Lexicographical Neighbors of Bewrayers
Literary usage of Bewrayers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An English Garner: Ingatherings from Our History & Literature by Edward Arber (1895)
"These plaintive Elegies, my griefs' bewrayers ; Accoutered, as is meet, in mournful
raiment I My red-swollen eyen, which were mine heart's betrayers! ..."
2. Ninety-six Sermons by Lancelot Andrewes (1853)
"And not only, that it was bewrayed, but that He made them the bewrayers of it
themselves; and even according to Eccles. 10. the place, Ecclesiastes, ..."
3. Studies in General History by Mary Sheldon Barnes (1885)
"bewrayers of the guild shall be heavily punished. Out- dwelling brethren of the
guild must deal in the town on market- days. . . . " No woman shall buy at ..."
4. Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom by Royal Society of Literature (Great Britain) (1870)
"Of Coleridge's most intimate friends and well intentioned bewrayers—friends from
whom he had reason enough to pray for safety, I refer to Hazlitt and De ..."
5. The Spectator: A Digest-index by William Wheeler (1892)
"For Ireland, Addison. 109-1-n. Whisperers of. 218-2-3. A secret marriage.
A scoundrel's trick. bewrayers of. 112-1-1: 322-2-4. Peter Hush and Lady Blast. ..."
6. The Antiquarian Magazine & Bibliographer by Edward Walford (1885)
"bewrayers [betrayers] of the Gild shall be heavily punished. No skinner nor glover
shall cut any wool from the skins during the summer months, but all skins ..."
7. Stray Chapters in Literature, Folk-lore, and Archaeology by William Edward Armytage Axon (1888)
"bewrayers of the guild to be heavily punished. No glover nor skinner to cut wool
during the summer months. Buyers of herrings to share and share alike. ..."
8. The Insurance Cyclopáedia: Being a Dictionary of the Definition of Terms by Cornelius Walford (1871)
"bewrayers [betrayers] of the Gild shall be heavily punished. No skinner nor glover
shall cut any wool from the skins during the summer months, but all skins ..."