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    betide
    /bɪˈtʌɪd/

    verb

    • 1. happen: literary "I waited with beating heart, not knowing what would betide"

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  3. Betide is a verb that means to happen or happen to, often with the phrase woe betide. Learn more about its synonyms, examples, word history, and related articles.

  4. Betide is a literary verb that means to happen to someone. It is often used with the phrase "woe betide" to express a warning or a threat. See how to use betide in sentences and find synonyms for it.

  5. (Definition of betide from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press) Examples of betide. betide. Woe betide those who'd stand in her way. From The Star-Ledger - NJ.com. And woe betide a superintendent or principal whose school dropped a notch. From Dallas Morning News.

  6. Betide means to happen or happen to; befall, often in the phrase woe betide. Learn the word origin, pronunciation, collocations, and usage of betide with Collins English Dictionary.

  7. When something betides you, it happens to you. Betide is a literary way of saying “happen,” like in this quote from Jane Austin’s Persuasion, “Woe betide him, and her too, when it comes to things of consequence….”

  8. Betide is a verb that means to happen to, come to, or befall. It is often used in the phrase woe betide, which expresses a warning or a threat. Learn more about its origin, usage, and examples from Dictionary.com.

  9. Betide is a verb that means to happen to or happen, often used in the phrase woe betide. Find synonyms, translations, examples, and verb tables for betide on this web page.