From Proto-Mon-Khmer *[d]ɓak ~ *[d]ɓaak (“to bestride; to have hanging down the neck”). Cognate with Mang ɓak⁷, Eastern Bru ʔa.bak, Bahnar tơʼbăk, Vietnamese...
ascend into the air) (intransitive) to mount (to place oneself on a horse, a bicycle, etc.; to bestride) (intransitive, transport) to board, get on (to step...
ágyban ― to sit up in bed (intransitive) to get on, to mount, to bestride (to place oneself on something, as a horse or vehicle) (followed by -ra/-re) Felültek...
Proto-Turkic *bīn- (“to mount, ride”). بینمك • (binmek) (intransitive) to mount, bestride, straddle, to sit on something high or on a horse (intransitive) to board...
Country Kingdoms, once our own? (transitive) To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. The rider mounted his horse. (transitive) To cause...
thou ſo often haſt beſtride. / That horſe, that I ſo carefully haue dreſt. (reflexive, intransitive, obsolete) To prepare (oneself); to make ready. [14th–16th...
Note: kiè - colloquial (“to ride”); kià - colloquial (“to straddle; to bestride”). Southern Min (Hokkien: Xiamen, Zhangzhou, General Taiwanese) Pe̍h-ōe-jī:...
ſtovv their Oars, or ſtop the leaky Sides, / Another bolder yet the Yard beſtrides, / And folds the Sails; a fourth vvith Labour, laves, / Th'intruding Seas...
great saddle, which he might be said rather to be perched upon than to bestride. 1905 January 12, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “An Exquisite of ’92”...