bescare

English

Etymology

From be- + scare.

Verb

bescare (third-person singular simple present bescares, present participle bescaring, simple past and past participle bescared)

  1. (transitive) To fill with fright; scare all over; scare completely; terrify.
    • 1889, Thomas Bridges, Francis Grose, George A. Smith (B.A.), Homer's Iliad:
      Just so these loons at ev'ry sound Would whip their eyes and ears around: Tho' the least noise did so bescare 'em, []
    • 1901, Pratt Institute Monthly, volume 9, page ii:
      Perchance our lives, should men bescare / To fight his cause for pay.

Anagrams

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