Part 55 (2/2)
_Douglas_
_Aurea tecta_, Virg According to Rudd q _gone over_ Chaucer uses the phrase, _With gold begon_, Roold,” Tyrwh
_To_ BEGECK, BEGAIK, BEGEIK, _v a_ To deceive; particularly by playing the jilt, SB
_Dunbar_
Teut _gheck-en_, deridere, ludibrio habere
V ~Geck~
BEGEIK, BEGINK, BEGUNK, _s_
1 A trick, or illusion, which exposes one to ridicule, S
_Ramsay_
2 It often denotes the act of jilting one in love; applied either to a male, or to a female, S
~Begeik~ is the more common term, S B
_Morison_
BEGES, BEGESS, _adv_ By chance, at random
_Evergreen_
Frohisse_
BEGGER-BOLTS, _s pl_ ”A sort of darts or missile weapons The word is used by James VI in his Battle of Lepanto, to denote the weapons of the _forceats_, or galley-slaves” Gl Sibb Hudson writes _beggers' bolts_
The word inated from contears_
BEGOUTH, BEGOUDE, _pret_ Began
_Wyntown_
_Begoud_ is now commonly used, S
A S _gynn-an_, _beginn-an_, seean_, ire: _Beginnan_, _begeode_
BEGRAUIN, _part pa_ Buried, interred
_Douglas_