1Shall it be a man to bewray thee, or a woman to bewray me?
2Said the scarlet-clad man: 'Belike by thine eyes thou art a true man, and wilt not bewray me.
3Smollett and Carlyle then walked home through secluded streets, and were silent, lest their speech should bewray them for Scots.
4But look thou to it, if thou hast a mind to bewray me; for the sons of the Raven die hard.
5Sith ye have bewrayed me, ye may stay on this hither shore.
6By the soul of my father I am not bewraying thee.
7Their speech bewrays them and is an index of their slow, shrewd minds.
8His speech, like Sir Piercy Shafton's Euphuistic eloquence, bewrayed him under every disguise.
9Fair lines bewrayed a figure not too svelte?
10A cotton tidy over the rocking-chair bewrays, wrought into its crocheted gorgeousness, the name of Uncle Tom.
11And Earl Waltheof went over sea, and bewrayed himself; but he asked forgiveness, and proffered gifts of ransom.
12But I had not known how far off thou wert banished, if thy speech had not bewrayed it.
13Bewray not him that wan- dereth.
14The penny has come down with the wrong side uppermost, and the loud execration at once bewrays young Badman.
15Thy pride hath bewrayed thee.
167 To a hill's side, which did to her bewray
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