bedizened
English
Adjective
bedizened (comparative more bedizened, superlative most bedizened)
- ostentatious
- 1923, Lucy Maud Montgomery, “Chapter 8”, in Emily of New Moon:
- There was much whispering and plotting after she had gone in, a conference with some of the boys, and a handing over of bedizened pencils and chews of gum for value received.
Derived terms
Verb
bedizened
- simple past and past participle of bedizen
- 1842, [anonymous collaborator of Letitia Elizabeth Landon], “(please specify the page)”, in Lady Anne Granard; or, Keeping up Appearances. […], volume II, London: Henry Colburn, […], →OCLC, pages 200–201:
- The first who passed him was a man about thirty, with a gait at once jaunty and clumsy, and who was so outrageously bedizened with eye-glass, watch-chain, and stock buckle, gay satin waistcoat, and new white continuations meant to apologize for a seedy coat, as to give the idea of a servant out of place.
- 1921, Lord Frederic Hamilton, Here, There And Everywhere:
- Twenty-four hours later we were both in the vast halls of the Winter Palace in full uniform, as bedizened with gold as a nouveau riche's drawing-room.
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