Begone
1Begone — Be*gone , p. p. [OE. begon, AS. big[=a]n; pref. be + g[=a]n to go.] Surrounded; furnished; beset; environed (as in woe begone). [Obs.] Gower. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] …
2Begone — Be*gone , interj. [Be, v. i. + gone, p. p.] Go away; depart; get you gone. [1913 Webster] …
3begone — (v.) late 14c., contracted from BE (Cf. be) (imperative) + GONE (Cf. gone) …
4begone — [bē gôn′, bigôn′] interj., vi. (to) be gone; go away; get out …
5begone — interjection Expressing a desire for someone or something to go away. Fairies, begone, and be all ways away. Shakespeare, A Midsummer Nights Dream …
6begone — decayed, worn ; the thatch of this house is lamentably begone. Norf. and Suff …
7begone — intransitive verb Etymology: Middle English, from be gone (imperative) Date: 14th century to go away ; depart used especially in the imperative …
8begone — /bi gawn , gon /, v.i. to go away; depart (usually used in the imperative). [1325 75; ME; see BE (impv.), GONE] * * * …
9begone — be|gone [bıˈgɔn US bıˈgo:n] interjection old use [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: be gone!] used to tell someone to go away …
10begone — be|gone [ bı gɔn ] interjection used in the past to tell someone to go away …
11begone — be·gone || bɪ gÉ’n interj. get out!, go away! …
12begone — exclamation archaic go away at once! …
13begone — interj. 1. Depart, avaunt, go away, haste away, be off, get thee gone. 2. Away, let us go, let us be off …
14begone — interjection old use used to tell someone to go away …
15begone — be·gone …
16begone — UK [bɪˈɡɒn] / US [bɪˈɡɔn] interjection used in the past to tell someone to go away …
17begone — be•gone [[t]bɪˈgɔn, ˈgɒn[/t]] v. i. to go away; depart (usu. used in the imperative) • Etymology: 1325–75 …
18begone — /bəˈgɒn / (say buh gon), /bi / (say bee ) interjection Archaic go away! depart! {Middle English; from be (imper.) + gone; originally a two word statement be gone!. Compare be off!. See also beware} …
19begone — Hele pēlā, hele i kahi ē …
20BEGONE — int. poet. go away at once! …