Word Meanings - BEBLUBBER - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To make swollen and disfigured or sullied by weeping; as, her eyes or cheeks were beblubbered.
Related words: (words related to BEBLUBBER)
- SULLIAGE
Foulness; filth. Though we wipe away with never so much care the dirt thrown at us, there will be left some sulliage behind. Gov. of Tongue. - SWOLLEN
p. p. of Swell. - BEBLUBBER
To make swollen and disfigured or sullied by weeping; as, her eyes or cheeks were beblubbered. - DISFIGURER
One who disfigures. - WEEPING TREE
Any tree having pendulous branches. A tree from which honeydew or other liquid secretions of insects drip in considerable quantities, esp. one infested by the larvæ of any species of the genus Ptylus, allied to the cuckoo spits, which in tropical - WEEPER
The capuchin. See Capuchin, 3 . (more info) 1. One who weeps; esp., one who sheds tears. 2. A white band or border worn on the sleeve as a badge of mourning. Goldsmith. - WEEP
The lapwing; the wipe; -- so called from its cry. - WEEPFUL
Full of weeping or lamentation; grieving. Wyclif. - DISFIGURE
To mar the figure of; to render less complete, perfect, or beautiful in appearance; to deface; to deform. Disfiguring not God's likeness, but their own. Milton. Syn. -- To deface; deform; mar; injure. (more info) dis-) + figurer to fashion, shape, - WEEPINGLY
In a weeping manner. - WEEPING-RIPE
Ripe for weeping; ready to weep. Shak. - DISFIGUREMENT
1. Act of disfiguring, or state of being disfigured; deformity. Milton. 2. That which disfigures; a defacement; a blot. Uncommon expressions . . . are a disfigurement rather than any embellishment of discourse. Hume. - DISFIGURATION
The act of disfiguring, or the state of being disfigured; defacement; deformity; disfigurement. Gauden. - WEEPING
The act of one who weeps; lamentation with tears; shedding of tears. - ENSWEEP
To sweep over or across; to pass over rapidly. Thomson. - PEASWEEP
The pewit, or lapwing. The greenfinch. - SWEEPAGE
The crop of hay got in a meadow. - FORWEEP
To weep much. - SWEEPING
Cleaning off surfaces, or cleaning away dust, dirt, or litter, as a broom does; moving with swiftness and force; carrying everything before it; including in its scope many persons or things; as, a sweeping flood; a sweeping majority; a sweeping - SWEEP-SAW
A bow-saw. - SWEEPY
Moving with a sweeping motion. The branches bend before their sweepy away. Dryden. - SWEEPWASHER
One who extracts the residuum of precious metals from the sweepings, potsherds, etc., of refineries of gold and silver, or places where these metals are used. - SWEEPER
One who, or that which, sweeps, or cleans by sweeping; a sweep; as, a carpet sweeper. It is oxygen which is the great sweeper of the economy. Huxley. - SWEEPINGS
Things collected by sweeping; rubbish; as, the sweepings of a street. - SWEEP
To draw or drag something over; as, to sweep the bottom of a river with a net. 7. To pass over, or traverse, with the eye or with an instrument of observation; as, to sweep the heavens with a telescope. To sweep, or sweep up, a mold , to form the