Abegging
Archaic. .
go abegging, to be unnoticed, unused, or unappreciated; find few supporters:
New ideas often go abegging.
Read Also:
- Abel
the second son of Adam and Eve, slain by his brother, Cain. Gen. 4. Sir Frederick Augustus, 1827–1902, English chemist: inventor of cordite. I. W. 1908–87, U.S. labor leader: president of the United Steelworkers of America 1965–77. Niels Henrik [neels hen-rik] /nils ˈhɛn rɪk/ (Show IPA), 1802–29, Norwegian mathematician. a male given name. Contemporary Examples […]
- Abel-meholah
a city in ancient Palestine, east of the Jordan River: the home of Elisha. Judges 7:22; I Kings 4:12; 19:16. meadow of dancing, or the dancing-meadow, the birth-place and residence of the prophet Elisha, not far from Beth-shean (1 Kings 4:12), in the tribe of Issachar, near where the Wady el-Maleh emerges into the valley […]
- Abel-beth-maachah
abel-beth-maachah meadow of the house of Maachah, a city in the north of Palestine, in the neighbourhood of Dan and Ijon, in the tribe of Naphtali. It was a place of considerable strength and importance. It is called a “mother in Israel”, i.e., a metropolis (2 Sam. 20:19). It was besieged by Joab (2 Sam. […]
- Abel-cheramim
abel-cheramim (Judg. 11:33, R.V.; A. V., “plain of the vineyards”), a village of the Ammonites, whither Jephthah pursued their forces.
- Abel-shittim
abel-shittim meadow of the acacias, frequently called simply “Shittim” (Num. 25:1; Josh. 2:1; Micah 6:5), a place on the east of Jordan, in the plain of Moab, nearly opposite Jericho. It was the forty-second encampment of the Israelites, their last resting-place before they crossed the Jordan (Num. 33:49; 22:1; 26:3; 31:12; comp. 25:1; 31:16).