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bewray

VERB
  1. reveal unintentionally
    Her smile betrayed her true feelings

How To Use bewray In A Sentence

  • For the Spaniards which you had with you here, the last year, have bewrayed this place, and taken away all that you left here. Sir Francis Drake Revived
  • Dwarfs was bewrayed; but these presently after brake down and laid waste their houses, and fled deeper away into their mountain. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 345, July, 1844
  • It was just at that time when the Cuckoulds quirister began to bewray Notes and Queries, Number 67, February 8, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • But this had just the contrary effect; for the whilom Hostess of the Stag o 'Tyne, enraged at the Indignity offered to her, did so bemaul and bewray M.dam M.cphilader with her tongue, shaking her fist at her meanwhile, that the Gaoleress in a fury clawed at least two handfuls of M. Drum's hair from her head, not without getting some smart clapperclawing in the face; whereupon she cries out "M.rther" and The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 1 of 3 Who was a sailor, a soldier, a merchant, a spy, a slave among the moors...
  • Who can deny the charge, when so bewrayed are they The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • It is like unto the dreams of the dreamer and the sleep-visions of the sleeper or as the mirage of the desert, which the thirsty take for water; 116 and Satan maketh it fair for men even unto death These are the ways of the world; wherefore put not thou thy trust therein neither incline thereto, for it bewrayeth him who leaneth upon it and who committeth himself thereunto in his affairs. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • But all with one accord say that they bewrayed him in their troth with him, and fell on him as he lay unarrayed and unawares. The Story of the Volsungs
  • But all with one accord say that they bewrayed him in their troth with him, and fell on him as he lay unarrayed and unawares. The Story of the Volsungs
  • But in thy love-making thou hast not bethought thee that keep her to thyself thou mayst not while I am above ground, save thou bewray me, and join thee to my foemen and thine. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • Nay, besides these, many societies that make a great figure in the world are reflected on in this book; which caused Rabelais to study to be dark, and even bedaub it with many loose expressions, that he might not be thought to have any other design than to droll; in a manner bewraying his book that his enemies might not bite it. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
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