different between becard vs beward

becard

English

Wikispecies

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

becard (plural becards)

  1. A South American flycatcher of the genus Pachyramphus

Anagrams

  • braced, decarb

becard From the web:

  • what does becard mean
  • what percent is bacardi


beward

English

Etymology

From Middle English *bewarden, from Old English beweardian (to ward, protect, keep), equivalent to be- +? ward.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -??(?)d

Verb

beward (third-person singular simple present bewards, present participle bewarding, simple past and past participle bewarded)

  1. (transitive, rare) To guard about or completely; protect.
    • 1895, William Morris, A.J. Wyatt, Beowulf:
      Hrothgar's Thane, and full strongly then set he a-quaking The stark wood in his hands, and in council-speech speer'd he: What men be ye then of them that have war-gear, With byrnies bewarded, who the keel high up-builded Over the Lake-street thus have come leading.

Anagrams

  • bedraw, dawber

beward From the web:

  • what beward means
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