Behead
to cut off the head of; kill or execute by decapitation.
geology. (of a pirate stream) to divert the headwaters of (a river, stream, etc.).
contemporary examples
when khaled saad answers his phone there is often a voice on the other end threatening to behead him.
battle for the sinai sophia jones july 14, 2013
right now a young woman whose husband tried to behead her is recovering from her injuries in a ghor hospital.
the underground educator gayle tzemach lemmon march 4, 2010
i suspect the brits used to behead people for lesser breaches of protocol.
the power of mich-lle katty kay april 28, 2009
they not only kill soldiers in battle, they behead them and burn them.
iraqi soldiers bribe officers so they don’t have to fight isis niqash october 7, 2014
historical examples
i would sooner hang or fry a hundred wretched burghers, or behead a score of knights, than touch this friar.
the house of walderne a. d. crake
there was a thorpe among the judges who voted to behead him.
the market-place harold frederic
but if paine was so fit for such a convention, why should they behead him?
the life of thomas paine, vol. ii. (of ii) moncure daniel conway
therefore, in order to realize the perfection, let us behead them.
sophisms of the protectionists frederic bastiat
there was a paddle at one end, with enough of an edge to behead a prawn, and the other end had been worked to a point.
little fuzzy henry beam piper
furious at the insult, he issued orders to behead all jains.
castes and tribes of southern india edgar thurston
verb
(transitive) to remove the head from; decapitate
v.
old english beheafdian, from be-, here with privative force, + heafod (see head (n.)). related: beheaded; beheading.
a method of taking away life practised among the egyptians (gen. 40:17-19). there are instances of this mode of punishment also among the hebrews (2 sam. 4:8; 20:21,22; 2 kings 10:6-8). it is also mentioned in the new testament (matt. 14:8-12; acts 12:2).
Read Also:
- Beheld
simple past tense and past participle of behold. to observe; look at; see. look; see: and, behold, three sentries of the king did appear. contemporary examples upon their arrival in rockaway on friday, the sisters were stunned by the destruction they beheld. sandy’s rockaway victims pause to vote, press on with recovery efforts michael daly […]
- Behest
a command or directive. an earnest or strongly worded request. contemporary examples jackson declined to comment on the case, saying it was at the behest of his lawyer. prof: mit hospitalized me for ferguson tweets nina strochlic december 10, 2014 or the time he ran and hid—at his mother’s behest—during the battle of the blackwater. […]
- Be in for
(used to indicate inclusion within sp-ce, a place, or limits): walking in the park. (used to indicate inclusion within something abstract or immaterial): in politics; in the autumn. (used to indicate inclusion within or occurrence during a period or limit of time): in ancient times; a task done in ten minutes. (used to indicate limitation […]
- Be in on
see: in on
- Be in someone's face
be in someone’s face verb phrase to confront and bother someone •the expression may come from the aggressive confrontations of basketball players: he was totally in her face/ i was in his face about raking the leaves (1980s+)