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Go to a dictionary. Look up "severe". That's what the justice's eyes suggest he's like. He has a beard. All beards are cut to one shape or another. Go back to the dictionary. Look up "formal". You know, the kind of thing you'd wear on a special occasion like a graduation or a wedding. Imagine all the possible beard shapes, and choose, in your mind, the one that most suggests seriousness and self-importance. A dictionary is your best friend when you are faced with words you don't understand.
Beard the lion means to confront an adversary.
A thin, wispy beard that is hardly big enough to call a beard.
Beard
In the context I found it online, it means a very thin, wispy beard, one hardly big enough to be called a beard.
There is no formal word unsevere to mean "not severe." Words that mean the opposite of severe are mild, gentle, and temperate (for people: friendly, tolerant, or lenient). The word unsevere would be a case of using a known, specific word simply to suggest a reverse meaning, such as unlarge or unhated.
"I have a beard."
Well, if you mean a beard that REALLY is a beard, one that you can see from quite a distance, no. But if you're a boy there's not much trouble about it.
It means beard
Spanish for beard. Hispanic
It means beard or whiskers
they have a date!