bewayEtymologyFrom by way equivalent to be- + way. Compare German wegen (“because of, by reason of”).beway means by way; because. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.conjBy way; because.“[...] an' then hee'l turn him roon behint-afore an' play treeks, till collie gems at him; an' then beway o' makin friens again, hee'l Btreek an' pat him, [...]”nounMovement; sway; influence.“The Third Five-Year Plan with an industrial bias will no doubt, help the State of Kerala to make adequate beway in the matter of industrialisation which alone can pull up educated sons of India from their present low economic level.”Movement away; loss.“But their greatness admitted, it had been pointed out again, and with pe[r]sistence, that Bengali drama had not progressed in any measure, and that there was too much of a beway to make up.”