Part 84 (2/2)
_Polwart_
2 To injure one's character
_Bannatyne Poems_
3 To cause moral pollution
_Abp Hamiltoun_
A S _blaec-an_, denigrare Isl _blek_, liquor tinctorius
_To_ BLECK, _v a_ To puzzle, to reduce to a nonplus, in an examination or disputation, S
Geritare
_To_ BLEEZE, _v n_
1 To become a little sour Milk is said to _bleeze_, or to be _bleezed_, when it is turned, but not congealed, S; _blink_, synon
Frourare; heat, especially when acco this effect
2 The part _bleezed_ signifies the state of one on whoins to operate, S It especially denotes the change produced in the expression of the countenance; as, _He looked bleezed-like_
BLED, _part pa_ Perhaps, sprung
_Gawan and Gol_
BLEFLUM, BLEPHUM, _s_ A sham, an illusion, what has no reality in it, S
V ~Blaflum~, _v_
_Rutherford_
Isl _flim_, irrisio, carae infames, G Andr p 74 Su G _flimm-a_, illudere
BLEHAND, BLIHAND, _adj_
_Sir Trist_
”_Blue_, from _bleah_, Sax _caeruleus_ Blehand brown A bluish brown,” Gl The word is merely A S _blae-hewen_ a little transformed
The idea see to purple or violet”