a. rare; only in form Bel-. [f. prec. + -IAN.] Devilish.
1776. Hume, Lett. to J. Home, in Life & Corr. (1846), II. 508. Poor Edmondstoune and I parted to-day, with a plentiful effusion of tears; all those Belzebubians have not hearts of iron.
1867. P. Fitzgerald, 75 Brooke St., I. 239. Why, therell be the most infernal Belzebubian row that this house has ever seen, even when old Cromwell and his Quakers came down here.