English edit

Etymology edit

be- +‎ moccasined

Adjective edit

bemoccasined (not comparable)

  1. wearing a moccasin
    • 1926, In the Maine Woods, page 17:
      One has a very brotherly feeling toward all the bemoccasined and pack-laden individuals he sees getting on at Boston and next morning by the time breakfast is over, he has conversed with half the people in the car.
    • 1948, DeCost Smith, Martyrs of the Oblong and Little Nine, Caxton Printers, Ltd., page 194:
      The picturesque, bemoccasined woodrangers, usually spoiling for a fight, were now strangely apathetic.
    • 1960, New Mexico Historical Review, volumes 35-35, page 50:
      and Solomon's new world was a small child's-eye-view of wagon wheels, plodding oxen, bemoccasined Indian traders and a Territory in transition.

Translations edit