Bosworth Toller's

Anglo-Saxon

Dictionary online

be-leán

Dictionary links
Substitute: pp. -lagen.
to restrain a person (dat.) from something (acc.)
by blaming, to prohibit
Show examples
  • Hé willnode þæt hé móste mid him sweltan, þeáh se bisscop him þæt swíðe belóh (tametsi ipso multum prohibente), Bd. 5, 19; Sch. 661, 18. ꝥ preóstas ofer-druncen georne beleán óðrum mannum

    that priests restrain other men from drunkenness by their earnest condemnation of it,

      Ll. Th. ii. 256, 14.
  • Næs nán wítega ásend tó hǽðenum folce, þe heora gedwyld belóge,

      Hml. Th. ii. 76, 6.
  • Ne inc ǽnig mon beleán mihte sorhfulne sið

    nobody could keep you turn from the grievous adventure by pointing out its folly,

      B. 511.
  • Ðǽm lytegan is ǽresð tó beleánne hiera selflíce, ðæt hié ne wénen ðæt hié sién wiése

    in hebetibus hoc primum destruendum est, quod se sapientes arbitrantur,

      Past. 203, 9.
  • Him sí belagen ðæt hí dóð

    sunt destruenda ea, in quibus nequiter versant,

      441, 7.
to charge with (? v. be-hlígan)
Show examples
  • Wídgongel wíf mon wommum bilihð,

      Gn. Ex. 65.
Etymology
[For to bileande ꝥ no man werpe þe gilt of his sinne anuppen God, Hml. ii. 107, 10. O. H. Ger. pi-lahan.]
Full form

Word-wheel

  • be-leán,