Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word beflowered.

Examples

  • But the leopard-print hatboxes, poodles, satin swags, dogs, purses, bejeweled and beflowered and besparkled cakes never reveal Leslies lack of art background.

    Let Me Eat Cake Leslie F. Miller 2009

  • But the leopard-print hatboxes, poodles, satin swags, dogs, purses, bejeweled and beflowered and besparkled cakes never reveal Leslies lack of art background.

    Let Me Eat Cake Leslie F. Miller 2009

  • It was not overly large, a long rectangle, showing a scantily clad female figure advancing down a beflowered path toward what seemed to be a glint of water.

    Ill Met By Moonlight Lackey, Mercedes 2005

  • "He wasn't gloating," Aleneil said, then stopped as a dryad with beflowered, trailing willow-withies for hair asked what they would have.

    Ill Met By Moonlight Lackey, Mercedes 2005

  • She could not become the shrill edgy hurried harridan the war had tried to make her while his square, leisurely, beflowered, inscrutable figure passed daily up and down between those pale considerable buildings.

    Maid in Waiting 2004

  • It is time to close a work which we have woven, like a crown from a beflowered and variegated field, and which we offer to

    Essays and Miscellanies 2004

  • Time magazine covered the wed-in for its July 1967 issue on hippies but did not mention the "beflowered couple" by name.

    1968 the Year that Rocked the World Kurlansky, Mark 2004

  • The camp consisted of little cement or frame houses rambling over the hillside, a village of poor people, disorderly and beflowered and cheerful.

    The Arabs of Palestine 1969

  • One of the light creatures settled on a beflowered branch which swung under its weight.

    Year of the Unicorn Norton, Andre 1965

  • The camp consisted of little cement or frame houses rambling over the hillside, a village of poor people, disorderly and beflowered and cheerful.

    The Arabs of Palestine 1961

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.