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founding

When used as a verb, "founding" refers to starting something new, like a company or a city. It is often confused with "finding," but they have completely different meanings. As an adjective, it describes the people or documents involved at the very beginning of an organization (e.g., "founding father"). In a technical sense, "founding" can refer to melting and pouring metal into molds, though this usage is less common in everyday conversation than the meaning related to establishing organizations.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon, Jessica is frantically organizing a corporate anniversary event while Mark is on a long lunch break.
Jessica

Mark, did you find the list of founding members yet? I'm losing it.

Jessica
Mark
Mark

Chill. I'll dig through those files once I've finished my taco.

💡
Jessica is using 'founding' as an adjective to describe the original members of the organization. Mark uses the phrasal verb 'dig through' (to search thoroughly) and the slang term 'chill' (relax), highlighting their contrasting levels of stress and urgency.

Meanings

verb (transitive)

The act of establishing or creating an organization, institution, or city.

"She is responsible for founding the first women's college in the region."

noun

The act of casting metal in a foundry.

"The founding of the bronze statue required a massive mold and high temperatures."

adjective

Relating to the establishment or creation of something; original.

"The founding members of the club met in a small cafe in 1924."

Last Updated: May 23, 2026Report an Error