Bewray

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Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [1]

Bewray . To bewray (from Anglo-Saxon prefix be and wregan , to accuse) is not the same as to betray (from be and Lat. tradere to deliver). To bewray, now obsolete, means in AV [Note: Authorized Version.] to make known, reveal, as   Matthew 26:73 ‘thy speech bewrayeth thee.’ Adams ( Works , ii. 328) distinguishes the two words thus: ‘he … will not bewray his disease, lest he betray his credit.’ Sometimes, however, hewray is used in an evil sense, and is scarcely distinguishable from hetray. Cf. bewrayer in   Malachi 4:1  Malachi 4:1 ‘a bewrayer of the money, and of his country.’

Morrish Bible Dictionary [2]

To accuse or betray.  Isaiah 16:3;  Proverbs 27:16;  Proverbs 29:24;  Matthew 26:73 . From the Anglo-Saxon.

Easton's Bible Dictionary [3]

 Proverbs 27:16 29:24 Isaiah 16:3 Matthew 26:73

King James Dictionary [4]

BEWRA'Y, beray. To disclose perfidiously to betray to show or make visible.

Thy speech bewrayeth thee.  Matthew 23

This word is nearly antiquated.

Webster's Dictionary [5]

(1): (v. t.) To soil. See Beray.

(2): (v. t.) To expose; to reveal; to disclose; to betray.

Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words [6]

 Matthew 26:73

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [7]

(in  Isaiah 16:3, גָּלָה, Galah ', to Reveal, or disclose, as elsewhere rendered; in  Proverbs 29:24, נָגִד, Nagad , to Tell, as elsewhere; in  Proverbs 27:16, קָרָא, Kara , to Call, i.e. proclaim, as elsewhere; in  Matthew 26:73, ποιέω δῆλον, to Make Evident ), an old English word equivalent to "BETRAY."

References