Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- transitive verb To attack from all sides.
- transitive verb To trouble persistently; harass. synonym: attack.
- transitive verb To hem in; surround.
- transitive verb To stud, as with jewels.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To set or place.
- To set or place upon; distribute over; bestud; besprinkle: now only in the perfect participle.
- To come upon or against; set upon in attack, or so as to perplex, endanger, or hem in; press upon severely, vigorously, or from all sides: as, to
beset one with blows or with entreaties. - To employ; spend; use up.
- To become; suit; look well on.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb To set or stud (anything) with ornaments or prominent objects.
- transitive verb To hem in; to waylay; to surround; to besiege; to blockade.
- transitive verb To set upon on all sides; to perplex; to harass; -- said of dangers, obstacles, etc.
- transitive verb obsolete To occupy; to employ; to use up.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb transitive To
surround orhem in - verb transitive To
attack , especially from allsides - verb transitive To
decorate something withjewels etc - verb nautical Of a ship, to get trapped by ice
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- verb assail or attack on all sides:
- verb annoy continually or chronically
- verb decorate or cover lavishly (as with gems)
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
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Examples
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But the project is beset from the start by a fiendish enemy, and also that weird phantom of outer space, Zero Gravity.
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But there's an I-told-you-so attitude in the West Wing — a rare feel-good moment in a second term beset by a succession of crises.
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For Brown, appreciated by some but widely unloved, election day could mark the ignominious end of a three-year term beset by division within his party, relentless media sniping and the near-collapse of the British economy.
Stuff.co.nz - Stuff 2010
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For Mr Brown, election day could mark the ignominious end of a three-year term beset by division within his party, relentless media sniping and the near-collapse of the British economy.
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For Brown, appreciated by some but widely unloved, election day could mark the ignominious end of a three-year term beset by division within his party, relentless media sniping and the near-collapse of the British economy.
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For Brown, appreciated by some but widely unloved, election day could mark the ignominious end of a three-year term beset by division within his party, relentless media sniping and the near-collapse of the British economy.
Stuff.co.nz - Stuff 2010
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Kollapen said the report describes a community "beset" by problems:
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A man needs a stout heart, a clear head, and a sure hand, to hold his own in a welter of interests and antagonisms such as beset me.
The Black Colonel James Milne 1908
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But there were no other hardships such as beset Odysseus, between the burning of Troy and his return to Ithaca, west of the land of Greece.
Old Greek Folk Stories Told Anew Josephine Preston Peabody 1898
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Presently, however, his inner anxieties grew upon him so much that his book fell on his knee, and he lost himself in a multitude of small scruples and torments, such as beset all persons who live alone.
Helbeck of Bannisdale — Volume I Humphry Ward 1885
yarb commented on the word beset
Soon a big hornets' nest fell out of the tree, and Roland was beset by hundreds of stinging hornets.
- William Steig, Roland the Minstrel Pig
September 29, 2008
myth commented on the word beset
Soon a big hornets' nest fell out of the tree, and Roland was 'lavishly decorated' by hundreds of stinging hornets.
April 16, 2009
yarb commented on the word beset
Ha ha!
April 16, 2009