bewed

English

Etymology

From Middle English biwedden, from Old English beweddian (to betroth, marry, give security), equivalent to be- + wed. Cognate with Old Frisian biweddia.

Verb

bewed (third-person singular simple present beweds, present participle bewedding, simple past and past participle bewed or bewedded)

  1. (transitive) To pledge oneself to; betroth; wed; marry.
    • 1964, AESCHYLUS PROMETHEUS BOUND:
      [] You venerable Fates, a vision to see:
      Approaching the bride-room of Zeus,
      Or ever bewedded to bridegroom from heaven.
    • 2003, Roberto Strongman, Allegorical I/lands:
      As his widowed mother remarries a Moor herself, she metaphorically beweds her husband's killer, leaving Lazarillo in Oedipal anxiety.
  2. (transitive) To unite closely and intimately; join.

Synonyms

Derived terms

  • bewedded
  • bewedding
  • self-bewedding

Anagrams

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