behallow

English

Etymology

From be- + hallow.

Verb

behallow (third-person singular simple present behallows, present participle behallowing, simple past and past participle behallowed)

  1. (transitive) To make holy; consecrate; sanctify; hallow completely.
    • 1835, William Henry C. Grey, The Lords and the People:
      [...] bishops and servants of God — the "senatores natu majores," the elders and chiefs of the people — caused his eldest son, Egfurth, to be behallowed (which is the Saxon term used for the consecration of a bishop) as king of Mercia.
    • 1842 April 1, “The Anglo-Saxon Confessions”, in The Church of England Quarterly Review, volume 11, article 4, page 343:
      Kings are "behallowed" as well as bishops; []

Synonyms

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