English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English bidungen, bydyngen, from Old English *bedynġan, from Proto-West Germanic *bidungijan, equivalent to be- +‎ dung. Cognate with West Frisian bedongje (to bedung), Dutch bedongen (to bedung), German bedüngen (to bedung).

Verb edit

bedung (third-person singular simple present bedungs, present participle bedunging, simple past and past participle bedunged)

  1. (transitive) To cover with dung or manure.
  2. (transitive, sometimes figuratively) To bedaub or defile.
    • 1649, Bishop Hall, Resolutions and Decisions of Diverse Practical Cases of Conscience:
      [] had not God's inexpected champion, by divine instinct, taken up the monster, and vanquished him; leaving all but his head to bedung that earth, which had lately shaken at his terror.

Anagrams edit

Maguindanao edit

Etymology edit

Akin to Maranao bedong.

Noun edit

bedung

  1. cat