¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Begloomed
1. begloom [v] - See also: begloom
Lexicographical Neighbors of Begloomed
Literary usage of Begloomed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Dictionary of Similes by Frank Jenners Wilstach (1916)
"begloomed like seas empurpled under cloud. — ROBERT NOEL. Gloomy and dogged like
a dangerous maniac in his cell. — CHARLES READE. ..."
2. The History of Early English Literature: Being the History of English Poetry by Stopford Augustus Brooke (1905)
"... Wins the grace of God, though, begloomed with care, He must o'er the water-ways,
for a weary time, Push the ice-cold ocean, oaring with his hands, ..."
3. English Literature, from the Beginning to the Norman Conquest by Stopford Augustus Brooke (1898)
"THE WANDERER Prologue OFT a lonely wanderer wins at last to pity, Wins the grace
of God, though, begloomed with care, He must o'er the water-ways, ..."
4. The American Quarterly Review by Robert Walsh (1837)
"The music of the dance is ofttimes begloomed by a plaintive modulation into a
minor key. Strange sounds are heard from without. There is a pause. ..."
5. Casket of Reminiscences by Henry Stuart Foote (1874)
"Dark and portentous clouds begloomed the political firmament in two opposite
directions, and it was difficult to tell whether the first movements of civil ..."
6. The Methodist Review (1859)
"Look at the follies and curses with which it has disgraced and begloomed the
house of the Lord. Is the Protestant interpretation true? ..."