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bemonster. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From be- + monster.
Verb
bemonster (third-person singular simple present bemonsters, present participle bemonstering, simple past and past participle bemonstered)
- (transitive) To make monstrous or like a monster; make hideous; deform.
c. 1603–1606, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of King Lear”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (First Folio), London: Isaac Iaggard, and Ed Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, :Thou changed and self-cover’d thing, for shame!
Bemonster not thy feature!
1871 February 25, uncredited author, “Wanted for London”, in All the Year Round, page 306:One would think that clothing an official with decent taste was not a herculean task: yet ask a foreigner his opinion of the poor bemonstered force which protects our lives and purses. He might suppose that Dykwynkyn, or some other of the artists who work for the pantomimes, had designed the grotesque disfigurement of these unhappy men.
1980, Barry Unsworth, Pascali’s Island, New York: Norton, published 1997, page 163:Little by little the naked body was assuming shape under our hands. There were no longer those disfiguring gouts of clay which had produced dread in me by bemonstering the features.
- (transitive) To fill or cover with monsters.
- 1812, William Tennant, Anster Fair, Edinburgh: George Goldie, 2nd edition, 1814, Canto 4, Stanza 21, p. 119,
- So leap’d the men, half-sepulchred in sack,
- Up-swinging, with their shapes be-monstring sky,
1986, Peter S. Beagle, chapter 12, in The Folk of the Air, New York: Ballantine, page 165:It was one of the League’s rare open exhibitions, and nonmembers in ordinary dress thronged among the cartoon-colored pavilions, the hedges of bemonstered appliqué banners, and the blazons strung on wire between trees.
- (transitive) To regard or treat (someone) as a monster; to call (someone) a monster.
- 1921, R. H. Case, Review of The Percy Reprints: The Unfortunate Traveller by Thomas Nashe, The Modern Language Review, Volume 16, No. 1, January 1921, p. 77,
- It ends with a crude but forceful intensification of the lust and blood of the Italian novella, complicated with the popular theme of scandalising the Pope and bemonstering the Jew.
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