Bestead
Origin 1
Alternative forms
Full definition of bestead
Verb
- (transitive) To help, assist.
- 1603, John Florio, translating Michel de Montaigne, Essays, I.40:even errours and dreames, doe profitably bestead her, as a loyall matter, to bring us unto safetie and contentment.
- 1839, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Coleridge's Literary Remains, Volume 4. Chapter , I received also the blessed Sacrament with many tears; though yet, in my opinion, they were not shed with that sense and grief, for only my having offended God, which might have served to save my soul; if the error into which I was brought by them who told me that some things were not mortal sins, (which afterward I saw plainly that they were) might not somewhat bestead me.
- 1956, Haïm Hazaz, Mori Sa'id:"No, but you must tell me, no matter what; perhaps I may give you good counsel and bestead you in your trouble."
- (transitive) To profit; benefit; serve; avail.
- 1859, Southern literary messenger: Volume 28:With forty sous which remained, he went to a low gambling house, where fortune, or something surer to the skilful practitioner, so well besteaded him that he was able to clothe himself decently preparatory to entering Frascati's, the fashionable hell of Paris—a den of abomination early suppressed on the accession of Louis Philippe to the French throne.
- 2007, Miguel De Unamuno, Tragic Sense of Life:Abstract thought besteads immortality only in order that it may kill me as an individual being with an individual existence, and so make me immortal, pretty much in the same way as that famous physician in one of Holberg's plays, ...
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Origin 2
Origin 3
From be- + Old Norse staddr ("placed"), later assimilated to Etymology 1, above.