beghast
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
- begast
Etymology
    
From be- + ghast. Cognate with German begeistern (“to inspire, excite, thrill”).
Verb
    
beghast (third-person singular simple present beghasts, present participle beghasting, simple past and past participle beghasted)
- (transitive) To fill with shock, awe, wonder, or amazement; inspire; enthuse.
- 1844, Thomas Hood, Hood's magazine and comic miscellany: Volume 1:- [...] And all, but my own heart-wound I Beside me, (as I sat alone, Beghasted with wild dreams), [...]
 
- 1904, Julius M. Parker, God Never Spoke:- […] the beast of the earth after his kind, every thing that creepeth after his kind, and, as it were, the dod-begasted lie after his kind.
 
- 1942, Phil Stong, The iron mountain:- "Oh, but Fräulein! You beghast me! Such an honor!"
 
 
Related terms
    
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