
ETYMOLOGY
from be- + blubber (to weep effusively) + -ed
EXAMPLE
“…Thee seas, thee regions and eeche place worldlye beholding,
On Lybye land lastly fixt his celestial eyesight.
And thus as he mused, with tears Venus heauye beblubberd
Prest foorth in presence, and whimpring framed her errand…”
From: The First Booke of Virgil His Aeneis
Translated by Richard Stanyhurst, 1582