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PLAGUE |
Beset |
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BESIEGE |
Beset |
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BESET |
Of Beset |
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BESETTING |
Of Beset |
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PLAGUED |
Beset with torment |
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TROUBLED |
Beset by difficulties |
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PILIFEROUS |
Beset with hairs. |
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SIEGE |
To besiege; to beset. |
|
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BESTAD |
Beset; put in peril. |
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OBSESS |
To besiege; to beset. |
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HISPID |
Beset with stiff hairs or bristles. |
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BESTEAD |
To put in peril; to beset. |
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BARBATE |
Bearded; beset with long and weak hairs. |
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LIME-TWIGGED |
Beset with snares; insnared, as with birdlime. |
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EMBOSS |
To surround; to ensheath; to immerse; to beset. |
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ACULEATE |
Having prickles, or sharp points; beset with prickles. |
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BEGONE |
Surrounded; furnished; beset; environed (as in
woe-begone). |
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SERRATED |
Beset with teeth pointing forwards or upwards; as,
serrate leaves. |
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DANGEROUS |
Attended or beset with danger; full of risk; perilous;
hazardous; unsafe. |
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WOE-BEGONE |
Beset or overwhelmed with woe; immersed in grief or
sorrow; woeful. |
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DUN |
To ask or beset, as a debtor, for payment; to urge
importunately. |
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AMPHICOME |
A kind of figured stone, rugged and beset with
eminences, anciently used in divination. |
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OBSESSION |
The state of being besieged; -- used specifically of a
person beset by a spirit from without. |
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BESETMENT |
The act of besetting, or the state of being beset; also,
that which besets one, as a sin. |
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DIFFICULT |
Hard to do or to make; beset with difficulty; attended
with labor, trouble, or pains; not easy; arduous. |