10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «BEWELTERED»
Discover the use of
beweltered in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
beweltered and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Midsummer Night's Dream: Evans Shakespeare Editions
... turned, she was uncertain whether It were the tree at which they both agreed to
meet together. 160 While in this doubtful stound she stood, she cast her eye
aside And there beweltered in his blood her lover she espied Lie sprawling with
his ...
2
History of Friedrich the Second Called Frederick the Great
... French altogether, — the French have thrown it off; the French have dropped
their end of the bearing- poles (so to speak), and left Friedrich by himself, to stand
or stagger, under the beweltered broken harness-gear and intolerable weight!
... French altogether, — the French have thrown it off ; the French have dropped
their end of the bearing-poles (so to speak), and left Friedrich by himself, to stand
or stagger, under the beweltered broken harness-gear and intolerable weight !
4
History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the ...
... was French altogether,—the French have thrown it off; the French have
dropped their end of the bearing-poles (so to speak), and left Friedrich by himself,
to stand or stagger, under the beweltered broken harness-gear and intolerable
weight!
5
A Second Elizabethan Journl
Some neighbours spied a footing towards the grove, followed it, and found the
boy all-to-beweltered in gore ; and perceiving life to be in him, two laid him on a
cloak and between them brought him home, where, when he had recovered ...
6
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D)
Beweltered, bewel′tėrd, p.adj. besmeared by weltering in blood. [Pfx.be,
andWelter.] Bewet, bewet′, v.t.(Shak.) to wetor moisten. Bewig, bewig′, to
cover with a wig.—p.adj.Bewigged′. Bewilder, bewil′dėr, v.t.to perplex or lead
astray.
... the awful pine trees." Beweep ( be-wep') [ A. S. be & Weep.] v. t. to lament, to
bemoan <Ut)<A rsft) Stta 'R't. Bewep't pa. t. & p. p. Beweeping pr. p. Bewept p. a
disfigured by wee.ping ^T ^^T^ IHI^c^l; as, A B. face. Beweltered ( be-wel'-terd ) ...
Nilakantha Babaji Ranade, 1996
8
History of Friedrich II. Of Prussia, Frederick the Great ...
... French altogether,—the French have thrown it off; the French have dropped
their end ofthe BEARINGPOLES (so to speak),and left Friedrich by himself, to
stand or stagger, under the beweltered broken harnessgear and intolerable
weight!
9
The Chambers Dictionary
Used normally only in infinitive and imperative; old writers have was ware, etc. [
be and ware] beweep bi-wep'. vi to weep over, lament; to wet or disfigure by
weeping: — />«/ and/n//>bewept'. [be- (I)] beweltered bi-wel'tard, (archaic)
participial ...
... was French altogether,—the French have thrown it ofi; the French have
dropped their end of the bearing-poles (so to speak), and left Friedrich by himself,
to stand or stagger, under the beweltered broken harness-gear and intolerable
weight!
Thomas Carlyle, Henry Duff Traill, Oliver Cromwell, 1897