed Ruscha’s legendary 1968 painting The Los Angeles County Museum on Fire. Matthew Specktor, The Hollywood Reporter, 17 Jan. 2025 See all Example Sentences for sundry 

Word History

Etymology

Adjective

Middle English, different for each, from Old English syndrig, from sundor apart — more at sunder

First Known Use

Adjective

14th century, in the meaning defined above

Pronoun

14th century, in the meaning defined above

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

Dictionary Entries Near sundry

Cite this Entry

“Sundry.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sundry. Accessed 18 Feb. 2025.

Kids Definition

sundry

adjective
sun·​dry
ˈsən-drē
: miscellaneous, several, various
for sundry reasons

More from Merriam-Webster on sundry

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!