bemonster

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1)  To make monstrous or like a monster; make hideous; deform.
 * 2)  To fill or cover with monsters.
 * 3) * 1812,, Anster Fair, Edinburgh: George Goldie, 2nd edition, 1814, Canto 4, Stanza 21, p. 119,
 * So leap’d the men, half-sepulchred in sack,
 * Up-swinging, with their shapes be-monstring sky,
 * 1)  To regard or treat (someone) as a monster; to call (someone) a monster.
 * 2) * 1921, R. H. Case, Review of The Percy Reprints: by , , Volume 16, No. 1, January 1921, p. 77,
 * It ends with a crude but forceful intensification of the lust and blood of the Italian novella, complicated with the popular theme of scandalising the Pope and bemonstering the Jew.
 * Up-swinging, with their shapes be-monstring sky,
 * 1)  To regard or treat (someone) as a monster; to call (someone) a monster.
 * 2) * 1921, R. H. Case, Review of The Percy Reprints: by , , Volume 16, No. 1, January 1921, p. 77,
 * It ends with a crude but forceful intensification of the lust and blood of the Italian novella, complicated with the popular theme of scandalising the Pope and bemonstering the Jew.
 * It ends with a crude but forceful intensification of the lust and blood of the Italian novella, complicated with the popular theme of scandalising the Pope and bemonstering the Jew.