different between bemark vs bemar
bemark
English
Etymology
From be- +? mark. Cognate with German bemerken.
Verb
bemark (third-person singular simple present bemarks, present participle bemarking, simple past and past participle bemarked)
- (transitive, rare or obsolete) To mark with the sign of the cross; mark oneself.
- (transitive) To mark or cover with marks; mark up.
Anagrams
- embark
bemark From the web:
- what does bemarking mean
- what does bemark mean in afrikaans
- what means bemarking
- what is a bemarker in english
bemar
English
Etymology
From be- +? mar.
Verb
bemar (third-person singular simple present bemars, present participle bemarring, simple past and past participle bemarred)
- (transitive) To mar about or all over; injure seriously.
- 1994, Elizabeth Goodenough, Mark A. Heberle, Infant tongues: the voice of the child in literature:
- He hath all to be pist my shooes He hath bemarred my paper [...]
- 1994, Elizabeth Goodenough, Mark A. Heberle, Infant tongues: the voice of the child in literature:
Anagrams
- Amber, Brame, Bream, amber, brame, bream, embar
bemar From the web:
- what does bemark mean in afrikaans
- what does remark mean
- what does bihari mean
- demark meaning
- bimari in urdu
- bimari in english
- what we call bimari in english
- what is called bimari in english
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