bedoven
English
Alternative forms
- bedove
Etymology
From Middle English bedoven, from Old English bedofen, past particle of Old English bedūfan (“to bedive, to put under, immerse, submerge, drown”), equivalent to be- + dive. Cognate with Middle Low German bedöven (“immersed”).
Adjective
bedoven (not comparable)
- (obsolete) drenched.
- Life of Saint Christina Mirabilis of Saint Trudons
- Alle hir body […] semyd be dowen in blood. [All her body seemed bedoven in blood.]
- A Scotch Winter Evening in 1512
- The wind made wave the red weed on the dike. Bedoven in dank deep was every sike.
- 2015, LT Wolf, The World King, ebook edition (fiction), →ISBN:
- The words were unneeded as a woman, bedoven in blood and screaming, stumbl'd out from the back of the lead truck into the glaring lights.
- 2015, LT Wolf, The World King - Book I: The Reckoning:
- Gentlemen, before this is over, we'll be bedoven with mud but the swine will be dead. We shall swallow our foes.
- Life of Saint Christina Mirabilis of Saint Trudons
- (obsolete) drowned.
Dutch
Etymology
Past participle of obsolete beduiven.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bəˈdoː.və(n)/
- Hyphenation: be‧do‧ven
- Rhymes: -oːvən
Adjective
bedoven (not comparable)
- (archaic, dialectal) submerged, under water (sometimes also used of other fluids)
- (obsolete) immersed
Declension
| Declension of bedoven | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| uninflected | bedoven | |||
| inflected | bedoven | |||
| comparative | — | |||
| positive | ||||
| predicative/adverbial | bedoven | |||
| indefinite | m./f. sing. | bedoven | ||
| n. sing. | bedoven | |||
| plural | bedoven | |||
| definite | bedoven | |||
| partitive | — | |||