Bewray
Bewray
(in Isa 16:3, , galah’, to reveal, or disclose, as elsewhere rendered; in Pro 29:24, , nagad’, to tell, as elsewhere; in Pro 27:16, , kara’, to call, i.e. proclaim, as elsewhere; in Mat 26:73, , to make evident), an old English word equivalent to BETRAY.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Bewray
to reveal or disclose; an old English word equivalent to “betray” (Prov. 27:16; 29:24, R.V., “uttereth;” Isa. 16:3; Matt. 26:73).
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Bewray
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 Mat 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 2Ma 4:1 a bewrayer of the money, and of his country.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Bewray
To accuse or betray. Isa 16:3; Pro 27:16; Pro 29:24; Mat 26:73. From the Anglo-Saxon.
Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary
Bewray
* Note: The word “bewrayeth,” Mat 26:73, is a translation of poieo, “to make,” with delos, “manifest, evident;” lit., “maketh thee manifest.”