YONDER


Meaning of YONDER in English

I. ˈyändə(r) sometimes ˈyȯn- or ˈyən- adverb

Etymology: Middle English, from yond (I) + -er (as in hider hither)

: at or in that indicated somewhat distant place usually within sight

off yonder on a high rise — F.B.Gipson

look way back yonder down the hill — Eudora Welty

II. adjective

Etymology: Middle English, from yonder, adverb

1. : farther removed : more distant : thither

a pleasant hay meadow … bordered it on the yonder side — Agnes S. Turnbull

2. : being at a distance within view or at a place or in a direction known or indicated

could not see any trees save one, way yonder in the stubble field — Jean Stafford

down at the bottom of that road yonder — Dorothy G. Spicer

III. pronoun

Etymology: yonder (I)

: something that is or is in an indicated somewhat distant place

sending chips from here to yonder — Maristan Chapman

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.