wonder and wondour are different spellings of the same word, not unlike color and colour. Wondour or wonder is a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration, caused by something beautiful, unexpected, unfamiliar, or inexplicable.
"he had stood in front of it, observing the intricacy of the ironwork with the wonder of a child"
Similar:
awe admiration
wonderment
fascination
surprise
astonishment
amazement
verb
1.
desire or be curious to know something.
2.
to seek to create wondour.
I "wondour" what tomorrow will bring.
The future is a place of may wondours.
a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration, caused by something beautiful, unexpected, unfamiliar, or inexplicable.
"he had stood in front of it, observing the intricacy of the ironwork with the wondour of a child"
Similar:
wonder
awe admiration
wonderment
fascination
surprise
astonishment
amazement
verb
1.
desire or be curious to know something.
"how many times have I written that, I wondour?"
Similar:
ponder
ask oneself
think about
meditate on
reflect on
deliberate about
muse on
speculate about
conjecture
puzzle about
be curious about
be inquisitive about
a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration, caused by something beautiful, unexpected, unfamiliar, or inexplicable.
"he had stood in front of it, observing the intricacy of the ironwork with the wondour of a child"
Similar:
wonder
awe admiration
wonderment
fascination
surprise
astonishment
amazement
verb
1.
desire or be curious to know something.
"how many times have I written that, I wondour?"
Similar:
ponder
ask oneself
think about
meditate on
reflect on
deliberate about
muse on
speculate about
conjecture
puzzle about
be curious about
be inquisitive about
---
I can't wait to write this wondo art historypaper! (sarcastically)
---
Scott: Yo, what do you think about hittin' up this hella legit trail I found on Mt. Tam yesterday?
Plain and simple: an anemometer.
An anemometer is an instrument used for measuring windspeed.
Winds were clocked with my stupid sodding "rotten cat pee yellow" portable digital "windometer" (as JD from JD Quad in the UK calls them even though those things are actually called, "anemometers") ;-) as being variable to 3.60mph (4.36kph) at the surface.