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bewrite. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
bewrite, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
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English
Etymology
From Middle English bewriten, from Old English bewrītan (“to write, record, copy”), from Proto-West Germanic *biwrītan (“to write down; write about”), equivalent to be- (“about, over”) + write. Cognate with Old Frisian biwrīta (“to write down”), Middle Low German bewriten (“to engrave; to pronounce a blessing”), German bereiẞen (“to scale something by hand, carry out manually”). Compare also Dutch beschrijven (“to describe”), German beschreiben (“to describe”), Swedish beskriva (“to describe”).
Pronunciation
Verb
bewrite (third-person singular simple present bewrites, present participle bewriting, simple past bewrote, past participle bewritten)
- (transitive) To write about; describe.
1838, The Yale literary magazine, volume 3:I vow and purpose, here in the presence of " Billy Shakspeare," to bewrite this ill-starred foolscap!!
1878, Philip Dwyer, The Diocese of Killaloe from the Reformation to the close of the Eighteenth century:I humbly beg of you, for God's sake and your own, to read what I here presume to bewrite: [...]
1926, Blanche Colton Williams, Best American stories:"I said it was a pleasureful thing to be thus bewritten upward. [...]"
- 2011, The history of the Chronoswiss brand can only reach:
- This harvesting bewrites the unhealable Monogrammed Beach Towels of affair and assenting a brew-house.
- (transitive) To write to.
1905, Charles Hallam Elton Brookfield, Frances Mary Brookfield, Mrs. Brookfield and her circle: Volume 1:After I bewrote thee yesterday Mrs. Neville drove Lady Charlotte, young Bagot (Clerk) and self into Glastonbury.
- (transitive) To write; write from; copy.
1850, Donald Grant Mitchell, The battle summer::And it was in just one of these accessions of strength, (which after all, I count only as seductive illusions,) that I found myself with pen and paper, bewriting page after page — sketching men and scenes that I thought you would be glad to see, [...]
Derived terms