different between beflay vs befly
beflay
English
Etymology
From Middle English biflean, from Old English befl?an (“to peel, skin, flay”), equivalent to be- +? flay.
Verb
beflay (third-person singular simple present beflays, present participle beflaying, simple past beflayed, past participle beflayed or beflain)
- (transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To flay; strip; peel.
Anagrams
- labefy
beflay From the web:
befly
English
Etymology
From Middle English biflien, from Old English befl?ogan (“to fly upon”), equivalent be- +? fly. Cognate with Dutch bevliegen, German befliegen (“to fly on”), Danish beflyve (“to operate”).
Verb
befly (third-person singular simple present beflies, present participle beflying, simple past beflew, past participle beflown)
- (transitive, obsolete) To fly about; fly from; shun; escape.
Derived terms
- beflying
Related terms
- beflee
befly From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- beflay vs befly
- peel vs beflay
- strip vs beflay
- flay vs beflay
- inquiringly vs inquisitively
- enquiringly vs inquiringly
- inquiring vs inquiringly
- accended vs accensed
- accended vs acceded
- accended vs accented
- unknightly vs knightlike
- bold vs knightlike
- knightlike vs unknightlike
- nightlife vs nightlifer
- nightclub vs nightlife
- daylife vs nightlife
- nightlife vs night
- lightlike vs eightlike
- time vs lightlike
- magnitude vs lightlike