bounder

Alternative forms

 * boundure

Etymology
From. In the case of 2. below from the Hindi word "bandar" meaning a monkey, via Anglo-Indian.

Noun

 * 1) Something that bounds or jumps.
 * 2)  A dishonourable man; a cad.
 * 3) A social climber.
 * 4) That which limits; a boundary.
 * 5) * 1638 Martin Fotherby (Iacob Blome: London) Atheomastix p.269:
 * Let the mountaine Pyrenaeus diuide the French, and Spaniards: and the wildernesse of Sand the Aethiopians, from Aegyptians. And in like manner also be all other Kingdomes: they are bound within their bounders, as it were in bands; and shut-vp within their limits, as it were in prison.
 * 1)  A four-wheeled type of dogcart or cabriolet