beguilt

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English

Etymology 1

From Middle English begilten, equivalent to be- +‎ guilt.

Verb

beguilt (third-person singular simple present beguilts, present participle beguilting, simple past and past participle beguilted)

  1. (transitive) To make guilty; cause to sin.
    • 1791, Samuel Ayscough, An index to the remarkable passages and words made use of by Shakespeare:
      Why should I fear, I know not; since guiltiness I know not. I will not reason what is meant hereby, because I will beguilt less of the meaning.
    • 1977, Basil Davenport, The portable Roman reader:
      "Why mangelest thou a wretched man? O spare me in my tomb! Spare to beguilt thy righteous hand, Æneas! [] "
  2. (transitive) To impute with guilt or fault; blame; accuse.
    • 1895, Eiríkr Magnússon, William Morris, The Saga library:
      [] for they deemed that he was long-grudging, even in lesser matters than those wherein Kalf had done to beguilt him with the king.
    • 1911, William Morris, May Morris, The Collected Works of William Morris:
      [] and albeit Einar were old, yet he threw himself into this case, and beguilted the sons of Thorgrim to the full at the Thorsness-thing.

Etymology 2

From begild.

Verb

beguilt

  1. Alternative form of begilt