become to adorn, to set-off, to grace:
“become disloyalty,”
COMEDY OF ERRORS, iii. 2. 11
;
“become the field,”
KING JOHN, v. 1. 55
;
“become hard-favour'd death,”
1 HENRY VI., iv. 7. 23
;
“vilest things Become themselves in her,”
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, ii. 2.
243
;
“becomes the ground,”
AS YOU LIKE IT, iii. 2. 227
;
“Whether the horse by him became his deed,”
A LOVER'S COMPLAINT, 111.