bebark
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English
Etymology
From Middle English beberken, biberken, equivalent to be- + bark.
Verb
bebark (third-person singular simple present bebarks, present participle bebarking, simple past and past participle bebarked)
- (transitive, rare, poetic) To bark about; bark around; bark at.
- 1906, Charles Montagu Doughty, The dawn in Britain:
- The remnant, he accounts Dust, base world's dross; even who divinest spirits; Aye, and every lofty work of theirs bebarks, Presumption, still, with his hot carrion breath.
- 1954, Peter Russell, Nine:
- With Morris such lapses are a rare exception, with Doughty fatally common and disastrous, as when certain gentlemen, audibly cavilling at some project, are said to 'bebark' it. Imagine Achilles bebarking a plan of Agamemnon's!