Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misbecome.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • “Peace thou!” said Toxartis, “or I will do a deed that misbecomes a soldier, and rid the world of a prating old man.”

    Count Robert of Paris 2008

  • She is lively and obliging: she is young; not more than twenty; yet looks rather younger, by reason of a country bloom, which, however, misbecomes her not; and gives a modesty to her first appearance, that prepossesses one in her favour.

    Sir Charles Grandison 2006

  • For I am far from thinking that a prudent regard to worldly interest misbecomes the character of a good clergyman; and I wish all such were set above the world, for their own sakes, as well as for the sakes of their hearers; since independency gives a man respect, besides the power of doing good, which will enhance that respect, and of consequence, give greater efficacy to his doctrines.

    Pamela 2006

  • Pushing his way through the other passengers, with a discontented expression upon his genial face that rather misbecomes it, he emerges into the open air, to find that a smart drizzle, unworthy the name of rain, is falling inhospitably upon him.

    Molly Bawn Margaret Wolfe Hamilton

  • Nothing that he does or says misbecomes him: but a good deal that he does not do and say might be added with advantage, in order to give us the portrait of a whole as well as a live man.

    The English Novel George Saintsbury 1889

  • The gardener should be an idler, and have a gross partiality to the kitchen plots: an eager or toilful gardener misbecomes the garden landscape; a tasteful gardener will be ever meddling, will keep the borders raw, and take the bloom off nature.

    Essays of Travel Robert Louis Stevenson 1872

  • But humanity never misbecomes those of royal blood.

    Droll Stories — Complete Collected from the Abbeys of Touraine Honor�� de Balzac 1824

  • Then it struck her that perhaps all his wonder-working power lay in the knapsack, and she pretended to be very fond of him, and when she had brought him into a good humour she said, -- "Pray lay aside that ugly knapsack; it misbecomes you so much that I feel ashamed of you."

    Household Stories by the Brothers Grimm Jacob Grimm 1824

  • But humanity never misbecomes those of royal blood.

    Droll Stories — Volume 2 Honor�� de Balzac 1824

  • After which, the next consideration immediately subsequent to the being of a thing, is what agrees or disagrees with that thing; what is suitable or unsuitable to it; and from this springs the notion of decency or indecency; that which becomes or misbecomes, and is the same with honestum et turpe.

    Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. I. 1634-1716 1823

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