14 collocations for bewrays

What a bawdy knave hath he to his father, that keeps his Rachel, hath his bastards, and lets his sons be plain ladies' puppies to bewray a lady's chamber.

Hark how these murderous Romans, viper-like, Seek to bewray their fellow-citizens.

O, that Ben Jonson is a pestilent fellow; he brought up Horace, giving the poets a pill; but our fellow Shakespeare hath given him a purge that made him bewray his credit. BURBAGE.

All his dealings are square and above the board; he bewrays the fault of what he sells, and restores the overseen gain of a false reckoning.

And what if now you fit askew where erstwhile Fair lines bewrayed a figure not too svelte?

Well, do what I can in outward kindness to them, yet they do nothing but bewray my house: as there was one that made a couple of knavish verses on my country chimney, now in the time of my sojourning here at London; and it was thus Sir Raderic keeps no chimney cavalier, That takes tobacco above once a year.

Sure, he's no man, but an incarnate devil, Whose ugly shape bewrays his monstrous mind.

A man in whom no secret can be bound up, for the apprehension of each danger loosens him, and makes him bewray both the room and it.

The anagram, "well-ordered," will undoubtedly bewray the secret.

[The frown of night Conceals him, and bewrays their sight.

Thus, Phoebus, thus it is; if thou be hee That art pretended in thy pedegree, If sonne thou be to Iove, as thou doest fame, And chalengest that tytle not in vaine, Now heer bewray some signe of godhead than, And chaunge me straight from shape of mayd to man.

Duke; we'll wager a kilderkin of chaney oranges at four pence each and a dozen cordial juleps with pearls that thy conscience is about to bewray thee.

Then use my life or death, my lord and king, For your relief to ease your grieved soul: For whether I live, or else that I must die To end your pains, I am content to bear; Knowing by death I shall bewray the truth Of that sound heart, which living was her own, And died alive for her, that lived mine.

* Silence in love bewrays more woe Than words, tho' ne'er so witty; A beggar that is dumb, you know, May challenge double pity.

14 collocations for  bewrays