different between sego vs bego
sego
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Ute si?o?o.
Noun
sego (plural segos)
- A perennial bulb lily found in Western North America, the Calochortus nuttallii, which has trumpet-shaped flowers.
Translations
References
Anagrams
- EOGs, GEOs, Gose, egos, geos, goes, gose
Catalan
Verb
sego
- first-person singular present indicative form of segar
Italian
Etymology
Variant of sevo, from Latin s?bum, from Proto-Indo-European *seyb- (“to pour out”). Cf. also sebo.
Noun
sego m (plural seghi)
- tallow
Derived terms
- rassegare
- segoso
Verb
sego
- first-person singular present indicative of segare
Javanese
Noun
sego
- Nonstandard spelling of sega.
Portuguese
Verb
sego
- first-person singular (eu) present indicative of segar
sego From the web:
- what sego means
- segovia what to do
- segovia what to visit
- segovia what to eat
- segotia what does it mean
- what does sago mean
- what is segovia famous for
- what does segovia mean
bego
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English begon, from Old English beg?n (“to go over, traverse, get to, come by, fall into, go to, visit, care for, cultivate, inhabit, occupy, surround, beset, overrun, practice, do, engage in, perform, attend to, be diligent about, honor, serve, worship, profess”), from Proto-Germanic *bi + *g?n?, corresponding to be- +? go. Cognate with Dutch begaan, German begehen, Danish begå.
Verb
bego (third-person singular simple present begoes, present participle begoing, simple past bewent, past participle begone)
- (archaic) To go about; encompass; surround; beset, surround with hostile intent; to overrun.
- 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book V:
- Thy prysemen ar sore begone and put undir, for they ar oversette with Sarazens mo than fyve hondred.
- 1892, Albany Law Journal - Volumes 44-45 - Page 166:
- False love, I bego, I bego. Ere something still worse come down.
- 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book V:
- (obsolete) To clothe, dress.
- (obsolete except in set phrases) To affect, usually as a good or bad influence, or as a circumstance.
- He was woe begone.
Etymology 2
Back-formation from begone, originally an imperative but now an interjection, construed as a past participle.
Verb
bego (third-person singular simple present begoes, present participle begoing, simple past bewent, past participle begone)
- (rare, humoristic or faux-archaic) To go away, to disappear.
Noun
bego (plural begoes)
- That which besets, surrounds, compasses, or affects; situation; circumstance.
- 2011, Loretto Gubernatis, Dimitrius and the Gladiolas:
- “As I was passing by a vineyard on the Earth where some of mankind were taking their lunch, I heard them complaining and grumbling about these things they called 'ants'. Oh the woes and begoes of mankind,” smiled the good lord.
- 2011, Loretto Gubernatis, Dimitrius and the Gladiolas:
Related terms
- bewend
Anagrams
- Egbo, Gebo
Basque
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /be.?o/
Verb
bego
- Third-person singular (hura) present imperative form of egon.
- Synonym: dagoela
Indonesian
Adjective
bego
- (informal, vulgar) moron, fool
bego From the web:
- what begotten means
- what begonia do i have
- what begot means
- what begotten son mean
- what begonias take full sun
- what begonias like shade
- what bego means
- what begonia plant