An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language Part 55 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
BEFORN, _prep._ Before.
_Wallace._
It occurs also in O. E.
_R. Brunne._
A. S. _beforan_, ante; coram.
BEFOROUTH, _adv._ Before, formerly.
V. ~Forowth~.
_Barbour._
BEFT, _part. pa._ Beaten.
V. ~Beff~.
_To_ BEGARIE, _v. a._
1. To variegate, to deck with various colours.
_Lyndsay._
2. To stripe, to variegate with lines of various colours, to streak.
_Begaryit_, striped, _part. pa._
_Douglas._
3. To besmear; to bedaub, to bespatter. "S. _begaried_, bedirted;" Rudd.
vo. ~Laggerit~.
_Lyndsay._
This _v._ has an evident affinity to our _Gair_, _gare_, a stripe of cloth, and _Gaired_, _gairy_, q. v. The word is immediately allied to Fr. _begarr-er_, to diversify; _begarre_, of sundry colours, mingled.
BEGAIRIES, _s. pl._ Stripes or slips of cloth sewed on garments, by way of ornament, such as are now worn in liveries; _pessments_, S. synon.
_Acts Ja. VI._
BEGANE, _part. pa._ Covered; _Gold begane_, overlaid with gold.
_Douglas._
_Aurea tecta_, Virg. According to Rudd. q. _gone over_. Chaucer uses the phrase, _With gold begon_, Rom. Rose, 943., "painted over with gold," Tyrwh.
_To_ BEGECK, BEGAIK, BEGEIK, _v. a._ To deceive; particularly by playing the jilt, S.B.
_Dunbar._
Teut. _gheck-en_, deridere, ludibrio habere.
V. ~Geck~.
BEGEIK, BEGINK, BEGUNK, _s._
1. A trick, or illusion, which exposes one to ridicule, S.
_Ramsay._
2. It often denotes the act of jilting one in love; applied either to a male, or to a female, S.
~Begeik~ is the more common term, S. B.
_Morison._
BEGES, BEGESS, _adv._ By chance, at random.
_Evergreen._
From _be_, by, and _gess_, guess, Belg. _ghisse_.
BEGGER-BOLTS, _s. pl._ "A sort of darts or missile weapons. The word is used by James VI. in his Battle of Lepanto, to denote the weapons of the _forceats_, or galley-slaves." Gl. Sibb. Hudson writes _beggers' bolts_.
The word may have originated from contempt of the persons, who used these arms, q. _bolts_ of _beggars_.
BEGOUTH, BEGOUDE, _pret._ Began.
_Wyntown._
_Begoud_ is now commonly used, S.
A. S. _gynn-an_, _beginn-an_, seem to have had their pret. formed like _eode_, from _gan_, ire: _Beginnan_, _begeode_.
BEGRAUIN, _part. pa._ Buried, interred.
_Douglas._