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Be-

4 entries found.
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]
Be \Be\, v. i. [imp. {Was}; p. p. {Been}; p. pr. & vb. n.
   {Being}.] [OE. been, beon, AS. be['o]n to be, be['o]m I am;
   akin to OHG. bim, pim, G. bin, I am, Gael. & Ir. bu was, W.
   bod to be, Lith. bu-ti, O. Slav. by-ti, to be, L. fu-i I have
   been, fu-turus about to be, fo-re to be about to be, and perh
   to fieri to become, Gr. ? to be born, to be, Skr. bh? to be.
   This verb is defective, and the parts lacking are supplied by
   verbs from other roots, is, was, which have no radical
   connection with be. The various forms, am, are, is, was,
   were, etc., are considered grammatically as parts of the verb
   ``to be'', which, with its conjugational forms, is often
   called the substantive verb. ?97. Cf. {Future}, {Physic}.]
   1. To exist actually, or in the world of fact; to have
      ex?stence.
            To be contents his natural desire.    --Pope.
            To be, or not to be: that is the question. --Shak.
   2. To exist in a certain manner or relation, -- whether as a
      reality or as a product of thought; to exist as the
      subject of a certain predicate, that is, as having a
      certain attribute, or as belonging to a certain sort, or
      as identical with what is specified, -- a word or words
      for the predicate being annexed; as, to be happy; to be
      here; to be large, or strong; to be an animal; to be a
      hero; to be a nonentity; three and two are five;
      annihilation is the cessation of existence; that is the
      man.
   3. To take place; to happen; as, the meeting was on Thursday.
   4. To signify; to represent or symbolize; to answer to.
            The field is the world.               --Matt. xiii.
                                                  38.
            The seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the
            seven churches.                       --Rev. i. 20.
   Note: The verb to be (including the forms is, was, etc.) is
         used in forming the passive voice of other verbs; as,
         John has been struck by James. It is also used with the
         past participle of many intransitive verbs to express a
         state of the subject. But have is now more commonly
         used as the auxiliary, though expressing a different
         sense; as, ``Ye have come too late -- but ye are come.
         '' ``The minstrel boy to the war is gone.'' The present
         and imperfect tenses form, with the infinitive, a
         particular future tense, which expresses necessity,
         duty, or purpose; as, government is to be supported; we
         are to pay our just debts; the deed is to be signed
         to-morrow.
   Note: Have or had been, followed by to, implies movement. ``I
         have been to Paris.'' --Sydney Smith. ``Have you been
         to Franchard ?'' --R. L. Stevenson.
   Note: Been, or ben, was anciently the plural of the
         indicative present. ``Ye ben light of the world.''
         --Wyclif, Matt. v. 14. Afterwards be was used, as in
         our Bible: ``They that be with us are more than they
         that be with them.'' --2 Kings vi. 16. Ben was also the
         old infinitive: ``To ben of such power.'' --R. of
         Gloucester. Be is used as a form of the present
         subjunctive: ``But if it be a question of words and
         names.'' --Acts xviii. 15. But the indicative forms, is
         and are, with if, are more commonly used.
   {Be it so}, a phrase of supposition, equivalent to suppose it
      to be so; or of permission, signifying let it be so.
      --Shak.
   {If so be}, in case.
   {To be from}, to have come from; as, from what place are you
      ? I am from Chicago.
   {To let be}, to omit, or leave untouched; to let alone. ``Let
      be, therefore, my vengeance to dissuade.'' --Spenser.
   Syn: {To be}, {Exist}.
   Usage: The verb to be, except in a few rare case, like that
          of Shakespeare's ``To be, or not to be'', is used
          simply as a copula, to connect a subject with its
          predicate; as, man is mortal; the soul is immortal.
          The verb to exist is never properly used as a mere
          copula, but points to things that stand forth, or have
          a substantive being; as, when the soul is freed from
          all corporeal alliance, then it truly exists. It is
          not, therefore, properly synonymous with to be when
          used as a copula, though occasionally made so by some
          writers for the sake of variety; as in the phrase
          ``there exists [is] no reason for laying new taxes.''
          We may, indeed, say, ``a friendship has long existed
          between them,'' instead of saying, ``there has long
          been a friendship between them;'' but in this case,
          exist is not a mere copula. It is used in its
          appropriate sense to mark the friendship as having
          been long in existence.
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]
Be- \Be-\ [AS. be, and in accented form b[=i], akin to OS. be
   and b[=i], OHG. bi, pi, and p[=i], MHG. be and b[=i], G. be
   and bei, Goth. bi, and perh. Gr. ? about (cf. AS. bese['o]n
   to look about). [root]203. Cf. {By}, {Amb-}.]
   A prefix, originally the same word as by; joined with verbs,
   it serves:
   (a) To intensify the meaning; as, bespatter, bestir.
   (b) To render an intransitive verb transitive; as, befall (to
       fall upon); bespeak (to speak for).
   (c) To make the action of a verb particular or definite; as,
       beget (to get as offspring); beset (to set around).
   Note: It is joined with certain substantives, and a few
         adjectives, to form verbs; as, bedew, befriend,
         benight, besot; belate (to make late); belittle (to
         make little). It also occurs in certain nouns, adverbs,
         and prepositions, often with something of the force of
         the preposition by, or about; as, belief (believe),
         behalf, bequest (bequeath); because, before, beneath,
         beside, between. In some words the original force of be
         is obscured or lost; as, in become, begin, behave,
         behoove, belong.
From WordNet (r) 1.6 [wn]
Be
     n : a light strong brittle gray toxic bivalent metallic element
         [syn: {beryllium}, {Be}, {glucinium}, {atomic number 4}]
     v 1: have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective
          or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a
          good answer"
     2: be identical to; be someone or something, as in "The
        president of the company is John Smith"; "This is my
        house"
     3: occupy a certain position or area; be somewhere; "Where is
        my umbrella?" "The toolshed is in the back"; also for
        abstract situations and relations: "What is behind this
        behavior?"
     4: have an existence, be extant; "Is there a God?" [syn: {exist}]
     5: happen or come to pass; "I lost my wallet; this was during
        the visit to my parents' house"; "There were two hundred
        people at his funeral"; "There was a lot of noise in the
        kitchen" [syn: {occur}]
     6: be identical or equivalent to: "One dollar equals 1,000
        rubles these days!" [syn: {equal}] [ant: {differ}]
     7: form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone
        wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These
        constitute my entire belonging"; "The children made up the
        chorus"; "This sum represents my entire income for a
        year"; "These few men comprise his entire army" [syn: {constitute},
         {represent}, {make up}, {comprise}]
     8: work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a
        specific function; "He is a herpetologist; "She is our
        resident philosopher"; "She works as a waitress to put
        herself through law school" [syn: {work}, {follow}]
     9: represent, as of a character on stage; "Derek Jacobi was
        Hamlet" [syn: {embody}, {personify}]
     10: spend or use time: "I may be an hour"
     11: have life, be alive; "Our great leader is no more" [syn: {live}]
     12: be priced at; "These shoes cost $100" [syn: {cost}]
From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 Jan 01) [foldoc]
be
   <networking> The {country code} for Belgium.
   (1999-01-27)

Be-

4 entries found.
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]
Be \Be\, v. i. [imp. {Was}; p. p. {Been}; p. pr. & vb. n.
   {Being}.] [OE. been, beon, AS. be['o]n to be, be['o]m I am;
   akin to OHG. bim, pim, G. bin, I am, Gael. & Ir. bu was, W.
   bod to be, Lith. bu-ti, O. Slav. by-ti, to be, L. fu-i I have
   been, fu-turus about to be, fo-re to be about to be, and perh
   to fieri to become, Gr. ? to be born, to be, Skr. bh? to be.
   This verb is defective, and the parts lacking are supplied by
   verbs from other roots, is, was, which have no radical
   connection with be. The various forms, am, are, is, was,
   were, etc., are considered grammatically as parts of the verb
   ``to be'', which, with its conjugational forms, is often
   called the substantive verb. ?97. Cf. {Future}, {Physic}.]
   1. To exist actually, or in the world of fact; to have
      ex?stence.
            To be contents his natural desire.    --Pope.
            To be, or not to be: that is the question. --Shak.
   2. To exist in a certain manner or relation, -- whether as a
      reality or as a product of thought; to exist as the
      subject of a certain predicate, that is, as having a
      certain attribute, or as belonging to a certain sort, or
      as identical with what is specified, -- a word or words
      for the predicate being annexed; as, to be happy; to be
      here; to be large, or strong; to be an animal; to be a
      hero; to be a nonentity; three and two are five;
      annihilation is the cessation of existence; that is the
      man.
   3. To take place; to happen; as, the meeting was on Thursday.
   4. To signify; to represent or symbolize; to answer to.
            The field is the world.               --Matt. xiii.
                                                  38.
            The seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the
            seven churches.                       --Rev. i. 20.
   Note: The verb to be (including the forms is, was, etc.) is
         used in forming the passive voice of other verbs; as,
         John has been struck by James. It is also used with the
         past participle of many intransitive verbs to express a
         state of the subject. But have is now more commonly
         used as the auxiliary, though expressing a different
         sense; as, ``Ye have come too late -- but ye are come.
         '' ``The minstrel boy to the war is gone.'' The present
         and imperfect tenses form, with the infinitive, a
         particular future tense, which expresses necessity,
         duty, or purpose; as, government is to be supported; we
         are to pay our just debts; the deed is to be signed
         to-morrow.
   Note: Have or had been, followed by to, implies movement. ``I
         have been to Paris.'' --Sydney Smith. ``Have you been
         to Franchard ?'' --R. L. Stevenson.
   Note: Been, or ben, was anciently the plural of the
         indicative present. ``Ye ben light of the world.''
         --Wyclif, Matt. v. 14. Afterwards be was used, as in
         our Bible: ``They that be with us are more than they
         that be with them.'' --2 Kings vi. 16. Ben was also the
         old infinitive: ``To ben of such power.'' --R. of
         Gloucester. Be is used as a form of the present
         subjunctive: ``But if it be a question of words and
         names.'' --Acts xviii. 15. But the indicative forms, is
         and are, with if, are more commonly used.
   {Be it so}, a phrase of supposition, equivalent to suppose it
      to be so; or of permission, signifying let it be so.
      --Shak.
   {If so be}, in case.
   {To be from}, to have come from; as, from what place are you
      ? I am from Chicago.
   {To let be}, to omit, or leave untouched; to let alone. ``Let
      be, therefore, my vengeance to dissuade.'' --Spenser.
   Syn: {To be}, {Exist}.
   Usage: The verb to be, except in a few rare case, like that
          of Shakespeare's ``To be, or not to be'', is used
          simply as a copula, to connect a subject with its
          predicate; as, man is mortal; the soul is immortal.
          The verb to exist is never properly used as a mere
          copula, but points to things that stand forth, or have
          a substantive being; as, when the soul is freed from
          all corporeal alliance, then it truly exists. It is
          not, therefore, properly synonymous with to be when
          used as a copula, though occasionally made so by some
          writers for the sake of variety; as in the phrase
          ``there exists [is] no reason for laying new taxes.''
          We may, indeed, say, ``a friendship has long existed
          between them,'' instead of saying, ``there has long
          been a friendship between them;'' but in this case,
          exist is not a mere copula. It is used in its
          appropriate sense to mark the friendship as having
          been long in existence.
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]
Be- \Be-\ [AS. be, and in accented form b[=i], akin to OS. be
   and b[=i], OHG. bi, pi, and p[=i], MHG. be and b[=i], G. be
   and bei, Goth. bi, and perh. Gr. ? about (cf. AS. bese['o]n
   to look about). [root]203. Cf. {By}, {Amb-}.]
   A prefix, originally the same word as by; joined with verbs,
   it serves:
   (a) To intensify the meaning; as, bespatter, bestir.
   (b) To render an intransitive verb transitive; as, befall (to
       fall upon); bespeak (to speak for).
   (c) To make the action of a verb particular or definite; as,
       beget (to get as offspring); beset (to set around).
   Note: It is joined with certain substantives, and a few
         adjectives, to form verbs; as, bedew, befriend,
         benight, besot; belate (to make late); belittle (to
         make little). It also occurs in certain nouns, adverbs,
         and prepositions, often with something of the force of
         the preposition by, or about; as, belief (believe),
         behalf, bequest (bequeath); because, before, beneath,
         beside, between. In some words the original force of be
         is obscured or lost; as, in become, begin, behave,
         behoove, belong.
From WordNet (r) 1.6 [wn]
Be
     n : a light strong brittle gray toxic bivalent metallic element
         [syn: {beryllium}, {Be}, {glucinium}, {atomic number 4}]
     v 1: have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective
          or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a
          good answer"
     2: be identical to; be someone or something, as in "The
        president of the company is John Smith"; "This is my
        house"
     3: occupy a certain position or area; be somewhere; "Where is
        my umbrella?" "The toolshed is in the back"; also for
        abstract situations and relations: "What is behind this
        behavior?"
     4: have an existence, be extant; "Is there a God?" [syn: {exist}]
     5: happen or come to pass; "I lost my wallet; this was during
        the visit to my parents' house"; "There were two hundred
        people at his funeral"; "There was a lot of noise in the
        kitchen" [syn: {occur}]
     6: be identical or equivalent to: "One dollar equals 1,000
        rubles these days!" [syn: {equal}] [ant: {differ}]
     7: form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone
        wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These
        constitute my entire belonging"; "The children made up the
        chorus"; "This sum represents my entire income for a
        year"; "These few men comprise his entire army" [syn: {constitute},
         {represent}, {make up}, {comprise}]
     8: work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a
        specific function; "He is a herpetologist; "She is our
        resident philosopher"; "She works as a waitress to put
        herself through law school" [syn: {work}, {follow}]
     9: represent, as of a character on stage; "Derek Jacobi was
        Hamlet" [syn: {embody}, {personify}]
     10: spend or use time: "I may be an hour"
     11: have life, be alive; "Our great leader is no more" [syn: {live}]
     12: be priced at; "These shoes cost $100" [syn: {cost}]
From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 Jan 01) [foldoc]
be
   <networking> The {country code} for Belgium.
   (1999-01-27)