Definition of "befriend"
befriend
verb
third-person singular simple present befriends, present participle befriending, simple past and past participle befriended
(transitive, dated) To act as a friend to, to assist.
Quotations
an Irish section boss, whose wife (my mother having befriended her years before when first she and her husband came to Sullivan) had now, at the time my mother was compelled to make this return pilgrimage, befriended us by letting us stay - mother and us three youngsters - until she could find a house.
1916, Theodore Dreiser, Franklin Booth, A Hoosier Holiday, page 417
He fled to Switzerland to escape military service, and there was befriended by the revolutionary, Angelica Balabanoff, who, pitying him in his misery and loneliness, befriended him, helping him translate a German pamphlet because he did not know the language.
1939, Philip Lindsay, A Mirror for Ruffians, page 353
Quotations
If it will please Caesar / To be so good to Caesar, as to hear me, / I shall beseech him to befriend himself.
1599 (first performance), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, (please specify the act number in uppercase Roman numerals, and the scene number in lowercase Roman numerals)
This Universe has its Laws. If we walk according to the Law, the Law-Maker will befriend us; if not, not.
1843 April, Thomas Carlyle, “ch. 4, Morrison’s Pill”, in Past and Present, American edition, Boston, Mass.: Charles C[offin] Little and James Brown, published 1843, (please specify |book=I or IV, or the page)