bebusy

/bɪˈbɪzi/

Etymology

From be- + busy.

Why this word is great

**bebusy** — Verb. To make or be busy; to occupy oneself or someone else with tasks or activities. From the prefix *be-* (expressing causation or intensification) + *busy* ("engaged in activity"). Unlike *occupy* (which can imply filling time or space passively), *bebusy* hums with the clatter of hands sorting buttons, the scrape of a pen on paper, the rhythmic tap of fingers on a keyboard—small, insistent proofs of motion. Unlike *preoccupy* (which drowns the mind in thought), to *bebusy* is to stir the body into a dance of purpose, even if the steps are only the back-and-forth of a broom on a floor, the folding of a shirt, the stacking of plates. A way to outrun stillness, or to pretend to. A way to say, *I am here, I am doing, I have not stopped yet.*

verb

  1. To make or be busy; occupy.“The whole composition or text is manly, they are not bebusied about Rhetorike flowers.”