Dictionary: BE-SLAV'ER-ING – BE-SOT'TED-LY

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BE-SLAV'ER-ING, ppr.

Defiling with slaver.

BE-SLIME', v.t.

To daub with slime; to soil. [Not used.] – B. Johnson.

BE-SLOB'BER-ING, ppr.

Beslubbering. – Ed. Rev.

BE-SLUB'BER, v.t. [be and slubber, slabber.]

To soil or smear with spittle, or any thing running from the mouth or nose. [Vulgar.]

BE-SMEAR', v.t. [be and smear.]

To bedaub; to overspread with any viscous, glutinous matter, or with any soft substance that adheres. Hence, to foul; to soil.

BE-SMEAR'ED, pp.

Bedaubed; overspread with any thing soft, viscous, or adhesive; soiled.

BE-SMEAR'ER, n.

One that besmears.

BE-SMEAR'ING, ppr.

Bedaubing; soiling.

BE-SMIRCH', v.t. [be and smirch.]

To soil; to foul; to discolor. [Little used.] – Shak.

BE-SMOKE', v.t. [be and smoke.]

To foul with smoke; to harden or dry in smoke. [Little used.]

BE-SMOK'ED, pp.

Fouled or soiled with smoke; dried in smoke.

BE-SMUT', v.t. [be and smut.]

To blacken with smut; to foul with soot.

BE-SMUT'TED,

pp, Blackened with smut or soot.

BE-SNOW', v.t. [be and snow. Sax. besniwed, participle.]

To scatter like snow. [Little used.] – Gower.

BE-SNOW'ED, a. [or pp. be and snow.]

Covered or sprinkled with snow, or with white blossoms. – Hanbury.

BE-SNUFF', v.t.

To befoul with snuff.

BE-SNUFF'ED, pp.

Foul with snuff. – Young.

BE'SOM, n. [s as z. Sax. besm, a brush or broom; besman, twigs. Orosius, 2, 3. Ger. besen; D. bezem; Arm. bezo, birch. The besom was a little bundle of twigs used for sweeping.]

A broom; a brush of twigs for sweeping. I will sweep it with the besom of destruction, saith the Lord of Hosts. – Is. xiv.

BE'SOM, v.t.

To sweep, as with a besom. Rolls back all Greece, and besoms wide the plain. – Barlow.

BE'SOM-ER, n.

One who uses a besom.

BE-SORT', n.

Company; attendance; train. [Obs.] – Shak.

BE-SORT', v.t. [be and sort.]

To suit; to fit; to become. – Shak.

BE-SOT', v.t. [be and sot.]

  1. To make sottish; to infatuate; to stupefy; to make dull or senseless. – Milton.
  2. To make to dote. – Shak.

BE-SOT'TED, pp.

Made sottish or stupid. Bosotted on, infatuated with foolish affection. – Dryden.

BE-SOT'TED-LY, adv.

In a foolish manner. – Milton.