Shakespeare-Lexicon: Band 2 M - Z [2., ed. Reprint 2020]
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SHAKESPEARE-LEXICON. VOLUME II. M-Z.

SHAKE8PEAEE-LEXIC0K A COMPLETE DICTIONARY OF ALL THE ENGLISH WORDS, PHRASES AND CONSTRUCTIONS

IN T H E W O R K S O F T H E P O E T .

BY

ALEXANDER SCHMIDT, LL. D.

SECOND EDITION.

V O L U M E II. M—Z.

1886.

BERLIN.

LONDON.

GEORG REIMES.

WILLIAMS & NORGATE.

M. the thirteenth letter of the alphabet: Tw. II, 6, 118. 121. 132. 136. 141. 151. • a h , the qaeen of the fairies: Bom. I, 4, 53. 75. 88. • a c h M h , name in Mcb. passim. Rhyming to heath: I, 1, 7. to death: I, 2, 65. Ill, 5, 4. to breath: IV, 1, 98. Maeeahaeua; Judas M., the leader of the Jews against Antiochns of Syria; one of the Nine Worthies: LLL V, 1, 134. V, 2, 540. 602. 634. H u M n w s l i (the later Ff Macdonnell} name in Mcb. I, 2,9. Maedftff (cf. Duff), name in Mcb. II, 4, 20 etc. • a c e , a spice, the second covering of the nutmeg: Wint. IV, 3, 49. Mace, a club of metal used as an ensign of authority : he that »el* up hit rest to do more exploits with hit m. than a morris-pike, Err. IV, 3,28. the sword, the m., the crown imperial, H5 IV, 1, 278 ( = sceptre). with these borne before us instead of — s , H6B IV, 7, 144. 0 murderous slumber, layest thou thy leaden m. upon my boyt Caes. IV, 3, 268 (to arrest him like a bailiff; cf. Arrest). Maeedan, the kingdom of Alexander the Great: H5 IV, 7, 21. 22. 23. 26. 28. Per. II, 2, 24. Machlavel, the famous Italian writer; proverbially for a crafty politician: am I a M.I Wiv. Ill, 1, 104. Alenfon, that notorious i f . H6A V, 4, 74. set the murderous M. to school, H6C III, 2, 193. M a e h l n a t l e n , intrigue, plotting: —s, hollowness, treachery, Lr. I, 2, 122. your business of the world hath so an end, and m. ceases, V, 1, 46. Machine, artificial structure; nsed of the body: whilst this m. is to him, Hml. II, 2, 124. Mackerel, the fish Scomber scomber: buy land as cheap as stinking m. H4A II, 4, 395. Macmerrla, name in H5 III, 2, 72. 91. 100. Maculate, stained, impnre: m. thoughts, LLL I, 2, 97. M a c n l a t i e n , stain, imparity: there's no m. in thy heart, Troil. IV, 4, 66. M a d , adj. 1) disordered in the mind, insane: Sonn. 129, 8. 140, 12. Tp. I, 2, 209. Ill, 3, 58. Meas. V, 60. Err. II, 2, 11. 215. IV, 3, 82. IV, 4, 131. Shr. I, 2, 18. Ill, 2, 19. Tw. I, 5,145. 211. II, 3, 93 etc. etc. Used of dogs infected with the rabies canina: Wiv. IV, 2, 131. Err. V, 70. Ant. IV, 15, 80. m. as a buck, Err. Ill, 1, 72 (proverbial phrase), stark m. Err. II, 1, 59. V, 281. Shr. 1, 1, 69. Wint. Ill, 2, 184. very m. H8 I, 4, 28. to fall m. Tit. II, 3, 104. to grow 8ohmldt, Sh«k«apean Lexicon. 3. Ed. T. IL

ra. Sonn. 140, 9. to go m. Troil. IV, 2, 78. Lr. II, 4, 289. Oth. IV, 1, 101. to run m. Lncr. 997. Ado I, 1, 88. 93. Tw. II, 5, 212. Wint. Ill, 2, 184. H4A HI, 1, 145. 212. H8 II, 2, 130. Troil. V, 1, 54. Tit. IV, 1, 21. Bom. II, 4, 5. IV, 3, 48. IV, 5, 76. Oth. Ill, 3, 317. to wax m. Tit. Ill, 1, 223. 2) beside one's self, having lost all self-command: at his own shadow let the thief run m. Lucr. 997. sometime her grief is dumb ... sometime 'tis mad and too much talk affords, 1106. m. that sorrow should his use control, 1781. the fools are m., if left alone, Gent. Ill, 1, 99. Lucr. 1108. Wiv. I, 4, 69. Ill, 5, 154. IV, 1, 4. Mids. Ill, 2, 441. Merch. IV, 1, 48. V, 176. H4A 1, 3, 53. Oth. Ill, 3, 317. IV, 1, 101 etc. 3) extravagant in any way; gay and frolicksome to wildness and wantonness: a m. host, Wiv.Ill, 1,115. do you hear, my m. wenches t LLL II, 257. how now, ra. spiritf Mids. Ill, 2, 4. fetching m. bounds, Merch. V, 73. be in. and merry, Shr. Ill, 2, 228. like a m. lad, Tw. IV, 2,139. how now, m. wagf H4A I, 2, 50. IV, 2, 55. m. Shallow, H4B III, 2, 16. the m. days that I have spent, 37 etc. — furious, passionate: her eyes are m. that they have wept till now, Ven. 1062. subject to the tyranny ofm. mischances, 738 (the later Qq sad), the finest m. devil of jealousy, Wiv. V, 1, 19. ra. ire, H6AIV, 3, 28. m. and fantastic execution, Troil. V, 5, 38. these hot days is the m. blood stirring, Bom. Ill, 1,4. = inflamed with desire: he was ra. for her, All's V, 3, 260. Iain m. in Cressid's love, Troil. I, 1, 51. = foolish, absurd: a m. fantastical trick, Meas. Ill, 2, 98. his m. attire, Shr. Ill, 2, 126. a m. marriage, 184. 244. her m. and headstrong humour, IV, 1, 212. as m. in folly, All's V, 3, 3. m. world, m. kings, John II, 561. he she loved proved m. and did forsake her, Oth. IV, 3, 27 (cf. All's V, 3, 3). Mad, vb. 1) tr. to make mad, to madden: Sonn. 119, 8. Err. IV, 4, 129. V, 84. All's V, 3, 213. Tw. I, 5, 141. B2 V, 5, 61. Tit. Ill, 1, 104. Lr. IV, 2, 43. Cymb. II, 2, $7. IV, 2, 313. 2) to be mad: when he to —ing Dido would unfold his father's acts, H6B III, 2, 117. Madam, title of honour given in speaking of or to ladies of rank: what must I call her. Madam. Atce m., or Joan m. 1 M., and nothing else; so lords call ladies, Shr. Ind. 2, 111; cf. Sly's blunders v. 145 and 1, 1, 259. ere long they should call me m. II4B II, 1, 109. Lucr. 1277. Gent. I, 2, 3. 34. 77. 130. 138. IV, 2, 120. LLL II, 1, 1. 40 etc. etc. m. my interpreter, H5 V, 2, 282. dear m. Gent. I, 2, 17. sweet m. LLL V, 2, 339. my dearest m. All's I, 3, 213. good « . Tw. 44

680

M

III, 1, 173. gracious m. H6C III, 3, 59. noble m. H 8 IV, 2, 44 etc. M. Silvia, Gent. II, 1, 6. 14. 152. II, 5, 12. IT, 3, 1. IV, 4, 39. 114. 116. Meas. I, 2, 45. 74 etc. m. and mistress, Gent. U, 1, 102. IN., and pretty mistresses, give ear, L L L V, 2, 286. our —s mode at us, H5 111, 5, 28 (French ladies), the —s too did almost sweat, H8 I, 1, 23. honest —'s issue, L r . I, 2, 9. Mad-brain, adj. insane: Shr. Ill, 2, 10. Mad-brained, the same: Shr. Ill, 2, 165. H 6 A I, 2, 15. T i m . V, 1, 177. M U - k r e 4 , produced by or in madness: this m. flaw, H6B III, 1, 354. M a d c a p , a fellow of wild and eccentric habits: Gent. II, 5, 8. John I, 84. H 4 A I, 2, 160. Adjectively: the merry m. lord, L L L II, 215. a m. ruffian, Shr. II, 290. the m. duke, H 4 A I, 3, 244. the m. Prince of Wale», IV, 1, 95. Madeira, a sort of wine: H 4 A I, 2, 128. Made-up, complete, perfect: a m. villain, T i m . V, 1, 101. Mad-headed, wild, foolish: H 4 A II, 3, 80. Madly, l ) i n a deranged mind, distractedly: that's somewhat m. spoken, Meas. V, 89. ioast thou mad, that thus so m. thou didst answer mef Err. 11, 2, 12. Mids. II, 1, 171. Shr. II, 329. Ill, 2, 246. T w . V, 319. John III, 4, 58. Rom. IV, 3, 51. 2 ) wildly, without self-control: which ( f e a r ) m. hurries her she knows not whither, Ven. 904. m. tossed between desire and dread, Lucr. 171. by reprobate desire thus m. led, 300. Err. V, 152. Mids. II, 1, 153. III, 2, 23. H4B 1, 1, 10. Troil. II, 2, 116. Cymb. V, 5, 31 (in. dying, = dying in a wild state of mind). Madman, a man whose understanding is deranged : Meas. V, 506. Err. IV, 1, 93. V, 213. L L L V, 2, 338. Mids. V, 10. Shr. V, 1,60. 76. T w . I, 5, 139. 146. IV, 2, 46. 125. IV, 3, 221. V, 294. 299. 335. H6B 111, 1, 347. Rom. I, 2, 55. II, 1, 7. V, 3, 67. T i m . Ill, 4, 103. Caes. IV, 3, 40. L r . Ill, 6, 10. IV, 1, 32. V, 3, 187. he speaks nothing but m. T w . I, 5, 115 (cf. H5 V, 2, 156). Plur. madmen: Bonn. 147, 11. Mids. V, 4. A s 111, 2, 422. T w . Ill, 4, 154. R2 V, 5, 62. H4B I, 3, 32. Troil. V, 1, 56. Rom. Ill, 3, 61. Caes. Ill, 2, 274. L r . Ill, 4, 81. IV, 1, 48. Cymb. V, 4, 146.

M a g g a t , a small grab, a fly-worm: L L L V, 2, 409. Hml. II, 2, 181. IV, 3, 24. M a g g a t - p l e or M a g a t - p i e , magpie: Mcb. Ill, 4, 125. M a g i c , subst. sorcery, enchantment: T p . V, 50. W i n t . V, 3, 39. 110. Tim. I, 1, 6. Hml. Ill, 2, 270. Oth. 1, 2, 65. I, 3, 92. Ill, 4, 69. Ant. Ill, 10, 19. Magic, adj. pertaining to sorcery: T p . I, 2, 24. H 6 A I, 1, 27. Mcb. HI, 5, 26. Magical, the same: A n t III, 1, 31. M a g i c i a n , sorcerer: A s V, 2, 67. 78. V, 4, 33. H 4 A I, 3, 83. R 3 I, 2, 34. Magistrate, a public functionary: T p . II, 1, 149. H5 I, 2, 191. H 6 A I, 3, 57. H6B IV, 2, 19. H6C I, 2, 23. Cor. II, 1, 47. Ill, 1, 104. 202. Magnanimity, heroic bravery: infuse his breast with m. and make him naked foil a man at arms, H6C V, 4, 41. Magnanlmana, dauntless, heroic: be m. in the enterprise, All's III, 6, 70. most m. mouse, H 4 B III, 2, 171. as m. as Agamemnon, H5 III, 6, 6. IV, 7, 18. valiant and m. deeds, Troil. II, 2, 200. Ill, 3, 277. cf. Armado'8 letter in L L L IV, 1, 65. Magnificence, pomp, splendour: Wint. 1,1, 13. Magnificent, pompous, boastful: a letter from the m. Armado, L L L I, 1, 193. than whom no mortal so m. Ill, 180. M a g n i f i e s , title given to Venetian grandees: Merch. Ill, 2, 282. Oth. I, 2, 12. M a g n i f y , to glorify, to exalt: him that thou —est with all these titles, H 6 A IV, 7, 75. Magnuat Saint M. Corner, H6B IV, 8, 1. Magat-ple, see Maggot-pie. Mahamet, the Arabian prophet: H 6 A I, 2, 140. M a h a , name of a devil: Lr. Ill, 4, 149. IV, 1, 63. Maid, 1) virgin: he preached pure m. Compl. 315. 'tis not a m., for she hath had gossips, Gent. Ill, 1, 269. a wronged, I would fain have said a m. Meas. V, 21. II, 2, 154. A d o II, 2,40. IV, 1,35. 86. Mids. II, 2, 59. Merch. Ill, 2, 312. A s IV, 1, 148. All's IV, 2, 74. John II, 572. H 4 A IV, 1, 114. H5 V, 2, 323. H 6 A V, 4, 55. H6B IV, 7, 129. H6C I, 1, 216. T r o i l . IV, 5, 50. Rom. Ill, 2, 135. Hml. IV, 5, 54. Lr. I, 5, 54 etc. Used of a man who has not yet known woman: you are betrothed both to a m. and man, T w . V, 270. 2 ) girl: if you be m. or no, T p . I, 2, 427. 428 (not a goddess, but a mortal woman), behold this m. 491. IV, 95. V, 185. knows I am a m. and would not force this Utter to my view, Gent. I, 2, 53. can you love the m.f W i v . I, 1, 252. I, 4, 127. is there a m. with child by him? Meas. 1, 2, 92. 94. I, 4, 32. II, 2, 20. Ill, 1, 180. V, 178. L L L I, 1, 137. 299. Mids. II, 2, 73. III, 2, 302. T w . II, 4, 46. V, 268. 282. H 4 A III, 3, 130 (M. Marian). Rom. I, 4, 66 etc. Used as a comp i l a t i o n : why went you not with master doctor, m.t W i v . V, 5, 232. m.! L L L I, 2, 138. mates, m.t Shr. I, 1, 59. the gods to their dear shelter take thee, m. Lr. I, 1, 185. my —s, L L L V, 2, 262. good m., fair m. etc. W i v . II, 2, 38. Meas. II, 2, 79. Mids. I, 1, 46 etc. Proverb: —s still answer nay, and take it, R3 III, 7, 51; cf. — s in modesty say no to that which they would have the profferer construe ay, Gent. I, 2, 55.

Madneaa, 1) insanity: Sonn. 140, 10. T p . II, 2, 14. V, 116. W i v . IV, 2, 27. Meas. IV, 4, 4. V, 51. 61. 63. Err. V, 76. Merch. I, 2, 69. A s 111, 2, 420. IV, 1, 218. T w . Ill, 4, 16. 61. IV, 3, 4. 10. V, 302. Wint. IV, 4, 495 etc. etc. in m. = mad: Hml. Ill, 4, 187. Oth. I, 1,98. 2 ) extreme folly , of this m. cured, H4B IV, 2, 41. loere't not m., to make the fox surveyor of the foldf H 6 B III, 1, 252. his flight was m. Mcb. IV, 2, 2. 3 ) wild affection or emotion: fetter strong m. in a silken thread, A d o V, 1, 25. such il hare is m. the youth, Merch. I, 2, 21. M a d a n n a , the address used by the fool to Olivia in T w . I, 5, 47. 64. 66. 68. 72. 74. 76. 120. 145. V, 306. Madrigal, a pastoral song: Pilgr. 360. W i v . Ill, 1, 18. 23. M a d - w a m a n , a woman deranged in her under3) female servant: spinning amongst her —s, Lucr. standing: if your wife be not a m. Merch. IV, 1, 445. A r g . 10. she hoarsely calls her m. Lucr. 1214. a m. Maecenas (O. Edd. Mecenas) friend of Octavius of Dian's, Sonn. 153, 2. T p . Ill, 1, 84. Gent. I, 2, Caesar: Ant. II, 2, 17. 102. 175. 69. II, 3, 8. Ill, 1, 269. W i v . IV, 2, 77. V, 5, 49. Err.

M

681

V, 170. Merch. i n , 2, 200. 311. V, 33. Shr. Ind. 2, most imperfect, Oth. 1, 3, 99. I am —edfor ever, V, 92. H8 111, 1, 75. Bom. II, 2, 6. Tim. IT, 1, 12. Oth. I,27. = to hurt in general: did win whom he would m. IV, 3, 26. Ant. Ill, 7, 15. IV, 15, 74 etc. Pilgr.312 (in the rhyme), ti—edyou two outright, Shr. Mald>ehlld, female child: Per. V, 3, 6. V, 2,62. Cade says mained for maimed, H6BIV, 2,172. • • M e n , 1) virgin: then are you no m. Ado IV, Main, subst. 1) with of; full might, the whole, I, 88. All's II, 1, 175. H5 III, 3, 20. Oth. Ill, 4, 75. the gross of a thing: nativity, once in the m. of light, Oftenest adjectively: the m. burning of his cheeks, crawls to maturity, Sonn. 60, 5. empties itself, as doth Ven. 50. m. worlds, Lncr. 408. bud, 848. Sonn. 16, an inland brook, into the main of waters, Merch. V, 6. 66, 6. 154, 4. Mess. IV, 4, 27. Ado III, 1, 109. 97. to-morrow we must with alt our m. of power stand IV, 1, 166. 181. L L L V, 2, 351. 789. Mids. I, 1, 75. fast, Troil. II, 3, 273. goes it against the m. of Poland, II, I, 164. Ill, 2, 285. All's IV, 2, 57. John n , 98. or for some frontiert Hml. IV, 4, 15. H5 V, 2, 253. 349. 353. H6A II, 4,47. V, 4, 52. H8 2) absol. a ) the principal point, that which is first IV, 2,169. V, 5, 41. T i t II, 3, 232. Rom. II, 2, 86. in question: let's make haste away, and look unto the Hml. I, 3, 121. V, 1, 256. Per. V, 1, 243. o m. and m. H6B 1,1, 208. I doubt it is no other than the m., an innocent hand, John IV, 2, 252 (not yet stained his father's death and our o'erhasty marriage, Hml. with blood), thy m. sword, H4A V, 4, 134. m. youth, II, 2, 56. H 6 A IV, 7, 38. b) the ocean, the great sea: Sonn. 64,7. 80,8. 2) girl: —s' eyes stuck over all his face, Compl. John II, 26. B3 1,4,20. Oth. II, 1,3. 39. 81. Meas. I, 4, 80. L L L V, 2, 916. Mids. II, 1, 35. c) the continent: swell the curled waters 'bove the 168. II, 2, 74. HI, 2, 66. Merch. II, 1, 14. Ill, 2, 8. m. Lr. Ill, 1, 6. As IV, 3, 41. Shr. IV, 5, 44. All's I, 1, 55. IV, 2, 6. d) (probably from the French main) a stake at T w . I, 4, 33. Wint. IV, 4, 85. H5 II, 4, 107. Troil. gaming: to set so rich a m. on the nice hazard of one III, 2, 219. Oth. I, 3, 94. Used as a compellation: doubtful hour, H4A IV, 1,47. Meas. II, 2, 48. All's I, 3, 155. II, 1, 117. AdjecMain, adj. 1) great, first in importance, principal, tively: my m. weeds, T w . V, 262. a m. battle, Troil. chief: the m.flood, Merch. IV, 1, 72 (the sea), the man IV, 5, 87. that the m. harvest reaps, As III, 5, 103. he might in a Maidenhead, virginity: Shr. Ill, 2, 227. Tw. I, m. danger fail you, All's III, 6,17. the m. consents are 6, 232. Wint. IV, 4, 116. H4A II, 4, 398. IV, 1, 59. had, V, 8, 69. these m. parcels of dispatch, IV, 3,104. H4B II, 2, 84. H6B IV, 7, 130. H8 II, 3, 23. 25. our m. battle's front, H60 I, 1, 8; B3 V, 3, 299. m. Troil. IV, 2, 23. Bom. 1, 1, 31. I, 3, 2. Ill, 2, 137. end, H8 II, 2, 41. Ill, 2, 215. Cor. II, 2, 43. IV, 3, 20. Per. Ill Prol. 10. IV, 2, 64. IV, 6, 136. Mcb. IV, 3, 198. V, 4, 10. Hml. 1,1, 105. Lr. IV, 6, Maidenhead, place in England: Wiv. IV, 5, 80. 217. Oth. 1, 3, 11. II, 1, 269. Ant. I, 2, 198 (the m. Maidenhead, virginity: All's 111, 5. 24. H6A soldier). Cymb. V, 4, 16. Per. V, 1, 29. IV, 6, 17. Bom. Ill, 2, 13. 2) concerning the gross or whole; general: a man Maidenly, 1) becoming a maid: it is not friendly, may prophesy of the m. chance of things, H4B III, 1, 'tis not m. Mids. 111,2,217. 2) girlish: what a m. 83. we do not mean the coursing matchers only, but man-at-arms are you become, H4B II, 2, 82. 3) vir- fear the m. intendment of the Scot, H5 I, 2, 144. m. ginal, chaste: the —est star, Lr. I, 2, 143. chance, father you meant, H6B I, 1, 212. put your m. Maiden-tangoed, speaking in a gentle and in- cause into the king's protection, H8 III, 1, 93. by the m. assent of all these learned men she was divorced, sinuating manner: Compl. 100. Maiden - widawed, having become a widow, H8 IV, 1, 31. if he were foiled, we did ourm. opinion crush in taint of our best man, Troil. 1, 3, 373. quite while yet a virgin: Bom. Ill, 2, 135. Maldhaad, girlhood: by the roses of the spring, from the m. opinion he held once, Caes. II, 1, 196. no by m., honour, truth and every thing, T w . Ill, 1, 162. farther than the m. voice of Denmark goes withal, Hml. is there not charms by which the property of youth and I, 3, 28. m. may be abusedt Oth. I, 1, 173. 3) superior, overruling: which by m. force WarMaid-pale (cf. Pale) having the white and tender wick did win, H6B I, 1, 210. by commission and m. complexion of a virgin: change the complexion of her power, H8 II, 2, 7. m. peace to scarlet indignation, B2 III, 3, 98. Maln-canrse, the main sail (cf. Course, 9): bring Mall, subst. armour: a rusty m. Troil. HI, 3,152 her to try with m. Tp. I, 1,38 ( i . e., according to (O. Edd. male\ Corrupt passage: no egma, no riddle, Smith's Sea-Grammar: 'to hale the tacke aboord, the no I'envoy; no salve in the m. L L L III, 74 (Qq Fl in sheet close aft, the boling set up, and the helme tied thee male; m. perhaps = budget, box). close aboord'). Mailed, clnd in armour: the m. Mars, H4A IV, Maine, French county: John I, 11. 11,152. 487. 1, 116. with his m. hand, Cor. I, 3, 38 (gauntleted). H6A IV, 3, 45. V, 3, 95. 154. H6B I, 1, 51. 209. m. up = completely covered and wrapped up: I should 210. IV, 1,86. IV, 2, 170. IV, 7, 70. not thus be led along, m. up in shame, H6B II, 4, 31. Mained, in the language of Cade, = maimedMalm, subst. a laming and crippling hurt, a deep H6B IV, 2, 172. injury: so deep a m. as to be cast forth in the common Mainly, forcibly, mightily: these four came all air, B2 I, 3, 156. your father's sickness is a m. to us, a-front and m. thrust at me, H4A II, 4, 222. I do not H4A IV, 1, 42. that bears so shrewd a m. H6B 11, 3, call your faith in question so tn. as my merit, Troil. 41. stop those —s of shame seen through thy country,IV, 4, 87. by your safety, wisdom, all things else, you Cor. IV, 5, 92 ( — s of shame = shameful —s). m. were stirred up, Hml. IV, 7, 9. I am m. ignorant Malm, vb. to lame, to cripple: you —ed the juris- what place this is, Lr. IV, 7, 65 ( = perfectly). dii tion of all bishops, H8 111, 2, 312. with such —ed Main - mast, the chief or middle mast: Wint. rites, Hml. V, 1, 242 (defective), a judgment —ed and III, 3, 94. 44*

682

M

Maintain (accentuated on the syllable; on the first in H6A I, 1, 71. Tit. II, 1, 47. T, 2, 72). 1) to keep, to support, to sustain, to feed: he will m. you like a gentlewoman, Wiv. Ill, 4, 45. sweat in this business and m. this war, John V, 2, 102. I have —ed that Salamander with fire, H4A III, 3, 53. H5 I, 1, 12. II, 3, 45. H6B IV, 7, 75. IV, 10, 24. H6C 111, 3, 126. 154. B3 I, 2, 260. H8 I, 2, 31. Hml. II, 2, 361. to m. it = to afford it: I am able to m. it, Shr. V, 1, 79. so senseless of expense, that he will neither know how to m. it, nor cease his flow of riot, Tim. II, 2, 2. 2) to support, to defend, to vindicate, to justify: our country rights in Rome —ed, Lucr. 1838. if it be honest you have spoke, you have courage to m. it, Meas. 111,2,167. never could m. his part, Ado I, 1, 238. a sceptre must be as boisterously —ed as gained, John HI, 4, 136. R2 I, 1, 62. 98. IV, 27. H4A IV, 3, 9. H4B III, 2, 82. IV, 1, 42. IV, 2, 67. IV, 5, 225. H5 III, 2, 85. Ill, 6, 95. IV, 1, 300. H6A II, 4, 32. 70. 73. 88. Ill, 1, 129. Ill, 4, 31. H6B I, 1, 161 (Jesu m. your royal excellence!). H6C I, 1, 88. Troil. II, 1, 138. II, 2, 129. Tit. V, 2, 72. Tim. IV, 3, 71. Lr. V, 3, 100. 112. Cymb. V, 4, 74. 3) to assert: unless this general evil they m. Sonn. 121, 13. she dying, as it must be so —ed, upon the instant, Ado IV, 1, 216. say if I—ed the truth, H6A II, 4, 5. when the devout religion of mine eye —s such falsehood, Rom. I, 2, 94. heard him oft m. it to be fit, Lr. I, 2, 77. 4) to keep, to entertain, to hold: —ed the change of words with any creature, Ado IV, 1, 185; m. no words with him, Tw. IV, 2, 107; m. talk with the duke, Lr. Ill, 3, 16. m. a mourning ostentation, Ado IV, 1, 207. which —ed so politic a state of evil, V, 2, 62. it shall be so far forth friendly —ed till we set his youngest free, Shr. 1,1,141. defences, musters, preparations, should be —ed, assembled and collected, H5 II, 4, 19. that here you m. several factions, H6A I, 1, 71. and m. such a quarrel openly, Tit. II, 1, 47. 5) to represent: the one —ed by the owl, LLL V, 2, 902 (Armado's speech). Maintenance, 1) sustenance: Gent. 1,3, 68. Shr. V, 2, 148. 2) deportment, carriage: I saw him hold Lord Percy at the point with lustier m. than I did look for of such an ungrown warrior, H4A V, 4, 22. Main-tap, the top of the mainmast: Cymb. IV, 2, 320. Majeatte, grand, stately: Tp. IV, 118. Caes. I, 2, 130. Cymb. V, 5, 457. Majeatleal, 1) pertaining to royalty, princely: presence m. would put him out, LLL V, 2, 102. laid in bedm. H5 IV, 1, 284. 2) grand, stately: LLL V, 1, 12. H5 III Chor. 16. H6A IV, 7,39. R3 III, 7,118. Hml. 1,1,143. 11,2,313. Majestically, with princely dignity: H4A II, 4, 479. M « ] e a t r , 1) grandeur, dignity of aspect and manner: he trots with gentle m. Ven. 278. the sun ariseth in his m. 856. in great commanders grace and m. you might behold, Lucr. 1387. Sonn. 7, 4. 78, 8. LLL I, 1, 137. IV, 3, 228. As III, 2, 154. Wint. V, 2, 39. V, 3, 35. 39. R2 III, 3, 70. H6A I, 2, 79. V, 3, 70. H6B I, 1, 33. Ill, 1, 6. Ill, 2, 50. H6C IV, 6, 71. R3 I, 1, 16. Ill, 1,100. Ant. Ill, 3,20. 45. 46 etc. 2) royalty: hiding base sin in plaits of m. Lucr.

93. I sue for exiled—'i repeal; let him return, 640; ef. 0 fair return of banished m. John III, 1, 321. the sceptre, the attribute to awe and m. Merch. IV, 1, 191. to bless the bed of m. Wint. V, 1, 33. John II, 350. Ill, 1,98. 100. IV, 2, 213. IV, 3,148. R2 II, 1, 120. 295. H6B I, 2 , 3 6 ; R3 in, 7,169. Hml. Ill, 3, 15. IV, 1, 31. A n t V, 2,17 etc. Masc. in Lucr. 640. 3) title given to kings and queens: Tp. II, 1,168. LLL II, 141. V, 2, 311. 888. All's 1,1, 4. 13. 1,2, 10. 23. 76. H5 V, 2, 26. H6A III, 1, 96. 176. 179. H6B I, 1, 1. Hml. II, 2, 26. Ill, 1, 22 etc. your high m. All's II, 1, 113. your sweet m. R2 II, 2, 20. my dear m. your queen, Hml. II, 2, 135. most royal m. Lr. I, 1, 196. good m. Ant. Ill, 3, 2. most gracious m. 7 etc. the m. of England, John I, 3. the double —s, II, 480. before my father's m. H4A V, 1, 96. the m. of buried Denmark, Hml. 1,1, 48. where is the beauteous m. of Denmark t IV, 5, 21. this oldm. Lr. V, 3, 299. Applied to the princess of France: LLL V, 2, 736 (probably as supposed to be heiress of her dead father). • a j a r , subst. the first proposition of a syllogism: I deny your m. H4AII, 4,544 (perhaps quibbling with mayor). H f t j i r , adj. greater: my m. vow lies here, Troil. V, 1, 49. the m. part of your syllables, Cor. II, 1, 64. H a j a r l t y , superiority, preeminence: whose great name in arms holds from all soldiers chief m. and military title capital through all the kingdoms, H4A III, 2, 109. Make, vb. (impf. and partic. made). A. trans. 1) to create, to beget, to cause to exist, to form, to frame, to compose: nature that made thee, Ven. 11. 243. bees that made 'em (honey-combs) Tp. 1, 2, 330. thou art made like a goose, II, 2, 136. as if the garment had been made for me, Gent. IV, 4, 168. like man new made, Meas. II, 2, 79 (new-created by salvation), a man already made, II, 4, 44. a life true made, 47. to see the —ing of her carcanet, Err. Ill, 1, 4. by this I know 'tis made, 115. he were an excellent man that were made just in the midway between him and Benedick, Ado II, 1, 8. he speaks not like a man of Ood* —ing, LLL V, 2, 529; As III, 2, 216. God made him, Merch. 1,2, 60. put the liveries to —ing, II, 2,124. (the painter) having made one (eye) III, 2, 124. Nathaniel's coat was not Jully made, Shr. IV, 1, 135. Be that made me, R2 II, 1, 93; H6A II, 4, 88; H6C II, 2, 124; R3 1, 2, 62; Lr. I, 1, 210. J was not made a horse, R2 V, 5, 92; cf. repent thou wast not made his daughter, Ant. III, 13, 135. I knew ye as well as he that made ye, H4A II, 4, 296. what I have to say is of mtne own —ing, H4B V, 5, 121. his passport shall be made, H5 IV, 3, 36. you are weakly made, H8 II, 3, 40. my will shall here be made, Troil. V, 10,53; Wiv. Ill, 4, 60. he sits in his state, as a thing made for Alexander, Cor. V, 4,23 (formed to represent A.), he that made us with such large discourse, Hml. IV, 4, 36. there was good sport at his —ing, Lr. I, 1, 24. the issue that their lust hath made between them, Ant. Ill, 6, 8. made a law, Per. Prol. 35 etc. etc. With of: such stuff as dreams are made on, Tp. IV, 157 (on = of), the ladder made of cords, Gent. 11,4, 182. 111,1, 117. his guts are made of puddings, Wiv. II, 1,32. what stuff'tis made of, Merch. I, 1,4. such as we are made of, such we be, Tw. II, 2, 33. the breath is gone whereof this praise is made, Tim. II, 2, 179 etc. etc. Hence made of = consisting of: if my breast had not been made

M of faith, and my heart of steel, Err. Ill, 2, 150. proud, idle, made of self-lore, All's I, 1, 157. Cor. I, 9, 44. made of turner stuff, Caes. Ill, 2, 97. Without of: were I not the better part made mercy, As HI, 1 , 2 ; cf. when he was less furnished than now he is with that which —s him both without and within, Cymb. 1,4, 9 ( = constitutes). Made, followed by an inf. or by for, = destined, and hence fit, well qualified: nor made to court an amorous looking-glass, R3 I, 1, 15. aplace by nature made for murders, Tit. IV, 1, 58. The aux. vb. to be before it either in the present or impf. tense: torches are made to light, beauty for the use, Ven. 163. 10« are made to be no stronger than faults may shake our frames, Meas. II, 4,132. you are made rather to wonder at the things you hear than to work any, Cymb. V, 3, 53. if he'll do as he is made to do, I'll know he'll quickly fly my friendship too, 61. were not made to woo, Mids. II, 1, 242. this hand was made to handle nought but gold, H6B V, 1, 7. they were made for kissing, B3 I, 2, 172. meat was made for mouths, Cor. I, 1, 211. men's eyes were made to look, Bom. Ill, 1, 57. was this fair paper made to write whore upont Oth. IV, 2, 72. Made up = finished, completed: sent before my time into this breathing world, scarce half made up, R3 I, 1, 21. he's a made up villain, Tim. V, 1, 101 (complete, perfect), being scarce made up, I mean, to man, he had not apprehension of roaring terrors, Cymb. IV, 2, 109 (full grown). Made without up, used in the same sense by Fluellen: H5 IV, 7, 45. 2) to effect, to produce, to cause, to perform: to m. the breach, Lucr. 469; H6A II, 1, 74; III, 2, 2; H6B V, 2, 82. he does m. our fire, Tp. I, 2, 311; Ado II, 1, 262; Shr. IV, 1, 4; Wint. II, 3, 115 etc. widows of this business' —ing, Tp. II, 1, 133. to m. an earthquake, 315. m. flows and ebbs, V, 270. and m. rough winter everlastingly, Gent. II, 4, 163. m. water ( = to urine) Gent. IV, 4, 41; Meas. Ill, 2, 117; Tw. I, 3, 139. to m. a hole, Wir. Ill, 5, 143; H4B II, 2, 88; Caes. V, 1, 31 etc. m. the fairy oyes, Wiv. V, 5, 45. vice —s mercy, Meas. IV, 2, 115 (is the cause of mercy), who —s that noise t IV, 3, 27; Ado 111, 3, 35; Mids. Ill, 2, 116; H4B IV, 5, 1; H8 IV, 1, 72; Lr. II, 1, 57 etc. unquiet meals m. ill digestions, Err. V, 74. m. good room, Ado II, 1, 88. made a blot, III, 1, 64. your fair self should m. a yielding 'gainst some reason in my breast, LLL II, 151. —s sport to the prince, IV, 1, 101; Wir. IV, 4, 14; Mids. Ill, 2, 161. the wound inine eye hath made, As III, 5, 20; B2 IV, 279; T i t III, 1, 247; Tim. HI, 5, 66. infirmity doth ever m. the better fool, Tw. I, 5, 83; cf. Til m. a fat pair of gallows, H4A II, 1, 74. a solemn combination shall be made of our souls, Tw. V, 392. the need I have of thee thine own goodness hath made, Wint. IV, 2, 14. this league that we have made, John II, 545; IV, 2, 126. I have made a happy peace with him, John V, 1, 63; V, 2, 91; K2 III, 2, 127; R3 I, 2, 198; II, 2, 132; Cor. V, 6, 79 etc. made a divorce betwixt his queen and him, B2 III, 1, 12; H5 V, 2, 394; Cymb. 11, 1,67. m. fearful musters, H4B Ind. 12. his own merit —s his way, H8 I, 1, 64; cf. H6B IV, 8, 62 and Oth. V,

683

mirth, II, 3, 101. made emulous missions, Troil. Ill, 3, 189 (caused), made a shower and thunder with their caps and shouts. Cor. II, 1, 282. the noble knot he made, Cor. IV, 2, 32. m. a treaty, V, 6, 68; Ant. II, 6, 85. the harmony which that tongue has made, Tit. II, 4, 48. the sorrow that their sister — s ( = causes) III, 1, 119. trenches made by grief, V, 2, 23. m. a mutual closure of our house, 134. let u a . a bay, II, 2, 3. the want whereof doth daily m. revolt in my penurious band, Tim. IV, 3, 91 (mark the different meaning in Oth. I, I, 135). our old love made a particular force, V, 2, 8. abler than yourself to m. condi-' lions, Caes. IV, 3, 32. it shall m. honour for you, Mcb. II, 1, 26. to m. mouths, Hml. IV, 4, 50; cf. Mids. III, 2, 238 and Lr. Ill, 2, 35; to m. faces, LLL V, 2, 649; Cor. II, 1, 83; Mcb. Ill, 4, 67. his quietus m. Hml. III, 1, 75. m. your own purpose, how in my strength you please, Lr. II, 1,113. her garboils, made out of her impatience, Ant. II, 2, 68. made a gap, 223. made his will, III, 4, 4. my desolation does begin to m. a better life, V, 2, 1 (is the beginning of the better life which is to come), what —s your admiration f Cymb. I, 6, 38. cf. Cor. Ill, 1,27. Per. II Prol. 31 etc. etc. to m. means (cf. Means' — to take measures, to contrive, to practise: Gent. V, 4, 137. B3 V, 3, 40 (Qq bear my good night to him). 248. Cymb. II, 4, 3. ( = to make possible, All's V, 1, 35). to m. fair weather, see Weather. With a double accus., to denote an effect o r change produced: m. the rope of his destiny our cable, Tp. I, 1, 33. words that made them (thy purposes) known, I, 2, 358. —s my labours pleasures, III, 1, 7. made wit with musing weak, Gent. I, 1, 69. one made privy to the plot, III, 1,12. made me publisher of this pretence, 47. Silver made it good, Shr. Ind. 1, 19 (cf. Good), he'll be made an example, Wint. IV, 4, 847 (cf. Example), it made my imprisonment a pleasure, H6C IV, 6, 11. those you m. friends, H8 II, 1, 127. my boon I m. it that you know me not, Lr. IV, 7, 10 etc. to m. it strange = to pretend to be shocked at what has been said or done: she —* it strange, but she would be best pleased to be so angered with another letter, Gent. I, 2, 102. to achieve hert howl Why —st thou it so stranget Tit. 11,1, 81. With up, to denote a complete effect: what he with his oath and all probation will m. up full clear, Meas. V, 157. Peculiar passage: thou shouldst have made him as little as a crow, ere left to after-eye him, Cymb. 1,3,14 ( = let him become). Beflexively: m. yourself ready, Tp. 1,1, 27. m. thyself like a nymph, I, 2, 301. to m. myself acquainted with you, Wiv. II, 2, 189 etc. etc. Sometimes to m. one's self = to betfome: that, being a stranger in this city here, do m. myself a suitor to your daughter, Shr. II, 91. how sometimes nature will betray its folly and m. itself a pastime to harder bosoms, Wint. I, 2, 152. I dare not m. myself so guilty, to give up willingly that noble title, H8 III, 1, 139. Octavius. with Mark Antony have made themselves so strong, Caes. IV, 3, 154. m. yourself my guest whilst you abide here, Ant. II, 2, 249 (cf. Meas. Ill, 1, 205). Adverbial or prepositional expressions supplying the place of the second accusative: till time had made them for us, Meas. I, 2, 157 ( = disposed them in our favour). you have made the days and nights as one, All's V, 1, 3. that day that made my sister thirteen years, Tw. V, 255. what—s you in this sudden changet H6C

2, 263. Ms —s bold mouths, H8 I, 2, 60. this night he —s a supper ( = gives) H8I,3,52; cf. —s factious feasts, Troil. I, 3, 191; be every one officious to m. this banquet, Tit. V, 2, 203. all hoods m. not monks, 118 III, 1, 23. made this mischief, II, 1, 22. m. yourself IV, 4, 1. made of none effect, H8 IV, 1, 33. what —s

684

M

that frontlet on? Lr. 1, 4, 207 (what caoses that frontlet to be on your forehead?), to m. away = to m. away with, to destroy, to kill: Ven. 763. Sonn. 11, 8. As V, 1, 58. All's 1, 1, 226. R2 I, 3, 244. H6B III, 1, 167. Ill, 2, 67. R3 IV, 4, 281. Tit. II, 3, 189. 208. IV, 2, 167. Tim. I, 2, 110. to m. up = to complete, to make full, to accomplish: Meas. V, 228. Err. 1, 1, 154. LLL IV, 3, 207. Mids. Ill, 2, 438. Wint. II, 1, 179. John II, 541. Ill, 1, 106. H6C I, 4, 25. Troil. II, 2, 170. Cor. 1,1, 148. V, 3, 140. Rom. V, 1, 48. Mcb. I, 5, 38. 1, 3, 36. Hml. V, 1, 294. Oth. IV, 2, 5. Per. Ill, 3, 5 (cf. Up). = to bring up, in the language of the fishermen in Per. II, 1, 155. The prepos. of supplying the place of the first accus.: made such a sinner of his memory, Tp. I, 2, 101. to m. a wonder of a poor drunkard, II, 2, 169. Wiv. I, 1, 2. Meas. I, 2, 57. II, 1, 1. LLL II, 252. Mids. II, 1, 243. III, 1, 123. Meich. I, 1, 6. Tw. Ill, 3, 2. H6A IV, 5, 15. R3II, 1, 50. Rom. Ill, 1, 50. Oth. Ill, 4, 61 etc. etc. I'll m. a shaft or a bolt on't, Wiv. HI, 4, 24 (cf. Bolt), in. your best of it, Shr. IV, 3, 100; Cor. V, 6, 148 (cf. Best), can anything be made of this t Oth. HI, 4, 10 ( = is there any meaning in this?). Ae will m. no deed at all of this, All's III, 6, 102. to m. much of = to hold dear, to show love and respect to (cf. Much): Tp. 1, 2, 333. All s I, 1, 87. H6C IV, 6, 75. R3 V, 5, 7. Cor. II, 3, 116. Tit. IV, 1, 10. Ant. IV, 2, 21. Cymb. IV, 2, 198. Much omitted: he is so made on here within, as if he were son and heir to Mars, Cor. IV, 5, 203 (on = of), to m. more of: I'll m. more of thy old body than I have done, Wiv. II, 2, 145. to m. nothing of = to treat with contempt: his white hair, which the impetuous blasts catch in their fury and m. nothing of, Lr. Ill, 1, 9. Followed by an accus. and inf.; a) without to: made thee more profit, Tp. I, 2, 172. m. his bold waves tremble, 205. 288. 354. 370 473. V, 303. Gent. Ill, 2, 29. Meas. I, 2, 124. Err. Ill, 2, 38. 173. Ill, 2, 151 etc. I do m. myself believe, Meas. Ill, 1, 205 ( = I am inclined to believe), a part to tear a cat in, to m. all split, Mids. 1,2,32 (a phrase expressing great violence of action), b) with to: their ambition —s them still to fight, Lucr. 68. Gent. Ill, 2, 19. V, 4, 163. Err. II, 1, 26. 11,2, 178. LLL V, 2, 556. Merch. I, 1, 68. Shr. 1,1,174. All's I, 3, 238. V. 3, 114. Tw. UI, 4, 369. Wint. IV, 4, 198. V, 3, 71. John IV, ?, 24. R2 I, 1, 72. H6A IV, 7, 12. V, 3, 168. H6B II, 1, 162. 164. IV, 8, 17. H6C I, 1,108. 142. 1,2,26. IV, 8, 54. R3 I, 3, 68. Ill, 2, 14. 118 II, 4, 183. Troil. IV, 4, 139. Cor. II, 3, 241. V, 3, 101. Tit. IV, 1, 21. 25. Hml. Ill, 4, 186. Oth. IV, 2, 147. Per. III. 2, 18 etc. Iam made to understand = I am given to understand, Meas. Ill, t , 254. 3) Joined, in a periphrastical way, to different substantives implying the idea of an action, to denote the performance of the respective action (cf. the resp. articles): to m. abode, Gent. IV, 3, 23. H6A V, 4, 88. Lr. I, 1, 137. account, Ado II, 1, 65. R3 III, 2, 71. act, R3 II, 2, 90. Ant. Ill, 1,13. ado, Gent. IV, 4, 30. H4A II,4,223. H8V, 3, 158. Tit. IV, 3, 102. advantage, Gent. II, 4, 68. amends, Tp. IV, 1, 2. Gent. Ill, 1, 331. IV, 2, 99. Wiv. II, 3, 70. Ill, 1, 90. Ill, 5, 48 etc. answer, Meas. Ill, 2, 165. Ado IV, 1, 18. Tw. HI, 3, 14. John II, 121. 235. R2 IV, 20. H5 V, 2, 75. HfiA V, 3, 150. Cor. I, 1, 110. Caes. I, 3, 114. Hml. 1, 2, 215 etc. apologies, Lucr. 31. appeal, H8 V, 1, 153. appear-

ance, 11,4, 132. appointment, Meas. Ill, 1,60. approach, H5 II, 4, 9. Ant. 1,3, 46. article, LLL I, I, 140. assault, Meas. HI, 1,189. H6A II, 1,38. Cymb. I, 4,175. assay, Meas. Ill, 1, 163. Tim. IV, 3, 406. Hml. 111,3,69. assurance, Shr. II, 389. 398. 111,2, 136. atonement, Wiv. I, 1, 33. H4B IV, 1, 221. R3 I, 3,36. audit, Mcb. I, 6, 27. bargain, Ven. 512. LLL V, 2, 799. John 111, 1, 93. Troil. Ill, 2, 204. Caes. I, 3, 120. battery, Ven. 426. H6A I, 4, 65. H6C 111. 1, 36. Ant. II, 7, 115. Per. IV, 4, 43. V, 1,47. boast, Ado III, 3, 20. As II, 5, 38. H5 III, 7, 66. Troil. Ill, 3,98. Tit. II, 3, 11. bond, Merch. 11, 6, 6. boot, H5 1, 2, 194. H6B IV, 1, 13. Ant IV, 1, 9. bout, Hml. IV, 7, 159. businesses, Wint. IV, 2, 15. care, IV, 4, 366. challenge, LLL V, 2, 713. H8 II, 4, 77. charter, All's IV, 5, 97. cheer, H4B V, 3,18. choice, Mids. V, 43. Merch. 11, 7, 3. Ill, 2, 43. All's II, 1, 206. H6C IV, 1, 3. H8 1, 4, 85. Tit. II, 1, 73. Rom. II, 5, 38. Ant. Ill, 1, 23 etc. cital, H4A V, 2, 62. claim, John HI, 4, 143. H5 I, 2, 68. H6C IV, 7, 59. clamour, Hml. II, 2, 538. close, Gent. V, 4, 117. coil, John II, 165. collection, Cymb. V, 5, 432. comment, Err. III, 1, 100. John IV, 2, 263. V, 7, 4. commotion, H6B III, 1, 29. 358. compare, Mids. Ill, 2, 290. Tw. II, 4, 104. compromise, Wiv. I, 1, 33. John V, 1, 67. conclusion, As V, 4, 132. Wint. I, 2, 81. confession, Rom. Ill, 5, 233. IV, 1, 22. Hml. IV, 7, 96. conquest, John III, I,290. R2 II, 1,66. Per. 1,4, 69. construction, Wiv. II, 2, 232. course, R3 IV, 4, 529 (Qq made away), courtesy, Ado II, 1, 56. Meas. II, 4, 175. As Epil. 23. H4B II, 1, 135 (Ff om.). covenant, R2 II, 3, 50. cry, R2 V, 3, 75. Per. 11, 1, 22. defeat, Ado IV, 1, 48. H5 I, 2, 107. Hml. II, 2, 598. delay, Mids. III, 2, 394. R3 V, 3, 17. delivery, Wint. V, 2, 10. demand, All's 11, 1, 194. Troil. II, 3, 72. Ill, 3, 17. 272. Ant. V, 2, 305. Cymb. V, 5, 130. denial, Meas. Ill, 1, 166. Shr. 11, 281. A11V I, 2, 9. descant, R3 III, 7, 49 (Qq build), diction, Hml. V, 2, 123. difference, Wiv. 11, 1,57. discord, Oth. II, 1, 201. disjunction, Wint. IV, 4, 540. dispatch, COT. 1,1,281. dispensation, Lucr. 248. distinction, All's III, 4, 40. Tw. II, 3, 174. Cymb. IV, 2, 248. division, Tw. Ill, 4, 380. V, 229. dole, As I, 2, 138. doubt, Gent. V, 2, 20. LLL V, 2, 101. H8 V, 3, 67. Cor. I, 2, 18. V, 4, 49 etc. election, All's II, 3, 61. H6B I, 3, 165. Cymb. 1, 2, 29. end, Wiv. I, 2, 12. Meich. Ill, 2, 44. Wint. Ill, 3, 99. H5 II, 3, 11. Tim. Ill, 4, 55. Hml. IV, 5, 186 etc. entrance, H6A II, 1, 30. escape, HGC IV, 6, 80. exchange, Gent. II, 2, 6. Wint. IV, 4, 647. Rom. II, 3, 62. excuse, Ven. 188. Lucr. 114. 225. Tw. 1, 5, 33. R3 I, 2, 83. Troil. III, 1, 85. Rom. Ill, 5, 33 etc. experiment, Wiv. IV, 2, 35. All's II, 1, 157. extent, As III, 1, 17. Jault, LLL V, 2, 562. Wint. 111,2,218. R2 I, 2,5. H5 IV, I, 311. Cor. V, 6, 64. Cymb. Ill, 6, 58 etc. feast, Meas. I, 2, 57. Shr. Ill, 2, 16. flight, Gent II, 7, 12. fray, Merch. Ill, 2, 62. gambol, Merch. Ill, 2, 93. grapple, Tw. V, 59. greeting, Meas. IV, 3, 92. groan, Per. IV, 2, 117. guard, Ant. IV, 1, 10. hand, H8 V, 4, 74. Cor. IV, 6, 117. harm, Lr. IV, 7, 29. haste, Gent. II, 4, 190. Ill, 1, 258. Meas. IV, 1, 57. IV, 5, II. Merch. Ill, 2, 327 etc. havoc, Ado IV, 1, 197. Tw. V, 208. John II, 220. hazard, Lncr. 155. Merch. II, 1, 45. John II, 71. holiday, Tp IV, 136. Caes. 1, 1, 35. impression, R3 I, 4, 63. impressure, Troil. IV, 5, 131. incision, Merch. II, 1, 6. As 111, 2, 75. H5 IV, 2, 9. inquiry, Meas. V, 5. Hml. 11, 1, 4. inroad, Ant.

M 1, 4, 50. intent, Lr. IV, 7, 9 (my made intent), jest, Ado II, 3, 206. HGC V, 1, 30. jointure, H6C III, 3, 136. journey, Cymb. II, 4, 43. joy, John HI, 4, 107 (or verb?), leg, All's II, 2, 10. life, Oth. Ill, 3, 177 (m. a life of jealousy, — lead a jealous life? or make jealousy my manner of living?), lip, Cor. II, 1, 126. look, Wint. V, 1, 228. Ant. I, 5, 56. love, Gent. IV, 2, 126. Wiv. I, 3, 4«. Mids. I, 1, 107. Shr. 1, 2, 136. Hml. Ill, 4, 93. Lr. V, 3, 86 etc. manage, R2 I, 4, 39. mansion, Tim. V, 1, 218. march, H6A IV, 3,8. Mcb. V, 2, 31. Ant. IV, 8, 30. marriage, Ant. II, 3, 39. match, Ven. 586. Wiv. II, 2, 304. Ado II, 1, 314. II, 2, 38. Shr. IV, 4, 46. All's IV, 3, 254. H5 1, 2, 264 etc. meal, H4B IV, 3, 99. Cymb. Ill, 6, 52. merchandise, Merch. Ill, 1, 133 mistalcings, Tp. 1,2,248. moan, Gent. II, 3, 33. Mids. V, 341. Merch. I, 1, 126. III, 3, 23. R3 I, 2, 158. mod, Oth. V, 2, 151. motion, Err. I, 1, 60. Tw. Ill, 4, 316. H8 II, 4, 234. Cor. Ill, 2, 118. note, Ant. Ill, 3, 26. oath, R2 V, 1, 75. observation, Lr. I, 1, 292. offence, Meas. Ill, 2, 15. IV, 2, 199. As III, 5, 117. H5 IV, 8, 58. Lr. 11,4, 61 etc. offer, L L L V, 2, 810. Merch. IV, 1, 81. H5 1, 1, 75. IV, 1, 193. A n t II, 6, 34 etc. opening, Meas. IV, 1, 31. overture, All's V, 3, 99. Lr. Ill, 7, 89. pants, Oth. II, 1, 80. partition, Cymb. 1,6, 37. passage, H8 II, 4, 165. pastime, Wint. II, 3, 24. Cymb. Ill, 1, 78. pause, Lucr. 541. John IV, 2, 231. H6C 111, 2, 10. B3 I, 2, 162. Ant. V, 1, 3 etc. period, Mids. V, 96. H4B IV, 5, 231. K3 II, 1, 44. pillage, Tit. II, 3, 44. play, H8 I, 4, 46. point, H6B II, 1, 5. practice, Meas. III, 2, 288. prayer, Merch. IV, 1, 127. H6B IV, 7, 121. preachment, H6C I, 4, 72. preparation, Wiv. IV, 5, 89. Ado I, 1, 280. prepare, H6C IV, 1,131. pretence, Per. I, 2, 91. prey, R3 I, 3, 71. Ill, 5, 84. Troil. I, 3, 123. price, Ado III, 3, 122. All's V, 3, 61. prize, R3 III, 7, 187. Ant. V, 2, 183. probation, Hml. I, 1, 156. proclamation, H6A I, 3, 71. H6C IV, 7, 70. V, 5, 9. R3 IV, 4, 519. promise, Wiv. IV, 6, 34. Meas. IV, 1, 34. Cor. Ill, 6, 86. Caes. IV, 2,24. Hml. I, 3, 119 etc. proof, Ado II, 2, 27. T w . I, 5, 67. H6A I, 2, 94. Caes. II, 1, 299. Oth. V, 1, 26. provision, Err. I, 1, 48. purchase, Ven. 515. R3 III, 7, 187. Oth. II, 3, 9. pursuit, R3 III, 2,30. push, Ado V, 1,38. quarry, Cor. I, 1, 202. question, Merch. I, 1, 156. 184. H4B IV, 1, 167. Troil. I, 2, 174. Cor. II, 1, 246. Lr. IV, 3, 26. Oth. Ill, 4, 17 etc. ransom, H6B IV, 1,10. recantation, All's II, 3, 194. reckoning, H5 IV, 1, 141. Hml. 1, 5, 78. recompense, Wiv. IV, 6, 55. recordation, Troil. V, 2,116. reference, Ant. V, 2, 23. remain, Cor. I, 4, 62. render, Tim. V, 1, 152. repair, L L L II, 240. repetition, Ven. 831. R3 I, 3, 166. replication, Caes. I, 1, 52. Hml. IV, 2, 13. reply, John 111, 3, 49. B2 II, 3, 73. Ant. Ill, 11, 18. report, Cor. IV, 5, 157. Lr. III, 1, 37. A n t II, 5, 57. V, 2, 255. request, Cor. II, 3, 47. Tim. 1, 1, 279. Caes. V, 5, 11. rescue, Err. IV, 4, 114. Ant. HI, 11, 48. reservation ,• All's II, 3, 260. Cor. Ill, 3, 130. rest, Per. II Prol. 26. restitution, Wiv. V, 5, 32. retire, L L L II, 234. H5 IV, 3, 86. retreat, As III, 2, 169. H4B IV, 3, 78. return, Gent. II, 7, 14. Meas. IV, 3, 107. Tw. I, 4, 22. H6B I, 2, 83. H6C IV, 1, 5. Lr. II, 4, 153 etc. revolt, Oth. 1, 1, 135. ring, Caes. HI, 2, 162. road, H5 I, 2, 138. Cor. Ill, 1, 5. satisfaction, Err. IV, 1, 5. V, 399. H5 IV, 8, 48. H6C V, 5, 14. T i t V, 1, 8. scruple, H4B 1, 2, 148. Troil. IV, 1, 56. Cymb. V, 5, 182. search, Tp. II, 1, 323. Per. Ill Prol. 19. separation, Wint.

685

I, 1, 28. sermon, Shr. IV, 1, 185. set, R3 V, 3, 19. shift, Merch. I, 2, 97. A l l s II, 5, 39. H4B II, 1, 169. II, 2, 25. H6B IV, 8, 32. Mcb. II, 3, 46. shoot, L L L IV, 1, 10. shout, Caes. I, 1, 49. show, Tp. I, 2, 470. Ado 1, 3, 20. As I, 2, 96. H4A V, 4, 95. H6B I, 1, 241. Caes. IV, 2, 24. Cymb. 1,5, 40. Per. I, 4, 75 etc. shrift, R3 III, 4, 97. sign, Tit. Ill, 1,121. Ill, 2, 43. signal, H6BIII,3,28. slander, Ado III, 3, 170. slaughter, H6B III, 2, 190. Cymb. V, 3, 79. Per. IV, 4, 37. smiles, Wint. I, 2, 116. sojourn, Lr. I, 1, 48. sound, Shr. Ind. I, 51. Per. II, 3, 62. spare, H8 V, 4, 21. speech, Caes. HI, 2, 64. speed, Gent. Ill, 1, 169. Meas. IV, 3, 109. Mids. II, 1, 233. Merch. II, 8, 37 etc. spoil, H6C V, 4, 80. sport, Wiv. Ill, 3, 160. Err. II, 2,30. Ado 111, 1, 58. Mids. Ill, 2, 389. As I, 2,28. All's V, 3, 323. R2 II, 1, 85. Hml. II, 2, 536 etc. stand, Lncr. 438. Merch. II, 6, 2. V, 77. John IV, 2, 39. H4B II, 3, 64. H6C III, 1, 3. Cymb. V, 3,1 etc. start, H6B IV, 8, 45. stay, Mids. HI, 2, 87. V, 428. Tim. Ill, 6, 128. step, Troil. II, 3,193. strain, Troil. I, 3, 326. stray, Lr. I, 1, 212. stride, R2 I, 3, 268. III, 3, 92. Cymb. V, 3, 43. suit, Tp. III, 2, 44. H8 1, 2, 197. Tit. I, 223. Cymb. V, 5, 71 etc. summons, H8 II, 4, 219. supper, H6C V, 5, 85 (or = to give?). survey, Cor. II, 1, 43. tale, H6C II, 1, 120. Hml. II, 2. 146. taste, H4B II, 3, 52. tender, Wiv. I, 1, 215. Ado II, 3,185. L L L II,171. Hml. 1,3,99; in another sense: H4A V, 4, 49. test, Meas. I, 1, 49. thought, Oth. I, 3, 26. thrust, H1B II, 4, 228. H5 11, 1,104. title, All's 1, 3, 107. H5 I, 2, 68. trespass, H6C V, ] , 92. trial, Lucr. Arg. 9. Tp. 1,2, 467. Meas. 111,1, 203. Tw. IV, 2, 52. H6A V, 3, 76. Cor. V, 1, 40. use, Ven. 129. Tp. I, 2, 492. Gent. II, 4,68. Ado 1,3,40, All's IV, 4, 22. H5 1,2, 268. Tim. Ill, 2, 89. A n t III, 5, 7 etc. vent, All's II, 3, 212. view, T w . II, 2,20. visitation, H8 1,1,179. vow, L L L II, 22. Tw. V, 222. John III, 1, 266 etc. voyage, Ado I, 1, 82. R2 V, 6, 49. wager, Hml. IV, 7, 156. Cymb. J, 4, 120. war, H6A 1,2,17. H6C II, 2, 31. Cor. I, 1,238. Mcb. II, 4,17. Ant. II, 2, 43. 95. HI, 5,4 etc. waste, Merch. I, 1, 157. H5 I, 2, 28. Rom. I, 1, 224. way, Shr. 1, 1, 239. II, 155. Wint. V, 1, 233. R2 V, 2, 110. H6C IV, 5,10 etc. welcome, Tim. 1, 2, 135. wing, Mcb. III, 2, 51. work, John II, 302. 407. Cor. I, 4, 20. I, 8, 9. IV, 6, 80. 88. 95. 100. V, 1,15. Rom. II, 6, 35 etc. 4) to pat into the suitable form for use: m. the beds, Wiv. 1,4,102. Merch. IV, 1, 96. Shr. IV, 1, 203. Rom. Ill, 5, 202. Of doors, -= to close, to fasten, to bar: the doors are made against you, Err. Ill, 1, 93. m. the doors upon a woman's wit and it will out at the casement, As IV, 1, 162. Similarly: there is no bar to m. against your highness, H5 I, 2, 36. With up: ay, in. up that, T w . II, 5,133 ( = make it out, make it intelligible, Bolve the riddle). 5) to raise, to gather, to assemble, to bring together: m. all the money thou canst, Oth. I, 3, 361. 365. the greatest strength and power he can m. R3 IV, 4,449. m. friends with speed, H4B I, 1, 214. let our alliance be combined, our best friends made, Caes. IV, 1, 44. 'tis fit you m. strong party, Cor. III, 2, 94. the army we can m. V, 1, 37. m. head, H4A III, 1, 64. IV, 1, 80. Cor. II, 2, 92. Ill, 1, 1. Caes. IV, 1, 42. cf. Bead. With up: m. up no factious numbers for the matter, H6B II, 1,40. he —s up the file of all the gentry, H8 I, 1, 75. the enemy by them shall m. a fuller number up, Caes. IV, 3, 208.

686

M

6) to make the fortnne o f , to enrich, to make h a p p y : there would this monster m. a man, T p . II, 2, 31- and m. and mar the foolish Fate», Midi. I, 2, 39. there'* enough to m. us all, H4A 11, 2, 60. it —• him and it man him, Mcb. II, 3, 35. it — * us, or it mars us, Oth. V, 1, 4 (cf. Mar\ that either —s me or fordoes me quite, Oth. V, 1, 129. Made = fortunate, having one's fortnne made: we had all been made men, Midi. IT, 2, 18. thinks himself made in the unchaste composition. All's IV, 3, 21. go to, thou art made, Tw. II, 5, 168. you're a made old man, Wint. 111, 3, 124. he's made for ever, Oth. I, 2, 51. 7) to amonnt to: this bottle —s an angel, H4A IT, 2, 6 ( = costs), ten masts at each m. not the altitude, Lr. IV, 6, 53. 8) to e a r n , to raise as a profit: of whom I hope to m. much benefit, Err. I, 2, 25. of which he made five marks, ready money, Meas. IT, 3, 7. whether that thy youth and kind will the faithful offer take of me and all that lean m. As IV, 3, 61. 9) to represent; to consider as, to pretend to be: m. not impossible that which but seems unlike, Meas. T, 51. m. it no wonder, Shr. Ill, 2, 193. what place m. you special, when you put off that (the conrt) with such contemptt All's II, 2, 5. m. this haste as your own good proceeding, II, 4, 50. I beseech your majesty to m. it natural rebellion, done t the blaze of youth, V, 3, 5. m. me not sighted like the basilisk, Wint. I, 2, 388. were it worse than the name of rebellion can tell how to m. it, H4B I, 2, 90. your virtue is to m. him worthy whose offence subdues him, Cor. I, 1, 179. 10) to prove to be, to tnrn out, to become, to be (Germ, abgeben 1 myself could m. a chough of as deep chat, Tp. II, 1, 265. an old cloak —s a new jerkin, W i r . 1,3, 18. thou wouldst m. an absolute courtier, III, 3, 66. he'll m. a proper man, As III, 5, 115. a would have made a good pantler, H4B II, 4, 258. I should m.four dozen of such, V, 1, 70. a far more glorious star thy soul will m. than Julius Caesar, H 6 A I, 1, 55. he would have made a noble knight, IV, 7, 44. thou wouldst m. a good fool, Lr. I, 5, 41. Jove knows what man thou mightst have made, Cymb. IV, 2, 207. to m. one = to be of the party: Wiv. II, 3, 48. Shr. I, 2, 246. Tw. I, 5, 213. II, 5, 227. H4A I, 2, 112. Caes. V, 5, 72 (cf. One), let the fool m. a third, Tw. II, 3, 189. the devil m. a third, H6B HI, 2, 303. Evans says: I shall m. two, Wiv. Ill, 3, 250. 11) to have to do, to be about, to do: what they made there, I know not, Wiv. II, 1, 244. what m. you heref IV, 2, 55. As I, 1, 31. II, 3, 4. what — s treason here1 L L L IV, 3, 190. what — s he heref As III, 2, 234. Oth. I, 2, 49. what doest thou m. heret R2 V, 3, 89. what —St thou in my sightt R3 I, 3, 164. what —s he upon the seat IV, 4, 474 (Qq doth), what made your master in this placet Rom. V, 3, 280. what m. we abroadt Tim. Ill, 5,46. what m.you from Wittenberg f Hml. I, 2, 164. what m. you at Elsinore, II, 2, 277. what m. you from hornet Oth. Ill, 4, 169. = to do, to operate: this late complaint will m. but little for his benefit, H6B I, 3, 101. the policy of that purpose made more in the marriage than the love of the parties, Ant. II, 6, 126. she can m., unmake, do what she list, Oth. II, 3, 352. Used, like to do, to supply the place of another verb: if none appear to prove upon thy head thy heinous treasons, there is my pledge: I'll m. it on thy heart, Lr. V, 3, 93 (Qq prove).

B) absol. and intr. 1) to do, to be active, to operate: the less you meddle or m. with them, Ado III, 3, 56. I'll not meddle norm.no further, Troil. I, 1, 14. I'll meddle nor m. no more in the matter, 85. to m. against = to be contrary to, to oppose: albeit considerations infinite do m. against it, H4A V, 1, 103. which —s much against my manhood, H5I1I,2,52. what may m. against the house of Lancaster, H6C11,1,176. the time and place doth m. against me, Rom. V, 3,225 (speaks against me). With up: election — snot up on such conditions, Lr. 1,1,209 (does not come to a decision). 2) Joined to adjectives, nearly = to be: to m. bold, Wiv. II, 2, 162. 262. Mids. Ill, 1, 187. H8 III, 2, 318. Rom. Ill, 1, 81. Mcb. II, 3, 56. Hml. V, 2, 16. Oth. Ill, 1, 35. Cymb. I, 6, 197. V, 5, 89 (cf. Bold), she that —s dainty, she, I'll swear, hath corns, Rom. I, 5, 21 ( = plays the p r n d e \ to m. merry, Shr. V, 1, 23. H6B I, 2, 85. he that stands upon a slippery place —s nice of no vile hold to stay him up, John III, 4, 138 (is not over - scrupulous in laying hold of etc.). m. ready = m. yourself ready, Meas.UI, 1,172. Troil. IV, 4, 146. 'ti> but wisdom to m. strong against him, H4A IV, 4, 39. that she m. friends to the strict deputy, Meas. I, 2, 185 ( = gain the friendship of). 3) to move, to go: Venus —s amain to him, Ven. 5. as the waves in. towards the pebbled shore, Sonn. 60, 1. two ships —ing amain to us, Err. I, 1, 93. m. for Sicilia, Wint. IV, 4, 554. R2 I, 4, 52. II, 1, 287. H6C II, 3, 56. IV, 5, 10. R3 IV, 4, 469. 529 (Qq made away, Ff made his course). H8 I, 4, 55. Tit. V, 1, 25. Rom. 1, 1, 131. Caes. Ill, 1, 18. V, 3, 29. Lr. I, 1, 145 (m. from the shaft). Oth. I, 1, 68. 1, 3, 14. 222. V, 1, 58. Per. 1, 4, 61. Ill, 1, 78. IV, 4, 3. V, 1, 19. With forth: the Dukes of Berry and of Bretagne shall ra. forth, H5 II, 4 , 5 . m. forth: the generals would have some words, Caes. V, 1, 25. With out: seven of my people m. out for him, Tw. II, 5, 65. With up: Philip, m. up; my mother is assailed, J o h n III, 2, 5 (go to the place where my mother is), m. up, lest your retirement do amaze your friends, H4A V, 4, 5 (join our army), m. up to Clifton, 58. H a k e , subst. mate, companion, husband or wife: else one self mate and m. could not beget such different issues, Lr. IV, 3, 36 (reading of Q2; the other O. Edd. mate and mate). H t k e l t i i , mateless, widowed: the world will wail thee, like a m. wife, Sonn. 9, 4. Hake-peace, peacemaker: R2 I, 1, 160. Maker, one who makes: we are the —* of manners , H5 V, 2, 296. God, the best m. of marriages, 387. peace is a great m. of cuckolds, Cor. IV, 5, 244. = creator: man, the image of his M. H8 III, 2, 443. praise my M. V, 5, 69. Making, subst. (cf. Make, vb.) form, external appearance, show: stigmatical in m., worse in mind, Err. IV, 2,22. either I mistake your shape andm. quite, Mids. II, 1, 32. when by the Archbishop of Canterbury she had all the royal —s of a queen, H8 IV, 1, 87 (ensigns of royalty). Malady, disease: Ven. 745. Sonn. 118, 3. 153, 8. Gent. II, 1, 42. L L L IV, 3, 295. Shr. Ind. 2, 124. All's II, 1, 9. 124. Wint. IV, 4, 124. H4B I, 2, 139. H5 V, 1, 87. H6A III, 3, 49. Tim. Ill, 6, 108. Mcb. IV, 3, 142. Lr. Ill, 4, 8. Malapert, pert, forward, saucy: Tw. IV, 1, 47. H6C V, 5, 32. E 3 1, 3, 2ft:>

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• i l c h i i ( O . Edd. Mauchus), king of Arabia: IV, 2, 48. Cor. I, 1, 91. III, 3, 55. Mcb. IV, 3, 59. Hml. I, 1, 146. II, 2, 536. Lr. Ill, 5 , 1 0 . Oth. 1,1,100. Ant. Ill, 6, 72. 2) full of hate: commander of this hot m. day, J o h n • a l c e l m , name in Mcb. I, 4, 38 etc. II, 314. • a l c a n t e n t , see Malecontent. M a l l d t m l T , 1) malignantly: Cor. I, 1, 35. • a l e , adj. of the sex that begets, not bears young: 2) like one full of hate, with the strength of hate : Wiv. V, 5, 19 (quibbling . Err. 1, 1, 56. J o h n 111, 4. 79. H 4 B IV, 3, 100. H5 1, 2, 70. H8 II, 4, 189. 191. I will be treble-sinewed, hearted, breathed, and fight m. Ant. III, 13, 179. Used of strong poison: a lingering Troil. V, 1, 17. Cor. V, 4, 30. • a l e , subst 1) one of the male sex, one whose dram that should not work m. like poison, Wint. I, 2, office is to beget young: the beasts are their —s' 321 (in an apparently pernicious manner). M a l i e n , vb. to regard with envy or malice : as subjects, Err. II, 1,19. you love the breeder better than the m. H6C II, 1, 42. compote nothing but —s, Mcb. you m. our senators, Cor. I, 1, 117. wayward fortuné did m. my state, Per. V, 1, 90. I, 7, 74. Malignancy, malevolence : the m. of my fate, Tw. 2) male parent, father: thy mother's ton I like enough, and thy father's shadow: to the ton of the fe- II, 1, 4. male is the shadow of the m. H4B III, 2 , 1 4 1 . I , the • a l i g n a n t , 1) full of malice: thou liest, m. thing, haplett a. to one tweet bird, H6C V, 6,15. Tp. I, 2, 257. am. and a turbaned Turk, Oth. V, 2, • a l e c a n t o n t , adj. discontented, displeased - that 353. you stand pensive, as half m. H6C IV, 1, 10. is it for 2) injurious, pernicious, hostile: unless the next a wife that thou art m.t 60. word have some m. power upon my life, Gent. Ill, 1, • a l e c a n t e n t , subst. one who feels unhappy, be- 238. hearing your high majesty is touched with that m. cause he has not what be wishes: Men, like a melan- cause, All's II, 1, 114 ( = disease). O m. and ill-bocholy m., he vails his tail, Ven. 313. to wreathe your ding stars, H6A IV, 5, 6. cracked in pieces by m. arms like a m. Gent. II, 1, 20. thou art the Mars of death, R3 II, 2, 52. to your person his unit is most m. — s , Wiv. I, 3,113. Cupid, liege of all loiterers and H8 I, 2, 141. —s, L L L HI, 185. M a l i g n a n t l y , malevolently, maliciously: if he • a l a d i e t l a B , evil speaking: menaces and —s should still m. remain fast foe to the plebeii, Cor. II, against king and nobles, Lr. I, 2,160. 3, 191. • a l e f a e t U n , crime: Hml. II, 2, 621. • a l k l n , a kitchen-wench: Cor. II, 1, 224. Fer. • a l e f a c t a r , a criminal: Meas. II, 1, 52. Ado IV, 3, 34. IV, 2, 3. Ant. II, 5, 53. Mot understood by Elbow • a l l , diminutive of Mary : Tp. II, 2, 50. are they and Dogberry. like to take dust, like Mistress —'s picture t Tw. 1,3, • a l e v a l e n c e , ill will, enmity: the m. of fortune, 135 (commonly supposed to allude to one Mall CutMcb. Ill, 6, 28. purse, but with little probability, as Mall Cutpune • a l e v a l e n t , ill disposed, hostile: m. to you in was born in 1589 and died in 1659. Perhaps Sir Toby all aspects, H4A I, 1, 97. means only to say: like a picture intended for a Malice, 1)malignity, disposition to injure others: beauty, but in fact representing Mall the kitchenMeas. Ill, 2, 157. Merch. IV, 1, 214. As II, 3, 36. wench. In the poet's time it was the custom to hang All's III, 6, 9. Tw. I, 5, 196. V, 373. Wint. 1, 1, 37. curtains before pictures). J o h n IV, 1, 109. H4B I, 2, 195. H6A HI, 1, 26. 75. • a l l a r i , a drake: Ant. Ill, 10, 20. B I, 3, 213. II, 1, 25. III, 1, 154. Ill, 2, 23. H8 1, 1, • a l l e a k l e , capable of extension by the hammer: 105. II, 2, 69. III, 2, 237. 243. V, 1, 135. V, 2, 8. Per. IV, 6, 152. V, 3, 44. 145. 152. Troil. V, 1, 64. Cor. II, 1, 58. M a l l e e h a (O.Edd. mallico and malicho), probably II, 2, 36. Tit. V, 3, 13. Tim. I; 1, 47. Mcb. II, 3, from the Spanish maOiecho, = mischief: this is mich138. Ill, 2, 25. Lr. II, 2, 137 (with against). Oth. II, ing m.; it means mischief, Hml. Ill, 2, 146. 1, 148. V, 2, 343. Ant. I, 2, 112. Cymb. I, 5, 35. • a l l e t , a wooden hammer: there's no more conHI, 5, 33. IV, 2, 324. Abstr. pro concr.: shruggest ceit in him than is in a m. H4B II, 4, 263 (or = malthou, m.f Tp. I, 2, 367. lard?). 2) hate, enmity, ill will: our cannons' m. John II, • a l U w a , the plant Malva: Tp. II, 1, 144. 251. your sharpett deeds of m. 380. combine the blood Malmsey, a kind of sweet wine: L L L V, 2, 233. of m. in a vein of league, V, 2, 38. I have heard you M a l m i e y - k n t t , a large cask of malmsey: R 3 I, preach that m. was a great and grievous sin, H6A 111, 4, 161. 277. I, 128 (i. e. hatred'. I never sought their m. H8 V, 2, H a l m t e y - n a s e , red-nosed: m knave, H4B II, 15. translate his m. towards you into love, Cor. II, 3, 1, 42. 197. to affect the m. and displeasure of the people, Malt, grain prepared for brewing: Lr. Ill, 2, 82. II, 2, 24. Merch. IV, 1, 18. As I, 2, 294. R2 I, 1, 9. M a l t - h a r a e , a brewer's horse; used as a term of 14. 155. H6A IV, 1, 108. H6C IV, 3, 46. IV, 6, 28. contempt: Err. Ill, 1, 32. Shr. IV, 1, 132. R3 I, 3, 29. II, 2, 125. H8 II, 1, 62. 80. 157. Ill, 2, • a l t - w a r m , a tippler of ale: H4A II, 1, 83. 268. Cor. II, 1, 244. IV, 5, 78. 102. IV, 6, 41. Caes. H4B II, 4, 361. III, I, 174. Mcb. Ill, 2, 14. Oth. II, 3, 275. V, 1, 102. • a l v a l i a , name in Tw. I, 5, 79 etc. With of, to indicate the object of hate: '(is in the m. • a m l U l m , name in Wint. I, 1,38. 1,2, 119.211. of mankind that he thus advises us, Tim. IV, 3, 456. • a m m e r i n g , hesitating, Oth. Ill, 3, 70 ( Q l mutWith towards: the m. towards you (is) to forgive you, tering). Cymb. V, 5, 419. • a m m e t , a doll, a puppet: this is no world to M a l l e l a a s , 1) malignant, malevolent, prone to play with —s, H4A II, 3, 95> a whining m. Rom. Ill, do mischief: H6A IV, 1, 7. H8 I, 2, 78. 11, 4, 83. 5, 186

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M a n u a s c h , to tear in pieces: how he —ed it, man, just the man wanted: Ovidius Naso was the m LLL IV, 2, 127. here comes the m. Mercb. II, 2, 119. Cor. I, 3, 71. • r a , name of an island in the Irish sea: H6B am I the m.yett As 111, 3,3. s o f t , s o f t , unless the master werethe m. Tw.1,5,313. I am them. 11,2,26. Iwillbe II, 3, 13. II, 4, 78. 94. Man, subst. (plur. men), 1) a human being: this point-devise the very m. II, 5, 177. Harry the Fifth's u the third m. that e'er J taw, Tp. I, 2, 445. a m. or the m. H4B V, 3, 122. this is not the m. V, 5, 149. ajuhr II, 2, 25. 35. II, 1, 154. Ill, 1, 51. H5 IV, 1, you'll be the m. Rom. I, 5, 83. 'tis the m. Ant. I, 5, 106 etc. etc. wilt thou be made a m. out of my vice ? 54. cf. here comes my m. Rom. Ill, 1, 59. I was never Mens. Ill, 1, 138 ( = wilt thou live etc.); cf. am I mine own m. since, H6B IV, 2, 91 ( = I was not what dead? do I not breathe ami H6C III, 1, 82; since I I used to be), cf. when no m. was his own, Tp. V, 213 was m. Lr. Ill, 2, 45 (since my birth). The article (in his senses). omitted, to denote the whole human race: beyond —'s Often joined, in O. Edd., by a hyphen to preceding l i f e , Tp. II, 1, 247. where m. doth not inhabit, III, 3, monosyll. adjectives, or spelt as a compound, while 57. Wiv. I, 1, 21. Meas. II, 2, 50. 79. Mids. IV, 1, M.Edd. prefer writing them in two words. Very often, 211. Wint. IV, 4, 829. 830. H4B IV, 3, 118. Tim. too, the adjective is accentuated, so that in many such IV, 3, 194. 197 (more m.t plague, plague!). Lr. Ill, expressions a similar difference is discernible as 1, 10. Per. II Prol. 35. Plur.: men hang and drown between madman, freshman, nobleman and mad man, their proper selves, Tp. Ill, 3, 59. V, 242. H6B III, 1, fresh man, noble man. Cf. blind-man, H6A II, 4, 24. 301 etc. am. — any person, one: misery acquaints H6B II, 1, 63. deadman, Err. V, 241. Wint. II, 1, a m. with strange bedfellows, Tp. II, 2, 41. to sing at 150. R2 IV, 144. H5 II, 4, 107. H6B IV, 1, 6. V, 2, a —'s funeral, 46. as a [nose on a —'» face, Gent. 4. R3 I, 4, 29. Tit. II, 3, 229. Rom. IV, 1, 82. 85. II, 1, 142. II, 5, 5. Ill, 1, 311. V, 4, 1. Wiv. II, 1, V, 1, 7. V, 2, 30. Mcb. IV, 3, 170 etc. dumb men, Cor. 193. Ill, 2, 37. Ado II, 3, 247. H4B IV, 3, 95 etc. II, 1, 278. good m. LLL I, 1, 310. As II, 7, 115. 122. not a m. of them = none of them: LLL V, 2, 128. R2 I, 1, 114. H5 IV, 3, 56. R3 II, 1, 61. H8 III, 1, H4B Ind. 38. R3 II, 1, 119. every m. = everybody: 22. 64. Tit. IV, 1, 123. Oth. V, 1, 99 etc. (cf. GoodAdo III, 2, 110. LLL I, 1, 152. Mids. I, 2, 4. IV, 2, man). great m. Meas. II, 2, 110; cf. 128. H6B 111, 1, 38 etc. every m. of them, H4A II, 4, 197. no m. = no- 19. H8 II, ] , 67. Ill, 2, 375. Hml. Ill, 2, 214. mean body: Tp. V, 213. 267. Gent. II, 1, 65. Wiv. V, 5, m. R2 I, 2, 33. old m. Eit. I, 1, 97. John II, 570. 52. Tw. 1!, 5, 110 etc. H6B V, 2, 51. H6C V, 6, 39. H8 IV, 2, 21. Rom. II, 2) a male of the human race: more widows than 3, 35. Caes. I, 3, 65. Lr. II, 1, 101. II, 4, 291. 298. we bring men to comfort them, Tp. II, 1, 134. kept from Oth. I, 3, 78. Cymb. V, 3, 52. 57. 85. Per. Prol. 13. resort of men, Gent. Ill, 1, 108. 109. the putting down plain m. R3 I, 3, 51. poor m. John IV, 1, 50. H6B IV, of men, Wiv. II, I, 30. it is a —'s voice, Meas. I, 4, 7, 93. Caes. I, 1, 62. Lr. IV, 6, 29. prime m. H8 111, 7. Tp. I, 2, 109. 214. 488. II, 2, 32 (cf. Make). Ill, 2, 162. proud m. Troil. Ill, 3, 49. rich m. Tim. I, 2, 2, 114. Wiv. II, 1, 83. Ill, 3, 78. Meas. II, 1, 176 72. rude m. John 1, 1, 64. sick m. R2 II, 1. 84. Cor. III, 2, 112. Err. II, 1, 7. Mids. I, 1, 66. Tw. Ill, 4, I, 1, 182. Caes. II, 1, 310. 327. tame m. Mids. Ill, 2, 333 etc. etc. Without the article, in a general sense: 259. true m. LLL IV, 3, 187. R2 V, 3, 73. H6C I, were m. but constant, he were perfect, Gent. V, 4, 110. 4, 64. Cymb. II, 3, 76. wise m. Tw. II, 3, 45. Ill, 1, she could not love me, were m. as rare as phoenix, As 73. 75. R2 I, 3, 276. V, 5, 63. H6C HI, 1, 25. Rom. IV, 3, 17. m. is enemy to virginity, All's 1, 1, 123. III, 3, 62. Lr. I, 4, 182. young m. Mids. I, 1, 6. Shr. Tw. II, 2, 37. Lr. Ill, 4, 84. Oth. IV, 1, 111. Cymb. II, 393. John II, 570. Troil. V, 2, 165. Tit. I, 484. I, 6, 69 etc. m. by m. Mids. I, 2, 3. H4A III, 3, 65. 3) a servant : one of my husband's men, Lucr. 1291. to the last m. H4B IV, 2, 44. man at arms and man now they are my men, Tp. II, 1, 274. get a new m. of arms = knight, warrior: LLL IV, 3, 290. H4B II, 2, 189. Gent. IV, 2, 75. Wiv. I, 1, 114. 136. 281. II, 2, 82. H6C V, 4, 42. II6A I, 4, 30. m. of war = II, 1, 182. Meas. IV, 2, 103. Err. II, 1, 43. II, 2, 207. warrior, soldier: three thousand men of war, R2 II, III, 2, 74. IV, 4, 8. Ado III, 2, 45. Merch. II, 2, 94. I, 286. with his men of war, II, 3, 52. doth the m. of V, 183. Shr. Ind. 2, 10". John III, 3, 72. H5 111, 2, war stay all night1 H-1B V, 1,31. the nine men's mor- 32. R3 I, 1, 80. II8 IV, 2, 148. Rom. II, 4, 3. 200. ris, Mids. II, 1, 98 (cf. Morris). Used as a familiar Ill, 1, 59. Lr. II, 4,201 etc. compellation: no marrying1 None, m. Tp. II, 1, 166. 4) a m. of war = a ship of war: Tit. IV, 3, 22. Han, vb. 1) to furnish with men, to line, to II, 2, 133. 137. Gent. II, 3, 38. II, 4, 168. IV, 2,55. Meas. I, 2, 97. Err. IV, 2, 41. LLL I, 2, 139. Mercli. guard : the castle, —ed with three hundred men, R2 II, I, 3, 157. II, 8, 1. II6B I, 2, 85. Tit. II, 1, 85. Rom. 3, 54. the castle royally is —ed, III, 3, 21. see how the 1, 5, 36. Caes. 1, 2, 135 etc. Used with some latitude; surly Warwick —s the wall, H6C V, 1, 17. your ships applied to boys: bring my young m. here to school, are not well —ed, Ant. Ill, 7, 35. with the rest fullWiv. IV, 1, 8. go play, Mamillius, thou art an honest manned, 52. to m. his galleys, IV, 11, 3. m. Wint. I, 2, 211. to God: God's a good m. Ado 111, 2) to accustom to man, to tame: to m. my hag5, 40 (Dogberry's speech), to the devil: no m. means gard, to make her come and know her keeper s call, evil but the devil, Wiv. V, 2, 15. to flies: they are fret Shr. IV, 1, 196. cf. Unmanned. men, Rom. Ill, 3, 42. Emphatically play the men, Tp. 3) to furnish with a servant: I was never —ed I, 1, 11. H6A I, 6, 16. to trial of a m. Ado V, 1, 66. with an agate, H4B I, 2, 18. I were —ed, horsed and LLL V, 2, 697. H5 III, 2, 33. Mcb. I, 7, 46. 49. 51. wived, 60 Caes. I, 2, 153. 155. 157. Hml. I, 2, 187. Ill, 4, 62. 4) Very singular use: m. but a msh against 0Lr. II, 2, 127. II, 4, 42 etc. my man of men, Ant. I, thello's breast, and he retires, Oth. V, 2, 270 (John5, 72. Opposed to a boy: Compl. 92. Wiv. Ill, 2, 6. son: to point, to aim. Perhaps = manage). Tw. 1, 5, 165. 169. V, 402 etc. the m. — the right Manacle, subst. chain for the hands, shackles:

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689

it is am. of love, Cymb. 1,1, 122. Plur. — t = chains: Mane, the hair growing on the necks of horses Meas. II, 4, 93. Cor. I, 9, 57. V, 3, 115. Cymb. V, and lions: Ven. 271. 298. Troil. Ill, 3, 224. Rom. 4, 199. I, 4, 89. Used of the foaming crest of waves: Oth. Manacle, vb. to chain, to fetter: I'll m. thy neck II, 1, 13. In All's IV, 5, 41 O. Edd. main, M. Edd. and feet together, Tp. I, 2, 461. m. the bear-herd in name. their chains, H6B V, 1, 149. Man-entered, initiated in, introduced into manManage, subst. 1) training, government of a hood : his pupil-age m. thus, Cor. II, 2, 103. horse: or he (became) his m. by the well doing steed, Manfully, bravely: Gent. IV, 1, 28. Tit. I, 196. Compl. 112. they (bis horses) are taught their m. As Mangle, vb. to cnt into pieces, to mutilate; I, 1, 13. wanting the m. of unruly jades, R2 III, 3, absol.: her sight dazzling makes the wound seem three, 179. speak terms of m. to thy bounding steed, H4A II, and then she reprehends her —ing eye, Ven. 1065. 3, 52. spur them, till they obey the m. H8 V, 3, 24. trans.: As II, 7, 42. H 4 A V, 4, 96. H5 II, 4, 60. IV, she's not paced yet: you must take some pains to work 4, 41. H6C V, 2, 7. Troil. V, 5, 33. T i t III, 1, 256. her to your m. Per. IT, 6, 69. By conjecture in L L L Rom. IV, 3, 52. Oth. V, 1, 79. Ant. IV, 2, 27. MetaV, 2,482: merrily hath this brave m., this career, been phorically, —: to take from, to impair, to reduce to run (Ql nuage, Q2 Ff manager). nothing: the naked, poor and —dpeace, H5 V, 2,34. 2) administration, conduct: and to him put the m. —ing by starts the full course of their glory, Epil. 4. of my state, Tp. I, 2, 70. the husbandry and m. of my your dishonour —s true judgment, Cor. Ill, 1, 158. house, Merch. Ill, 4, 25. their negotiations all must what tongue shall smooth thy name, when I have —d iff Rom. Ill, 2, 99. to m. me with that word 'banslack, wanting his m. Troil. HI, 3, 25. 3) proceeding, taking of measures, contriving of ished', III, 3, 51. take up this —d matter at the best, means: which now the m. of two kingdoms must with Oth. I, 3, 173. our laws, whose use the sword of Caefearful bloody issue arbitrate, John I, 37. for the re- sar hath too oft —d, Cymb. Ill, 1, 57. bels which stand out in Ireland expedient m. must be Mangy, scabby: a m. dog, Tim. IV,3, 371. made, R2 I, 4, 39. Manheed, 1) virility, opposed to womanhood: 4) the bringing about, setting on foot: lean dis- fit you to your m. Cymb. HI. 4, 195. cover all the unlucky m. of this brawl, Rom. Ill, 1, 148. 2) virility, opposed to boyhood: thy prime of m. Manage, vb. 1) to handle, to wield: m. it (the daring, R3 IV, 4, 170. many unrough youths that even staff of hope) against despairing thoughts, Gent. Ill, now protest their first of m. Mcb. V, 2, 11. 1, 247. m. rusty bills against thy seat, R2 III, 2, 118. 3) qualities becoming a man, bravery, fortitude, m. me your caiiver, H4B III, 2, 292. 301. m. it (your honour: Ado IV, 1, 321. Mids. Ill, 2, 412. Tw. HI, sword) to part these men, Rom. I, 1, 76. that still 4, 198. H4A I, 2,155. 11, 4, 141. 142. H5 II, 1,103. would m. those authorities, Lr. I, 3, 17. III, 2, 53. IV, 3, 66. H6B V, 2, 75. H6C II, 2, 108. 2) to train, to break in (as a horse): he will not 125. IV, 2, 20. Troil. I, 2, 276. II, 2, 47. Cor. Ill, m. her, although he mount her, Ven. 598. 1, 246. Tim. IV, 3, 14. Mcb. Ill, 1, 103. Lr. I, 4, 3) to administer, to control, to govern: whose 319. IV, 2, 68. Oth. Ill, 3, 153. Ant. Ill, 10, 23. state so many had the —ing, H5 Epil. 11. the son Cymb. V, 2, 2. Mrs. Quickly and Fluellen agree in (should) m. his revenue, Lr. I, 2, 79. Photinus and saying saving your m. for saving your honour, or your reverence: H4B II, 1, 29. H5 IV, 8, 36. your maids m. this war, Ant. Ill, 7, 16. 4) to handle, to treat with caution and address: Manlfeat, adj. 1) obvious, evident, not doubtful: shame hath a bastard fame, well — d , Err. III, 2, 19. Meas. IV, 2, 145. Merch. IV, 1, 358. H6A 1, 3, 33. in the —ing of quarrels he is wise, Ado II, 3, 197. Ill, 1, 21. Cor. Ill, 1, 172. Lr. V, 3, 92.' Shr. Ind. 1, 45. Wint. IV, 2, 17. H4A I, 2,181. H6A 2) plain, open, notorious, public: to retort your IV, 1, 181. m. appeal, Meas. V, 303. his reading and m. experi5) to bring abont, to set on foot, to contrive: to ence, All's I, 3, 229. make't m. where she has lived, Wint. V, 3,114. you are m. house-keepers, Cor. 1,3,54. m. private and domestic quarrel, Oth. II, 3, 215. Manager, 1) one who wields: rust, rapier! be Manlfeat, vb. to make appear, to show plainly, to still, drum 1 for your m. is in love, L L L I, 2, 188. reveal: Wiv. IV, 6, 15. Meas. IV, 3, 94. V, 417. Ado 2) one who sets on foot, a contriver: where is our III, 2, 100. Tw. II, 5,181 (she —s herself to my love). usual m. of mirth t Mids. V, 35. H4B IV, 5, 105. Cor. II, 2, 14. Oth. I, 2, 32 (my Manakln, little man; term of contempt: this is parts, my title and my perfect soul shall m. me rightly). a dear m. to you, Tw. Ill, 2, 57. Partic. —ed adjectively: to make you understand this Man-child, male child, boy: Cor. I, 3, 18. men- in a —ed effect, Meas. IV, 2, 169, i. e. so as to make the matter manifest, as to leave no doubt. children: Mcb. I, 7, 72. Mandate, order, authoritative command: Hml. Manlfeld, multifarious: Compl. 216. Tp. 1,2, Ill, 4, 204. Oth. I, 3, 72. IV, 1, 270. Ant. I, 1, 22. 264. H4A IV, 3, 47. Tim. I, 1, 5. Lr. II, 1, 49. the Mandragera, mandrake; a soporific: Oth. Ill, m. linguist, All's IV, 3, 265 (i. e. knowing many languages). a m. traitor, Lr. V, 3, 114. 3, 330. Ant. I, 5, 4. Mandrake, the plant Atropa mandragora, the Manifoldly, in many ways: All's II, 3, 214. root of which was thought to resemble the human Manikin, see Manakin. figure, and to cause madness and even death, when Mankind (accented mostly on the last syll. in torn from the ground: thou whoreson m., thou art fitter Tim., on the first in the other plays) 1) the human to be worn in my cap, H4B I, 2, 17. the whores called race: how beauteous m. is! Tp. V, 183. T w . Ill, 4, him m. Ill, 2, 339. would curses kill, as doth the —'s 108. Troil. II, 3, 30. Tim. Ill, 4, 84. IV, 1, 36. 40. groan, H6B III, 2, 310. shrieks like —s' torn out of I IV, 3, 23. 42. 53. 456. 506. Mcb. II, 4> 18. Ant. IV, the earth, Born. IV, 3, 47. I 8, 25.

690

M

2 ) the male* of the human race: so rail» against tesy gives undeserving praise, V, 2, 365. I am yet sc all married m. W i v . IT, 2, 23. should all despair thatnear the —s of my mother, T w . II, 1, 41. our country have revolted wives, the tenth of m. would hang then-- s give our betters way, John I, 156. whose —* our selves, Wint. I, 2, 199. what land o' man is he t why,apish nation limps after, B2 II, I , 22. these external of m. T w . I, 5,160. thou art a woman, and disclaimest—s of laments, IT, 296. your m. of wrenching, H4B flinty m. Tim. IT, 3, 491. Adjectively, = masculine: II, 1, 120. we art the makers of —s, H5 T, 2, 296. a m. witch, Wint. II, 3, 67. are you m.t Cor. IT, 2, showing, as the m. is, his wounds to the people, Cor. II, 16 (quibbling). 1, 251. as the m. of our country is, Rom. IT, 1, 109. • • • - l i k e , manly: not more m. than Cleopatra, I am native here and to the m. born, Hml. I, 4, 15. 4) kind, sort: and words express the m. of my Ant. I, 4, 5. • a a l y , adj. 1) becoming a man, brave, fall of pity-wanting pain, Sonn. 140,4. the grosser m. of fortitude, vigorous: Lucr. 109. 1486. 1777. Ado V, these world's delights he throws upon the gross worlds 2, 15. Mids. Ill, 2, 157. Merch. II, 3, 14. All's II, 3, baser slaves, L L L I, 1, 29. the m. and the purpose of 298. John T. 2, 49. H5 II, 3, 3. Ill, 2, 24. H6B IV, his treason, R3 III, 5, 58. beyond all m. of so much I 8, 53. T, 2, 63. H6C II, 2, 40. R3 I, 2, 165. Troil. love you, Lr. I, 1, 62 (i. e. beyond any 'so much', any IT, 5, 104. Bom. Ill, 2, 53. Mcb. II, 3, 139. Cymb. comparison, of whatever kind it may be), all m. of men assembled here, H 6 A I, 3, 74. that no m. of perIT, 2, 397. Per. Ill, 1, 22. 2) pertaining to a man, not like a woman or boy: sons have recourse unto the princes, R3 III, 5, 108 ( F f (urn two mincing steps into a m. stride, Merch. Ill, 4, no m. person), what m. of manf As III, 2, 216. T w . I, 5, 161. HI, 4, 288. Wint. IV, 3, 89. H 4 A II, 4, 68. his big m. voice, A s II, 7, 161. 323. 462. H8 V, 1, 118. what m. o' thing is your croM a n l y , adv. in the manner of a man, courageouscodilet Ant. II, 7, 46. Evans: Mistress Quickly, which ly : this tune goes m. Mcb. IV, 3, 235. is in the m. of his nurse, Wiv. I, 2, 3. M a n - m a n a t e r , servant-monster, a monster in a 5) to be taken with the m. (apparently from another person's service: Tp. Ill, 2, 14. • u n a , the food of the famished Israelites in the root), a law-term, = to be taken in the fact: L L L Arabian desert: you drop m. in the way of starved 1, 1, 205. H 4 A II, 4, 347. if you had not taken yourself with the m. Wint. IV, 4, 752. people, Merch. V, 294. 6) Plur. —s = a ) behaviour, carriage, bearing: M a n n e r , 1) form of executing and performing, way, mode: mark the m. of his teaching, Shr. IV, 2, their —8 are more gentle-kind, Tp. Ill, 3, 32. frame 5. the m. of his gait, T w . II, 3, 170. Troil. IV, 5, 14. your —s to the time, Shr. I, 1, 232. I advise you use the m. of your bearing, Wint. IV, 4, 569. the pretty your —s discreetly in all kind of companies, 247. that and sweet m. of it, H5 IT, 6, 28. the m. of his speech, changeth thus his — s , Wint. I, 2, 375. what foolish Ant. II, 2, 114 (opposed to matter), sets down the m. master taught you these — s t H4B II, 1, 203. thou dost how, T w . Ill, 4, 80. the m. how he found it, Wint. V, affect my —s, Tim. IT, 3, 199. their —s are so apish, 2, 4. the m. how she came to it, 92. unless I be ob- L r . I, 4, 184. infected with their —s, 264. these bloody tained by the m. of my father's will, Merch. 1, 2, 118 accidents must excuse my —s, Oth. T, 1, 94. b) rules (i. e. in the way prescribed by the testament of my of good breeding and decency: beshrew my —» and my pride, Mids. II, 2, 54. we stand upon our —s, father), she is dead, and by strange m. Caes. IV, 3, Wint. IV, 4, 164. our griefs, and not our —s, reason 189. in this m. Wiv. II, 1, 25. in a most hideous and now, John IT, 3, 29. whom our —s term the prince, dreadful m. IV, 4, 34. in most uneven m. Meas. IT, 4, R3 III, 7, 191. my —s tell me we have your wrong 3. V, 196. Ado IV, 2, 64. 65. L L L 1, 1, 206. 207. rebuke, Oth. I, 1, 130. I extend my —s, II, 1, 99. you 211 (in m. and form following). Mids. II, 2, 130. As put me to forget a lady's — s , Cymb. II, 3, 110. good 111, 2, 427. T w . Ill, 4, 9. Wint. V, 2, 49. H6C III, 3, — s = good breeding, civility, decency: A s II, 7, 92. 178. H8 I, 2, 35. II, 4, 144. Troil. V, 7, 6. Cor. II, 3, 66. Tim. Ill, 6, 15. Lr. I, 4, 59. Per. I, 1, 147. III, 2, 42. 43. 47. V, 4, 95. H 4 A III, 1, 190. H8 V, In a m. and in m. = almost: t( is in a m. done al- 2, 29. Rom. I, 5, 4. — s , alone, in the same sense: ready, John V, 7, 89. you have in m. with your sin- a million of —s, Gent. II, 1, 105. against all checks, ful hours made a divorce betwixt his queen and him, rebukes and —s, Wiv. Ill, 4, 84. if you have any pity, grace, or —s, Mids. Ill, 2, 241. I lack —s. As IV, 3, R 2 III, 1, 11. 2) course, process: I'll show you the m. of it, Gent. 15. if God have lent a man any —s, he may easily put II, 3, 15. the cunning m. of our flight, II, 4, 180. the it off at court, All's II, 2, 9. T, 1, 15. T w . II, 3, 94. m. of it is, 1 was taken with the m. L L L I, 1, 204. IV, 1, 53. Wint. IV, 4, 244. H 4 A III, 1, 184. H 6 A tell us the m. of the wrestling, As I, 2, 118. the m. of II, 2, 54. H8 III, 2, 308. V, 1, 161. Tit. II, 1, 27. their taking, R2 T, 6, 9. the m. how this action hath Rom. V, 3, 214. Tim. II, 2, 147. IV, 1, 18. Hml. V, been borne, H4B IT, 4, 88. the m. and true order of 2, 17. Lr. IV, 6, 264. V, 3, 234. Treated as a sing.: the fight, 100. the treacherous m. of his death, H 6 A All's II, 2, 9. Wint. IV, 4, 244. Rom. V, 3, 214. Lr. II, 2, 16. in writing I preferred the m. of thy vile out- V, 3, 234. as a plur.: T w . IV, 1, 53. R3 III, 7, 191. rageous crimes, III, 1, 11. tell us the m. of it, Caes. I, in — s , and with — s , = decently: my tongue-tied 2, 234. 236. to relate the m. were to add the death of Muse in —s holds her still, Sonn. 85, 1. it charges you, Mcb. IV, 3, 205. he has done aU this .... here's me in —s to express myself, T w . II, 1, 15. how thy the m. of it, Ant. Ill, 6, 2. the m. of their deaths, T, worth with —s may I sing, Sonn. 39, 1. can we with —s ask what was the difference1 Cymb. I, 4, 56. I 2, 340. 3) custom, habit, fashion: it was ever his m. to do was thinking with what —slmight safely be admitted, so, Meas. IT, 2, 138. I'll view the —s of the town, Err. All's IV, 5, 93 ( = how I might decently be admitted). I, 2, 12. it is the m. of a man to speak to a woman, — c) cast of mind, morals, character: their face their L L L I, 1, 212. my lady, to the m. of the days, in cour- —s most expressly told, Lucr. 1397. public means

M which public —t breeds, Sonn. I l l , 4. as Jtisproportioned in his —t at in his thape, Tp. V, 290. though I am a daughter to his blood, J am not to his —s, Merch. II, 3, 19. a like proportion of lineaments, of —s and of spirit, III, 4, IS. neither his daughter, if we judge by —s, As I, 2, 283. Ill, 2, 43. All's I, 1, 71. John II, 127. H4B IV, 4, G4. 123. H5 I, 2, 49. H 6 B V, 1, 158. R3 IV, 4 , 2 0 6 . H8 IV, 2, 45. Tim. IV, 1, 25. Hml. I, 4, 30. Oth. II, 1, 232. K > n e i t 4 , minded, affected, disposed: he is one the truest m. Cymb. I, 6, 166. to give her princely training, that she may bem.at the is born, Per. Ill,3,17. M a n n e r l y , adj. decent; civil: let me have what thou thinkest meet and is most mannerly, G e n t II, 7, 58. m. dittinguishment betwixt the prince anitbeggar, W i n t . II, 1, 86. here it am. forbearance, H6A II, 4, 19. which m. devotion shows in this, Rom. I, 5, 100. M a n n e r l y , adv. decently; civilly: the wedding m. modest, Ado II, 1, 79. Cupid's post that comes to m. Merch. II, 9, 100. we'll m. demand thee of thy story, Cymb. Ill, 6, 92. M a n n l n g t r e e , place in Essex, famous for its pastures and the size of its oxen: that roasted M. ox with the pudding in hit belly, H4A II, 4, 498. M a n n i s h , 1) male: we'll have a swashing and a martial outride, as many other m. cowards have that do outface it with their semblances, As I, 3, 123. 2) pertaining to the age of manhood: though now our voices have got the m. crack, Cymb. IV, 2, 236. 3) masculine, bold in an unbecoming manner: a woman impudent andm. grown, Troil. Ill, 3, 217. M a n - a f - w a r , see Man. • • m a r , estate, land belonging to a nobleman: Wiv. II, 2, 19. All's 111, 2, 10. R2 IV, 212. H6C V, 2, 24. H8 1,1,84. M a n a r - h a u t e , house belonging to a manor: L L L I, 1, 208. • » • « « • t i e r , a slayer of men, murderer: H4B II, 1, 58. M a n a l e n , a lord's house- Lucr. 1171. Sonn. 95, 9. 146, 6. Compl. 138. Gent. V, 4, 8. Merch. Ill, 2, 170. H4B III, 2, 351. Rom. Ill, 2, 26. Ill, 3, 108. Tim. IV, 3, 191. V, 1, 218. Mcb. IV, 2, 7. Cymb. Ill, 4, 70. V, 4, 87. V, 5,155. H a n a l a n r y , abode in a place: Me martlet does approve, by his loved m., that the heaven's breath smells wooingly here, Mcb. I, 6, 5 (O. Edd- mansonry, some M. Edd. masonry). M a n s l a u g h t e r , unlawful killing of a man: Tim. III, 5, 27. M a n t l e , subst. 1) cloak: Lucr. 170. Pilgr. 79. Mids. V, 143.146. 287. Wint. V, 2, 36. Caes. Ill, 2, 174. 191. Ant. II, 5, 22. Cymb. V, 5, 361. Used of the darkness of night: H6A II, 2, 2. H6C IV, 2, 22. Rom. Ill, 2,15. of the twilight of morning: the mom, in russet m. clad, Hml. I, 1, 166. 2) that which gathers on the surface of a pool: the green m. of the standing pool, hi. Ill, 4, 139. M a n t l e , vb. 1) trans, to cloak, to cover: the ignorant fumes that m. their clearer reason, Tp. V, 67. if you come not in the blood of others, but —d in your own, Cor. 1, 6, 29. Applied to the filthy covering of a pool: I left them in the filthy —dpool, Tp. IV, 182. 2) intr. to gather a covering on the surface: whose visages do cream and m. like a standing pool, Merch. 1, 1. 89.

691

M a n t n a , town in Italy: Gent. IV, 1, 50. IT, 3, 23. V, 2, 47. Shr. II, 60. IV, 2, 77. 81. Rom. I, 3, 28. Ill, 3, 149. 169. Ill, 5, 15. 89. IV, 1, 117. 124. V, 1, 5 1 . 6 6 . V, 2, 3. 12. 28. V, 3, 273. Hantaan, a native of Mantua: L L L IV, 2, 97 101 (the poet Baptista Spagnolus Mantuanus). M a n u a l a e a l , signet: set thy seal manual on my wax-red lipt, Ven. 516. my gage, the manual teal of death, R2 IV, 25. • a n a r e , vb. 1) to cultivate, to till: to have it sterile with idleness, or —d with industry, Oth. 1, 3, 328. 2) to fatten with composts, to dung: the Hood of English shall m. the ground, B2 IV, 137. the cold blood he hath, like lean, sterile and bare land, —d, husbanded and tilled with excellent endeavour of drinking fertile sherris, H4B IV, 3, 129. • a n y , subst. multitude: 0 thou fond m., with what loud applause didst thou beat heaven, H4B 1,3,91. • a n y , adj. 1) sing., used with the indef. art. behind it, = more than one, not few, more than one wonld suppose: I sigh the lack of m. a thing I sought, Sonn. 30, 3. the expense of m. a vanished sight, 8. how m. a holy and obsequious tear hath dear religious love stolen from mine eye, 31, 5. the injury of m.a blasting hour, Compl. 72. Err. I, 2, 17. II, 2, 83. L L L 1, 1, 173. Merch. II, 7, 67. Ill, 1, 6. IV, 1, 221. As II, 7, 130. Ill, 3, 53. 54. IV, 1, 101. Wint. I, 2 , 1 9 2 . J o h n II, 303. IV, 1, 50. H4B II, 3, 13. IV, 5, 25. H 6 A V, 4, 19. H6B III, 1, 115. H6C I, 2, 74. IV, 4, 21. Cymb. V, 5, 71. Per. Prol. 39 etc. etc. of folded schedules had she m. a one, Compl. 43. though in this city he hath widowed and unchilded m. a one, Cor. V, 6, 153. these talents of their hair I have received from m. a several faxr, Compl. 206. m. a thousand gravis, Meas. Ill, 1, 20. H6C V, 6 , 3 7 . m. a time, B2 IV, 93. Tit. V, 3, 162. m. a time and oft, Merch. I, 3, 107. H4A I, 2, 56. Caes. I, 1, 42. (Simpcox's wife say* m. time and oft, H6B II, 1, 93). m. a time and often, Tim. III, 1, 25. how does your honour for this m. a dayt Hml. Ill, 1 , 9 1 ( = the long time that I have not seen you). I think your highness saw this m. a day, H8 V, 2, 21 (i. e. it is a long time since yon saw this). Reduplicated: m. a m. foot of land the worse, J o h n I, 183; cf. Hml. Ill, 3, 9. Preceded by full: full m. a glorious morning have I teen, Sonn. 33, 1. Tp. HI, 1, 39. Mids. Ill, 1, 135. Many and a separated by the verse: W i n t V, 3, 140. H8 II, 4 , 4 9 . 2) plur. a great number of: burn in m. placet, T p . I, 2 , 1 9 9 . II, 1, 60. Ill, 3, 34. V, 182. Gent. I, 2 , 2 1 . II, 7, 31. Ill, 1 , 2 3 6 etc. etc. Saxon Genitive: in —'« looks the false heart's history is writ, Sonn. 93, 7. Seemingly for much: one is one too m. Err. Ill, 1, 35. being one too m. by my weary self, Rom. I, 1, 135 (not in Globe Ed., which here follows the spurious Ql). cf. how 171. is one thrice toldt L L L I, 2, 41. In the predicate: your helps are m. Cor. II, 1, 39. Various use of so m.: this is a sleep that from this golden rigol hath divorced so m. English kings, H4B IV, 5, 37 ( = many an English king; German: so manchen Koenig). they flock together like so m. wild-gees ••, H4B V, 1, 79 ( = as if they were wild geese), fathers that, like so m. Alexanders, have fought, H5 III, 1, 19. those few almost no better than so m. French, III, 6, 156. he that cuts off twenty years of life cuts of} so m. years of fearing death, Caes. Ill, 1, 102. we are but men, and what

692

M

to m. may do, we have done, H8 V, 4, 79 (speaking of the hurt that his unkindness —ed, Ven. 478 (the accos. two only), let him alone, or to m. to minded, wave denoting not the object, bat the effect, — which his (AIM, Cor. 1,6, 73 ( = all that are so minded). Pre- unkindness injuriously made. cf. ruined in Err. II, ceding the poss. pron.: an earnest inviting, which m. 1, 97). my near occasion» did urge me to put off, Tim. Ill, 6, Marble, the stone Marmor; used for monuments: 11 ( = many motives which concerned myself very Sonn. 55, 1. H8 III, 2, 434. Adjectively: Meas. V near), the letters too of m. our contriving .friendt in 233. Hml. 1,4, 50. Emblem of hardness: Lucr. 560. Rome petition tu at home, Ant. I, 2, 189 (many friends 1241. Meas. Ill, 1, 238 (a m. to her tears). Err. II, who are busy in onr interest). Preceded by the def. 1, 93. H6C III, 2, 50. Tit. II, 3, 144. Adjectively: art.: the m. will be too chill and tender, All's IT, 5, 55 Lucr. 1240. Wint. V, 2, 98 (who was most m. there (the multitude; opposed to the elected few), not able changed colour). H6C III, 1, 38. Used of the heavens to maintain the m. to them longing, H8 I, 2, 32. the (on account of their eternity?) Oth. Ill, 3, 460. Cymb. mutable, rank-scented m., let them regard me as I do V, 4, 87. 120. cf. Marbled, whole as the m. Mcb. Ill, not flatter. Cor. Ill, 1, 66 (O. Edd. Meyny). Preceded 4, 22; cf. Wint. II, 3, 90. by the indef. article: I do know a m. fools, Merch. Marble-breasted, hard-hearted: Tw. V, 127. Ill, 5, 73. a m. merry men, As I, 1, 121. told of a m. Marble-eenatant, firm as marble: Ant. V, 2, thousand warlike French, John IV, 2, 199. you bear 240. a m. (stars) superfluously, E5 III, 7, 179. a m. poor Marbled, like marble (everlasting ? cf. Marble): men's Imet, IT, 1, 127. mother of a m. children, R3 III, the m. mansion all above, Tim. IV, 3, 191. 7, 184. with of: like a m. of these litping hawthornMarble-hearted, hard-hearted: Lr. I, 4, 281. buds, Wiv. Ill, 3, 77. a m. of our bodies, H5 IV, 3, 95. Marcade (M. Edd. Mercade), name in L L L V, am. of your horsemen, IV, 7, 88. As for this m. sum2, 724. mers, H8 III, 2, 360, see This. Mareamtant, from the Italian mercatante, merMany-eeleared • Tp. IT, 76. All's I, 3, 158. chant: Shr. IV, 2, 63 (M. Edd. mercatante). Many-headed i Cor. 11,3, 18. Mareellua, name in Hml. I, 1, 12 etc. and in Ant. Hap, subst. 1) a picture representing the surface II, 6, 118. of the earth or any part of it: Merch. I, 1, 19. Tw. March, the third month of the year: Wint. IV, III, 2, 85. H4A III, 1, 6. 70. H5 IT, 7, 25. Lr. I, 1,38. 4, 120. H4A IV, 1, 111 (the sun in M... doth nourish 2) any picture or image: showing life's triumph agues). Caes. I, 2, 18. 19. 23. II, 1, 40. 59. Ill, 1, 1. in the m. of death, Lucr. 402. the face, that m. whichIV, 3,18. V, 1, 114. deep impression bears of hard misfortune, 1712. thus March, subst. 1) military movement, journey ot it his cheek the m. of days outworn, Sonn. 68, 1. and soldiers: John II, 60. 223. 242. V, 1, 7. H4A II, 4, him as for a m. doth Nature store, to show false Art 598. H5 I, 2, 195. Ill, 3, 58. Ill, 5, 57. HI, 6, 115. what beauty was of yore, 13. thou m. of honour, R2 T, H6C II, 6, 87. R3 I, 1, 8. T, 2, 13. Troil. V, 10, 30. I, 12. in thy face I see the m. of honour, H6B III, 1, Hml. IT, 4, 3. to make a march: H6A IT, 3, 8. Mcb. V, 203. if you see this tn the m. of my microcosm, Cor. 2,31. Ant. IT, 8,30. II, 1, 68. thou m. of woe, that thus dost talk in signs, 2) grave and solemn walk: and with solemn m. Tit. Ill, 2, 12 (cf. Globe). R3 II, 4, 54. goes slow and stately by them, Hml. I, 2, 201. Hap, vb. to delineate, to point out the situation March, vb. 1) intr. a) to move in a military manof: I am near to the place where they should meet, if ner: Lucr. 3bl. 782 (used of vapours compared with Pisanio have —ed it truly, Cymb. IT, 1, 2. an army\ 1430. Sonn. 32, 12. John II, 209. 315. Mappery, study of maps, bookish theory: they 320. T, 2, 27. R2 II, 3, 92. Ill, 3, 49. 51. Ill, 6, 51. H4A 1, 1, 15. 111,2, 174. 111,3, 103. IT, 1, 89. IT, 2, call this bed-work, m., closet war, Troil. I, 3, 205. Mar, to injure, to hurt, to spoil, to ruin: m. not 2. 42.43. V, 3, 25. H4B IV, 2, 94. H5 II, 3,61. Ill, the thing that cannot be amended, Lucr. 578. striving 5, 11. Ill, 6, 159. 179. 181. IV, 3, 111. H6A III, 1, to mend, to m. the subject, Sonn. 103, 10. you m. our 187. Ill, 3, 30. 39. IV, 1, 73. IV, 3, 4. 5. V, 2, 4. H6B labour, Tp. I, 1, 14. be mute, or else our spell is - ed, IV, 2, 198. 200. IV, 3, 20. IV, 9, 27. IV, 10, 15. H6C IV, 127. m. the concord, Gent. I, 2, 94. it is —ing, if I, 1, 92. II, 1, 114. 182. II, 2, 70. IV, 3, 61. IV, 7, 50. he quarter it, Wir. I, 1, 26. Meas. II, 2, 148. II, 4, IV, 8, 4. V, 1, 3. 13. V, 3, 22. V, 5, 87. R3 V, 2, 4. 22. 127. Err. II, 1,92. L L L I V , 3, 191. V, 2, 22. Mids. Troil. V, 9, 7. Cor. I, 4, 11. I, 6, 83. Tit. IV, 4, 65. I,2,39. IT, 2, 5. Merch. V, 237. As I, 1, 34. Ill, 2, Tim. V, 4, 29. Caes. IV, 3, 197. 207. Lr. IV, 4, 21. 276.278. Shr. IV, 3, 97. 115. All's II, 3,315. Wint. Cymb. T, 5, 481. m. away (as a word of command): IT, 4, 490. T, 3, 82. H4B V, 5, 122. H6A T, 3, 84. H5 IT, 3, 131. Troil. V, 10, 21. Tit. V, 1, 165. to m. H6C IT, 8, 61. R3 I, 3, 165. H8 III, 2, 21. Cor. II, 3, on: Lucr. 438. 1391. R2 III, 3, 61. H5 III, 6, 150. 64. 111, 1,254. Rom. 1,2, 13. 11,4, 122. Tim. IT, 2, H6C V, 3, 9. R3 IV, 4, 530. V, 2, 4. V, 3, 312. Cor. 41. IT, 3,153. Caes. Ill, 2, 201 (—ed with traitors — I, 6, 85. Caes. IV, 2, 31. Mcb. V, 2, 25. to m. up: destroyed and disfigured by traitors). Mcb. T, I, 60. H4B II, 1, 187. Lr. I, 1,97. 1,4,35. 111,2, 82. Ill, 6, 64. Oth. V, 1, b) to walk, to go: that thus he —eth with thee arm 4. V, 2, 357 (all that's spoke is —ed = has been spo- in arm, H6B V, 1, 57. that form in which the majesty ken in vain). Ant. Ill, 11, 65. IV, 14, 48. V, 2, 279. of buried Denmark did sometimes m. Hml. I, 1, 49. Per. IV, 1, 27. Joined, in opposition, to make: L L L come, m. to wakes and fairs, Lr. Ill, 6, 77. IV, 3, 191. Mids. I, 2. 39. As I, 1, 34. Shr. IT, 3, 97. 2) tr. to cause to move in a military manner: H4B T, 5, 122. R3 I, 3, 165 Rom. I, 2, 13. II, 4, 122. on the marriage-bed of peace to m. a bloody host, John Tim. IT, •>, 41. Mcb. II, 3, 36. Oth. V, 1, 4. Ant. Ill, III, 1, 246. March, name of some earls (Edmund and Roger I I , 65. V, 2, 279. to mend: Ven. 478. Lucr. 578. Sonn. 103, 10. Lr. 1, 1, 97. Peculiar passage: to mend I Mortimer) nearly related to the royal house of Eng-

M land: H4A I, 3, 84. IV, 3, 93. V, 5, 40. H6B II, 2, 36. 37. IV, 2, 144. H6C I, 1, 106. II, 1, 179. March-chick,a chicken hatched in March; used to denote precociousness: a very forward M. Ado I, 3, 58. • a r c h e s , borders, border-country: H 5 I, 2,140. H6C II, 1, 140. M a r c h l s n e u , a woman having the rank of a marquis: H8 II, 3, 63. 94. Ill, 2, 90. Marchpane, a sweet biscuit composed of sugar and almonds: Bom. I, 5, 9. Marcial», name of a family of ancient Rome: Cor. II, 3, 246. Maretas (O. Edd. Martha) the family name of Coriolanus: Cor. I, 1, 7 etc. etc. King Ancus M.: II, 3, 247. Mareas, 1) Roman prenomen; a) of Cato, Caes. V, 4, 3. 5. b) of Brutus, III, 1, 185. IV, 3, 79. c) of Crassus, Ant. Ill, 1, 2. 5. d) of Antonius, Ant. II, 6, 119. e) of two officers of Antony, Ant. Ill, 7, 73. f) of the brother of Titus Andronicus, Tit. I, 47 etc. etc. g) of a Volscian, Cor. V, 6, 123. — 2) Christian name in Oth. I, 3 , 4 4 . M a r t i a n , name of a ennuch in Ant. I, 5, 8. II, 5, 4. IV, 13, 7. 9. Mare, 1) the female of the horse: Ven. 384. H5 II, 1, 26. H4BII, 1, 84. Ant. Ill, 7, 8. 9. to ride the wild m. = to play at see-saw, H4B II, 4, 268. Proverbial phrases: the man shall have hit m. again = all shall be right again, Mids. Ill, 2 , 4 6 3 . whose m. is deadt = what is the matter? what is amiss? H4B II, 1,46. 2) the night-mare, inenbus: I will ride thee o'mgkts like the m. H4B II, 1, 83. M a r g a r e ! » , name in Troil. V, 5, 7. Margaret, name of 1) Henry V P s queen: H6A V, 3, 51. 82 etc. H6B I, 1, 4. 16 etc. H6C I, 1, 228 etc. R 3 I, 2, 93 etc. — s battle at Saint Albans, I, 3, 130. 2) a waiting gentlewoman in Ado II, 2, 13 etc. Marge, in Sea-marge, q. v. Margent, margin, border, edge: a river, upon whose weeping m. she was set, Compl. 39. in the beached m. of the sea, Mids. II, 1, 85. writ o' both sides the leaf, m. and all, L L L V, 2, 8. Glosses or comments, in old books, usually printed on the margin of the leaf: I knew you must be edified by the m. ere you had done, Hml. V, 2, 162. The eyes, as interpreters of the mind, compared with the margin in books: the subtle-shining secrecies writ in the glassy —s of such books, Lucr. 102 (i. e. in the eyes), his face's own m. did quote such amazes that all eyes saw his eyes enchanted with gazes, L L L II, 246. what obscured in this fair volume lies find written in the m. of his eyes, Rom. I, 3, 86. Margery, vulgar form of Margaret: Tp. II, 2, 50. Merch. II, 2, 95. 96. H6B I, 2, 75. Term of contempt: Lady M., your midwife there, Wint. II, 3, 159. Maria, name of 1) the Holy Virgin: Jesu M ! Rom. II, 3, 69. 2) a lady attending on the princess in LLL IV, 3, 56. 133. V, 2, 843. 3) Olivia's chambermaid: Tw. II, 3, 129. 11, 5, 27. Ill, 4, 67. V, 355. 370. Marian, vulgar form of Mary or Maria: Tp. II, 2, 50. Err. Ill, 1,31. L L L V, 2, 934. Shr. Ind. 2, 22. Tw. II, 3, 14. Maid M., a personage in the morris dances, often a man dressed like a woman, and some-

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times a strumpet: for womanhood, Maid M. may be the deputy's wife of the ward to thee, H4A III, 3, 129. Mariana, female name in Meas. Ill, 1, 216. 265. IV, 1,49. IV, 3, 145. V, 379 etc. MarigeM, the flower Calendula officinalis: her eyes, like —s, had sheathed their light, Lncr. 397. great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread but as the m. at the sun's eye, Sonn. 25, 6. the m., that goes to bed with the sun, Wint. IV, 4, 105. Per. IV, 1, 16. Marina, female name in Per. Ill, 3, 12 etc. Mariner, seaman, sailor: T p . I, 1, 3. I, 2, 210. 225. 230. V, 98. Ant. Ill, 7, 36. Per. Ill, 1, 73. 76. Maritime, pertaining to the sea: the borders m. A n t 1,4,51. • a r j s r a m , the plant Origanum Majorana: 99, 7. Wint. IV, 4 , 1 0 4 . sweet m. All's IV, 5, 17. Lr. IV, 6, 94. Mark, abbreviation of the Latin Marcus, used only before the name of Antony: H5 III, 6 , 1 5 . Caes. II, 1,156. Ill, 1,173. Ill, 2,63. 143. Mcb. Ill, 1, 56. Ant. I, 5 , 3 5 etc. etc. Mark, subst. 1) a sign, trace, stain or impression made or left on a person or thing: I have some —s of yours upon my pate, Err. I, 2, 82. 83. my tears shall wipe away these bloody —s, H6C II, 5, 71. he should have showed us his —s of merit, wounds received for his country, Cor. II, 3, 172. can show for Rome her enemies' —s upon me, III, 3, 111. hath more scars of sorrow in his heart than foemen's —s upon his battered shield, Tit. IV, 1, 127. I know it by this m. Per. II, 1, 144. Especially any natural irregularity or deficiency by which a person is distinguished: — s descried in men's nativity are nature's faults, Lucr. 538. told me what privy —s I had about me, Err. Ill, 2,146. the m. of my shoulder, the mole in my neck, 147. never mole, hare-lip, nor scar, nor m. prodigious such as are despised in nativity, Mids. V, 419. foul moles and eyeoffending — s , John III, 1, 47. some —s of secret on her person, Cymb. V, 5, 205. it was a m. of wonder, 365. Such tokens being supposed to be ominous, the following expressions took rise: he hath no drowning m. upon him, Tp. I, 1, 31. nor set a m. so bloody on the business, I, 2, 142. sin, death and hell have set their —s on him, R 3 I, 3, 293. God bless the m., originally a phrase nsed to avert the evil omen, = saving your reverence, under your pardon: who, God bless the m., is a kind of devil, Merch. II, 2, 25. and I , God bless the m., his Moorship's ancient, Oth. I, 1, 33. he had not been there — bless the m. — a pissing while, Gent. IV, 4, 21. Similarly God save the m. = God have mercy: talk so like a waiting gentlewoman of guns and drums and wounds — God save the m. 1 H4A I, 3, 56. I saw the wound, I saw it with mine eyes — God save the m.! — here on his manly breast, Rom. Ill, 2, 53. Used in a good sense of any excellence: this so darks in Philoten all graceful -~s, Per. IV Prol. 36. 2) a character made by a person who cannot write his name: doest thou use to write thy namef or hast thou a m. to thyself, like an honest man? H6BIV, 2,110. 3) any sign of distinction, any token by which a thing is known: with soft-slow tongue, true m. of modesty, Lncr. 1220. how know you that I am in lovef Marry, by these special —s, Gent. II, 1, 18. I do spy some —s of love in her, Ado II, 3, 255. there is no vice so simple but assumes some m. of virtue on his

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outward parti, Merch. Ill, 2, 82. there it none of my uncle'» —s upon you, As 111, 2, 387. m the official —s invested, Cor. II, 3, 148. by no meant I may discover them by any m. of favour, Caes. II, 1, 76. —s of sovereignty, Lr. I, 4, 252. take you the —s of her, the colour of her hair, complexion, height, Per. IV, 2, 61. 4) butt, target, aim: thy m. is feeble age, but thy false dart mistakes that aim, Ven. 941. the scornful m. of every open eye, Lncr. 520. slander's m. was ever yet the fair, Sonn. 70, 2. if knowledge be the m., to know thee shall suffice, Filgr. 63 and L L L IV, 2, 115. I stood like a man at a m.f with a whole army shooting at me, Ado II, 1, 254. L L L IV, 1, 132. All's III, 2, 110. H4B III, 2,284. H5 I, 2, 208. H6B I, 1, 243. H8 II, 1, 165. Troil. V, 6, 27. Rom. I, 1, 213. II, 1, 33. Tim. V, 3, 10. Per. I, 1, 164. II, 3, 114. beyond them. = beyond the reach, beyond the power: he fought beyond the m. of others, Cor. II, 2, 93. you are abused beyond the m. of thought, Ant. Ill, 6, 87. 5) an object looked to for guidance: it (lore) is an ever-fixed m. that looks on tempests and is never shaken,Sonn. 116,5. Hence = example, pattern: your high self, the gracious m. of the land, Wint. IV, 4, 8. he was the m. and glass, copy and book, that fashioned others, H4B II, 3, 31. 6) notice taken, observance, note: the strong statutes stand Wee the forfeits in a barber's shop, as much in mock as m. Meas. V, 324. a fellow of no m. and likelihood, H4A III, 2, 45. he hath devoted and given up himself to the contemplation, m. and denotement of her parts and graces, Oth. II, 8, 322. 7) a sum of thirteen shillings and four pence: five —s, Meas. IV, 3, 7. a thousand —s, Err. I, 1, 22. 25. I, 2, 81. 84. II, 1, 61. Ill, 1, 8. Shr. V, 2, 35. John 11,530. H4AII, 1, 61. 11,4,569. 111,3,48. H4B I, 2, 217. H6B V, 1, 79. H8 V, 1, 172. Uninflected: forty m. H4A III, 3, 95. H4BII, 1, 34. • a r k , vb. 1) to make a sign or incision on, to stain, to stamp: his sword, death's stamp, where it did m., it took, Cor. II, 2, 112. when we have —ed with blood those sleepy two, Mcb. I, 7, 75. my body's —ed with Roman swords, Cymb. Ill, 3, 56. 2) to set a mark on, to blemish, to brand: a jellow by the hand of nature —ed, quoted and signed to do a deed of shame, John IV, 2,221. —ed with a blot, damned in the book of heaven, R2 IV, 236. to m. the full-fraught man and best endued with some suspicion, H5 II, 2, 139. — ed by the destinies to be avoided, H6C II, 2, 137. that by their witchcraft thus have - ed me, R3 III, 4, 74. villains —ed with rape, Tit. IV, 2, 9. 3) to point out, to designate, to elect ; with a double accus.: these signs have —ed me extraordinary, H4A III, 1, 41. With for: my will that —s thee for my earth's delight, Lucr. 487. that —s thee out for hell, B2IV, 26. thou art only —ed for the hot vengeance and the rod of heaven, H4A III, 2, 9. —ed for the gallows, H6B IV, 2, 131. your brother Richard —ed him for the grave, H6C II, 6, 40. nor came any of his bounties over me, to m. me for his friend, Tim. Ill, 2, 86. With to: to this your son is —ed, and die he must, Tit. I, 125. God m. thee to his grace, Rom. I, 3, 59. With an inf.: whom the fates have —ed to bear the extremity nf dire mishap, Err. I, 1, 141. if we are — ed to die, H5 IV, 3, 20. cf. death-marked, Rom. I Chor. 9. 4) to take notice of, to pay attention to, to heed, to observe; absol.: attend and m. Mids. IV, 1, 98. m.

a little while, W i n t V, 3, 118. the disease of not listening, the malady of not —ing, H4B I, 2, 139. perpend my words and m. H5 IV, 4, 8. couch we awhile and m. Hml. V, 1, 245. 247. Followed by an accus. or a clause: did not I bid thee still m. me and do as I dot Gent IV, 4, 39. n . it well, Meas. II, 1, 158. nobody —s you, Ado I, 1, 118. not —ed, or not laughed at, II, 1, 153. I do confess much of the hearing it, but little of the —ing of it, L L L 1,1, 288. they do not m. me, and thai brings me out, V, 2, 172. I'll m. no words that smooth-faced wooers say, 838. Merch. I, 3, 98. V, 88. 243. As II, 1, 41. Shr. 1,1,171. IV, 2, 5. Tw. II, 4, 44. II, 5, 217. Wint. I, 2, 408. II, 1, 65. V, 1, 63. 233. John IV, 3, 85. R2 I, 1, 36. II, 1, 11. III, 3, 61. IV, 290. H4A I, 2, 96. II, 4, 234. Ill, 1, 159. H4B V, 5, 7. H5IV, 3,104. IV, 7,33. R3 I, 3, 349. Ill, 6, 4. H8 III, 2, 440. Troil. I, 2, 204. 251. V, 7, 2. Cor. I, 1, 259. I, 4, 45. II, 3, 45. Tit. Ill, I, 34. Rom. II, 4, 188. Caes. I, 2, 126. 236. II, 3, 3. III, 1, 18. Ill, 2, 122. Mcb. IV, 3, 169. Hml. 1, 1, 43. II, 1, 15. II, 2, 164. 400. 111,2,158. L r . Ill, 6, 118. IV, 6, 142. Oth. II, 1, 224. IV, 1, 83. 87. 292. Per. V, 1, 81. Synonymous to consider: if your grace m. entry circumstance, you have great reason to do Richard right, H6A III, 1, 153. call we to mind, and m. but this for proof, was not the Duke of Orleans thy foel III, 3, 68. do you but m. how this becomes the house, Lr. II, 4, 155. 5) to be aware of, to perceive by the ear or eye, to listen to, to hear, so see: she —ing them begins a wailing note, Ven. 835. —ing what he tells with trembling fear, Lucr. 510. m. how one string ... strikes each tn each, Sonn. 8, 9. while Philomela sits and sings, 1 sit and m. Pilgr. 197. Ven. 457. 643. 680. Lucr. 990. Sonn. 112, 12. Tp. 1, 2, 67. 88. 117. II, 1, 169. V, 267. Gent. II, 3, 33. Wiv. Ill, 5, 108. IV, 1, 45. Meas. II, 1, 156. II, 4, 81. Ill, 1, 226. IV, 3, 130. Err. IV, 4, 54. Ado I, 1, 213. 215. L L L IV, 1, 133. IV, 3, 100. 138. Mids. II, 1, 127. 165. Ill, 1, 135. IV, 1, 115. V, 282. Merch. I, 3, 78. II, 2, 51. IV, 1, 313. 317. As III, 4, 59. Ill, 5, 124. IV, 3, 39. 104. Shr.1,1,176. Wint.II,3,170. IV,4,428.442. J o h n l l , 475. Ill, 4, 130. R2 IV, 203. V, 4, 1. H4A II, 4, 278. 281. Ill, 1, 108. 139. H5 IV, 7, 3. H6A II, 5, 79. H6C 111, 3, 1C9. R3 II, 1, 134. H8 II, 4, 169. IV, 2, 98. Cor. I, 1, 145. II, 2, 150. Ill, 1, 89. Ill, 3, 74. V, 3, 92. Tit. II, 3, 20. Ill, 1, 143. Rom. Ill, 4, 17. Tim. Ill, 4, 21. Caes. 1,2, 120. Ill, 2, 117. 182. Mcb. I, 2. 28. V, 1, 46. Hml. I, 5, 2. II, 1, 41. II, 2, 107. Ill, 2, 118. 214. IV, 5, 34. V, 1, 19. Lr. I, 4, 130. 333. IV, 6, 184. V, 3, 36. Oth. I, 1, 44. II, 1, 260. Ant. II, 5, 52. Cymb. I, 1, 58. Per. IV, 2, 127. Followed by an inf.; with to: I have —ed a thousand blushing apparitions to start into her face, Ado IV, 1, 160. without to: who —s the waxing tide grow wave by wave, Tit. HI, 1, 95. M a r k e t , 1) public place for buying and selling: search the m. Per. IV, 2, 3. 18. 99. 2) purchase and sale in a public place: he endt,. the m. L L L III, 111 (in allusion to the proverb: three women and a goose make a market). meetings, —t, fairs, V, 2, 318. the right butter-women's rank to m. As III, 2, 104. you are not for all —s, III, 5, 60. I run before my horse to m. R3 1, 1, 160 ( = I count my chickcns before they are hatched). I can buy me twenty at any m. Mcb. IV, 2, 40.

M

695

3) purchase, bargain: your store is not for idle Ado II, 1, 312. II, 2, 58. Merch. Ill, 2, 53. Shr. Ill, — t , Tw. Ill, 3,46. what is a man, if his chief good and 2, 15. H5 V, 2, 398. m. of his time be but to sleep andfeedl Hml. IV, 4, 34. 4) state of perpetual union: this siege that hath M a r k e t a b l e , likely to find a buyer: one of them engirt his m. Lucr. 221. you violate a twofold m. R2 is a plain fish and no doubt m. Tp. V, 266. ice shall V, 1, 72. the bed of blessed m. H5 V, 2, 392. Sonn. 116, 1. Ado III, 2,6. As III, 3, 71. 87. V, 4, 59. Tw. be the more m. As I, 2, 103. Market-bell, a bell giving notice that trade may 1, 5, 21. H5 V, 2, 387. Oth. Ill, 3, 268 etc. begin in the market: H6A III, 2, 16. Compounds: m. bed: Err. II, 1, 27. John III, 1, M a r k e t - c r « u , a cross in a market-place: H4A 245. V, 2, 93. m. blessing: Tp.1V, 106. m. day: All's V, 1, 73. V, 3, 70. Rom. V, 3, 233. Per. V, 3, 76. n . dowry: Market-day, a day of public sale: H6BIV,2,62. Meas. Ill, 1, 230. m. feast: LLL II, 40. Per. Ill Prol. M a r k e t - f e l k a , people going to market: H6A 4. m. hour: Gent. II, 4, 179. m.joys: R3 IV, 4, 330. III, 2, 15. m. pleasures: Per. Prol. 34. m. vow: Wiv. U, 2, 258. M a r k e t - m a i d , a female servant coining to Hml. Ill, 4, 44. market: you are come a m. to Rome, Ant. Ill, 6, 51. • a r r a w , the substance contained in the cavities Market-mem, men coming to market: B6A III, of animal bones: my flesh is soft and plump, my m. 2, 4. V, 5, 54. burning, Yen. 142. spending his manly m. in her arms, Market-place, place of public sale: Gent. IV, 4, All's II, 3, 298. would he were wasted, m., bones and 60. Ado IV, 1, 309. Shr. V, 1, 10. John II, 42. H6A all, D6C HI, 2, 125. when crouching m. in the bearer I, 4, 40. II, 2, 5. Cor. I, 5, 27. Ant. II, 2, 220. Ill, strong cries of itself 'No more', Tim. V, 4, 3. the pith 6, 3. the Boman Forum: Cor. II, 1, 249. II, 2, 163. and m. of our attribute, Hml. I, 4, 22. Plur. —s: hut Ill, 1, 31. 112. 332. Ill, 2, 93. 104. 131. V, 6, 3. and liberty creep in the minds and —s of our youth, Caes. I, 2, 254. I, 3, 27. Ill, 1, 108. 228. 292. on the Tim. IV, 1, 26. dry up thy —s, vines, and plough-torn m.: Cor. II, 2, 163. Ill, 1, 332 (usually in). has, IV, 3, 193. Market-price, the current price of commodities: M a r r e w - e a t i n g , wasting the strength of the at m. All's V, 3, 219. body: m. sickness, Yen. 741. Market-town, a town that has the privilege of M a r r e w l e » , destitute of marrow: Mcb. Ill, 4,94. a stated market: H6B II, 1, 159. Lr. Ill, 6, 78. Marry, vb. 1) to take a hnsband or a wife; absol.: M a r k - m a n (F3.4 marks-man) one skilful in shoot- no —ing'mong his subjects, Tp. II, 1, 165. I will m. ing: Rom. I, 1, 212. one day, Err. II, 1, 42. Wiv. IV, 6, 50. Ado II, 3,237. Marl, a kind of fat clay: a clod of wayward m. Ill, 4, 89. Hml. I, 2, 156 etc. trans.: if you will m. (viz man) Ado II, 1, 66. me, Tp. Ill, 1, 83. Gent. II, 5,15.17. IV, 3, 16. Wiv. Marie, French name in H5 IV, 8, 105. 1,1, 232. V, 3, 9. V, 5, 182. Meas. I, 4, 49. HI, 1, Marmeset, a small monkey: Tp. II, 2, 174. 221. V, 382. 518. Ado IV, 1, 4. Mids. I, 1, 25. 94. Marines*, a title of honour, next below that of H6A II, 5, 86. H6B 1,1, 4. H6C III, 2, 111 etc. Intr., duke: Merch. I, 2, 125. H6B I, 1, 15. 45. H6C III, followed by with: to m. with Nan Page, Wiv. IV, 4, 3, 164. R3 I, 3, 255. 261. IV, 2, 47. H8 IV, 1, 38. 85. before he —ed with her, Meas. 11, 1, 179. to m. lord m. H6B I, 1, 63. R3 II, 1, 25. IV, 4, 520. Used with Demetrius, Mids. 1,1,40. Ado V, 4,37. Shr. IV, as a fem.: Lady M. Dorset, H8 V, 3, 170. 2, 33. R3 I, 3, 100. Rom. Ill, 5, 219. Hml. I, 2,151. Marriage (dissyll.; trisyll. in Lucr. 221, where Ill, 4, 29. Oth. IV, 2, 90. —ed = having a husband it rhymes to rage and sage; in H6A V, 5, 55, and or a wife: Wiv. Ill, 5, 144. IV, 2, 23. Meas. IV, 2, 4. perhaps in V, 1,91), 1) the act of marrying, of uniting V, 171. 184. Ado I, 1, 270. LLL V, 2, 912. 918. As a man and woman for life: a m. between Master Abra- III, 3, 61. Ant. I, 3,20. II, 2, 125. Cymb. V, 1,2 etc. ham and Mistress Anne Page, Wiv. I, 1, 57. forced my —ed wife, R2 V, 1, 73. H6B1I,4,28. a —ed life, m. V, 5, 243. there was some speech of m. Meas. V, Per. II, 5, 4. — ed chastity, Phoen. 61 ( = a chaste 217. he promised her m. HI, 2, 213. Err. Ill, 2, 94. matrimony). Ado I, 3, 47. II, 2, 8. II, 3, 246. Ill, 2, 1 etc. to make The simple vb. for the refl.: you two would m. — a m. Ant. II, 3, 39. to pass assurance of a dower in m. each other, Wiv. Ill, 2, 15; cf. Embrace, Greet, m. 'twixt me and one Baptista's daughter, Shr. IV, 2, Hug, Kiss, Know, KiU, Look, Love, See. 117. proffers his only daughter to your grace in m. Used with reference to the ceremony performed II6A V, 1, 20. his daughter meanly have I matched in by a priest; followed by with: and with him at Eton m. R3 IV, 3, 37. to speak for my master in the way of immediately to m. Wiv. IV, 6,25. trans.: thus, I trust, m. Wiv. I, 4, 89. never to speak to lady in way of m. you will not m. her, Shr. Ill, 2, 117. Wiv. IV, 4, 75. Merch. II, 1, 42. to woo a maid in way of m. 11,9, 13. IV, 6, 32. Mids. I, 1, 161. mocking him about the m. of the Lady Bona, H6C IV, 2) to join in matrimony; a) as disposing of a 1, 31. person: would 1 had never —ed my daughter there, 2) the performance of the rites by which the union Tp. II, 1, 108. you would have —ed her most shamebetween a man and woman is sanctioned: consenting fully, Wiv. V, 5, 234. I, 1, 256. All's III, 5, 56. Lr. to the safeguard of your honour, I thought your m. fit, 1, 1, 131 etc. Followed by with: to m. me with OctaMeas. V, 425. the plain form of m. Ado IV, 1, 2. in- vius Caesar, Ant. I, 2, 29. oftener by to: Wiv. Ill, 4, continent before m. As V, 2, 43. the ceremonial rites of 87. V, 5, 204. Meas. II, 1, 184. IV, 3, 183. V, 520. m. Shr. Ill, 2, 6. John II, 539. the vow I made to her Err. II, 2, 177. 184. Ado IV, 1, 7. 9. LLL III, 122. in m. Hml. I, 5, 50. Merch. I, 2, 55. IV, 1, 94. H6C III, 2, 111. R3 IV, 3) a feast made on occasion of marrying: at the 2, 55 etc. b) as performing the rite (German traueri): m. of the king's daughter to the king of Tunis, Tp. II, Wiv. V, 5, 216. Ado 111, 1, 100. IV, 1, 8. V, 4, 120. 1, 70. m. tables, Hml. 1, 2, 181. cf. Gent. V, 4, 172. Mids. IV, 2, 17. As III, 3, 85. 92. 93. 94. IV, 1, 125. S c h m i d t , Shake spear« Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. II. 45

696

M

Shr. II, 181. Bom. II, 3, 64. V, 3, 233. with to: he Pilgr. 145. Tp. IV, 98. Wiv. I, 3, 113. L L L V, 2, -ed ru before to Romeo, Rom. IV, 3, 27. 650. 657. Merch. Ill, 2, 85. All's II, 1,48. II, 3,300. 3) Metaphorically, —ed = closely joined, and Ill, 3, 9. IV, 1, 33. R2 II, 1, 41. II, 3, 101 H4A III, hence concordant, harmonious: veil-tuned sounds, by 2, 112. IV, 1, 116. H5 Prol. 6. IV, 2, 43. H6A I, 2, unions —ed, Sonn. 8, 6. thou wert not —ed to my 1. Troil. Il, 1, 58. II, 3, 256. Ill, 3, 190. IV, 5, 177. Muse, 82,1. our inward souls —ed in league, John 198. 255. V, 2, 164. V, 3, 52. Cor. I, 4, 10. IV, 5, III, 1, 228. their spirits are so —ed in conjunction, 124. 204. V, 6, 100. Tim. IV, 3, 384. Hml. II, 2, H4B V, 1, 77. the unity and —ed calm of states, Troil. 512. Ill, 4, 57. Ant. I, 1, 4. I, 5, 18. II, 2, 6. II, 5, I, 3, 100. speculation turns not to itself, till it hath 117. Cymb. V, 4, 32. travelled and is —ed there where it may see itself, III, 2) name of a planet: you were born ... under M. 3, 110 (some M. Edd. mirrored, bnt the verb to mirror All's 1, I, 206. 207. 208. 210. M. his true moving, is unknown to Sh.; cf., besides, John II, 501 etc.). even as in the heavens so in the earth, to this day is examine every ed lineament and see how one anothernot known, H6A I, 2, 1. lends content, Rom. I, 3, 83 (reading of Q2; the rest Marseilles, French town: Shr. II, 377. All's IV, of O. Edd. several), like a master —ed to your good 4, 9. IV, 5, 85. service, Ant. IV, 2, 31. it must be —ed to that your Marsh, moorland: the enemy is past the m. R3 diamond, Cymb. II, 4, 97. V, 3, 345. Marry, an exclamation supposed to have been Marshal, subst. 1) the chief officer of arms, who derived from the name of the Holy Virgin, used 1) regulates combats in the lists and establishes rank and to express indignant surprise: I'U ascend the regal order at royal feasts and processions : the —'s trunthrone. M., God forbid! R2IV, 114. Gloster is dead. cheon, Meas. II, 2, 61. lord m., command our officers M., God forfend! H6B III, 2, 30. I fear we shall at arms be ready to direct these home alarms, R2 I, 1, ne'er win him to it. M., God forbid! R3 III, 7, 81. 204. I, 3, 7. 26. 44. 46. 99. H4A IV, 4, 2. H4B I, 2) to affirm a wish or imprecation, in which case 3, 4. II, 3, 42. Ill, 2, 348. IV, 1, 220. H8 IV, 1, 19 it is joined to amen: God be wi' you, good Sir Topas. (earl m.J. M., amen! Tw. IV, 2,109. the Lord forbid! M., amen! 2) in France, the highest military officer (apH8 III, 2, 54. a plague of all cowards I say, and a parently trisyll. in this sense): the M. of France, vengeance too! m., and amen! H4A II, 4, 128. God Monsieur La Far, Lr. IV, 3, 9. Great m. to Henry forgive me, m. and amen! Rom. IV, 5, 8. the Sixth of all his wars within the realm of France, 3) to affirm any thing, = indeed, to be sure: to H6A IV, 7, 70 (marshal as well as Henry trisyll.). each of you one fair and virtuous mistress fall, when 3) leader: reason becomes the m. to my will, Mids. Love please ! m., to each, but one, All's II, 3, 64. good II, 2, 120. counsel, m. R3 I, 3, 2G1. m., yet the fire of rage is in Marshal, vb. to direct, to lead: thou —est me him, Cymb. I, 1, 76. cf. Meas. II, 1, 191. 198. Err. the way that I was going, Mcb. II, 1, 42. they must Ill, 1, 15. Followed by and, by way of expressing a sweep my way and m. me to knavery, Hml. Ill, 4, 205. prompt and joyous assent: you would all this time have when these mutualities so m. the way, hard at hand proved there is no time for all things. M., and did, sir, comes the master and main exercise, Oth. II, 1, 268. Err. II, 2, 103 ( = and so indeed I did), you bid me m. the rest, as they deserve their grace, Per. II, 3, 19. make it orderly and well. M., and did, Shr. IV, 3, 96. Marshalsea, name of a prison: H8 V, 4, 90. a virtue that was never seen in you. M., and I am glad Mart, subst. 1) market-place: Err. I, 2, 74. II, 1, of it, H4A III, 1, 127. go you and tell him so. M., and 5. II. 2, 6. Ill, 2, 155. 189. you beat me at the m. shall, V, 2, 34. I do beseech you send for some of them.III, 1, 12. I'll meet with you upon them. I, 2, 27. II, M., and shall, R3 III, 4, 36. 2, 166. Ill, 1, 7. V, 261. to come so smug upon the m. 4) oftenest as an expletive particle, = why; im- Merch. Ill, 1, 49. parting to the speech a slight tinge of contempt: how 2) public purchase and sale: at any Syracusian do you bear with met M., sir, the letter, Gent. I, 1, —s and fairs, Err. I, 1, 18. foreign m. for implements 130. how know you that I am in lovet M., by these of war, Hml. 1, 1, 74. we lost too much money this m. marks, II, 1, 18. how painted? M., so painted, 64. II, Per. IV, 2, 5. 5, 13. Ill, 1, 295. IV, 2, 28. 138. IV, 4, 49. Meas. 3) bargain: venture on a desperate m. Shr. II, 329 I, 2, 64. II, 1, 80. Err. II, 2, 52. L L L II, 84. Mids. (cf. Co-mart). I, 2, 11. V, 365. Merch. II, 2, 44. R2 I, 4, 16. H6A Mart, vb. to traffic, to trade: if he shall think it II, 3, 31. H6B II, 1, 39. R3 II, 2, 124. Rom. I, 3, fit, a saucy stranger in his court to m. as in a Romish 63. Hml. Ill, 2, 247. Lr. IV, 2, 68 etc. m., come up stew, Cymb. I, 6, 151. trans. = to buy, or to sell: = you mistake your business! you will find your you have let him go and nothing —ed with him, Wint. match! Rom. II, 5, 64. Per. IV, 6, 159. m. trap = IV, 4, 363. to sell and m. your offices for gold to unyou are caught (Nares): Wiv. I, 1, 170. Followed by deservers, Caes. IV, 3, 11. an inversion of the subject in answers: wilt thou be Mar-text, one who perverts the meaning of pleasedt M., will J, Tp. Ill, 2, 46. you mean to whip words; name in As 111, 3, 43. 65. V, 1, 6. the dogt Ay, m., do /, Gent. IV, 4, 28. were they his Martial, 1) pertaining to war, opposed to civil: menf m.,were they, Wiv. II, 1, 185. does he lie at the m. law, H5 IV, 8, 46. a m. man = a warrior, Lncr. Garter1 Ay, m., does he, 188. IV, 5, 29. L L L I, 1, 200. H6A1,4,74. arts andm. exercises, H4BIV, 5,74. 126. Mids. Ill, 1, 92. As I, 1, 128. All's III, 5, 40. 2) warlike, becoming or like a true warrior: a m. Wint. Ill, 3, 140. H4B III, 2, 104. R3 I, 3, 98. H8 outside, As I, 3, 122. write it in a m. hand, T w . Ill, I, 1, 97. Tit. IV, 1, 122. Caes. I, 2, 229. Hml. I, 4, 2, 45. a maid, and be so m. II6A II, 1, 21. warlike 13. Oth. Ill, 1, 7. and m. Talbot, III, 2, 118. with a m. scorn, Rom. Ill, Mars, 1) the Roman god of war: Sonn. 55, 7. 1, 166. with m. stalk, Hml. I, 1, 66.

M 3) resembling Mars: hit foot Mercurial, his M. thigh, Cymb. IV, 2, 310. M a r t i n , name of a saint, whose feast falls on the eleventh of November: expect Saint —'s summer, halcyon days, H6A 1, 2, 131 (fair weather after winter has set in, i. e. prosperity after misfortune). M a r t i n » , name in Rom. I, 2, 67. M a r t l a a , see Marcius. M a r t l e m a a , the feast of Saint Martin; used of a person in the decline of life: how doth the m., your mastert H4B II, 2, 110; cf. AU-hallown summer in H 4 A I, 2, 178. M a r t l e t , the bird Hirundo urbica: Merch. II, 9, 28. In Mcb. I, 6, 4 O. Edd. barlet, M. Edd. martlet. M a r t y r , subst. one who suffers for his faith or in defence of any cause: H4B IV, 1,193. V, 5, 148. H8 111,2,450. Per. I, 1,38. M a r t y r , vb. to torture, to torment, to destroy in a savage manner: that face which underneath thy black all-hiding cloak immodestly lies —ed with disgrace, Lucr. 802. spealc, gentle sister, who hath —ed thee f Tit. Ill, 1, 81. 107. hark, wretches, how I mean to m. you, V, 2,181. despised, distressed, hated, —ed, killed, Rom. IV, 5, 59. —ed, adjectively, = pertaining to a state of crnel suffering: I can interpret all her —ed signs, Tit. Ill, 2, 36. M a n i l l a s ( 0 . Edd. Murrellus and Murellus) name in Caes. I, 2, 288. M a r v e l , subst. 1) astonishment: I speak amazedly, and it becomes my m. and my message, Wint. V, 1, 188. strike all that look upon with m. V, 3, 100. and, to kill the m , shall be so ever, Cymb. Ill, 1, 10. 2) wonder, something strange: till I may deliver this m. to you, Hml. 1,2,195. Usually in the predicate: it is m. = it is strange, Shr. IV, 2, 86. that's great m. L L L I, 2, 128. no m. or it is no m. = it is not strange, H4B IV, 3, 96. Lr. II, 2, 58. Followed by a clause with the indie.: it is m. he out-dwells his hour, Merch. II, 6, 3. 'tis no m. he is so humorous, H4A III, I , 2 3 4 . H 6 B I I , 1,9. no m. though, always followed by the subjunctive, = it is not strange that: no m. though thy horse begone, Ven. 390. no m., then, though I mistake my view, Sonn. 148, 11. no m. though she pause, Err. II, 1, 32. no m. though Demetrius do fly, Mids. II, 2, 96. no m. though it affrighted you, R3 I, 4, 64. no m. though you bite so sharp at reasons, Troil. II, 2, 33. no m., then, though he were ill affected, Lr. II, 1, 100. M a r v e l , vb. 1) to find something strange, to wonder; absol.: you make me m. Tim. II, 2, 133. with at: you must not m. at my course, All's II, 5, 63. Cor. V, 6, 42. Mcb. Ill, 2, 54. Usually followed by a clause: / m. I hear not of Master Brook, Wiv. Ill, 5, 58. you may m. why I obscured myself, Meas. V, 395. Im. thy master hath not eaten thee, L L L V, 1, 42. I in. why I answered not, As III, 5, 132. I m. Cambio comes not, Shr. V, 1 , 8 . we m. much our cousin France ... would shut his bosom, All's III, 1, 7. I m. your ladyship takes delight, Tw. I, 5, 89. I do not only m. where thou spendest thy time, H4A II, 4, 439. R3 II, 2, 111 (Qq why, Ff that). Troil. II, 2 , 4 2 . 111,3, 181. Lr. IV, 2, 1. Per. II, 1, 29. Followed by should: I much m. that your lordship ... should shake off the golden slumber, Per. Ill, 2, 21.

697

sped, H6A II, 1, 48 (— I should like to know). / m. where Troilus is, Troil. I, 2, 238. I m. what kin thou and thy daughters are, Lr. I, 4, 199. M a r v e l l a a s , adj. very great: her husband has a m. infection to the little page, Wiv. II, 2, 120 (Mrs. Quickly's speech). H a r r e U e a * , adv. (joined only to adjectives and adverbs), very, extraordinarily: m. sweet music, Tp. III, 3, 19. m. little beholding, Meas. IV, 3, 166. m. merry, Err. IV, 3, 59. a m. witty fellow, Ado IV, 2, 27. m. well shot, L L L IV, 1, 132. IV, 2, 158. V, 2, 586. Mids. Ill, 1, 2. IV, 1, 26. Shr. II, 73. All's IV, 3, 179. H4B II, 4, 30. V, 1, 38. H 5 III, 2, 81. B 3 I, 2, 255. Troil. I, 2, 150. Cor. IV, 5, 30. Rom. Ill, 5, 230. Hml. II, 1, 3. Ill, 2, 312. M a r v e l l c a a l y , adv. joined only to verbal extraordinarily, very much: you are m. changed, Merch. I, 1, 76. you may be m. mistook, H5 III, 6, 85. M a r y , name 1) of the Holy Virgin: John II, 538. R 2 I I , 1 , 5 6 . H8 V,2,33. 2) a daughter of Henry V H I : H8 II. 4, 175. 3) of Olivia's woman: Tw. I, 3, 57. I, 5, 11. II, 3, 130 (cf. Maria). M a r y - b a d >, flowers of the marigold: and winking m. begin to ope their golden eyes, Cymb. II, 3, 25. M a a e n l l n e , male: my m. usurped attire, Tw. V, 257. pray God she prove not m. ere long, H6A II, 1, 22. hit m. whore, Troil. V, 1, 20. M a a h a m , name in H 5 : Henry Lord Scroop of M. II Prol. 24. II, 2, 13. 67. H a s h e d , see Meshed. M a s k , subst. 1) a cover for the face (used by the poet only in speaking of women; cf. Vizard); worn to preserve the complexion: her sun-expelling m. Qent. IV, 4 , 1 5 8 . my m., to defend my beauty, Troil. I, 2,286. with faces fit for —s, or rather fairer than those for preservation eased, or shame, Cymb. V, 3, 21. cf. L L L II, 124. V, 2, 245. Wint. IV, 4, 223. Oth. IV, 2, 9. Black masks worn by ladies at the theatres: as these black —s proclaim an enshield beauty, Meas. II, 4, 79. these happy —s that kiss fair ladies' brows being black put us in mind they hide the fair, Rom. I, 1, 236. Masks worn by players performing a woman's part: let not me play a woman; I have a beard coming. That's all one: you shall play it in a m. Mids. I, 2, 52. Metaphorically, applied to men as well as women: stain my favours in a bloody m. H4A 111, 2, 136. death put on his ugliest m. H4B I, 1, 66. thou knowest the m. of night is on my face, Rom. II, 2, 85. 2) a diversion or procession in which the company wear masks, a masquerade: revels, dances, — s, L L L IV, 3, 379. what —s, what dances, Mids. V, 32. will you prepare you for this m. to-night, Merch. II, 4, 23. 11, 5, 23. 28. II, 6, 64. Tw. I, 3, 121. J o h n V, 2, 132. H81,1,26. Troil. I, 3,,84. Rom I, 4, 48. I, 5,35. Mask, vb. 1) trans, to cover with a visor (applied to women): being —ed, Gent. V, 2, 40. —ed and vixarded, Wiv. IV, 6, 40 (girls and boys). Ado V, 4, 12. L L L V, 2, 127. 157. 295. Metaphorically, applied to men as well as women: to m. their brows and hide their infamy, Lucr. 794. when summer's breath their —ed buds discloses, Sonn. 54, 8. if some suspect of ill —ed not thy show, 70, 13. L L L 1, 2, 98. Cor. I, 8, 10. Caes. II, 1, 81. With from ( = to conceal): the region cloud hath —ed him (the sun) from me. Sonn. 33, 12. —ing the business 2) to wonder, to be curious to know: I m. how he from the common eye, Mcb. Ill, 1, 125. 45*

698

M

2) intr. to play a part in a masquerade: and then owner, proprietor, ruler, governor: m. of a full poor we —ed, Bom. I, 5, 39. —ing = pertaining to a cell, Tp. I, 2, 20. the —s of some merchant, II, 1, 5 masquerade: our —ing mates, Mercb. II, 6, 59. what (i. e. the owners of some trading ship), a man is m. —ing »tuff is here, Shr. IV, 3, 87. of his liberty, Err. II, 1, 7. he's m. of my state, 95. Donbtfnl passage: then give you up to the —ed when thou didst make him m. of thy bed, V, 163. affecNeptune and the gentlest winds of heaven, Per. Ill, 3, tions, —s of passion, Uerch. IV, 1, 51. the cottage that 36 (perhaps = hiding his cruel nature). the old carlot once was m. o f , As III, 5, 108. lest it • u k e r , one that takes part in a masquerade: the (the dagger) should bite its m. Wint. I, 2, 157; cf. —t come, L L L V, 2, 157. Lewis it sending over —i, H4A I, 1, 18. —s of their wealth, II, 4, 280. though to revel it with him, H6C III, 3, 224. IV, 1, 94. a m. most m. wear no breeches, H6B I, 3, 149. m. of his and a reveUer, Caes. V, 1, 62. heart, Troil. I, 1, 4. — s of the field, V, 10, 1. — s of IUmb, a bricklayer: H5 I, 2, 198. Hml. V, 1, 47. their fates, Caes. I, 2, 139. let every man be m. of his • » M a r ; , 1) the art of a bricklayer: root out the time, Mcb. Ill, 1, 41. the safer sense will ne'er accomwork of m. Sonn. 55, 6. 2) the work of a bricklayer: modate his m. thus, Lr. IV, 6, 82. by sea he is an abcreaking my shoes on the plain m. All's II, 1, 31 ( = solute m. Ant. II, 2, 166. I am the m. of my speeches, paved floor), cf. Mansionry. Cymb. I, 4, 152. you are m. of the feast, 111,6, 29 etc. I u W i orthography of some M. Edd. for Mask Applied to a female: but now I was the lord of this fair mansion, m. of my servants, Mcrch. Ill, 2, 170. in its 2 ^ signif. • a m , 1) solid substance, bulk: winnows the light Peculiar passage: by whose aid, weak —s though ye away, and what hath m. or matter, by itself lies rich be, I have bedimmed the noontide sun, Tp. V, 41 (i.e. in virtue, Troil. I, 3, 29. in such indexes there is seen according to Blackstone: ye are powerful auxiliaries, the baby figure of the giant tn. of things to come at but weak if left to yourselves). 2) the founder or chief of a sect or doctrine: so large, 345. not the dreadful spout which shipmen do the hurricano call, constringed in m. by the almighty Judas kissed his m. H6C V, 7, 33. ween you of better sun, V, 2, 173. this solidity and compound m. (the luck than your m. (Christ) H8 V, 1, 137! cf. tell me, earth) Ilml. Ill, 4,49. this army of such m. and charge, love's m. Ven. 585 (or = lord of the queen of love?). IV, 4, 47. 3) one of perfect skill in an art or science: that 2) great quantity: hath —es of money, Wiv. II, 2, rare Italian m. Wint. V, 2, 105. he is not his crafts 284. have cost a m. of public treasure, H6B I, 3, 134. TO. H4B III, 2, 297. each following day became the Tim. IV, 3, 404. let us pay betimes a moiety of that next days m. H8 I, 1, 17. till by some elder —s, of m. of moan to come, Troil. II, 2, 107. I remember a known honour, I have a voice and precedent of peace, m. of things, Oth. II, 3, 289. to do the act not the Hml. V, 2, 259. you are musics m. Per. II, 5, 30. a world's m. of vanity could make me, IV, 2, 164. m. of fence, Wiv. I, 1, 295 ( " n o t merely a fencingKaaa, the service of the Romish church: at even- master, but a person who had taken his master's deing m. Bom. IV, 1, 38 ( = vespers). M. and by the m. gree in the science. There were three degrees, a used as forms of asseveration; m.: Ado III, 3, 106. master's, a provost's, and a scholar's." Steevens). he H6B II, 1, 101. IV, 7, 9. Bom. IV, 4, 19. Hml. V, 1, will answer the letters' m. Bom. II, 4, 11 (or letter's 62. by the m.: Wiv. IV, 2, 214. Ado IV, 2, 53 (Q m. = writer of the letter?). by m.). H4A II, 4, 400. H5 IV, 3, 115. H6B V, 3, 16. 4) chief, head, leader: being then appointed m. of Hml. Ill, 2, 395. Sometimes omitted in Ff, probably this design, Tp. I, 2, 163. the m. of the cross-bows, as indecent: H4A II, 1, 18. B 11,4,4. 21. Ill, 2, 19. H5 IV, 8, 99. great m. of France, 100 (grand maitre V, 3, 14. Hml. II, 1, 50. Sometimes changed: H4B de la maison du roi). m. of the jewel house, H8 IV, 1, II, 2, 73 (Ff look). Oth. II, 3, 384 (Ff in troth). 110. m. o'the rolls, V, 1, 34. —s of the people (viz Hawaere, subst. slaughter, carnage: H4A V, 4, the tribunes) Cor. II, 2, 55. 81. bees led by their m. 14. H6A I, 1, 135. II, 2, 18. V, 4, 160. B3 II, 4, 53. Tit. V, 1, 15. Used of the commander of a merchant IV, 3, 2. Tit. V, 1, 63. ship, and of a subordinate officer in ships of war: Massacre, vb. to slaughter, to butcher: Tit 1,450. Tp. I, 1, 2. 8. 11. 13. II, 2, 48. V, 99. 237. H6B IV, • • • • J , bulky, large, heavy: your swords are now 1, 12. 15. Mcb. I, 3, 7. Oth. II, 1, 211. Per. IV, 1, 65. Adjeetively, = chief, principal: the m. cord on's too m.for your strengths, Tp. Ill, 3, 67. his codpiece seems as m. as his club, Ado III, 3,147. with m. staples, heart, H8 111, 2, 106. choice and m. spirits, Cues. Ill, Troil. Prol. 17. drawing their m. irons and cutting I, 163. the m. and main exercise, Oth. II, 1, 268. she the web, II, 3, 18. it is a m. wheel, Hml. Ill, 3, 17. has me her quirks, her reasons, her m. reasons, Per. M a s t , the beam by which the sails and rigging IV, 6, 8. of a vessel are supported: Tp. I, 2, 147. Err. I, 1, 80. 5) a teacher: Pilgr. 212. 216. Wiv. IV, 1, 9. 20. 86. Tw. 1, 2, 14. H4B 111, 1, 18. H6C V, 4, 3. 17. H4B II, 1, 202. Per. II, 5, 38. B3 III, 4, 101. Lr. IV, 6, 53. Per. IV, 1, 56. 6) opposed to servant, one who has the command Matt, acorns, food for swine: the oaks bear m., of another: Tp. I, 2, 189. 216. 293. 296. 299. II, 1, the briers scarlet hips, Tim. IV, 3. 422. 297. II, 2, 182. 189. Ill, 2, 124. IV, 1, 34. V, 262. M a s t e r , subst. (sometimes maister in 0 . Edd., Gent. I, 1, 39. 70. 76. IV, 1, 39. Wiv. I, 1, 164. Err. f. i. Merch. II, 2, 34. H6B IV, 1, 12. Tit. V, 1, 15. II, 1, 20. 24. L L L I, 2, 26. 69. 97. Alls II, 3, 194. Bom. II, 4, 11. Sometimes, before names or titles, 196. 199. 261. IV, 5, 75. Tw. I, 5, 271. 313. Mcb. abbreviated to M.: Wiv. II, 2, 48. II, 3, 39. 46. 49. I, 3, 101 etc. etc. 50. 76 etc. L L L V, 2, 84. 87. H8 V, 3, 1. 77. V, 4 , 7) a familiar title of respect: mistress and m., you 4. or to Mr.: Wiv. II, 3, 19. 20. Meas. II, 1, 223. have oft inquired, As III, 4, 50. a plum-tree, m. H6B IV, 3, 5. 9. 14. 23 etc. Err. Ill, 2, 170), 1) one who II, 1, 97. good m. 102. come on, young m. Lr. II, 2, 49. has possession and power of controlling and using; | bless thee, m. IV, 1,41. —s, let him go, Err. IV, 4, 114.

M

699

well, —s, Ado III, 3, 90. 94. 113. 183. IV, 2, 18. V, gave you such a m. report for art and exercise in your 1, 232. V, 3, 24. 29. Mids. I, 2, 16. 101. Ill, 1, 30. defence, Hml. IV, 7, 97; i. e. such a report of master108. IV, 2, 15. 29. 8hr. 1, 2, 189. Cor. V, 6, 135. ship, an account of youT consummate skill. M u t e r l y , adv. like a master, most skilfully Caes. Ill, 2, 115. 126. Hml. II, 2, 440. Oth. II, 3, 176. V, 2, 188 etc. my —», Shr. I, 2, 238. Tw. 11, 3, Tw. II, 4, 23. Wint V, 3, 65. Oth. I, 1, 26. • a i t « r - m l s t r e u (not hyphened in O. Edd.), a 93. H4A II, 2, 80. II, 4, 550. H6A I, 1, 152. Ill, 1, 144. H6B I, 3, 1. I, 4, 1. II, 1, 72. 135. H6C IV, 3, male mistress, one loved like a woman, bnt of male 24. Tit. IV, 3, 35. my noble — s, Cor. V, 6, 133. my sex: the m. of my passion, Sonn. 20, 2. M u t e r - p i e c e , capital performance: confusion very noble and approved good —», Oth. 1,3,77. Placed, in courtesy, before names: Wiv. I, 1, 46. 112. II, 3, now hath done his m. Mcb. II, 3, 71. M u t e r i h l p , 1) supreme skill: when the sea was 39. Meas. II, 1, 104. 106. 126. 154. 271. IV, 3, 5. 9. 14. 23. Err. Ill, 2, 170. IV, 3, 45. LLL I, 2, 167. calm all boats alike showed m. in floating, Cor. IV, 1,7. 2) a title of respect used by low people: what Mids. Ill, 1, 186. 191. 196. As III,'2,12. H4A II, 1, 58. H4B n, 1, 191. H6A II, 4, 43. 128 etc. etc. Be- news with your m.1 Gent. Ill, 1, 280. an't please your fore titles: m. parson, Wiy. I, 1, 9. I, 4, 34. Ill, 1, m. Merch. II, 2, 61. 36. LLL IV, 2, 84. Tw. IV, 2, 13. m. doctor, Wiv. M u t l c k , probably but another form of mastiff: I, 4, 3. II, 2, 48. II, 3, 19. Err. IV, 4, 125. Cymb. 1, when rank Thersites opes his m. jaws, Troil. I, 3, 73 5, 4. m. guest, Wiv. II, 3, 76. m. tapster, Meas. 11, I, (many M. Edd. mastiff). 223. m. constable, Meas. II, 1, 272. Ado III, 3, 17. M u t l f f , a dog of the largest size: H5 III, 7, 151. 178. IV, 2, 8. 35. m. schoolmaster, LLL IV, 2, 87. m 159. Troil. 1, 3, 392. Lr. Ill, 6, 71 young-man, Merch. II, 2, 34. m. Jew, 35. m. sheriff, Match, subst. a joining or meeting of two parH4A II, 4, 555. H6B II, 4, 74. m. lieutenant, H6C tics ; 1) a marriage intended or made: will it be am. t IV, 6, 1. R3 IV, 1, 13. m. mayor, H6C IV, 7, 20. Gent. II, 5, 35. the m. were rich and honourable, 111, peace, m. marquess, B3 I, 3, 255. m. secretary, H8 1, 63. 379. IV, 3, 30. Wiv. IV, 6, 27. Err. Ill, 2, 94. V, 3, 1. 77. good m. porter, V, 4, 4. m. steward, Tim. Ado II, 1, 384. As III, 2, 87. Shr. II, 321. 327. Ill, IV, 2,1 etc. Dogberry and Verges strain their courtesy 2, 244. John II, 430. 447. 450. H6A V, 3, 96. R3 to saying: m. gentleman Conrade; here comes m. Signior I, 3, 102. Tit. I, 244. Rom. Ill, 5, 224. Oth. Ill, 3, Leonato, Ado IV, 2,17. V, 1, 266. 229. IV, 2, 125. V, 2, 205. Cymb. I, 1, 12. With Peculiar phrase: we'll be thy good —s, Wint. between: I would effect the m. between Sir Thario and V,2,188; it being a common petitionary phrase to ask my daughter, Gent. Ill, 2, 23. we have lingered about a superior to be good lord or good master to the sup- a m. between Anne Page and my cousin Slender, Wiv. plicant. cf. from my lord Biron, a good m. of mine, Ill, 2,58. to make a m. = to effect, to bring about a LLL IV, 1, 106 ( = wellwisher, patron). marriage: his grace hath made the m. Ado II, 1, 315. M u t e r , vb. 1) to be master of, to have as ser- II, 2, 38. Shr. IV, 4, 46. John II, 468. Ant. II, 5,67. vant: I will not say thou shall be so well —ed, Cymb. to make up: John II, 541. IV, 2, 383. and rather father thee than m. thee, 395. 2) a game played between two parties; joined with 2) to conquer, to subdue: brag not of thy might, the verbs to make and to play: half won is m. well for —ing her that foiled the god of fight, Yen. 114. made, All's IV, 3, 254. make some pretty m. with servtlely —ed with a leathern rein, 392. — ing what shedding tears, R2 III, 3, 165. what cunning m. have not strives, Compl. 240. Love is your master, for he you made with this jest of the drawert H4A II, 4, 101. — s you, Gent. I, 1, 39. every one can m. a $rief but he hath made a m. with such a wrangler, H5 I, 2, 264. he that has it, Ado III, 2, 28. affects ... not by might if two gods should play some heavenly m. Mercb. Ill, —ed, LLL I, 1, 153. they thatm. so their blood, Mids. 5, 84. assured loss before the m. be played, John III, 1,1, 74. or Charles or something weaker —s thee, As I, 336. V, 2, 106. Rom. Ill, 2,12. Hence = wager: I, 2, 272. not till now ( I loved yon) so much but I I dare you to this m. Cymb. I, 4,158. a m.! = donel might m. it, Troil. Ill, 2, 129. m. the devil, Hml. Ill, agreed! Tp. II, 1, 34. Shr. V, 2, 74. switch and spurs; 4, 169 (residing of the later Qq). to m. Caesar's sword, or I'U cry a m. Rom. II, 4, 74 (?). And = bargain: Cymb. Ill, 1, 31. there I have another bad m. Merch. Ill, 1, 46. I'll 3) to possess, to own: leaves it (his gold) to be make my m. to live; the kiss you take is better than —ed by his young, Lncr. 863. such a beauty as you you give; therefore no kiss, Troil. IV, 5, 37 ( = I'll m. now, Soon. 106, 8. f o r the wealth that the world make a reasonable and valid bargain). —s, Merch. V, 174. as if he —ed there a double 3) a meeting of two in combat: art thou for Hecspirit, H4A V, 2, 64. the promise of his greener days tor's m.1 Troil. V, 4, 28 (the modem: a match for and these he —s now, H5 II, 4, 137. Hector), unequal m., Pyrrhus at Priam drives, Hml. M u t e r 4 * m , dominion, supremacy: which shall II, 2, 493 (Qq matched). to all our nights and days to come give solely sovereign 4) an agreement, appointment: shall we (meet tosway and m. Mcb. I, 5, 71. morrow)? wilt thou make the m.t Ven. 586. the hour M u t e r - f a n n e r , an officer appointed to super- is fixed, the m. is made, Wiv. II, 2, 304. this is the intend the artillery: chief m. am I of this town, H6A body that took away the m.from Isabel, Meas. V, 211. I. 4, 6. this is a m., and made between's by vows, Wint. V, 3, M u t e r - l e a v e r , one who forsakes his master: 137. now shall we know if Gadshill have set a m. Ant. IV, 9, 22. H4A I, 2, 119 (Ff watch), the m. is made-, she seals M u t e r l e i s , having no owner: what mean these it with a courtsy, H6C III, 2, 57. thy hand upon that m. and gory swords, Rom. V, 3, 142. gains or loses m. Troil. IV, 5, 270. you shall ha' it, worthy sir. A m., your sword or mine, or m. leaves both, Cymb. II, 4, 60. sir, Cor. II, 3, 86. Cadwal and I will play the cook M u t e r l y , adj.: he made confession of you and and servant; 'tis our m. Cymb. Ill, 6, 30.

700

M

5) equal, equality, eqnal measure: she is no m. for you, Wiv. Ill, 4, 77 (or = she is not fit to be your wifef). the all-teeing sun ne'er saw her m. Rom. I, 2, 98. it were no m., your nail against his horn, Troil. IV, 5, 46. Clifford slew my steed, but m. to m. I have encountered him and made a prey for kites of the beast he loved so well, H6B V, 2, 10 ( = measure for measure", that my integrity and truth to you might be affronted with the m. and weight of stich a winnowed purity in love, Troil. Ill, 2, 173. Hatch, vb. 1) trans, a) to join, to sort, to pair in any way: a sharp wit —ed with too blunt a will, L L L II, 49. God m. me with a good dancer, Ado 11. 1, 111. —ed in mouth like bells, Mids. IV, 1, 128 / could m. this beginning with an old tale, As 1, 2, 127. here comes another of the tribe: a third cannot be — ed, unless the devil himself turn Jew, Mercb. Ill, 1, 81. this —ed with other, H4A I, 1, 49. such rude society as thou art —ed withal, III, 2, 15. when we have —ed our rackets to these balls, H5 I, 2, 261. his few bad words are —ed with as few good deeds, III, 2, 41. Used of combatants meeting in fight: the harder —ed, the greater victory, H6C V, 1,70. unequal —edPyrrhus at Priam drives, Hml. II, 2, 493 ;Ff match). b) to marry, to make husband or wife: to have him —ed, Shr. IV, 4, 32. his daughter meanly have I —ed in marriage, R3 IV, 3, 37. to have her —ed, Bom. Ill, 5, 180. to m. you where I hate, Lr. I, 1, 213. With to: to m. Sir Thurio to my daughter, Gent. Ill, 1, 62. With with: whom should we m. with Henry, H6A V, 5, 66. c) to compare: to m. us in comparisons with dirt, Troil. I, 3, 194. that fair ... with tender Juliet —ed, is now not fair, Rom. II Prol. 4. to m. you with her country forms, Oth. Ill, 3, 237. d) to equal, to rival: all love's pleasure shall not m. his woe, Ven. 1140. thy odour -—eth not thy show, Sonn. 69, 13. As III, 2, 374. All's II, 1, 213. Wint V, 3, 72. R3 IV, 2, 37. IV, 4, 66. Troil. IV, 5, 259. Tim. 1, 1, 5. Lr. IV, 7, 2. Oth. Ill, 3, 183. Ill, 4, 68. e) to cope with, to oppose as equal in combat: that I can m. her, Mids. Ill, 2, 305. if you oppose yourselves to m. Lord Warwick, H6B V, 1, 156. I would my arms could m. thee in contention, Troil. IV, 5, 205. 'twould be a sight indeed, if one could m. you, Hml. IV, 7, 101. I must go up and down like a cock that nobody can m Cymb. II. 1, 24. 2) intr. a) to marry, to take a husband or a wife: 1 hold it a sin to m. in my kindred, Ado II, 1, 68. half won is match well made; m. and well make it, All's IV, 3, 254. she'll not m. above her degree, Tw. 1, 3, IIP. had he —ed according to his state, II6C II, 2, 152. — ing more for wanton lust than honour, 111, 3, 210. Followed by with: to m. with her, H6B I, 1, 131. b) to cope, to meet in combat: strength —ed with strength, and power confronted power, John II, 330. c) to suit, to tally: as —ing to his youth and vanity, I did present him with the Paris balls, H5 11, 4, 130. M a t c h l e s s , having no equal: LLL II, 7. Troil. IV, 5, 97. M a t e , subst. 1) companion, associate, fellow: bestow thy fawning smiles on equal — s , Gent. Ill, 1, 158. these are my —s, V, 4, 14. our masking —s, Merch. 11, 6, 9. if thou receive me ( J o a n ) for thy warlike m. H6A I, 2, 92. we'11 forward towards War-

wick and hi* — s, H6C IV, 7, 82. when grief hath —s, Lr. Ill, 6, 114. my m. tn empire, A n t V, 1, 43. halfpart, —s, Per. IV, 1, 95. Especially used of seamen: carousing to his —s after a storm, Shr. Ill, 2, 173. leaked is our bark, and we, poor —s, stand on the dying deck, Tim. IV, 2, 20. = an officer in a ship who is subordinate to another: the gunner and his m. Tp. II, 2, 49. thou that art his (the master's) m. H6B IV, 1, 13. 2) husband or wife: his beauteous m. Lucr. 18. thou hast no unkind m. to grieve thee, Err. II, 1, 38. no — s for you, Shr. I, 1, 59. one self m. and m. could not beget such different issues, Lr. IV, 3, 36 (Q> mate and make). Applied to animals: I , an old turtle, will lament my m. Wint. V, 3, 134. as true as turtle to her m. Troil. Ill, 2, 185. 3) fellow, as an appellation of contempt or familiarity: to make a stale of me amongst these —s, Shr. 1, 1, 58. you poor, base, lack-linen m. H4B II, 4, 134. disgraced by an inkhorn m. H6A III, 1, 99. how now, my hardy, stout resolved —s, R3 I, 3, 340. Hate, vb. 1) to marry: mad herself, she's madly — d, Shr. Ill, 2, 246. the hind that would be —d by the lion, All's 1, 1, 102. if she be —d with an equal husband, Tim. I, 1, 140. Play on the word in Err. III, 2, 54. 2) to match, to cope with: I... that in the way of loyalty and truth ... dare m. a sounder man than Surrey can be, H8 III, 2, 274. Mate, rb. to confound, to paralyze, to disable: her more than haste is —d with delays, Ven. 909. not mad, but — d , Err. Ill, 2, 54 (double meaning). I think you are all —d or stark mad, V, 281. that is good deceit which —s him first that first intends deceit, H6B III, 1, 265. my mind she has —d, and amazed my sight, Mcb. V, 1, 86. Haterlal (cf. Immaterial), 1) full of matter, sensible: a m.fool, As III, 3, 32. 2) important: made his business more m. Wint. I, 2, 216. whose absence is no less m. to me than is his father's, Mcb. Ill, 1, 136. which is m. to the tender of our present, Cymb. I, 6, 207. 3 substantial, constituting and forming the matter or substance: she that herself will sliver and disbranch from her m. sap, Lr. IV, 2, 35 (a passage omitted in Ff. Theobald maternal). Mathematics, the science which treats of quantity: Shr. I, 1, 37. II, 56. 82. Matin, morning: the glow-worm shows the m. to be near, Hml. I, 5, 89. Matren, a respectable elderly lady: All's III, 5, 100. Cor. II, 1, 279. Rom. Ill, 2, 11. Tim. IV, 1, 3. IV, 3, 112. Mcb. IV, 3, 62. Hml. Ill, 4, 83. Cymb. Ill, 4, 40. Hatter, subst. 1) substance, materials: dry combustious m. Ven. 1162. in him a plenitude of subtle m , applied to cautels, all strange forms receives, Compl. 302. have I laid my brain in the sun and dried it, that it wants m. to prevent so gross o'erreachingt Wiv. V, 5, 144; cf. I have almost m. enough in me for such an embassage, Ado 1,1,281 (German : ich habe das Zeug dazu; = capacity). I do not know the m.: he's 'rested on the case, Err. IV, 2, 42 (quibbling), of this m. is Cupid's arrow made, Ado III, 1, 21. m. that should feed this fire, John V, 2, 85. what hath mass or m. Troil. I, 3, 29. when it serves for the base m. to illu-

M minate to vile a thing, Caes. 1,3,110. More especially, substance excreted from animal bodies: I have m. in my head against you, Wiv. I, 1, 127. till there be more m. in the thin, L L L III, 120. and quench hit fiery indignation even in the m. of mine innocence (i. e. my tears) John IV, 1, 64. then would come tome m. from him, Troil. II, 1, 9 (quibbling). 2) contents, argument, meaning, sense: what tayett thou to thit tune, m. and method f Meas. Ill, 2, 51. that you swerve not from the tmallett article of it, neither in time, m. or other circumstance, IV, 2, 108. how low soever the m., I hope for high wordt, L L L I, 1, 194. that for a trickty word defy the m. Merch. Ill, 5, 75. the m. it in my head, As III, 5, 137. though there wat no great m. in the ditty, V, 3, 36. although the print be little, the whole m. and copy of the father, Wint. II, 3, 98. doleful m. merrily tel down, IV, 4, 189. I'll read you m. deep and dangerout, H4A I, 3, 190. both in word and m. II, 4, 479. mere wordt, no m. from the heart, Troil. V, 3, 108. conceit, more rich in m. than in wordt, Rom. II, 6, 30. was ever book containing tuch vile m. to fairly boundf III, 2, 83. a book where men may read strange — t , Mcb. I, 5, 64. thy commandment all alone thall live within the book and volume of my brain, unmixed with bater m. Hml. I, 5, 104. what it them.f II, 2, 195. 197. there were no tallets in the linet to make the m. tavoury, nor no m. in the phrate that might indict the author of affectation, 463. there't m. in thete tight, IV, 1, 1 ( F f — s ) . thit nothing it more than m. IV, 5, 174. the phrate would be more german to the m. V,2,166. I love you more than wordt can wield the m. Lr. I, 1, 56. when priettt are more in word than m. III, 2, 81 (Goethe: wo Begriffe fehlen, da ttelU ein Wort zur rechten Zeit tich ein); cf. Merch. III, 5, 75. the m. of the paper, Lr. I, 2, 68. Ill, 5 , 1 6 . thou tpeakett in better phrate and m. than thou didtt, IV, 6, 8. nor cuntnett grow to the m. Ant. II, 2, 25. I do not much ditlike the m., but the manner of hit tpeech, 113. pour out the pack of m. to mine ear. II, 5, 54. Hence — good sense: to speak all mirth and no m. Ado II, 1, 344; cf. he's all my ezercite, my mirth, my m. Wint. I, 2, 166 (quicum joca, qnicura seria). then he't full of m. As II, 1, 68. my wordt are at full of peace at m. Tw. I, 5, 227. then would come tome m. from him, Troil. II, I, 9 (quibbling), morem. with lest art, Hml. II, 2, 95. O m. and impertinency mixed, Lr. IV, 6, 178. 3) argument, theme, ¡subject for conversation or thought: when your countenance filled up his line, then lacked I m. Sonn. 86, 14. the setting of thine eye and cheek proclaim a m. from thee, Tp. II, 1, 230. her wit values itself to highly that to her allm. else seems weak, Ado III, 1, 54. gravelled for lack of m. As IV, 1, 74. more m. for a May morning, Tw. Ill, 4, 156. here is more m. for a hot ¿rain, Wint. IV, 4, 700. like an old tale still, which will have m. to rehearse, V, 2, 67. I will devise m. enough out of this Shallow to keep Prince Harry in continual laughter, I14B V, 1, 87. many a m. hath he told to thee, Tit. V, 3, 164 ( = story). wherein necessity, of m beggared, will nothing stick our perton to arraign, Hml. IV, 5, 92. we had much more monttrous m. of feast, which worthily deterved noting, Ant. II, 2, 187. new m. stillf Cvmb. V, 5, 243. Hence — cause: that is not the m. I challenge thee for, Tw. Ill, 4, 172. there it not in the world either malice

701

or m. to alter it, Wint. I, 1, 37 and pick strong m. of revolt and wrath out oj the bloody finger t endt of John, John III, 4, 167. See below. 4) subject of complaint: I will make a Star-chamber m. of it, Wiv. I, 1, 2. what m. have you against met 125. three umpires in thit m. 139. you hear all thete —t denied, 193. the m. being afoot, keep your instruction, Meas. IV, 5, 3. whom it concern! to hear thit m. forth, V, 255. there were —t against you for your life, H4B I, 2, 151. I read in't looks m. against me, H8 1, 1, 126. the Jang hath found m. against him, III, 2, 21. if they shall chance, in charging you with —t, to commit you, V, 1, 147. toe need not put new m. to hit charge, Cor. Ill, 3, 76. m. whole you have not to make it (a quarrel) with, Ant. II, 2, 53. 5) point in question, affair, business: thy wretched wife mittook the m. to, to tlay hertelf, that should have tlain her foe, Lncr. 1826. open the TO. in brief, Gent. I, 1, 135. 138. how standi the m. with themt II, 5, 21. there't some great m. she'Id employ me in, IV, 3, 3. I will description the m. to you, Wiv. I, 1, 222. the mirth whereof so larded with my m. IV, 6, 14. the m. will be known to-night or never, V, 1,11. leavet unquestioned —t of needful value, Meas. I, 1, 56. few of any wit in tuch — t , II, 1, 282. well, the m.t II, 2, 33. as the m. now stands, III, 1, 201. the phrase is to the m. V, 90. I will debate thit m. at more leisure, Err. IV, 1, 100. I will to fathion the m. that Hero thall be absent, Ado II, 2, 47. speaks a little off the m. Ill, 5, 11; cf. this m. of marrying hit king't daughter . . . wordt him a great deal from the m. Cymb. 1, 4, 17 (from the point, from that whioh most really be taken into account, in short from reality), we will talk no more of thit m. L L L 111, 119. that it the very defect of the m. Merch II, 2, 152. as the m. falls, III, 2, 204. I came to acquaint you with a m. As I, 1, 129. her m. was, she loved your son, All's I, 3, 114. trust him not in m. of heavy consequence, II, 5, 49. on a forgotten m. we can hardly make distinction of our hand, Tw. II,3, 174. my m. hath no voice but to your own ear, III, 1, 99. do you know of this m.t III, 4, 284. heavy — s ! Wint. Ill, 3, 115. a million of beating may come to a great m. IV, 3, 63 (the clown's speech), to bring this m. to the wished end, H6A 111, 3, 28. 6ut to the m. that we have in hand, H6B I, 3, 162; = let us come to the subject, to the question; cf. Hml. Ill, 2, 336 and Cymb. V, 5, 169. I have great —s to impart to thee, H6B III, 2, 299. m. of marriage was the charge he gave me, H6C III, 3, 258. M hence to London on a serious TO. V, 5, 47; cf. Lr. IV, 5, 8. in deep designs and —s of great moment, R3 III, 7, 67. never suffers m. oj the world enter his thoughts, Troil. II, 3, 196. I tcarce have leiture to salute you, my m. is to rath, IV, 2, 62. never trouble Peter for the m. Rom. IV, 4, 18. I meddle with no tradesmen's —t, nor women's —s, Caes. I, 1, 25. that m. is antwered directly, III, 3, 25. and like a neutral to his will and m., did nothing, Hml. II, 2, 503. I meant country — s , III, 2, 1 2 3 . 0 / worldly —s and direction, Oth. 1,3,300 (Ff m.). state — t , III, 4, 155. I could have given letsTO.a better ear, Ant. II, 1,31. this m. of marrying his king's daughter, Cymb. I, 4, 14. I am amazed with m. IV, 3, 28 etc. 6) weight, importance, consequence: there may beTO.in it, Wint. IV, 4, 874 ( = something may be made of i f . there's m. in't indeed, if he be angry, Oth. Ill, 4, 139. Mostly with a negative; no m. = it is all

702

M

M a a d l l n , Magdalen: All's V, 3, 68. one, never mind: no at. where, Ven. 715. no m. then, although my foot did stand upon the farthest earth, H a n d « , in spite o f : T w . Ill, 1, 163. Tit. IV, 2, Sonn. 44,5. no m., tinee they have left their viands be-110. L r . V, 3, 131. hind, Tp. Ill, 3, 40. 50. no m. who's displeased, Gent. H a u l , to hack: Til so m. you and your toastingII,7, 66. nay then, no » . Ill, 1, 58. W i r . II, 2, 149. iron, John IV, 3, 99. 'tis sport to m. a runner, Ant. IV, Merch. V, 50. As II, 3, 30. All's IV, 1,4. R2 V, 2, 58 7, 14. • a u n d , a hand-basket: Compl. 36. etc. it is no m.: Gent. II, 3, 41. W i v . I, 1, 131. 133. M a u r i t a n i a , country in A f r i c a : Oth. IV, 2, 229. V,3, 10. A d o V, 1, 100. T w . Ill, 2, 46. H6B III, 1, • a w , stomach; applied to animals: Ven. 602. 263. Caes. I, 1, 73 etc. that's no m.: Ado V, 1, 81. A s III, 2, 176. IV, 3, 27 etc. With for, in the language Mcb. HI, 4, 73. IV, 1, 23. to human beings: Meas. of the vulgar: no m. for the dish, Meas. II, 1, 98. no 111, 2, 23. Err. I, 2, 66. John V, 7, 37. H5 II, 1, 52. m. for your foins, Lr. IV, 6, 251. she doth talk in her Tim. Ill, 4, 52. Metaphorically: thou detestable m. sleep. It's no m.for that, so she sleep not in her talk, (the grave) Rom. V, 3,45. M a x i m , axiom, established truth: Troil. I, 2, 318. Gent. Ill, 1, 334. it is no m. ver dat, Wiv. I, 4, 121 M a y , subst. the fifth month of the year, the month (Dr. Cains' speech), though I struck him first, yet it's no m. for that, T w . IV, 1, 38. 'tis no m. for his swell- of vernal beauty: Sonn. 18, 3. Compl. 102. Pilgr. ings, H5 V, 1, 17. who, my masterf Nay, it's no m. 228 and L L L IV, 3, 102. Pilgr. 374. W i v . Ill, 2, 70. Ado I, 1, 194. V, 1, 76. L L L I, 1, 106. Mids. I, 1,167. for that, Cor. IV, 5, 173. 7) any thing that has happened and caused diffi- IV, 1, 138. As IV, 1, 148. T w . HI, 4, 156. R2 V, 1, 79. culty or disturbance; in the phrase what is the m. f H 4 A IV, 1, 101. H6B I, 1, 49. Troil. 1, 2, 191. Hml. Tp. II, 1, 309. II, 2, 59. Gent. II, 3, 38. V, 4, 87. W i v . III, 3, 81. IV, 5, 157. • a y , vb. (iropf. might; mought in H6C V, 2, 45), II, 1, 43. Ill, 3, 100. Meas. II, 1, 46. 11, 2, 6. Err. IV, 2, 41. Merch. V, 146. As II, 3, 16. All's 111, 2, 37. 1) denoting subjective ability, = can: she hath asR2 V, 2, 73. H4B II, 1, 47. Troil. IV, 2, 60. Hml. II, sayed as much as may be proved, Ven. 608. whom 2,195 etc. etc. the m.* alone, in the same sense: Cor. stripes may move, not kindness, Tp. I, 2, 345. means I, 1, 57. HI, 1, 28. Ant. II, 7, 62. Cymb. IV, 2, 192. much weaker than you may call to comfort you, V, 147. what is the m. with theel T w . Ill, 4, 27. Oth. IV, 2, nor have I seen more that I may call men than you and 98. With a clause following, = reason, cause: what's my father, III, 1, 51. if any man may (win her) you the m. that you have such a February face t Ado V, 4, may as soon as any, W i v . II, 2, 245. cutting a smaller hair than may be seen, L L L V, 2, 258. it stands so 40. All's I, 3,156. Cor. Ill, 3, 58. 8) thing, in a very general sense: what impossible that I may hardly tarry so long, Shr. Ind. 2, 127. you, m. will he make easynextf Tp. II, 1, 88. most poor—s cousin Nevil, as I may remember, H4B 111, 1, 66. I point to rich ends, III, 1, 3. if — s grow to your li- am coming on, to venge me as I may, H5 I, 2, 292. kings, Wiv. I, 1, 79. an there be any m. of weight chan- yet, as we may, we'll meet both thee and tVai-wick, H6C ces, Ado III, 3, 91. beg a greater m. L L L V, 2, 207. IV, 7, 86. with all the heed I may, R3 III, 1, 187 ( F f I think of as many —s as he, As II, 5, 37. it is a hard can), with all the humbleness I may, I greet your hom.for friends to meet, III, 2, 194. to stop up the dis- nours from Andronicus, Tit. IV, 2, 4. your desire to pleasure he hath conceived against your son, there is know what is between us, o'ermaster it as you may, no fitter m. All's IV, 5, 81. 0, what better m. breeds Hml. I, 5, 140 etc. Likewise in negative and interrofor you than I have named, John III, 4, 170. instinct gative sentences: may it be that thou shouldst think it is a great m. H 4 A II, 4, 301. some eight-penny m. Ill, heavyt Ven. 155. what bargains may I make, still to 3, 119. my thoughts aim at a farther m. H6C IV, 1, be sealing t 512. what may a heavy groan advantage 125. he beseeched me to entreat your majesties to hear thee 1 950. may my pure mind with the foul act disand see the m. Hml. HI, 1, 23 (i. e. the piece), though pense ... . may any terms acquit me from this chance 1 thou deny me a m. of more weight, Ant. I, 2, 71. no Lucr. 1704. 1706. may I not go out ere he comet Wiv. such m. - a) nothing of the kind: in sleep a king, IV, 2, 51. how may I do it? Meas. IV, 2, 175. and may but waking no such m. Sonn. 87, 14. I see no such m. it be that you have quite forgot a husband1 s officet Ado I, 1, 192. b) it is not the case, not at all, by no Err. Ill, 2, 1. may this be sot Ado III, 2, 120. may means: the sport will be, when they hold one an opi- you stead met will you pleasure met Merch. I, 3, 7. nion of another's dotage, and no such m. Ado II, 3, 225. it is a surplus of your grace, which never my life may they swore that you were well-nigh dead for me. 'tis no last to answer, Wint. V, 3, 8. may this be possiblet may such m. V, 4, 82. art thou a churchman t No such m., this be true t John V, 4, 21. such beastly transformaT w . Ill, 1,5. the big year is thought with child.. . and no tion ... as may not be without much shame retold, H 4 A such m. H4B Ind. 15. no such m., you are wide, Troil. I, 1, 45. may it be possiblet H5 II, 2, 100 etc. Can HI, 1,97. we'll wait upon you. No such m. Hml. 11,2,274. and may alternating: can this cockpit hold the vasty fields of France t or may we cram within this wooden M a t t h e w , name in H6R IV, 5, 11. MftMaek, a kind of pickaxe: Tit. IV, 3, 11. Rom. 0 the very casques, H5 Prol. 12. The modern use of can and may quite inverted: whom may you else opV, 3, 22. 185. pose, that can from Hector bring his honour off, if not Mattreaa, a quilted bed: Ant. II, 6, 71. M a t u r e , (miture and matire), perfected by time, Achilles t Troil. I, 3, 333. ripe: Wint. I, 1,27. Troil. IV, 5,97. Cor. IV, 3, 26. Impf. might (not as a subjunctive, but as an indiLr. IV, 6, 282. Ant. I, 4, 31. Cymb. I, 1, 48. V, 4, 52. cative, = I was able): not only with what my revenue M a t u r i t y , ripeness: Sonn. 60, 6. Troil. I, 3, 317. yielded, but what my power might else exact, T p . 1,2, Mauchus, see Malchus. 99. when 1 might behold addrest the king, L L L V, 2, M a u d , diminutive of Magdalen; name of a fe- 92. but I might see young Cupid's fiery shaft quenched male servant: Err. Ill, 1, 31. in the chaste beams of the watery moon, Mids. II, 1,

M

703

161. from off our towers we might behold the onset and II, 1, 204. 285. Gent. II, 1, 173. Ill, 2, 29. H4B 111, 1, retire, John II, 325. but at last I well might hear, 45 (might always subjunctive), you may, you may = H6C V, 2,46. when he might act the woman in the scene, do, go on, divert yourself at my expense: Trail. Ill, COT. II, 2, 100. what we did was mildly as we might, 1,118 and Cor. II, 3, 39 (cf. you may thank yourself, Tit. I, 475 etc. Interrogative and negative sentences: Tp. II, 1, 123, = the imper. thank yourself). 4) = to be allowed, to be authorized: the poor mightst thou perceive in his eye that he did plead in eamestt Err. IT, 2, 2. such a storm that mortal ears fool prays her that he may depart, Ven. 578. if your might hardly endure the din, Shr. I, 1, 178. might you maid may be so bold, Lucr. 1282. for that vast of night not know she would do as she has donef All's III, 4, that they may work, Tp. I, 2, 327. and may I say to 2. and might by no suit gain our audience, H4B IV, 1, thee, this pride of hers hath drawn my love from her, 76. like a clamour in a vault, that mought not be dis- (rent. Ill, 1, 72. thou dost but what thou mayst, H6A tinguished, B6C V, 2, 45. which till to-night I ne'er 1, 3, 86. Meas. 1,4, 9. Mids. I, 2, 53. Bom. IV, 1, 19 might see before, Oth. U, 3, 236 etc. etc. I may not = I am not allowed, I must not: I 2) denoting objective possibility, and synonymous may not evermore acknowledge thee, Sonn. 36, 9- it to the adv. perhaps: the season once more Jits, that may not be, Gent. IV, 4, 131. I may not go in without love-sick Love by pleading may be blest, Ven. 328. then your worship, Wiv. I, 1, 288. my haste may not admit happy I, that love and am beloved where I may not re- it, Meas. I, 1, 63. you may, I may not, I, 4, 9. you may move nor be removed, Sonn. 25, 14. I may be straight, not so extenuate his offence, II, 1, 27. such a one at a though they themselves be bevel, 121, 11. if thou re- man may not speak of without he say Sir-reverence, memberest aught ere thou earnest here, how thou earnest Err. Ill, 2, 92. which princes, would they, may not dishere, thou mayst, Tp. 1, 2, 52. he may live, II, 1, annul, I, 1, 145. passed sentence may not be recalled, 113. to be your fellow you may deny me, III, 1, 85. 148. no woman may approach his silent court, LLL II, hinder them from what this ecstasy may now provoke 24. you may not come in my gates, 172. V, 2, 675. 712. them to, III, 3, 109. as little as may be possible, Gent. Merch. I, 2, 24. Shr. Ill, 2, 200. Tw. V, 104. Wint. II, 1, 2, 82. I may make my case as Claudia's, Meas. IT, 2, 7. John 111, 1, 66. B2 II, 3, 145. V, 2, 70. H4A IV, 2, 178. for which live long to thank both heaven 3, 1. H6A I, 3, 7. 18. II, 2, 47. V, 3, 188. H6C I, 1, and me. You may so in the end, All's IT, 2, 68. worst 263. IT, 6, 6. R3 IT, 1, 16. 27. T, 3, 94. Cor. T, 2, in this royal presence may I speak, R2 IV, 115. a 5. Rom. Ill, 2, 31. T, 1, 82. Mcb. Ill, 1, 122. Hml. score of ewes may be worth ten pounds, H4B III, 2, I, 3,19. Lr. IV, 5, 17. Ill, 7, 24. 57. happily met.... That may be, when I may be a Might: no rightful plea might plead for justice wife. That may be must be, Rom. IT, 1, 19. 20 etc. there, Lucr. 1649. a tailor might scratch her where'er In negative and interrogative sentences: why may not she did itch, Tp. II, 2, 55. who mutually hath answered he be here againt Wiv. IT, 2, 153. and yet enough may my affection, so far forth as herself might be her choonot extend so far as to the lady, Merch. II, 7, 28. if ser, Wiv. IV, 6, 11. I might not be admitted, Tw. I, you have 'any music that may not be heard, Oth. Ill, 1, 1, 24. my brother might not claim him, John 1, 126. in 16. nuiy you suspect who they should be that have thus wholesome wisdom he might not but refuse you, Oth. mangledyout T, 1, 78 etc. Similarly might: who might HI, 1, 50. be your mother, that you insult... over the wretched1 5) sometimes denoting, quite as the German motAs III, 5, 35. what I will not, that 1 cannot do. But gen, an inclination or desire, = to choose, to please: might you do't and do the world no wrong, if so your may your grace speak of it, Meas. I, 3, 6. construe my heart were touched with that remorse as mine is to him t speeches better, if you may. Then wish me better; I Meas. II, 2, 53. will give you leave, LLL V, 2, 341. I never may beIt may be and may be = possibly, perhaps: it may lieve thete antic fables, Mids. V, 2. 'tis well for thee, be I shall raise you by and by, Caes. IT, 3, 247. 251. that, being unseminared, thy freer thoughts may not fly may be the knave bragged, Wiv. Ill, 3, 211. may be forth of Egypt, Ant. I, 5,12. since the cuckoo build* not he telle you true, 111,4, 11. may be he will relent, Meas. for himself, remain in it as thou mayst, II, 6, 29. woe II, 2, 3. IV, 1, 23. All's III, 5, 72. John III, 4, 160. are we, sir, you may not live to wear all your true folH4AIV, 3,113. Cymb. II, 4, 104. Per. T, 1, 88. lowers out, IV, 14, 133. and longer might have stayed, Be it as it may = however it be: H6C I, 1, 194. if crooked fortune had not thwarted me, Gent. IT, 1, be it as it may be, I will marry thee, As III, 3, 42. 21 ( = would), majesty might never yet endure the that shall be as it may, H5 II, 1, 7. but come what may, moody frontier of a servant brow, H4A I, 3,18. who Tw. II, 1, 48. come what come may, Mcb. I, 3, 146. intercepts my expedition f O, she that might have interchance it as it may, Tim. T, 1, 129. thrive I as I may, cepted thee, by strangling thee in her accursed womb, Merch. II, 7, 60. come again when you may, Err. HI, R3 IV, 4, 137. I might not this believe without the sen1, 41. cf. the jargon of Nym in H5 II, 1, 15. 17. 23. sible and true avouch of mine own eyes, Hml. I, 1, 56. so loving that he might not beteem the teinds of 25. 60. 62. 132. 3) denoting opportunity or liberty offered: so of heaven visit her face too roughly, 1, 2, 141. 5, 177. concealed sorrow may be said, Ven. 333. yet mayst 6) Used to supply the place of the subjunctive thou well be tasted, 128. where thou mayst knock a nail mood: vouchsafe my prayer may know, Tp. I, 2, 423. into his head, Tp. Ill, 2, 69. there thou mayst brain him, and that you will some good instruction give how I may 96. to lesson me, how I may undertake a journey to my bear me here, 425. any villany that may not sully the loving Proteus, Gent. II, 7, 6. Men mightst thou pause, chariness of our honesty, Wiv. II, 1, 102. give leave Ven. 137. might I but through my prison once a day that we may bring you something on the way, Meas. I, behold this maid, Tp. I, 2, 490. your father might have 1, 62. I pray she may (persuade) I, 2, 192. God grant kept this calf, John I, 123. that almost mightst have it may with thee in true peace live, II4B IV, 5, 220. coined me into gold, H5 II, 2, 98. Tp. I, 2, 415. 417. any thing I have is his to use, so Somerset may die.

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H6B V, 1, S3, beseech you, I may he consul, Cor. II, 3,110. I do entreat that we may tup together, Oth. IV, 1, 273. if thou dost break her virgin knot before all sanctimonious ceremonies may be ministered, Tp. IV, 1, 16. he shall know you better if I may live to report you, Mens. Ill, 2, 172. if you may please to think I love the king, Wint. IV, 4. 532; cf. may it please you, Gent. I, 3, 39; Meas. Ill, 2, 209; Err. V, 136. one that will play the devil with you, an a may catch you and your hide alone, John II, 136. I'll never trouble you, if I may spy them, H6A I, 4, 22. lest your true love may seem false in this, my name be buried, Sonn. 72,9. season your admiration for a while till I may deliver, Hml. I, 2, 193 etc. I had rather it would please you I might be whipped, Meas. V, 512. would they not wish the feast might ever last, Veil. 447. we will make it our suit that the wrestling may not go forward, As I, 2, 193. tell me if this might be a brother, Tp. I, 2, 118. his tongue had not offended so today, if Cassius might have ruled, Caes. V, 1, 47. I jeared lest I might anger thee, Tp. IV, 169. fearing lest my jealous aim might err, Gent. Ill, 1, 28. why dost thou askf lest I might be too rash, Meas. II, 2, 9. Ado I, 1, 316. H4B IV, 5, 212. H6B 111, 2, 263. and canopied in darkness sweetly lay, till they might open to adorn the day, Lucr. 399 etc. Oftenest after that, to denote a purpose ( = in order that): thou art bound to breed, that thine may live when thou thyself art dead, Ven. 172. that the star-gazers may say, the plague is banished, 510. show me the strumpet, that with my nails her beauty I may tear, Lucr. 1472. 1603. Sonn. 10, 9. 14. Tp. IV, 104. 194. Gent. 1, 1, 138. 1, 2 , 4 9 . 1,3, 35. 111,1,33. IV, 1, 54. V, 4, 82. Wiv. II, 2, 194. Meas. I, 2, 165. Err. I, 1,34. V, 40. 158. Merch. Ill, 2 , 4 6 . All's I, 3, 39. H6A II, 2, 14. H6B II, 1, 75. H6C IV, 1, 122 etc. each trifle under truest bars to throw, that to my use it might unused stay, Sonn. 48, 3. and therefore from my face she turns my foes (her eyes) that they elsewhere might dart their injuries, 139, 12. that she might think me some untutored youth, 138, 3. Tp. Ill, 1, 35. Gent I, 2, 68. 80. IV, 2, 43. H6A II, 5, 32. H6C V, 5, 23 etc. That omitted: Love made these hollows, if himself were slain, he might be buried in a tomb so simple, Ven. 244. direct mine arms I may embrace his neck, I16A II, 5, 37. Used to express a wish: long may they kiss each other, Ven. 505. well may I get aboard! Wint. Ill, 3, 57. long mayst thou live, R3 I, 3, 204. prophet may you be, Troil. Ill, 2, 190. may you a better feast never behold, Tim. Ill, 6, 98. well may it sort that this portentous figure comes armed through our watch, Hml. 1, 1, 109 (see above may it please you). Lord worshipped might he be! Merch. II, 2, 98 (old Gobbo's speech). In subordinate clauses: which I wish may always answer your own wish, Ven. Ded. 7. if ever the duke return, as our prayers are he may, Meas. Ill, 2, 164. were nou) the general of our gracious empress, as in good time he may, from Ireland coming, H5 V Prol. 31. who may I rather challenge for unkindness than pity for mischance, Mcb. Ill, 4, 42. 0, that our night of woe might have remembered my deepest sense how hard true sorrow hits, Sonn. 120, 9. would thou mightst lie drowning, Tp. I, 1, 60. would I might but ever see that man, I, 2, 168 etc. 7) Joined to adverbs denotiig motion, = to have

opportunity or liberty to g o : shine comforts from the east, that I may back to Athens by day-light, Mids. Ill, 2, 433. you may away by night, II4A HI, 1, 142. cf. Shall, Will etc. M a y - d a y , the first of May, a day of festivity in old England: All's II, 2, 25. H8 V, 4, 15. M a 7 * m « r n , used as an image of fresh and promising youth: in the very M. of his youth, H51,2, 120. Mayer, the chief magistrate of a corporation: H5 V Chor. 25. H6A I, 3, 59. 86. H6BIV, 3, 16 (the — s sword). H6C IV, 7, 20. R3 111, 1, 17. Ill, 5, 13. 73. Ill, 7, 28. 44. 45. 66. IV, 2, 107. lord m. H6BIV, 5, 4. R3 III, 5, 14. 71. Ill, 7, 55. H8 II, 1, 151. V, 5, 70. May-pale, a pole erected and danced round on the first of May: thou painted m. Mids. Ill, 2, 296. Hazard (the later Ff mazzard) the head, contemptuously: knocked about the m. with a sexton's spade, Hml. V, 1, 97. Til knock you o'er the m. Oth. II, 3, 155. Maze, subst. a labyrinth: one encompassed with a winding m. Lucr. 1151. here's a m. trod, Tp. Ill, 3, 2. as strange a m. as e'er men trod, V, 242. the quaint —s in the wanton green, Mids. II, 1, 99. I have thrust myself into this m. Shr. 1, 2, 55. Mazed, perplexed, bewildered: the m. world now knows not which is which, Mids. II, 1, 113. a little herd of England's timorous deer, m. with a yelping kennel of French curs, H6A IV, 2, 47. many m. considerings, 118 II, 4, 185. Maesard, see Mazard. Me, see I. Meacack, spiritless, pusillanimous, hen-pecked: how tame, when men and women are alone, a m. wretch can make the curstest shrew, Shr. II, 315. Mead, (rhyming to dread in Ven. 636); flat low land covered with grass: Ven. 636. Lucr. 1218. Tp. IV, 1, 63. Mids. II, 1, 83. Shr. V, 2, 139. H5 V, 2, 48. 54. Tit. 11,4,54. Lr. 1, 1,66. Meadaw, the same: Sonn. 33, 3. L L L V, 2, 907. Tit. Ill, 1, 125. m. fairies, Wiv. V, 5, 69 (cf. Mids. II, 1, 9. 99). Meagre, 1) thin, lean : Ven. 931. John III, 4, 85. H6B III, 2, 162. Rom. V, 1, 40. 2) poor, barren: thou m. lead, Merch. HI, 2, 104. turning the m. cloddy earth to glittering gold, John 111,

1, 80.

Meal, repast: Meas. IV, 3, 161. Err. V, 74. LLL 1, 1, 40. H5 III, 7, 161. H6B IV, 10, 66. Troil. II, 3, 45. Cor. IV, 4, 14. Tim. I, 2, 51. Caes. II, 1, 284. Ant. IV, 2, 10. we will eat our m. in fear, Mcb. Ill, 2, 17. hath made his m. on thee, Tp. II, 1, 113. I had made my m. Cymb. HI, 6, 52. Meal, flour: m. and bran, Cor. Ill, 1, 322. Cymb. IV, 2, 27. Meal, in Inchmeal, Limb-meal, q. v. Mealed, sprinkled, tainted: were he m. with that which he corrects, then were he tyrannous, Meas. IV, 2, 86. Mealy, covered as with meal: men, like butterflies, show not their m. wings but to the summer, Troil. III, 3, 79. Mean, subst. 1) that which is between: and so 1 chide the —« that keeps me from it, H6C III, 2, 141. let not the piece of virtue, which is set betwixt us as the cement of our love, to keep it builded, be the ram to batter the fortress of it; for better might we have loved

M

705

without this m., if on both parts this be not cherished, 2, 24. fortune made such havoc of my —s, Ado IV, 1. Ant. Ill, 2, 32. (cf. Meantime). 197. 201. Merch. I, 1, 125. 138. I, 3, 17. Ill, 2, 266. 2 middle station, mcdiam, mediocrity: it it no IV, 1, 377. As 1, 2, 259. II, 7, 73. Ill, 2, 26. All's mean happiness to be seated in the m. Merch. !, 2, 8. V, 1, 35. R2 II, 1, 39. H4B I, 2, 159. I, 3, 1. 7. IV, shall toe disturb him, since he keeps no m. f H6A I, 2, 4, 64. V, 5, 71. R 3 IV, 2, 37. H8 IV, 2, 153. Tim. 121. they know, by the height, the lowness, or the m., V, 4, 20 etc. our —s secure us, Lr. IV, 1, 22, i. e. our faculties, the advantages which we enjoy, make us seif dearth or foison follow, Ant. II, 7, 22. 3) in music, the tenor or counter-tenor: there cure and careless. 6) opportunity; preparations made and measures wanteth but a m. to Jill your song. The m. is drowned with your unruly base, Gent. 1, 2, 95. 96. he can sing taken to effect something: tell me some good m. how a m. most meanly, L L L V, 2, 328. they are most of I may undertake a journey, Gent. II, 7 , 5 . many a man would take you at your word and go indeed, having so them —•» and bases, Wint. IV, 3, 46. 4) that which is used to effect a purpose: seek in good a m. Err. I, 2, 18. Oftener plur. — s : pausing for vain some happy m. to end a hapless life, Lucr. 1045. —s to mourn some newer way, Lucr. 1365. since they they have devised a m. hor he her chamber-window will did plot the —s that dusky Dis my daughter got, T p . ascend, Gent. Ill, 1, 38. that there were no earthly m. IV, 89. I had never so good —s as desire to make myto save him, Meas. II, 4, 95. nature is made better by self acquainted with you, Wiv. II, 2, 189. he gains by no m. but nature makes that m. Wint. IV, 4, 89. our death that has such —s to die, Err. Ill, 2, 51. I will sacks shall be a m. to sack the city, H 6 A 111, 2, 10. come after you with what good speed our means will we'll devise a m. to reconcile you all unto the king, make us — s , All's V, 1, 35. cf. though time seem so H 6 B IV, 8, 71. that m. is cut from thee. Tit. II, 4, 40. adverse and —s unfit, 26. you would not give —s for sudden m. of death, Rom. Ill, 3, 45. devise some m. to this uncivil rule, Tw. II, 3, 132. let me have open —s rid her from this second marriage, V, 3, 240 (reading to come to them, R3 IV, 2, 77. bid her devise some —s of Qi). I'll devise a m. to draw the Moor out of the to come to shrift, Rom. II, 4, 192. his —s of death, way, Oth. Ill, 1,39. a swifter m. shall outstrike thought, his obscure burial, Hml. IV, 5, 213. give this fellow A n t IV, 6, 35. Used of persons: be my m. to bring me some —s to the king, IV, 6, 13 (some opportunity to wh'-re to speak with Madam Silvia, Gent. IV, 4, 113. have access to him), to make —s = to contrive meamake the Douglas' son your only m. for powers in Scot- sures and opportunities: to make such —s for her as land, H4A I, 3, 261. you may deny that you were not thou hast done, and leave her on such slight conditions, the m. of my Lord Bastings' late imprisonment, R3 I, Gent. V, 4, 137. make some good —s to speak with 3, 90 (Qq cause), no place will please me so, no m of him, R3 V, 3 , 4 0 (Qq bear my good night to him), what death, as here by Caesar, and by you cut o f f , Caes. Ill, —s do you make to him t Cy mb. II, 4, 3 ( = what steps do you take with respect to him? what have yon 1, 161. Oftenerused in theplur.: these—s, as frets upon done to gain his favour?). In a bad sense: one that an instrument, shall tune our heart-strings, Lucr. made —s to come by what he hath, R3 V, 3, 248 ( = 1140. fortify yourself in your decay with —t more laid plots, used indirqrt practices). blessed than my barren rhyme, Soon. 16, 4. — s to By —s, used 1) to denote instrumentality, = live, Tp. II, 1, 50. supportable to make the dear loss through, by: by the woman's — s , Meas. II, 1, 84. have I —s much weaker, V, 146. Gent. II, 4, 182. murdered by Suffolk and the Cardinal Beauforts —s, Meas. II, 4, 48 (to put metal in restrained —s to make H6B III, 2, 124. mischance unto my state by Suffolk's a false one). Ill, 2, 22. Merch. IV, 1, 81. As II, 3, — », 284. our brother is imprisoned by your — s , R3 25. 51. John IV, 2, 219. R2 I, 4, 40. Ill, 2, 29. 32. 1, 3, 78. as if his sons have by my —l been butchcred H6A V, 1, 8. Oth. IV, 2,112 etc. etc. Used of medi- wrongfully, Tit. IV, 4, 55. either say thou'lt dot, or caments: till I have used the approved —* I have, thrive by other —s, Lr. V, 3, 34. by your virtuous —s, Err. V, 103. healed by the same —s, Merch. Ill, 1, 65. Oth. 111,4, 111. with all appliances and —s, H4B III, 1, 29. use —s 2) to denote way and manner: and have by underfor her recovery, H6C V, 5, 45. by using —s, I lame hand —s laboured to dissuade him, As I, 1, 146. till the foot of our design, Cor. IV, 7, 7. Used of persons: he hath ta'en thy life by some indirect —s or other, 159. being the agents, or base second — s , H4A I, 3, 165. hast thou by secret —s used intercession to obtain a leathose that were the —s to help him, R 3 V, 3, 249 ( = gue, H6A V, 4, 147. by wicked —s, H6B III, 1, 52. instruments;. I have advertised him by secret —s, H6C IV, 5, 9. by The plural form used as a singular noun: other fair or foul — s, IV, 7, 14. by what safe — s , 52. by —s was none, Err. I, 1, 76. who wins me by that —s vile —s, Caes. IV, 3, 71. by the worst —s, Mcb. Ill, I told you, Merch. II, 1, 19. by this —s, Wint. IV, 4, 4, 135. cf. send me your prisoners with the speediest 632. II6A 1, 2, 63. a — s, Wint. IV, 4, 865. H6C III, —s, II4A I, 3, 120 as soon as possible\ By all — s 3, 39. strain what other —s is left unto us, Tim. V, = certainly, without fail: Wiv. IV, 2, 230. Tw. Ill, 1, 230. remove the — s that makes us strangers, Mcb. 2, 62. by any —s — anyhow: if I can by any —s IV, 3. 163 (but cf. Abbott's Grammar p. 235). there light on a Jit man, Shr.'l, 1, 112. Wint. V, 2, 183. is - s, Lr. IV, 4, 11. Rom. I, 1, 151. by no —s = not at all: Meas. Ill, 1, 5) that which is at a person's disposal; resources, 15. Ado II, 1, 364. Mids. I, 1, 120. As III, 2, 326. power, wealth, allowance: would try him to the ut- Tim. I, 2, 8. Caes. II, 1, 75. 143. Hml. I, 3, 61. 1,4, most, had ye m. H8 V, 3, 146. With the exception of 62. Ill, 1, 6. Lr. II, 1, 44. IV, 3, 42. by some —s this single passage, only used in the plural: that did somehow or other: but end it (my life) by some —s not better for my life provide than public — s , Sonn. for Imogen, Cymb. V, 3, S3, by this —s = thus: my I l l , 4. either in my mind or in my — s , Wiv. II, 2, letters, by this —s being there so soon as you arrive, 211. let her have needful, but not lavish —s, Meas. II, Wint. IV, 4, 632. by what —s and by which —s —

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in what or which manner: by what —* gotst thou to be releaMtdt H6A I, 4, 25. by which —s I saw . . . , Wint. IV, 4, 614. 3) to assign a canse: we stand opposed by such —* as you yourself have forged against yourself by unkind usage, H4A T, 1, 67 ( = for such reasons, from snch motives), by this —s your lady is forthcoming yet at London, H6B II, 1, 178 ( = in consequence of this), did he not levy great sums for soldiers' pay in France, and never sent tit by —s whereof the towns each day revolted, H6B 111, 1, 63. stayed the soldiers' pay, by —s whereof his highness hath lost France, 106. I have much mistook your passion; by —s whereof this breast of mine hath buried thoughts of great value, Caet. I, 2, 49. By the —s, in the same sense: he is white-livered and red-faced; by the —s whereof a' faces it out, butjights not, H5 III, 2, 34. he hath a killing tongue aid a quiet sword; by the —s whereof a.' breaks words and keeps whole weapons, 37. their inhibition comes by the —s of the late innovation, Hml II, 2, 347. M e a n , adj. 1) common, vulgar, trivial, insignificant: a very m. meaning, Shr. V, 2, 31. all in vain are these m. obsequies, H6B III, 2, 146. 'tis a cause that hath no m. dependence upon our joint and several dignities, Troil. II, 2, 192. hadst thou no poison mixed, no sharp-ground knife, no sudden mean of death, though ne'er so m., but 'banished' to kill met Rom. Ill, 3, 45. some natural notes about her body, above ten thousand —er moveables would testify, Cymb. II, 2, 29. if one ofm. affairs may plod it in a week, why may not I glide thither in a dayt III, 2, 52. 2) low , humble, poor: that —er men should vaunt that golden hap, Lucr. 41. this my m. task, Tp. Ill, 1, 4. my —er ministers their several kinds have done, III, 3, 87. IV, 1, 35. too m. a servant to have a look of such a worthy mistress, Gent. II, 4, 107. Err. I, 1, 55. III, 1, 28. L L L II, 13. Mcrch. I, 2, 7. As I. 3, 113. Shr. I, 1,210. IV, 3, 172. 176. 182. V, 2, 32. All's III, 5 , 6 3 . Wint. I, 2, 313. V, 1, 93. E2 I, 2, 33. H4A 111, 2,13. H 5 111, 1, 29. IV Chor. 45. H6A II, 5,123. IV, 6, 23. H6B II, 1,185. IV, 8, 39. V, 1, 64. H6C I, 3, 19. 111,2,97. IV, 1, 71. R3 V, 2, 24. H8 II, 2, 136. Troil. II, 2, 156. Cor. I, 6, 27. IV, 2, 40. Tit. II, 1, 73. IV, 4, 33. Lr. IV, 6, 208. Ant. II, 5, 83. IV, 15, 75. Cymb. II, 3, 121. 122. 138 IV, 2, 246. Per. II, 2, 59. IV, 6, 108. • c a n , vb. to moan, to lament: and thus she —s, videlicet, Mids. V, 330 (some M. Edd. moans). H e a n , vb. (impf. and partic. meant), 1) absol. to be minded, to be disposed; joined with an adverb (Germ, es meinen): my cousin —t well, Wiv. I, 1, 265. Petruchio —s but well, Shv. Ill, 2, 22. if you m. well, now go with me and with this holy man into the chantry, Tw. IV, 3, 22. I cannot speak so well, nor m. better, Wint. IV, 4, 392. I do (perceive your mind) and m. accordingly, H6A II, 2, 60. if thou —est well, I greet thee well, H6B V, 1, 14. as if I —t naughtily, Troil. IV, 2, 38. we m. well in going to this mask, Rom. I, 4, 48. they that m. virtuously, and yet do so, Oth. IV, 1, 7. Passively: is it not —t damnable in us, to be trumpeters of our unlawful intents? All's IV, 3, 31. 2) trans, a) to have in mind, to think of in speaking, to be saying (though not expressing directly); followed by an accas. or by a clause: —t thereby thou shouldstprint more, Sonn. 11, 13 (cf. by in Gent. V,

4, 167. Err. HI, 1, 10. Mids. Ill, 2, 236 etc.). the miracle, Im. our preservation, Tp. II, 1, 7. I nt., in a sort, 103. you mistake; Im. the pound, Gent. 1,1, 113. 11,1,49.59.127. 11,3,46. 11,5,51. 111,1, 101. 106. V, 4, 167. Wiv. Ill, 4, 63. Meas. II, 4, 118. Err. II, 1, 58. Ill, 1, 10. 111. IV, 2, 8. IV, 3, 15. Ado I, 1, 35. Mids. II, 2, 47. 111,2, 236. Merch. II, 9, 25 that 'many' may be —t by the fool multitude, = of the fool multitude; cf. By). Shr. V, 2, 19. 27. 31. All's I, 3, 174. Wint. IV, 4, 197. Rom. 1, 4, 44. Cymb. IV, 1 , 9 etc. etc. With how and so: how doest thou m. a fat marriage t Err. Ill, 2, 95. how m. you, sirt L L L I, 2, 20. how m. you thatt Shr. I, 1, 59. V, 2, 21. how do you m.t All's 111,5, 71. m. you sot Err. Ill, 1, 81. I —t not so, L L L IV, 1, 13. What do you m. or what m. yout used reproachfully, = do not so, or do not say so (Germ, was denkst du dir dabeit): what dost thou m. to stifle beautyt Ven. 933 ( = in stifling beauty). what do you m. to dote thus on such luggage t Tp. IV, 230. what m. you, sirt for God's sake, hold your hands, Err. I, 2, 93. what in. you, madamt I never swore such an oath, L L L V, 2, 450. what m. yout you will lose your reputation, 708. what doest thou m.t is it a world to hide virtues in t Tw. I, 3, 140. but what m. I to speak so true, H4B Ind. 27. what do you m.t Lr. Ill, 7, 77. what m. you, madam t I have made no fault, Ant. II, 5, 74. what m. you, sir, to give them this discomfortt IV, 2, 33. Hence: what —s the world to say it is not sot Sonn. 148, 6 ( = the world is mistaken). what —s death in this rude assault t Villain, thy own hand yields thy death's instrument, R2 V, 5, 106 ( = death is mistaken and shall be disappointed". Jocularly: what a plague —s my niece, to take the death of her brother thust Tw. I, 3, 1. what a plague m. ye to colt me thust H4A II, 2, 39. In speaking of things, = to signify, to indicate, to purport: what —s this passion at his namet Gent. I, 2,16. what —s this jestt Err. II, 2, 21. what —s thist As III, 5, 41. H6A I, 3, 29. we wot not what it (the word submission) —s, IV, 7, 55 etc. b) to have a mind, to intend, to purpose; with an accus.: know not what we m. Ven. 126. Im.it not, Wiv. Ill, 4, 88. no man —s evil but the devil, V, 2, 15. nor Im. it not, Meas. II, 1, 124. Merch. Ill, 5, 82. if they m. a fray, Mids. Ill, 2, 447. do you m. goodfaitht Merch. Ill, 2, 212. what I did not well I —t well, Wint. V, 3, 3. he may m. more, H6A I, 2, 122. Talbot —s no goodness. III, 2, 72. things are often spoke and seldom —t, H6B 111, 1, 268. he —t all harm, H6C V, 7, 34. where he did m. no chase, R3 III, 2, 30. where all faith was —t, H8 III, 1, 53. one that —s his proper harm, Cor. I, 9, 57. thankful even for hate, that is — t love, Rom. Ill, 5, 149. —s most deceit, Per. I, 4, 75 etc. With accus. and dat.: my hand —t nothing to my sword. Ado V, 1,57 (or can this be = my hand to my sword, i. e. put to my sword, meant nothing?). the poor deer's blood, that my heart —s no ill, L L L IV, 1, 35. when fortune —s to men most good, John III, 4, 119. I never —t him any ill, H6B II, 3, .91. —ing treason to our royal person, III, 1, 70. you in. no good to him, R3 III, 7, 87. Tit. V, 3, 10. Cymb. I, 5, 66. With an inf.: their queen —s to immure herself, Ven. 1194. if thou m. to chide, Lucr. 484. Gent. II, 1, 125. II, 4, 80. II, 6, 33. IV, 4, 27. Wiv. I, 3, 47. IV, 6, 46. Meas. II, 1, 242. IV, 2, 206. Err. Ill, 1, 108. IV, 3, 79. Ado II, 1, 370. Ill, 2, 91. Mids. I, 1, 250. II, 2, 55.

M Merch. lit, 2, 194. John 1,215. H6A II, 2, 58. H6B II, 1, 143. Cor. V, 1, 72. Bom. II, 1, 42. Caes. IV, 2, 28 etc. etc. With a clause: you have taken it wiselier than I —i you should, Tp. II, 1, 21. her father —s the thall be all in white, Wiv. IV, 6, 35. at never I m. thou thall, Wint. IV, 4, 440. M e a n - a p p a r e l l e d , poorly dressed: Shr. Ill, 2, 76. Mean-fcara, of low birth: H6B III, 1, 335. R3 IV, 2, 54 (Ff mean poor). Meander, a winding way: through forth-right» and —s, Tp. Ill, 3,3. • u « l l ( , subst 1) sense; thought in any manner expressed or suggested: hit m ttruck her ere hit words begun, Ven. 462. could pick no m. from their parting looks, Lucr. 100. when thou didtt not know thine own m. Tp. I, 2, 356. there's m. in thy snores, II, 1, 218. Wir. I, 1, 263. Err. II, 1, 51. HI, 2, 36. Ado II, 3, 267. Ill, 4, 80. V, 1, 230. LLL III, 59. V, 2,19. 21. Merch. I, 2, 34. I, 3, 15. Ill, 5, 64. Shr. IV, 4, 79. V, 2, 30. John IV, 2, 212. H5 I, 2, 240. III, 6, 53. V, 2, 334. H6A HI, 2, 24. H6C IV, 5, 22. R3 1,3, 74. 1,4,95. IV, 4, 261. H8 IV, 2, 39. Tit. II, 3, 271. II, 4,3. Ill, 2, 45. Hml. II, 1, 31. to take the m. — to understand what another means: would not take her m. nor her pleasure, Pilgr. 154. love takes the m. in loves conference, Mids. II, 2, 46. take our good in. Rom. I, 4, 46. Plur. —s: speakest thou in sober —sf As V, 2, 76. two —s in one word, R3 III, 1, 83. I have fair —s, A n t II, 6, 67. Used of the signification of a word: Tw. 1,3,62. Of the solution of a riddle: now behold the m. All's V, 3,305. Cymb. V, 5, 434. Per. 1,1, 109. 2) intention, purpose: he hath some m. in his mad attire, Shr. Ill, 2, 126. my m. in't was very honest, All's IV, 3, 246. 'tis not my m. to raze one title qf your honour out, R2 II, 3, 74. H4B IV, 2, 68. H6C IV, 7, 60. R3 III, 5, 55. Tim. V, 4, 59. Lr. V, 3, 4. l a m no honest man if there be any good m. towards you, Lr. I, 2, 190. = opinion, in the language of Sir Hugh: Wir. I, 1, 263. ef. mean Tp. II, 1, 21 & Cymb. IV, 1, 9. Meanly, 1) insignificantly, indifferently: he can sing a mean most m. LLL V, 2, 328. 2) not in a great degree, moderately: not m. proud of two such boys, Err. I, 1, 59. 3) lowly, poorly: his daughter m. have I matched in marriage, R3 IV, 3, 37. trained up thus m. Cymb. Ill, 3, 82. Means, see Mean subst. Meantime (mtantime or meantime), intervening time; in the m. (sometimes used to denote a contrast of opinion or design): Ado I, 1, 277. I, 3, 38. II, 2, 47. Mids. I, 2, 107. All's IV, 3, 44. John I, 103. H5 V, 1, 35. Rom. IV, 1, 113. Tim. Ill, 2, 44. Hml. Ill, 2, 47. Oth. Ill, 3, 252. the in. = in the m.: the m. I'll raise the preparation of a war, Ant. Ill, 4, 25. m., alone, adverbially, in the same sense: Lucr. Ded. 5. Ado V, 4, 70. LLL II, 169. Merch. Ill, 2, 311. IV, 1, 149. As V, 4, 182. Tw. V, 393. John IV, 2, 43. R2 I, 1, 67. H6A I, 2, 117. II, 4, 62. 121. R3 I, 1, 111. 116. I, 3, 77. IV, 3, 33. Rom. V, 3, 220. 246. Hml. II, 2, 83. Lr. I, 1, 37. Ant. I, 4, 81. IV, 1, 5. Meanwhile (meanwhile), in the meantime, till then: HS 11,4,233. Tit. 1,408. 11, 1,43. IV, 3,105. Meaalea, leprosy: so shall my lungs coin words

707

against those m., which we disdain should tetter us, yet sought the very way to catch them, Cor. Ill, 1, 78. Measurable, in die language of Holofernes, = well adapted, fit: the posterior of the day is liable, congruent and m. for the afternoon, LLL V, 1, 97 (cf. measure in Cor. II, 2, 127). Measure, subst. 1) that by which extent or quantity is ascertained: (a tailor) with his shears and m. in hit hand, John IV, 2, 196. Metaphorically: these particulars are not my m. Sonn. 91, 7 (i. e. to estimate human happiness), their memory thall as a pattern or a m. live, by which his grace must mete the lives of othert, H4B IV, 4, 76. Icnow by m. of their observant toil the enemy's weight, Troil. 1,3, 202. my life will be too short, and every m. fail me, Lr. IV, 7, 3. this dotage o'erfiowt the m. A n t 1,1, 2. 2) a limited or ascertained extent or quantity; in a proper and a metaphorical sense: them, of one (mile) is easily told, LLL V, 2, 190. shrunk to this little m. Caes. Ill, 1, 150. —» of lawn, Oth. IV, 3, 73. send —s of wheat to Rome, A n t II, 6, 37. there is no m. in the occasion that breeds, Ado I, 3, 3. more m. of this m. LLL V, 2, 222 ( = more of this dance), according to the m. of their stales, As V, 4, 181. fill up them, of her will, John II, 556. a reasonable m. in strength, H5 V, 2, 141. to add more m. to your woet, H6C II, 1, 105. hath given me m. of revenge, II, 3, 32. the m. of hit love, III, 3, 120. after the m. at you intended well, Cor. V, 1, 46. filled the time with all licentiout m. Tim. V, 4, 4 ( = with alt measure or degree of licence), there it no end, no limit, m., bound, in that word's death, Rom. Ill, 2, 125. this . . . we will perform in m., time and place, Mcb. V, 8, 73. most narrow m. lent me, Ant. Ill, 4, 8. that he should dream, knowing all —s, the full Caesar will answer his emptiness, III, 13, 35. unfold his m. duly, Cymb. I, 1, 26. heaped m. = great quantity, high degree: with m. heaped tn joy, As V, 4, 185 (=£ joyful in the highest degree). if the m. of Ay joy be heaped like mine, Rom. II, 6, 24. to take m. = to measure, to ascertain the extent or degree of a thing: took m. of my body, Err. IV, 3, 9. taking the m. of an unmade grave, Rom. Ill, 3, 70. that he might take a m. of his own judgments, All's IV, 3, 38. m.for m. = like for like: like doth quit like, and m. still for m. Meas. V, 416. m. for m. mutt be answered, H6C II, 6, 55. Hence used as a judicial term for dealing out justice: justice always whirls in equal m. LLL IV, 3, 384 (quibbling), received no sinister m. from his judge, Meas. Ill, 2, 257. this it hard and undeserved m. All's II, 3, 273 ( = treatment). Above m. = immensely: Cymb. II, 4, 113. loved me above the m. of a father, Cor V, 3, 10. beyond all m. Shr. 1, 2, 90. out of m. = immoderately: Ado I, 3, 2. in all fair m. — in any fair degree, Troil. Ill, 1, 47. in great m. Ado I, 1, 25. in some m. Mids. I, 2, 30. John II, 557. H4B I, 1, 139. in some large m. R2 I, 2, 26. in some little m. As V, 2, 63. in some slight m. Mids. Ill, 2, 86. with m. = competently: he cannot but with m. fit the honours which we devise him, Cor. II, 2, 127. come not within the m. of my wrath, Gent. V, 4, 127 ( = within the reach). Used of a certain quantity of a beverage : carouse full m. to her maidenhead, Shr. Ill, 2, 227. we'll drink a m. the table round, Mcb. Ill, 4, 11. would fain have a m. to the health of black Othello, Oth. II, 3, 32. 3) moderation; just degree: there is m. in every

708

M

thing, A d o II, 1, 74 (quibbling), in m. rein thy joy, burn, II, 1, 63. the m. wants basting, II, 2, 57. m. Merch. HI, 2, 113. my legs can keep no m. in delight sweet-savoured, 119. good m. HI, 1, 24. his m. was when my poor heart no m. keeps tn grief, R 2 III, 4, 7. sauced with thy upbraidings, V, 73. the boy that stole 4) metre: for the one (verses) I have neither words your m. A d o II, 1, 206. a man loves the m. in his youth nor m. H 5 V, 2, 139. that he cannot endure tn his age, II, 3, 247. he eats his 5) music accompanying and regulating motion: m. without grudging, III, 4, 90. Merch. Ill, 5, 65. 68. shall braying trumpets and loud churlich drums be —s A s III, 3, 36. Shr. IV, 1, 164. 172. 200. 202. IV, 3, 9. 19. 32. 40. 46. All's II, 2, 49. R 2 II, 1, 76. H4B to our pomp? John III, 1, 304. 6 ) a grave and solemn dance: mannerly modest, V, 5, 143. H6B IV, 10, 41. Cor. I, 1, 211. IV, 2, 50. as a m.,full of state and ancientry, A d o II, 1, 80. a Rom. II, 4, 143. T i m . I, 1, 271. I, 2, 36. 38. 41. 46. delightful m. or a dance, B2 I, 3, 291. Used of any 81. Ill, 1, 60. Ill, 4, 50. Ill, 6, 76. 85. IV, 3, 294. dance: to guide our m. round about Vie tree, W i v . V, 419. Caes. I, 2, 149. Mcb. Ill, 4, 36. Ill, 6, 34. Oth. 5, 83. in our m. do vouchsafe one change, L L L V, 2, III, 3, 167. Cymb. Ill, 6, 38. 50. V, 4, 163. Per. Ill, 209. 221. to the —s fall, A s V, 4, 185. dancing —s, 2, 3. Joined to drink: dress m. and drink, W i v . I, 4, 199. Me triplex is a good tripping m. T w . V, 41. H5 102. H4B V, 3, 30. Ant. V, 2,49. that's m. and drink V, 2, 141. R3 I, 1, 8. Bom. 1, 4, 10. I, 5, 52. P e r . II, to me — that is a treat to me: W i v . I, 1, 306. A s V, 3, 104. to lead the m. A l l ' s II, 1, 58. a m. to lead 'em 1, 11. Used of the eatable interior of an egg: as an once again, H8 I, 4, 106. to tread the —s, Ven. 1148. egg is full of m. Rom. Ill, 1, 25. cut the egg and eat L L L V, 2, 185. A s V, 4, 45. Play on the word: A d o up the m. Lr, I, 4, 174. Opposed to porridge: porridge II, 1, 74. L L L IV, 3,384. R 2 III, 4, 7. after m. Troil. I, 2, 263 (spoon-meat in Err. IV, 3, 61 7 ) regulated and graceful motion in general: the a non-entity?). = meal, repast: the thanksgiving behorse that doth untread again his tedious — s , Merch. fore m. Meas. 1, 2, 16. the grace 'fore m. Cor. IV, 7, II, 6, 11. hath not my gait in it the m. of the court? 3. cf. Err. V, 73 and Oth. IV, 2, 170. Metaphorically: Wint. IV, 4, 757. 1 am m. for your master, H4B 11, 4, 135. wishing him Measure, vb. 1) to ascertain the extent or degree my m. Per. II, 3, 32. o f : T p . V, 122. W i v . I, 4, 124. II, 1, 215. Err. Ill, Plur. — s: baked —s, Bom. IV, 4, 5. Hml. I, 2, 2, 113. L L L V, 2, 189. 194. H 5 III, 7, 137. to m. 180. broken —s, L r . II, 2, 16. one'/ length — to lie down, or to be thrown down: H e a z e l a , spelling of O. Eild. for Measles. if you willm. your lubber's length again, L r . T, 4, 100. Mecaenas, see Maecenas. to m. out my length on this cold bed, Mids. Ill, 2, 429. Mechanic, subst. handicraftsman, workman; cf. here lie I down and m, out my grave, A s II, 6, 2. used in contempt: capitulate with Rome's — s, Cor. till you had —d how long a fool you were, Cymb. I, 2, V, 3, 83. 25. to m. swords — to fight: A s V, 4, 91. Mechanic, adj. pertaining to the class of work2 ) to make or suppose to be o f a certain degree: men, occupied in low drudgery, vulgar: the poor m. m. his woe the length and breadth of mine, and let it porters crowding in, H51,2,200. m. slaves with greasy answer every strain for strain, A d o V, 1, 11. your aprons, Ant. V, 2, 209. to stand on more m. compliment, cause of sorrow must not be —d by his worth, Mcb. V, IV, 4, 32 ( = such as becomes a journeyman). 8,45; = have the measure, the greatness of his worth . Mechanical, subst. the same as mechanic, q. v.: 3) to pass over: thus far the miles are —d from a crew of patches, rude — s , Mids. Ill, 2, 9. base my friend, Sonn. 50, 4. how shall that Claribel m. us dunghill villain and m. KGB I, 3, 196. (cubits) back to Naples? T p . II, 1, 259. to m. kingMechanical, adj. the same as mechanic, q. v.: doms with his feeble steps, Gent. II, 7, 10. L L L V, 2, m. salt-butter rogue, W i v . II, 2, 290. by most m. and 184. Merch. Ill, 4, 84. Wint. V, 1, 145. John V, 5, dirty hand, H4B V, 5, 38. know you not, being m.,you 3. R2 III, 2, 125. ought not walk upon a labouring day without the sign 4 ) to consider, to judge: not —ing what use we of your profession? Caes. I, 1,3. made of them, H5 I, 2, 2(58. With an accus. ( = to Medal (O. Edd. medull or medul), a piece of metal judge o f ) : with thoughts so qualified as your charities stamped with a figure: he that wears her like her m., shall best instruct you, m. me, W i n t . II, 1, 114. you do hanging about his neck, Wint. I, 2, 307 (like her porm. the heat of our livers with the bitterness of your galls, trait in a locket). H4B I, 2, 198. if I be —d rightly, your majesty hath Meddle, 1) to mingle, to mix (cf. Comeddle): no just cause to hale me, V, 2, 65. W i t h by: that (thy more to know did never m. with my thoughts, T p . I, 2, mind) they m. by thy deeds, Sonn. 69, 10. I m. him 22 ( — never entered my mind). by my own spirit, A d o II, 3, 14!). Shr. V, 2, 29. Rom. 2 ) to have to do: strip your sword stark naked, I, 1, 133. I, 4, 9. Cymb. Ill, 6, 65. H-VM, in the same for m. you must, that's certain, or forswear to wear sense: m. my strangeness with my unripe years, Ven. iron about you, T w . 111,4,275 (you must not evade 524 j n judging of my strangeness, take my youth this business, you must fight.) Followed by with: they into account). are to m. with none but the prince's subjects, A d o l l l , 3 , 5) for a quibble's sake, = to dance: we'll m. them 34. m. not with her, Shr. II, 25 (leave her alone), we will a measure, Rom. I, 4, 10 ( o r = to deal out, to allot, not m. with him, AH'slV,3,41. T w . Ill, 4,308. a mystery to grant? as perhaps in A d o V, 1, 11?). with whom relation durst never m. Troil. 111,3,202. the Measureless, exceeding all bounds: m. liar, Cor. shoemaker should m. with his yard, Rom. I, 2, 40. V, 6, 103. m. content, Mcb. II, 1, 17. 3) to intrude on the concerns of others; absol.: Meat, human f o o d , particularly snch as is pre- a —ing friar, Meas. V, 127. do not you m. A d o V, 1, pared by cooking: kill your stomach on your m. Gent. 101. —ing monkey, Mids. II, 1, 181. this —ing priest, 1,2,68. would fain have m. 11, 1, 181. hot m. W i v . John III, 1, 163. beat away the busy —ing fiend, H6B I, 1, 297. the m. is cold, Err. I, 2, 47. your m. doth 111,3, 21. I'll not m. Cor. V, 1, 38. Followed by in:

M I'll not m. in it, Troil. I, 1, 66. By with: m. with buckwashing, Wiv. Ill, 3, 165. I'll not m. with it, R3 I, 4, 137. do you m. with my matter1 Cor. IV, 5, 50. to m. with thy mistress, 53. Im with no tradesman's matters, Caes. I, 1, 25. Joined to make, in the same sense: I will teach a scurvy priest to m. or make, Wiv. I, 4, 116. the lets you m. or make with them, Ado III, 3, 55. I'U not m. nor make no further, Troil. I, 1, 14. I'll m. nor make no more in the matter, 85. Meddler, one who intrudes into the affairs of others, a busybody: Meas. V, 145. Tim. IV, 3,309. money't a m. that doth utter all men's ware-a, Wint. IV, 4, 329 ( 0 . Edd. medler. = interferes with, and is good at, anything). Mede, Media: A n t HI, 6, 75. Medea, the celebrated sorceress of antiquity: Merch. V, 13. H6B V, 2, 59. Media, country in Asia: Ant. Ill, 1,7. Great M. III, 6, 14. Medlatlen, intercession in favour of another: noble offices thou maytt effect of m. between his greatness and thy other brethren, H4BIV, 4,25. some nobler token for Livia and Octavia, to induce their m. Ant. V, 2, 170. Mediator, one who intercedes and pleads for another: to trembling clients be you —s, Lucr. 1020. nonsuits my —s, Oth. I, 1, 16. Medlelnafcle (pronounced mid'cinable), medicinal, having the power of healing: any impediment will be m. to me, Ado II, 2, 5. whose (the gun's) m. eye correctt the ill aspectt of planets evil, Troil. I, 3, 01. I have derision m. Ill, 3, 44. drop tears at fast as the Arabian trees their m. gum, Oth. V, 2, 351 (Qq medicinal), some griefs are m.; that is one of them, for it doth physic love, Cymb. Ill, 2, 33. Medicinal (midcinal and medicinal) having the power of healing: words as m. at true, Wint. II, 3, 37 m. gum, Oth. V, 2, 351 (Ff medicinable). Medicine, subst 1) a substance administered to cure a disease; physic: Sonn. 118, 11. Wiv. Ill, 3, 204. Meas. II, 2, 135. Ill, 1, 2. Ado I, 3, 13. V, 1, 24. Mids. Ill, 2, 264. As II, 7, 61. All's I, 3, 239. John V, 1, 15. H4B III, 1, 43. Troil. V, 10, 35. Bom. II, 3, 24. Mcb. IV, 3, 214 (—»). Hml. V, 2, 325. Lr. IV, 7, 27 (thy m. = that which may cure thee). Cymb. V, 5, 29. gold preserving life in m. potable, H4B IV, 5, 163 (cf. Gold). 2' any thing particularly operating on the human body or mind; poison: sick, sick! If not, I'll ne'er trust m. Lr. V, 3, 96. work on, my m., work! Oth. IV, 1,46. a philter: if the rascal have not given me —s, to make me love him, H4A 11, 2, 19. Ihave drunk —s, 21. by spells and—s bought of mountebanks, Oth. I, 3,61. the philosopher's stone: Plutus that knows the tinct and multiplying m. All's V, 3, 102. coming from him, that great m. hath with his tinct gilded thee, Ant. I, 5, 36. 3) physician: Ihave seen a m. that's able to breathe life into a stone, All's II, 1, 75. Camilla, preserver of my father, now of me, the m. of our house, Wint. IV, 4, 598. meet we the m. of the sickly weal, and with him pour we ... each drop of us, Mcb. V, 2, 27. Medicine, vb. to restore by physic, to cure: nor all the drowsy syrups of the world shall ever m. thee to that sweet sleep, Oth. Ill, 3, 332. great griefs m. the less, Cymb. IV, 2, 243.

709

• e d l t e t e , 1) to contemplate, to muse, to revolve a subject in the mind: —ing with two deep divines, R3 III, 7, 75. look, he —t, Caes. V, 5, 12. With a clause: with —ing that she must die once, Caes. IV, 3, 191. With on: are you —ing on virginity? All's I, 1, 121. H8 IV, 2, 79. 2) to have in contemplation, to stndy, to plan; trans.: —ing that shall dye your white rote in a bloody red, H4A II, 4, 60 (i. e. that which shall dye etc. viz blood, combat). With on: I will m. upon tome horrid message, Tw. Ill, 4, 219. soldiers that nothing do but m. on blood, H5 V, 2, 60. Medltatlen, 1) though*: 0 fearful m. Sonn. 65, 9. with wings at swift at m. Hml. I, 5, 30. uncleanly apprehensiont ...in session tit with — t lawful, Oth. Ill, 3, 141. 2) deep thonght, contemplation: in maiden m. Mids. II, 1, 164. thou keepest the stroke betwixt thy begging and my m. B3 IV, 2, 118. thrust yourselves into my private —s, H8 II, 2, 66. Ill, 2, 345. Especially thought employed upon sacred objects: let us all to m. H6B III, 3, 33. divinely bent to m. R3 III, 7, 62. on his knees at m. 73. continued —s, tears, and sorrows, H8 IV, 2, 28. Mediterranean, adj. concerning the sea between Europe and Africa: the M.flote, Tp. I, 2, 234. Mediterranean!, the Mediterranean sea: LLL V, 1, 61 (Armado's speech). Medlar, the tree Mespilns Germanics, and its fruit (quibblingly confounded with meddler): they would else have married me to the rotten in. Meas. IV, 3, 184. I'll graff it with you, and then I shall graff it with a m. As III, 2, 125. you'll be rotten ere you be half ripe, and that's the right virtue of the m. 128. now will we sit under a m. tree, and wish his mistress were that kind of fruit as maids call —t, when they laugh alone, Rom. II, 1, 34 (i. e. open-arse), there't a m.for thee, eat it. Dost hate a m.t Ay, though it look like thee. An thou hadst hated —s sooner, thou shouldst have loved thyself better now, Tim. IV, 3, 305. Meed, 1) reward, recompense, hire: for thy m. a thousand honey secrets shall thou know, Ven. 15. when great treasure is the m. proposed, Lucr. 132. duty never yet did want his m. Gent. 11,4, 112. for my m. V, 4, 23. m. I have received none, Wiv. II, 2, 211. to receive the m. of punishment, LLL I, 1, 270 (Armado's letter), when service sweat for duly, not for m. As II, 3, 58. for his m. he is mewed up, R3 I, 3, 139. hired for m. I, 4, 234. when I have my m. 289. and for his m. was brow-bound with the oak, Cor. II, 2, 101. thanks to men of noble mindt is honourable m. Tit. I, 216. there's m. for m., death for a deadly deed, V, 3, 66. labour be his m. Cymb. Ill, 5, 168. 2) deserved praise, merit, worth: that we, the sons of brave Plantagenet, each one already blazing by our —s, should join our lights, H6C II, 1, 36. my m. hath got me fame, IV, 8, 38. no m. but he repays sevenfold above itself, Tim. I, 1, 288. but in the imputation laid on him by them, in his m. he is unfellowed, Hml. V, 2, 149. Meek, 1) humble, spiritless, tame: feeble desire, all recreant, poor and m., like to a bankrupt beggar wails his case, Lncr. 710. doing the honour of thy lordliness to one so m. Ant. V, 2, 162. 2) indulgent, mild, gentle: they can be m. that have no other cause, Err. II, 1, 33. hadst thou been m., our

710

M

title »till had slept, H6C II, 2, 160. you're m. and humble-mouthed, H8 II, 4, 107. affable wolves, m. heart. Tim. Ill, 6, 105. that I am m. and gentle with these butchers, Caes. Ill, 1, 255. Adverbially: this Duncan hath borne his faculties so m. Mcb. I, 7, 17. • e c k l r , gently, kindly: to hear m. and to laugh moderately, L L L I, 1, 199. H e e k n e u , gentleness, indulgent kindness: R 3 II, 2, 107. H8 II, 4, 109. 138. V, 3, 62. Meet, adj. 1) answering the purpose, proper, fit, good, decent: let me have what thou thiniest m. and is most mannerly, Gent. II, 7, 58. we thought it m. to hide our love, Meas. I, 2, 156. I do confess it and repent it. 'tis m. so, II, 3, 30. if you think it m., compound with him by the year, IV, 2, 25. such m. food to feed it, Ado I, 1, 122. find me a m. hour to draw Don Pedro and the count alone, II, 2, 33. L L L V, 2, 237. Shr. Ind. 2, 133. V, 2, 141. John V, 7, 94. H4A IV, 1,33. H4B IV, 2, 117. R3 III, 5, 74. Troil. I, 3, 333. Cor. Ill, 1, 168. 170. Tit. V, 3, 165. Caes. I, 2, 170. Hml. I, 5, 171. V, 1, 72. Lr. I, 2, 200. IV, 7, 11. Oth. 1, 1, 146. Ant. V, 1, 49. Per. Ill, 1, 55. With for: far any or for all these exercises he said that Proteus was m. Gent I, 3, 12. —est for death, Merch. IV, 1, 115. Wint. II, 2, 46. R2 V, 3, 118. H5 I, 2, 254. Tit. Ill, 1, 179. Hml. V, 1, 105. With an inf.: m. to be an emperor s counsellor, Gent. II, 4, 77. York is —est man to-be your regent, H6B I, 3, 163. m. to be sent on errands, Caes. IV, 1, 13. With a clause; either the subjunctive or should following: it is not m. the council hear a riot, Wiv. I, 1, 36. it is very m. the Lord Sassanio live an upright life, Mcrch. III, 5, 78. it is m. I presently set forth, IV, 1, 404. H5 II, 4, 15. 21. H6B 111, 1, 237. 291. Troil. I, 3, 358. Caes. I, 2,314. 111,2,146. IV, 3, 125. Hml. I, 5, 107. Ant. II, 6, 2. Cymb. I, 5, 16. it is not m. that I should be sad, H4B II, 2, 42. is it m. that we should also be an ass and a foolt H5 IV, 1, 79. it is not m. he should, 104. is't m. that he should leave the helm f H6C V, 4, 6. R3 II, 2, 139. Troil. II, 2, 72. Caes. II, 1, 155. IV, 3, 7. Mcb. V, 1, 18. Hml. Ill, 3, 31. Oth. IV, 2, 107. — Comp. — er: H5 I, 2, 254. Ant. V, 1, 49. Superl. — est: Merch. IV, 1, 115. H6B I, 3, 163. R3 III, 5, 74. Adverbially: where we'll show what's yet behind, that m. you all should know (the later Ff and M. Edd. that's m.) Meas. V, 545. if it end so m., the bitter past, more welcome is the sweet, All's V, 3, 333. 2) quit, even: he'll be m. with you, Ado I, 1, 47. Meet, vb. (impf. and partic- met) 1) to encounter, to come face to face, by going in different directions; trans.: I met her deity cutting the clouds, Tp. IV, 92. Friar Laurence met them both, Gent. V, 2, 37. I would my husband would m. him in this shape, Wiv. IV, 2, 86. 97. Err. IV, 2, 56. IV, 3, 1. V, 152. Ado II, 1, 46. Mcb. V, 2, 6. Ant. I, 5, 61 etc. = to go the way by which another is coming, in order to salute and join him: they are going to m. him, Wiv. IV, 3, 3. they are gone but to m. the duke, IV, 5, 72. him I'll desire to m. me at the consecrated fount, Meas. IV, 3, 102. 136. IV, 4, 6. fli» purpose —s you, Troil. IV, 1, 36. thou shall be met with thanks, Tim. V, 1, 164. Metaphorically : met your loves in their own fashion, L L L V, 2, 793. have I with all my full affections still met the kingl H8 III, 1,130. let us m. them like necessities,

H4B III, 1, 93; cf. and m. the time as it seeks us, Cymb. IV, 3, 33. 2) to encounter as an enemy; trans.: breasted the surge that met him, Tp. II, 1, 117. I shall m. your wit tn the career, Ado V, 1, 135. run to m. displeasure, John V, 1, 60. our party may well m. a prouder foe, 79. m. him, R2 I, 1, 6 3 . 1 dare m. Surrey in a wilderness, IV, 74. H4B IV, 1, 16. H6A III, 4, 43. IV, 2, 27 etc. etc. Intr.: whose ridges with the —ing clouds contend, Ven. 820. he and I shall m. Ado V, 1, 196. where two raging fires m. together, Shr. II, 133. two desperate men which in the very —ing fall, John III, 1, 33. R2 III, 3, 54. H4A I. 1, 12. II6A I, 3, 81. 82. IV, 1, 22. H6C II, 1, 120 etc. Followed by with: we must prepare to m. with Caliban, T p . IV, 166. the king with mighty and quick-raised power —5 with Lord Harry, H4A IV, 4, 13. I must go and m. with danger there, H4B II, 3, 48. 3) to join, to come in contact: they all have met again and are upon the Mediterranean flole, Tp. 1, 2, 233. is leaning cheek to cheek nothingt is —ing nosest Wint. I, 2, 285 (O. Edd. mealing); cf. they met so near with their lips, Oth. II, 1, 265. powers from home and discontents at home m. in one line, John IV, 3, 152. many ways m. in one town, H5 I, 2, 208. by the conflux of —ing sap, Troil. I, 3, 7. Hence = to concur, to operate together: both our inventions m. and jump in one, Shr. I, 1, 195. when means and lavish manners m. together, H4B IV, 4, 64. patience perforce with wilful choler —ing makes my flesh tremble in their different greeting, Horn. I, 5, 91. all three do m. in thee at once, III, 3, 120. when these prodigies do so conjointly m. Caes. I, 3, 29. how rarely does it m. with this time's guise, when man was wished to love his enemies, Tim. IV, 3, 472. 4) to find, to light on, and hence to get, to gain, to experience; trans.: when thou dost m. good hap, Gent. I, 1, 15. should m. the blow of justice, Meas. II, 2, 30. when in the streets he —s such golden gifts, Err. Ill, 2, 188. you are come to m. your trouble, Ado I, 1, 97. I cannot m. my Bermia, Mids. II, 1,193. if I could m. that fancy-monger, As III, 2, 382. I'U beat him, if lean m. him, All's II, 3, 253. 256. —ing the check of such another day, H4A V, 5, 42. by what bypaths I met this crown, H4B IV, 5, 186. how soon this mightiness —s misery, H8 Prol. 30. would I could m. that rogue Diomed, Troil. V, 2, 190. when we may profit m. Tim. V, 1,45. m. the old course of death, Lr. Ill, 7, 101. he was met even now as mad as the vexed sea, IV, 4, 1. you'll never m. a more sufficient man, Oth. Ill, 4, 91. m. reproach, IV, 1, 48. Intr., followed by with: cry out for thee, but they ne'er m. with Opportunity, Lucr. 903. though they (flowers) with winter m. Sonn. 5, 13. if that flower with base infection m. 94, 11. —ing with Salerio by the way, Merch. Ill, 2, 231. —ing with an old religious man, As V, 4, 166. elsewhere they m. with charity, Shr. IV, 3, 6. thou mail est with things dying, I with things newborn, Wint. Ill, 3, 117. hath now himself met tcith the fall of leaf, R2 III, 4, 49. if they m. not with Saint Nicholas' clerks, H4A II, 1, 67. I muse we met not with the Dauphin's grace, H6A II, 2, 19. hast thou met with himt Rom. II, 5, 19. when Caesar't wife shall m. with better dreams, Caes. II. 2, 99. 5) to come together: the principal men of the army — ing one evening, Lucr. Arg. 5. would I flame dis-

M

711

tinctly, then m. and join, Tp. I, 2, 2 0 1 . nor befitting II 64. H5 V, 2, 1. H 6 C II, 2, 121. R 3 I, 1, 7. Tit. IV, this first —ing, V, 165. where m. wet Gent. IV, 2, 84. 4, 102. Mcb. Ill, 4, 37. 109. at the very instant of Falstaffs and our —ing, W i v . 2) place o f c o m i n g together: our m. is BridgeV, 3 , 16. ere the ships could m. Err. I, 1, 101. A d o north, H 4 A 111,2. 174. M e e t l n g - p l k e e , place o f coming together: Cymb. 1, 1, 63. A s V, 2, 121. All's IV, 5, 92. T w . V, 172. Troil. IV, 2, 73. T i m . Ill, 4, 3. Mcb. I, 1, 1. H m l . IV, 1, 26. II, 2 , 2 1 6 etc. = to see each other after a l o n g abM e e t l y , in a proper m a n n e r , w e l l : you can do sence : both stood, like old acquaintance in a trance, better yet, but this is m. Ant. I, 3, 81. met far from home, Lucr. 1596. these are the parents M e e t n e u , fitness, propriety: found a kind of m. to these children, which accidentally are met together, to le diseased ere that there was true needing, Sonn. Err. V, 361. O my gentle brothers, have we thus mett 118, 7. Cymb. V, 5, 3 7 5 . = to hare a rendezvous: another M e g , diminutive o f Margaret: T p . II, 2, 50. W i v . embassy of—ing, W i v . Ill, 5, 132. we could never m. II, 1 , 1 5 2 . A d o III, 4, 8. 1 0 3 . In H 6 B III, 2, 2 6 O. V, 5, 121. = to assemble in c o u n c i l : therefore we m. Edd. Nell, some M. Edd. Meg. not now, H 4 A I, 1, 3 0 . are summoned to m. anon, Cor. • • l a y , followers, retinue: they summoned up their II, 3 , 152. and m. in the hall together, Mcb. II, 3, 140. m. Lr. II, 4, 3 5 ( Q q men). In Cor. Ill, 1, 6 6 O. Edd. to be met = t o b e assembled: as Falstaff, she and I meyny = multitude; M. Edd. many. are newly met, W i v . IV, 4, 52. are we all mett Mids. M e i s e n , a country in Germany: H 5 I, 2, 5 3 . H e i m l i c h « ! ? , snbst. g l o o m y temper, depression III, 1, 1. a crew of patches were met together, III, 2, 11. when the parties were met, A s V, 4, 1 0 5 . where- o f spirits, sadness: Sonn. 4 5 , 8. Err. I, 2, 20. V, 7 9 fore we are met, H 5 V, 2, 1. R 3 111, 4, 1. H 8 V, 3 , 2. ( 8 0 masc.; 8 1 fem.). A d o II, 1, 14. 154. 111,2, 54. Per. V, 1, 2 4 3 . many of the consuls, raised and met, L L L I, 1, 2 3 4 . I, 2, 8. Ill, 6 9 . IV, 3, 15. Mids. I, 1, are at the duke's, Oth. I, 2, 43. — Having with after 14. A s II, 5, 13. Ill, 2, 3 1 2 . IV, 1, 10. 15. Shr. Ind. i t : and m. with me upon the rising ..., Gent. V, 2, 4 5 . 2, 135. All's I, 2, 56. Ill, 2, 9. T w . II, 4 , 1 1 6 . II, 5, Falstaff at that oak shall m. with us, W i v . IV, 4, 4 2 . 3. 222. W i n t . IV, 4, 790. J o h n III, 3, 42. B 2 V, 6, ru m. with you upon the mart, Err. I, 2, 27. in the 20. H 4 A I, 2, 88. II, 3 , 4 9 . H 6 B V, 1, 34. Troil. II, instant that I met with you, IV, 1, 9. to-morrow will I 3, 94. Ill, 1, 76. Tit. II, 3, 3 3 . T i m . IV, 3, 2 0 3 . 4 0 2 . m. with thee, Mids. I, 1, 178. thereto m. with Macbeth, Caes. V, 3 , 6 7 . Hml. II, 2, 6 3 0 . Ill, 1 , 1 7 3 . Lr. I, 2, Mcb. I, 1, 7 etc. 147. Ant. IV, 9 , 1 2 . Cvmb. IV, 2, 2 0 3 . 208. Per. 1 , 2 , , Used in the partic., joined with an adverb, as a 2. 1 1 , 3 , 9 1 . kind o f salutation: you are well met, A» 111,3, 65. M e l a n c h e l y , adj. depressed in spirits, sad: V e n . Shr. I, 2, 164. W i n t . V, 2, 139. H 8 IV, 1, 1. Cor. 3 1 3 . Gent. Ill, 2, 62. W i v . II, 1, 156. 157. A d o II, 1, IV, 2, 11. you are very well met, W i v . I, 1, 2 0 0 . A s 6. 2 2 1 . 357. V, 1, 123. L L L 1, 2, 2. IV, 3 , 1 4 . V, 2, HI, 3 , 75. you are fortunately met, Mids. IV, 1, 182. 14. A s II, 1, 2 6 . 41. II, 5 , 1 0 . IV, 1, 3. All's III, 2 , 4 . you are happily met, Shr. IV, 4, 19. you are kindly met, I I I , 5 , 8 9 . T w . I I , 4 , 75. H 4 A I , 2, 83. H 6 B I V , 1 , 4 . T i m . Ill, 2, 30. Elliptically: fairly met, Meas. V, 1. B 3 1 , 1 , 1 3 6 . 111,1,3. V, 3 , 68. Troil. I, 2, 2 7 . P e r . H 5 V, 2, 10. happily met, Shr. IV, 5, 59. B o m . IV, 1, II, 3, 54. Used of things, = gloomy, dreary: Err. V, 18. ill met by moonlight, proud Titania, Mids. II, 1, 6 0 . 120. Merch. 1 , 1 , 101. A s II, 7, 111. B 3 1,4, 4 5 . IV, well met, W i v . Ill, 2, 9. Err. IV, 3, 45. A s V, 3 , 7. 4, 32. B o m . IV, 5, 86. Per. V, 1 , 2 2 2 . Applied blunderJ o h n Ii, 1. IV, 3, 2 1 . R 2 II, 2, 4 1 . H 5 II, 1, 1. B 3 ingly by Mrs Quickly: W i v . 1 , 4 , 96. Evans says: how II, 3, 1. Ill, 2, 1 1 0 . IV, 1, 5. H 8 I, 1, 1. II, 2, 13. —ies lam, III, 1, 13. T i m . Ill, 4, 1. Oth. II, 1, 214. Ant. II, 6, 57. exceedM e l e a g e r , the Greek hero, not named, but allnded ingly well met, L L L III, 145. heartily well met, Cor. to: H 6 B I, 1, 2 3 5 . IV, 3, 53. very well met, Meas. IV, 1, 26. M e l f e r d , place in E n g l a n d : H 6 B I, 3, 2 5 . Transitively, = to be w i t h , to g o t o , to c o m e • • I I , to meddle, to have to d o : men are to m. together with: how hast thou met us heret Tp. V, 136. with, boys are not to kiss, All's IV, 3, 2 5 7 . bid him make haste and m. me at the North-gate, Gent. H e l l l f l n e a s , flowing with sweetness, h o n e y III, 1, 2 5 8 . where shall I m. you t IV, 3, 4 3 . the hour sweet: a m. voice, T w . II, 3, 5 4 (used by Sir T o b y with that Silvia should m. me, V, 1, 3. engrossed opportuni- intentional affectation). ties to m. her, W i v . II, 2, 204. m. the senate, Cor. II, M e l l a w , adj. soft with ripeness, full ripe: V e n . 3, 149. I shall not dine at home; I m. the captains at 527. Cor. IV, 6, 100. Hml. Ill, 2, 2 0 1 . Cymb. I l l , 3 , 6 3 . the citadel, Oth. Ill, 3, 59. W i v . IV, 4, 18. Meas. I, M e l l a w , vb. to ripen; intr.: L L L IV, 2, 7 2 . T w . 2, 76. Err. Ill, 1, 7. 122. Ado V, 1, 152. Mids. I, 1, I, 2 , 4 3 . B 3 IV, 4 , 1 . —ed — ripened: H 6 C 111, 3, 1 0 4 . 166. J o h n IV, 3, 11 etc. go m. the French = g o to B 3 III, 7 , 1 6 8 . the French, J o h n V, 1, 5. I will go m. them, Troil. M e l a d l e i u , fnll o f harmony, delighting the e a r : IV, 2, 72. I will go m. the ladies, Cor. V, 4 , 55. I go V e n . 4 3 1 . Pilgr. 111. 3 6 0 . Gent. I, 2, 86. W i v . Ill, to m. the nobleBrutus, Caes. V, 3, 73. I will go m. him, 1, 18. Tit. II, 3, 27. Ill, 1, 8 5 . Hml. IV, 7, 1 8 3 . Oth. Ill, 4, 138 ( = g o to him, seek him). M e l e d y , pleasing sounds, music: Lncr. 1 1 0 8 . 6 ) to come to an assembly, to appear, to be pre- Mids. I, 1, 189. II, 2, 13. H 4 B III, 1, 14. Troil. Ill, 1, sent: 'tis past the hour that Sir Hugh promised to m. 75. Tit. II, 3, 12. Ill, 2, 64. IV, 4, 86. W i v . II, 3, 5. much upon this time have I promised here M e l t ( i m p f . and partic. melted; partic. molten to m. Meas. IV, 1, 18. as you love Rosalind, m., and only applied to metals, and placed before its subst.) as I love no woman, I'llm. A s V, 2, 129. 1) trans, a) to dissolve, t o make liquid: when sun M e e t i n g , snbst. 1) a coming together, interview, doth m. their snow, Lucr. 1 2 1 8 . Tit. Ill, 1, 20. till the assembly: Eilgr. 2 9 0 . Wiv. II, 1, 97. Ill, 1, 92. IV, 4, wicked fire of lust have —ed him in his own grease, 15. A d o V, 1 , 3 3 5 . L L L V, 2, 3 1 8 . W i n t . IV, 4 , 4 . W i v . II, 1, GD. they would m. me out of my fat, IV, 5, S c h m i d t , Shakeapeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. II. 46

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99. to what metal this counterfeit lump oj ore will be —erf, All's III, 6 , 4 0 . the —ed mow, H5 III, 5, 50. to m. the city leads upon your pates, Cor. IV, 6, 82. the gold will I m. Ant. II, 5, 34. molten lead, B4A V, 3, 3 4 . Lr. IT, 7 , 4 8 . molten coin, Tim. Ill, 1, 55. b) to soften, to toDch with pity: that which —eth fools, Caes. Ill, 1, 42. nor let pity m. thee, Per. IV, 1, 7. c) to waste away, to reduce to nothing, to make away with (cf. above: Wiv. II, 1, 69): yet sometimes falls an orient drop (i. e. a tear) beside, which her cheek —5, as scorning it should pass, Ven. 982 ( = dries up, sucks in), shall never m. mine honour into lust, Tp. IV, 27 (destroy my honour by changing it to lust; destroy it by lust), the morning ... —ing the darkness, V, 66. this weak impress of love is as a figure trenched in ice, which with an hour's heat dissolves to water and doth lose his form. A little time will m. her frozen thoughts, and worthless Valentine shall be forgot, Gent. 111,2,9 (will put an end to her love-thoughts which now seem firmly rooted), cf. lest zeal, now —ed by the windy breath of soft petitions, pity and remorse, cool and congeal again to what is was, John II, 477 ( = lest zeal, now extinct, again gain life and form), my love to Hermia, —ed as the snow, Mids. IV, 1, 171. the hearts... do discandy, m. their sweets on blossoming Caesar, Ant. IV, 12, 22 ( = lose their sweets for me, and bestow or waste them on Caesar), the opinion that fire cannot m. out of me, Ado.I, 1, 234. Reflexively : and the continent... m. itself into the sea, H4B III, 1, 48. With away: being three parts —ed away with rotten dews, Cor. II, 3, 35. tears will quickly m. thy life away, Tit. Ill, 2, 51. to m. myself away in waterdrops, R2 IV, 262. With down: wouldst have —ed down thy youth in different beds of lust, Tim. IV,3,256. 2) intr. a) to dissolve, to become liquid: my smooth moist hand would seem to m. Ven. 144. snow —s with the sun, 750. 1073. H6B III, 1, 223. H6C II, 6, 6. • II, 2, 51. Applied to clouds beginning to rain: when tempest of commotion doth begin to m. and drop upon our bare unarmed heads, H4B II, 4, 393. stain the sun with fog, as sometime clouds when they do hug him in their—ing bosoms, Tit. Ill, 1,214. cf. what ribs oj oak, when mountains m. on them, can hold the mortise, Oth. II, 1,8. b) to be softened to any gentle and tender passion: his tail cool shadow to his —ing buttock lent, Ven. 315. m. at my tears, Lucr. 594. my heart hath —ed at a lady's tears, John V, 2, 47. they must perforce have — ed, R2 V, 2, 35. —ed at the sweet tale of the sun's, H 4 A II, 4, 134. if you m., then will she run mad, III, I, 212. open as day for —ing charity, H4B IV, 4, 32 (Q meeting). I should m. at an offender's tears, H6B III,1, 126. steel thy -ing heart, H6CII, 2,41. 118 II, 3, 12. I m. and am not of stronger earth than others, Cor. V, 3, 28. to steel with valour the —ing spirits of women, Caes. II, 1, 122. Often applied to tears: each flower moistened like a —ing eye, Lucr. 1227. appear to him all — ing, Compl. 300. a sea of —ing pearl, which some call tears, Gent. Ill, 1, 224. that will dry thy —ing tears, H6C I, 4, 174. I that did never weep now m. with woe, II, 3, 46. —ing with tenderness, R3 IV, 3, 7. learn of us to m. in showers, Tit. V, 3, 161. unused to the —ing mood, Oth. V, 2, 349. c) to lose form and substance, to be reduced to nothing, to fade away, to vanish: the boy was —ed like a vapour from her sight, Ven. 1166. the morning's

silver — ing dew against the golden splendour of the sun, Lncr. 25 (i. e. melting against the sun. M. Edd. silver-melting), candied be they (twenty consciences) and m. ere they molest, T p . II, 1, 280 (cf. above: Gent. III, 2, 9 4 John II, 477). are —ed into air, Tp. IV, 150. against whose charms faith —eth into blood, Ado II, 1, 187. manhood is —ed into courtesies, IV, 1, 321. and showers of oaths did m. Mids. I, 1, 245. she —ed into air, W i n t III, 3, 37. what seemed corporal —ed as breath into the wind, Mcb. I, 3, 81. O that this too too solid flesh would m. Hml. I, 2, 129. to flaming youth let virtue be as wax, and m. in her own fire, III, 4, 85. let Rome in Tiber m. Ant. I, 1, 33. m. Egypt into Nile, II, 5, 78. authority —s from me, 111, 13, 90. the crown o'the earth doth m. IV, 15, 63. till he had —ed from the smallness of a gnat to air, Cymb. I, 3, 20. that on the touching of her lips I may m. and no more be seen. Per. V, 3, 43. cf. H6C II, 6, 6. M e l o n ( O . Edd. Meloone or Melloone) French name: John IV, 3, 15. V, 2, 1. V, 4, 9. V, 5, 10. Member, 1) limb: festered —s rot but by degree, H6A III, 1, 192. I'll lop a m. o f f , V, 3, 15. thou shouldst not bear from me a Greekish m. Troil. IV, 5, 130. Cor. 1, 1, 99. 115. 153. Oth. 111,4, 147. Ant. I, 2,171 (perhaps obscene quibbling. Hanmer numbers). 2) one of a community: Meas. IV, 2, 39. V, 237. L L L IV, 1, 41. IV, 2, 78. Merch. HI, 5, 37. Ho V, 2, 5. Cor. II, 3, 13. In general, one belonging to, and partaking of, something: all —s of our cause, H4B IV, 1, 171. the slave, am. of the country's peace, H5 IV, 1, 298. count wisdom as no m. of the war, Troil. 1, 3, 198. that I may be a m. of his love, Oth. 111,4,112. Memorable, 1) kept in memory, remembered: witness our too much m. shame when Cressy battle fatally was struck, H5 II, 4, 53. 2) tending to preserve the remembrance of something, conur.emorative: he sends you this most m. line, in every branch truly demonstrative, H5 II, 4, 88. I wear it for a m. honour, IV, 7, 109. worn as a m. trophy of predeceased valour, V, 1, 76. M e m e r a n d a m , a note to help the memory: —s of bawdy-houses, H4A III, 3, 179. Memerlal, subst. something to preserve remembrance, a souvenir, a monument: this line, which for m. still with thee shall stay, Sonn. 74, 4. lei us satisfy our eyes with the —s and the things of fame that do renown this city, Tw. Ill, 3, 23. the primitive statue and oblique m. of cuckolds, Troil. V, 1, 61. Memerlal, adj. given in memory of something: takes my glove and gives m. dainty kisses to it, Troil. V, 2, 80. H e m e r l c e , to make memorable, to make glorious: from her will fall some blessing to this land, which shall in it be — d, 118 111, 2, 52. or m. another Golgotha, Mcb. I, 2, 40. Memory, 1) the power of remembering things, recollection: Sonn. 77, 9. Tp. I, 2, 101. Wiv. IV, 1, 84. Err. V, 314. L L L IV, 1, 99. IV, 2, 71. V, 2, 150. Merch. I, 3, 55. Ill, 5, 71. H4B IV, 1, 202. H8 111, 2, 303. Cor. I, 9. 91. Rom. Ill, 2, 110. Mcb. I, 7, 65. V, 3, 41. Hml. I, 3, 58. 85. I, 5, 96. 98. II, 2, 470. V, 2, 119. Oth. IV, 1,20. Cymb. II, 2, 44. Ill, 4, 97. our great court made me to blame in m. Ill, 5, 51 with respect to m.; made me forgetful). Plur. —ies: toiled their unbreathed — ies, Mids. V, 74. freshly pitied in our —ies, H8 V, 3, 31.

M 2) a retaining of past ideas, remembrance; absol.: wear their state out of m. Sonn. 15, 8. he shall never cut from m. my sweet love's beauty, 63, 11. charactered with lasting m. 122, 2. shall be of little m. Tp. II, 1, 2 3 3 (shall be soon forgotten), many things of worthy m- Shr. IV, 1, 84. your grandfather of famous m. H5 IV, 7, 95. that ever-living man of m. HGA IV, 3, 51 ( = man of ever-living m.). I'll note you in my book ofm. H6A II, 4, 101; cf. H6B I, 1, 100. let m. upbraid my falsehood, Troil. Ill, 2,196. he shall have a noble m. Cor. V, 6, 155. bare hateful m. Ant. IV, 9, 9. I have some rights of m. in this kingdom, Hml. V, 2, 400 (rights living in the remembrance of men, traditional rights). With a genitive or a poss. pron.: his tender heir might bear his m. Sonn. I, 4. 55, 8. 81, 3. the wrinkles ...of mouthed graves will give thee m. 77, 6. leave no m. of what it was, G e n t V, 4, 10. Wint. V, 1, 50. H4B IV, 1, 81. IV, 4, 75. IV, 5, 216. H6A I, 6, 23 (in m. of her). H8 III, 2, 418. Tim. V, 4, 80. Hml. I, 2, 2. Ill, 2, 139. 3) that which calls to remembrance, memorial: O you m. of old Sir Rowland, As II, 3, 3. that surname , a good m. and witness of the malice and displeasure which thou shouldst bear me, COT. IV, 5, 77. beg a hair of him for m. Caes. Ill, 2, 139. these weeds are —ies of those worser hours, Lr. IV, 7, 7. till by degrees the m. of my womb ... lie graveless, Ant. Ill, 13, 163. Perhaps also in Cor. V, 1, 17. Memphis, town of ancient Egypt; thought by the poet to have been the name of a person: a statelier pyramis to her I'll rear than Rhodope's or —'ever was, H6A I, 6, 22. Menace, vb. to threaten ; absol.: who ever knew the heavens m. sot Caes. I, 3, 44. trans.: m. me, R3 I, 4,175. B8 I, 1, 183. Rom. V, 3, 133. to whom by oath he —d revenge upon the cardinal, H8 I, 2, 137. Menaeea, subst. threats: Lr. I, 2, 159. Menapban, name: Err. V, 368. M e n u , name in Ant. I, 4, 48. II, 1, 32. II, 6, 99 etc. • e n d , 1)trans, a) to repair from breach or decay: like the —ing of highways, Merch. V, 263. let the botcher m. him, Tw. 1, 5, 51. 52. H4A II, 4, 130. H4B 111,2, 176. H5 IV, 8, 74. Tim. IV, 3, 285. Caes. I, 1, 18. 20. like a chime a —ing, Troil. I, 3, 159. b: to make better, to improve: in others' works thou dost but m. the style, Sonn. 78, 11. thus I m. it, Err. II, 2, 107. where fair is not, praise cannot m. the brow, L L L IV, 1, 17. we will m. thy wages, As II, 4, 94. God m. your voices, V, 3, 42. it would m. the lottery, All's 1, 3, 92. would that have —ed my hairf Tw. 1, 3, 102. this is an art which does m. nature, Wint. IV, 4, 96. to m. her kissing, 163. I will m. thy feast, Tim. IV, 3, 282. 283. 284. to m. it (life) or be rid on't, Mcb. Ill, 1, 114. m. his pace, Hml. V, 1, 64. m. your speech, Lr. I, 1, 96. upon my —ed judgment, Cymb. I, 4, 49. = to add to, to increase the value of: over and beside Signior Baptista's liberality, I'll m. it with a largess, Shr. I, 2, 151. you m. the jewel by the wearing it, Tim. 1, 1, 172. to m. the petty present, Ant. I, 5, 45. I cannot m. it = I cannot help it, it is not my fault: R2 II, 3, 153. Ill, 2, 100. cf. will this gear ne'er be —edt Troil. I, 1, 6 ( = will yon ever lament thus?). Used of health to be restored: God m. him, H4B I, 2, 124. In a moral sense: show now your —ed faiths, John V, 7, 75. hollow hearts

713

I fear ye; m. 'em, H8 III, 1, 105. And reflexively: bid the dishonest man m. himself, Tw. I, 5, 50. So God m. me, nsed as an oath: by my troth, and in good earnest, and so God m. me, and by all pretty oaths that are not dangerous, As IV, 1, 193. in good sooth, and as true as I live, and as God shall m. me, H4A III, 1, 255. God shall m. my soull Rom. I, 5, 81. God m. all! an expression of acquiescence in a disagreeable truth: H8 I, 2, 201. Cymb. V, 5, 68. our worser thoughts heaven m. Ant. I, 2, 64. c) to set right, to correct, to repair what is amiss: to m. the hurt that his unkindness marred, Ven. 478. that fault may be —ed, Gent. Ill, 1, 328. Err. Ill, 2, 107. —ed again, Meas. V, 91; cf. very well —ed, Shr. V, 2, 25. Mini of this, and all is —ed, Mids. V, 431. I told him ... of his oath-breaking, which he — ed thus, by now forswearing that he is forsworn, H 4 A V, 2, 38. you must return and m. it, Cor. Ill, 2,26. what is amiss plague and infection m. Tim. V, 1, 224. m. it for your own good, Oth. II, 3, 304. = to adjust: he willm. the ruff and sing, All's III, 2, 7. your crowns awry; I'll m. it, Ant. V, 2, 322. d) to make in a better way, to perform better than before: whether we are —ed, or whether better they, Sonn. 59, 11. those parts of thee that the worlds eye doth view want nothing that the thought of hearts can m. 69, 2. were it not sinful then striving to m., to mar the subjectt 103, 9. will you go with met we'U m. our dinner here, Err. IV, 3, 60; cf. you have now a broken banquet, but we'll m. it, H8 I, 4, 61. he can sing, and in ushering m. him who can, L L L V, 2, 329 (Germ. mache es besser wer kann). m. the instance, As III, 2, 70 (produce a better argument), to-morrow it (our dinner) shall be —ed, Shr. IV, 1, 179. m. the plucking off the other (boot) 151. what here shall miss, our toil shall strive to m. Rom. Prol. 14. 2) intr. at to become better, to improve: what think you of this foolt doth he not m.t Tw. I, 5, 80. they are people such that m. upon the world, Cymb. II, 4, 26 ( = get the npperhand of the world; cf. grow in As I, 1, 91). = to recover: love me and m. Ado V, 2, 95. my long sickness of health and living now begins to m. Tim. V, 1, 190. Used in a moral sense: go m. Meas. Ill, 2, 28. if he m., he is no longer dishonest, Tw. I, 5, 50. Ado II, 3, 239. Tim. V, 1, 92. Lr. II, 4, 232. Oth. IV, 3, 106. b) to do better than before: if you pardon, we will m. Mids. V, 437. m. and charge home, Cor. I, 4, 38. still he —s, Ant. I, 3, 82. Mender, one who mends or repairs: am. of bad soles, Caes. I, 1, 15. Mends, snbst.: if she be fair, 'tis the better for her; an she be not, she has the m. in her own hands, Troil. I, 1, 68; according to Dyce, = she must make the best of it; according to Jervis, m. = remedy. Menecrates, name in Ant. I, 4, 48. M e n e l a a s , the famous king of Sparta: Troil. Prol. 9 etc. Prototype of cuckoldom: H6C II, 2, 147 Troil. I, 1, 115. V, 1, 60. Menenlu* (Agrippa) name in Cor. I, 1, 52 etc. Menon, name in Troil. V, 5, 7. Mental, pertaining to the mind, intellectual: the still and m. parts, Troil. 1, 3, 200. 'twin his HI. and his active parts, II, 3, 184. what a m. power this eye shoots forth! Tim. I, 1, 31. Menteltb, connty in Scotland: H4A I, 1, 73. 46*

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M e n t l e n , snbst. incidental notice taken and expressed in words: where no m. of me more must be heard of, H8 III, 2, 434. M e n t i a n , vb. to take and express occasional notice of, to alledge, to name: Wint. IV, 1, 22. Tit. V, 1, 107. Caes. Ill, 2,140. H c r k a i U p h l l n i , name of the evil spirit in the History of Fanstus and in Marlowe's play; used by Pistol as a term of invective: W i v . 1,1,132. Mercade, see Marcade. Mercatante, see Marcantant. Mercatl*, name in G e n t I, 2, 12. Mercenary, adj. renal, hired: my mind was never ¡/et more m. Merch. IV, 1, 418. soaked in m. blood, H5 IV, 7, 79. as if I had been m. Cor. V, 6, 41. Mercenary, subst a hired soldier: sixteen hundred — s , H5 IV, 8, 93. Mercer,, a silk-merchant: Meas. IV, 3, 11. Merchandise, subst. 1) goods bought or sold in trade, wares: Mids. II, 1, 134. Merch. I, 1, 40. H5 IV, 1, 155. Rom. II, 2, 84. Having the verb in the singular: mym. makes me not sad, Merch. I, 1, 45. in the plural: the m. are all too dear J or me, Ant. II, 5,104. 2 ) trade, commerce: were he out of Venice, lean make what m. I will, Merch. Ill, 1, 134. Merchandized, treated like an article of trade, as a thing that may be bought and sold: that love is m. whose rich esteeming the owner's tongue doth publish everywhere, Sonn. 102, 3. Merchant, 1) one who traffics to foreign countries : huge rocks ... the m. fears ere rich at home he lands, Lucr. 336. the hopeless m. of this loss, 1660. Tp. II, 1,5. Err. I, 1, 3. 7. 151. 1 , 2 , 3 . 2 4 . 11,1,4. V, 124. Merch. I, 3, 50. 111,1,26. 111,2,281. IV, 1, 23. 156. 174. 205. 233. 263. 299. Shr. I, 1, 12. II, 328. IV, 2, 98. H5 I, 2, 192. H8 I, 1, 96. Troil. I, 1, 106. I, 3, 359. II, 2, 69. 83. Tim. I, 1, 7. 242. Ant. V, 2, 183. 184. how doth that royal m., good Antonio? Merch. Ill, 2, 242. losses ... enow to press a royal m. down, IV, 1, 29 (cf. Royal). 2 ) a ship of trade: the masters of some m. T p . II, 1, 5. a whole —'» venture, H4B II, 4, 68. 3 ) a chap, fellow: this is a riddling m. H 6 A II, 3, 57. what saucy m. was this, that was so full of his ropery1 Rom. II, 4, 153. Merchant-like, like a merchant: I I 6 B IV, 1, 41. Merchant-marring, ruiningmerchants: m. rocks, Merch. Ill, 2, 274. M e r c i f u l , disposed to pity, ready to forgive, compassionate: Ven. 1155. T p . V, 178. Meas. II, 2, 114. Ill, 2, 203. A d o III, 3, 64. Merch. IV, 1, 182. 233. All's IV, 3, 144. Wint. II, 3, 185. H5 II, 2, 47. Ill, 2, 23. H6B IV, 2, 133. H8 V, 3, 61. Epil. 10. Tit. I, 118. Rom. Ill, 3, 12. V, 3, 72. Mcb. II, 1, 7. IV, 3, 207. Oth. V, 2, 87. M e r c i f u l l y , with compassion, mildly: mock me m. H o V, 2, 214. Merciless, pitiless, unfeeling: Ven. 821. Lucr. 1160. J o h n l l , 214. H6B IV, 4, 33. H6C 11,6,25. R3 I, 3, 184. Mcb. I, 2, 9. With to: Err. I, 1, 100. M e r c u r i a l , resembling Mercury: his foot M. Cymb. IV, 2, 310 (light and nimble like that of Mercury). M e r c a r y , 1) the ancient god, son and messenger of J o v e : L L L V, 2, 940. John IV, 2, 174. H 4 A IV, 1, 106. H5 II Chor. 7. R3 II, 1, 88. IV, 3, 55. Troil.

II, 2, 45. IV, 3, 55. IV, 4, 14. Hml. Ill, 4, 58. A n t IV, 15, 35. Patron of craftiness: Mercury endue thee with tearing, T w . 1, 5, 105. littered under M. Wint. IV, 3, 25. M., lose all the serpentine craft of thy caduceus, Troil. II, 3, 13. cf. T i t . IV, 1, 67. 2 ) name o f a planet: Wint. IV, 3, 25. Tit. IV, 3, 55. IV, 4, 14. M e r e u t l e , name in Rom, I, 2, 70 ( ? ) . 1,4,95. II, 1, 6 etc. Mercy, 1) readiness to spare and forgive, grace, clemency, pity: Sonn. 145, 5. T p . Ill, 2, 78. Epil. 18. Meas. I, 1, 45. II, 1, 297. II, 2, 50. 63. II, 4, 112. Ill, I , 6 5 . 111,2,207. IV, 2, 115. V, 412. 481. 489. A d o IV, 1, 182. L L L IV, 1, 24. Merch. Ill, 3, 1. Ill, 5, 35. IV, 1, 6. 184. A s III, 1,2. Wint. II, 1, 73. John IV, 1, 26. H 4 A I, 3, 132. H5 II, 2, 44. H6B I, 3, 160. IV, 8,12. H 6 C I I , 6, 46. IV, 8,43. R 3 I, 1,151. Hml. I, 5, 169 etc. Plor. —ies, H8 II, 1, 70. With of- should she kneel down in m. of this fact, Meas. V, 439; cf. Hml. IV, 5, 200. W i t h to: m. to thee would prove itself a bawd, Meas. Ill, 1, 150. to solicit him for m. to his country, Cor. V, 1, 73. in m. = out of pity: Meas. V, 439. H5 IV, 3, 83. H 6 B I, 3, 160. of his m., in the same sense: God of his m. give you patience, H5 II, 2, 179. to have m. = to take pity: A s I, 3, 2. R 3 V, 3, 178. Troil. I, 2, 133. Cor. IV, 6, 108. Oth. V, 2, 58. usually followed by on or upon: Lord have m. on us, L L L V, 2, 419. All's II, 3, 224. T w . Ill, 4, 152. 184. H 6 A I, 4, 70. H6B I, 3, 219. H8 III, 2, 262. Hml. IV, 5, 199. L r . Ill, 4, 75. Oth. V, 2, 35. Ant. V, 2, 175. to render m. = to show pity: Merch. IV, 1, 88. 378. to take m. on = to be merciful to: H5 II, 4, 103. H 6 A IV, 3, 34. I cry you m. = I beg your pardon: W i v . Ill, 5, 27. Meas. IV, 1, 10. A d o I, 2, 27. II, 1,353. H 4 A 1,3,212. IV, 2, 57. H 6 A V, 3, 109. H6B I, 3, 142. R 3 I, 3, 235. II, 2, 104. IV, 1, 19. IV, 4,515. Rom. IV, 5, 141. Oth. IV, 2, 88. V, 1, 69." I cry your worships m. Mids. Ill, 1, 182. I cry your honour m. H8 V, 3, 78. I omitted: cry you m. Gent. V, 4, 94. L r . Ill, 6, 54. cry m. R3 V, 3, 224. Imperatively: cry the man m. A s III, 5, 61. By m. in T i m . Ill, 5, 55, explained by some as = by your leave, under your pardon. Often used as an exclamation of surprise or fear: m., m., this is a devil, Tp. II, 2, 101. 0 m., God 1 what masking stuff is here! Shr. IV,3,87. God's m., maiden, does it curd thy blood, All's I, 3, 155. name of m., when was this f W i n t . Ill, 3, 105. alack, for m. T p . I, 2, 43G. God, for thy m. Err. IV, 4, 147. God for his m. R 2 II, 2,98. V, 2, 75. m.onus, Tp. 1,1,64. 111,2,141. Wint. III, 3, 70. m. on me, W i v . Ill, 1, 22. John IV, 1, 12. H8 V, 4, 71. 2) power of acting at pleasure, discretion: lies at the m. of his mortal sting, Lucr. 364. T p . IV, 2C4. stand at m. of my sword, Troil. IV, 4, 116. the part that is at m. Cor. I, 10, 7. at thy m. shall they stoop, Tit. V, 2, 118. the offender's life lies in the m. of the duke, Merch. IV, 1, 355. hold our lives in m. L r . I, 4, 350. all estates which lie within the m. of your wit, L L L V, 2, 856. leave thee to the m. of wild beasts, Mids. II, 1, 228. stoop unto the sovereign m. of the king, R2 II, 3, 157. to our best m. give yourselves, H5 III, 3, 3. left thee to the m. of the law, H6B I, 3, 137. IV, 8,12. 50. H 6 C I , 4 , 3 0 . H8 111, 2, 363. Plur. — ies: what foolish boldness brought thee to their —ies, T w . V,73. I commit my body to your —ies, H 4 B V, 5,130.

M M e r e r - l a t h i n g , pitiless: J o h n IV, 1, 121. • e r e , pnre; 1) only; simply that which is designated, and nothing else: the m. effusion of thy proper loins, Meas- III, 1, 30. upon his m. request came I hither, V, 152 (his request was my only motive), a m. anatomy, Err. V, 238. a quintain, a m. lifeless block, As 1, 2, 263. we are m. usurpers, II, 1,61. whose judgments are m. fathers of their garments, All's 1,2,62 (have no other business but to devise new fashions). the m. word is a slave deboshed on every tomb, II, 3, 144. my determinate voyage is m. extravagancy, Tw. II, 1, 12. it is but weakness, m. weakness, Wint. II, 3, 2. the prince, with m. conceit and fear, is gone, III, 2, 145. wisdom, loyalty and m. dislike of our proceedings kept the earl from hence, H4A IV, 1, 64. honour is a m. scutcheon, V, 1, 143. this is m. digression, H4B IV, 1, 140. learning a m. hoard of gold, IV, 3 , 1 2 4 . submission! 'tis a m. French word, H6A IV, 7, 54. this is a m. distraction, HS III, 1, 112. out of m. ambition, III, 2, 324. I am stifled with the m. rankness of their joy, IV, 1, 59. I with great truth catch m. simplicity, Troil. IV, 4, 106. HI. words, no matter, V, 3, 108. in nt. spite, Cor. IV, 5, 88. a m. satiety of commendations, Tim. I, 1, 166. answer m. nature, IV, 3, 231. love nought but even the m. necessities, 377. the m. want of gold 401. but a m. conceit, V, 4, 14. it was m. foolery, Caes. I, 2, 236. the m. lees is left, Mcb. II, 3, 100. to Jill up your will, of your m. own, IV, 3, 89. m. implorators of unholy suits, Hml.1,3,129. pictures, or m. beasts, IV, 5, 86. this is m. madness, V, 1, 307. m. fetches, Lr. II, 4, 90. our m. defects prove our commodities, IV, 1, 22. this is m. practice, V, 3, 151 (Qq this is practice), m. prattle, Oth. I, 1, 26. for m. suspicion, I, 3, 395. putting on the m. form of civil seeming, II, 1, 243. make our faith m. folly, Ant. Ill, 13,43. your pleasure was my m. offence, Cymb. V, 5, 334 (which should be: your m. pleasure was my offence. But Ff neer and near). 2) unqualified, absolute: cozenage, m. cozenage, Wiv. IV, 5, 64. she must lie here on m. necessity, L L L I, 1, 149. he speaks the m. contrary, I, 2, 35. engaged my friend to his m. enemy, Merch. Ill, 2, 265. second childishness and m. oblivion, Ar II, 7,165. most loving (is) m. folly, 181. this is m. falsehood, Wint. Ill, 2, 142. of m. compassion and of lenity, H6A V, 4, 125. m. instinct of love and loyalty, E 6 B III, 2, 250. your m. enforcement shall acquittance me, R3 III, 7, 233. to the m. undoing of all the kingdom, H8 III, 2, 329. each thing meets in m. oppugnancy, Troil. I, 3, 111. may that soldier a m. recreant prove, 287. the m. despair of surgery, Mcb. IV, 3, 152. the m. perdition of the Turkish fleet, Oth. II, 2, 3. to thy further fear, nay, to thy m. confusion, thou shalt know, Cymb. IV, 2, 92. that pity begets you a good opinion, and that opinion a m. profit, Per. IV, 2, 132. Superl. —st: he cried upon it at the —st loss, Shr. Ind. 1, 23. Adverbially: think you it is sof Ay, surely, m. the truth, All's 111, 5, 58. M e r e d , sole, entire: he being the m. question, Ant. Ill, 13, 10 (he being the only cause and subject of the war). Merely, 1) only: thus m. with the garment of a Grace the naked and concealed fiend he covered, Compl. 316. m. thou ( l i f e ) art death's fool, Meas. Ill, 1, 11. he shall have m. justice, Merch. IV, 1,339. Asll,7,140. Ill, 2, 420. R2 IV, 297. H8 II, 1, 162. Hml. II, 2, 264.

71ft

Ant. HI, 13, 62. m. but: Compl. 174. but m.: Meas. V, 459. H8 I, 3, 6. not m. . . . but: Troil. II, 2, 146. 2) simply, absolutely, quite: we are m. cheated of our lives by drunkards, Tp. 1,1, 59. that's the scene that I would see, which will be m. a dumb-show, Ado II, 3, 226. to live in a nook m. monastic, As III, 2, 441. in. our own traitors, All's IV, 3, 25. what they will inform, m. in hate, 'gainst any of us all, R2 II, 1, 243. this is clean kam; m. awry, Cor.lII, 1,305. their society may be m. poison, Tim. IV, 1, 32. that which I show is m. love, IV, 3, 522. I turn the trouble of my countenance m. upon myself, Caes. I, 2, 39. things rank and gross in nature possess it m. Hml. I, 2, 137. it is m. a lust of the blood, Oth. 1,3, 339. the horse were m. lost, Ant. Ill, 7, 9. give up yourself m. to chance, 48. some falling m. through fear, Cymb. V, 3, 11. Meridian, the highest point, summit: from that full m. of my glory I haste now to my setting, H8 III, 2, 224. Merit, snbst. 1) that for which a person deserves honour or reward : what a m. were it in death to take this poor maid from the world, Meas. Ill, 1, 240. my beauty will be saved by m. L L L IV, 1, 21 (quibbling); cf. if men were to be saved by m. H4A 1, 2, 120. that clear honour were purchased by the m. of the wearer, Merch. II, 9, 43. Me m. of service is seldom attributed to the true performer, All's III, 6, 63. H5 II, 2, 34. Troil. Ill, 2, 99. Cor. II, 3, 172. Hml. II, 2, 558. Lr. I, 1, 54. Oth. II, 3, 270. Ill, 4, 117. Cymb. I, 4, 91. I, 5, 74. V, 4, 79. Per. II, 3, 12. = desert in a bad sense : it was not altogether your brother's evil disposition made him seek his death, but a provoking m , set a-work by a reproveable badness in himself, Lr. Ill, 5, 8. so to use them as we shall find their —s and our safety may equally determine, V, 3, 44. when we fall we answer others' —t in our name, Ant. V, 2, 178. 2) that which is deserved, reward, recompense: my beauty will be saved by m. L L L IV, 1, 21 (quibbling). a dearer m., not so deep a maim, have J deserved, B2 I, 3, 156. 3) worthiness, excellence, good quality : to whom in vassalage thy m. hath my duty strongly knit, Sonn. 26, 2. what m. lived in me, 72, 2. place my m. in the eye of scorn, 88, 2. that may express my love or thy dear m. 108, 4. what m. do 1 in myself respect, 149, 9. Gent. V, 4, 144. Wiv. Ill, 5, 52. Ado III, 1, 70. Mids. V, 92. Merch. II, 9, 39. All's I, 1, 242. II, 1, 151. B2 V, 6, 18. H4B II, 4, 405. H5 V, 1, 8. H8 I, 1, 64. Troil. I, 3, 349. II, 2, 60. II, 3, 202. Ill, 3, 83. IV, 1, 65. IV, 4, 87. Cor. Ill, 1, 61. IV, 7, 48. Bom. I, 2, 31. Tim. I, 2, 212. Hml. Ill, 1, 74. Oth. II, 1, 147. Ill, 3, 187. Per. 11,2,9. Used of things, = worth, weight: and by the m. of vile gold purchase corrupted pardon, J o h n III, 1, 165 (cf. above: to be saved by m.). what m. is in that reason which denies the yielding of her upf Troil. II, 2, 24. if for the sake of m. thou wilt hear me, rise from thy stool, Ant. II, 7, 61 (i. e. the importance of what I have to say). Merit, vb. to deserve; trans.: Sonn. 142, 4. Pilgr. 325. Wiv. II, 2, 210. Meai. Ill, 1, 206. Ado III, 1, 19. As V, 4, 194. Shr. IV, 3, 41. All's II, 3, 291. Wint. V, 1, 175. J o h n II, 520. H5 III, 6, 24. H6B V, 1, 81. Troil. IV, 1, 53. Tit. Ill, 1, 197. Rom. 1, 1, 228. Lr. V, 3, 302. With of: hath more of thee —ed than a band of Clotcns had ever scar for, Cymb. V, 5, 304 (from in Wint. V, 1, 175). With an inf.: —ed to

716

M

be so, W i n t . Ill, 2, 49. T r o U . IV, 1, 55. Abaol.: all hit faults to Marcius shall be honours, though indeed in aught he m. not, Cor. I, 1, 280. M e r l t e r l e n s , deserving honour or reward: 'tis a m. fair design, Lucr. 1692. m. service, W i v . IV, 2, 217. m. shall that hand be called, John III, 1, 176. the deed is m. H 6 B III, 1, 270. M e r l i n , the famous sorcerer and prophet of ancient Britain: H 4 A III, 1, 150. L r . Ill, 2, 95. M e r m a i d , 1) a siren: thy —'s voice hath done me double wrong, Ven. 429. bewitching like the wanton —'s song, 777. as if some m. did their ears entice, Lucr. 1411. train me not, sweet m., with thy note, Err. III, 2, 45. I'll stop mine ears against the — 's song, 169. a m. on a dolphin's back, Mids. II, 1, 150. I'll drown more sailors than the m. H 6 C III, 2, 186. 2 ) water-nymph: Ant. II, 2, 212. 214. M e r m a l d - l i k e , like a water-nymph: and m. awhile they bore her up, Hml. IV, 7, 177. Mereps, father of Phaethon: Gent. Ill, 1, 153. M e r r i l y , with gayety, j o v i a l l y : T p . V, 92. W i v . II, 1, 198. Err. IV, 2, 4. L L L V, 2, 477. 481. A s II, 7, 11. Ill, 2, 340. A l l ' s II, 2, 63. W i n t . IV, 3, 133. IV, 4, 189. H 4 A 11,2, 100. 111. IV, 1, 134. V, 2, 12. H 4 B V, 3, 22. 23. T r o i l . V, 10, 42. Cor. IV, 3, 41. Bom. II, 5, 22. T i m . II, 2, 107. Caes. II, 1, 224.

I, 2, 65. 86. to make m. a to enjoy one's self, to feast with m i r t h : Shr. V, 1, 23. H 6 B I, 2, 85. 87. F o l l o w e d by at: m. at any thing, Meas. Ill, 2, 250. to be m. with - to m o c k : his lordship is but m. with me, T i m . I l l , 2, 42. F o l l o w e d by an infinitive denoting the occasion of gladness: I am —er to die than thou art to live, Cymb. V, 4, 175. M e r v t l l i a a , an unintelligible word nsed by Pistol in H 5 II, 1, 50; the later F f have marvellous, which is positively nonsensical. M e s h , a net: such a hare is madness the youth, to skip o'er the —es of good counsel the cripple, Merch. 1, 2, 22. here in her hairs the painter plays the spider and hath woven a golden m. to entrap the hearts of men, 111, 2, 122. cf. Enmesh. M e s h e d , mashed, brewed by mixing malt and water together: she drinks no other drink but tears, brewed with her sorrow, m. upon her cheeks, T i t . Ill, 2, 38. M e s e p a t a m l a , country between the rivers Euphrates and T i g r i s : Ant. Ill, 1, 8. Mess, mass: by the in. H 5 III, 2, 122 (the Scotch Captain Jamy's speech). M e a s , 1) a dish: I had as lief you would tell me of a m. of porridge, W i v . Ill, 1, 63. one m. is like to be your cheer, Shr. IV, 4, 70. our feasts in every in. have folly, and the feeders digest it with a custom, W i n t . IV, 4, I I . nature on each bush lays her full m. before you, T i m . IV, 3, 424. he that makes his generation —es to gorge his appetite, L r . I, 1, 119.

M e r r l m a n , name of a d o g : Shr. Ind. 1 , 1 7 . M e r r i m e n t , diversion, amusement; mirth: rather proved the sliding of your brother a m. than a vice, Meas. 2, 4, 116. they do it but in mocking m. L L L V, 2 , 1 3 9 . knowing aforehand of our m. 461. thou inter2 ) a small quantity, a small piece: to borrow a ruptest our m. 725. met your loves like a m. 794. stir m. of vinegar, H 4 B II, 1, 103. I will chop her into up the Athenian youth to — s , Mids. I, 1, 12. for your — es, Oth. IV, 1, 211 ( c f . gobbets in H 6 B V, 2, 58). m. Ill, 2, 146. friends that purpose m. Merch. 11,2,212. 3 ) a party eating together, a dining-tablc: he frame your mind to mirth andm. Shr. Ind. 2, 137. our and his toothpick at my worship's m. John I, 190. let first m. hath made thee jealous, IV, 5, 76. strain their a beast be lord of betists, and his crib shall stand at cheeks to idle m. John III, 3, 46. turn all to a m. H 4 B the king's m. Hml. V, 2, 89. lower —es = persons of II, 4, 324. nature's tears are reason's m. R o m . IV, 5, inferior rank (properly those who sat at the lower end of the table. D y c e ) : lower —es perchance are to 83. your flashes of m. Hml. V, 1, 210. M e r r l n e s s , merry disposition, g a y c t y : L L L I, this business purblind, W i n t . I, 2, 227.

1, 202. M e r r y , full of mirth, g a y : V e n . 1025. Lucr. 989. 1110. P i l g r . 253. T p . II, 1, 1. 177. Ill, 2, 125. IV, 135. Gent. IV, 2, 29. 30. W i v . II, 1, 8. II, 1, 215. 227. IV, 2, 107. V, 5, 254. Meas. Ill, 2, 249. Err. 1, 2, 21. 79. II, 1, 88. II, 2, 7. 20. Ill, 1, 26. 108. III, 2, 183. IV, 1, 90. L L L V, 2, 16. 638. Mids.I, 2, 15. II, 1, 43. 57. V, 58. Merch. V, 69. Shr. HI, 2, 228 etc. etc. Compar. — er: Err. I, 2, 69. L L L II, 66. Mids. II, 1, 57. A s I, 2, 4. John IV, 1, 12. Cor. V, 4, 45. Cymb. V, 4, 175. Superl. — est: Meas. Ill, 2, 7. 115 I, 2, 272. H 6 A II, 4, 15. she's a m. Greek, T r o i l . I, 2, 118. the m. Greeks, IV, 4, 58 ( c f . Greek), a many m. men with him, A s I, 1, 121 (m. men being, in popular songs, a very common appellation given to the vassals o f a lord), three m. men be we (scrap of a song), T w . II, 3, 82. the Hundred M. Tales, A d o II, 1, 135. there live we as m. as the day is long, A d o II, 1, 52. I should be as m. as the. day is long, John IV, 1, 18. 'twas never m. world since of two usuries the —est was put down, Meas. Ill, 2, 6. 'twas never m. world since lowly feigning was called compliment, T w . Ill, 1, 109. it was never m. world in England since gentlemen came up, I16B IV, 2, 9. 'twas m. when .. . A n t . II, 5, 15. God rest you m. (a parting compliment used by low people) A s V, 1, 65. rest you m. R o m .

4) a set of four ('as at great dinners the company was usually arranged into fours'. N a r e s ) : you three fools lacked me fool to make up the m. L L L IV, 3, 207. a TO. of Russians left us but of late, V, 2, 361. where are your m. of sons to back you now? H 6 C I, 4, 73. M e s s a g e , a communication from one party to another made by one sent for the purpose: Meas. V, 465. A d o II, 3, 262. L L L III, 52. Merch. I, 1, 164. T w . I, 5, 203. Ill, 4, 220. W i n t . V, 1, 188. R 2 II, 3, 69. H5 I, 2, 298. II, 4, 110. H 6 A II, 3, 13. H 6 B III, 2, 272. 379. H8 V, 1, 64. 164. T r o i l . IV, 4, 132. T i t . IV, 2, 2. T i m . V, 4, 20. Mcb. I, 5, 38. Ill, 6, 47. Hml. I, 2, 22. L r . I, 4, 36. A n t . II, 5, 86. Per. I, 3, 33. 36. to do a m.: Gent. IV, 4, 93. 95. T r o i l . 1, 3, 219. T i t . IV, 1, 117. IV, 4, 104. Eom. II, 5, 66. to be sent on a m.: Gent. IV, 4, 117. I16A IV, 7, 53. I \go of m. from the queen to France, I I 6 B IV, 1, 113. M e s s a l a , name in Caes. IV, 3, 141. 163. V, 1, 70 etc. M e s s a l l n e , name of a place (unknown in geog r a p h y ) : T w . II, 1, 18. V, 239. M e s s e n g e r , the bearer o f a communication or errand: L u c r . A r g . 17. L u c r . 1583. Sonn. 45, 10. T p . IV, 71. 76. Gent. I, 1, 159. II, 1, 173. II, 4, 53. II, 7, 77. Ill, 1, 52. IV, 4,104. W i v . II, 1, 163. Meas. V, 74. Err. I, 2, 67. II, 1, 77. IV, 4, 5. Mids. I, 1, 34.

M

717

III, 2, 4. Merch. IV, 1, 108. 110. 152. V, 117. As I, more, Meas. Ill, 2, 80. thou hast m. enough in thee to 2, 62. IV, 3, 12. All's I, 3, 157. Ill, 2, 111 (cf. John kill care, Ado V, 1, 133. a lad of m. H4A II, 4, 13. II, 260 and H6C I, 1, 99). Ill, 4, 34. 40. Tw. I, 5, 219. their pride and m. is asleep, IV, 3, 22. this boy lends 319. II, 2, 24. John II, 51. 260 (cf. All's 111, 2, 111). tn. to us all, V, 4, 24. from his m. was his party steel554. H5 I, 2, 221. H6B 111, 2, 48. V, 1, 16. H6C 1, ed, H4B I, 1, 116. I did not think Master Silence had I, 99. 272. Ill, 3, 222. IV, 1, 84. R3 II, 4, 38. Ill, 2, been a man of this m. V, 3, 41. where have they this 3, Troil. II, 3, 86. Cor. IV, 6, 54. Tit. V, 1, 152. Rom. m.t H5 III, 5, 15. our m. is bred out, 29. every Greek II, 2, 28. V, 2, 15. Tim. Ill, 6, 41. Caes. II, 1, 104. of i7i. Troil. I, 3, 258. the insuppressive m. of our spiMcb. Ill, 6, 41. Hml. II, 2, 144. IV, 3, 36. Lr. II, 1, rits, Caes. II, 1, 134. make gallant show and promise 126. II, 2, 54. 139. 153. II, 4, 2. 38. Oth. I, 2, 41. of their m. IV, 2, 24. of unimproved m. hot and Jull, 89. I, 3, 13. IV, 2, 170. Ant. I, 1, 29. 32. 52. I, 5, Hml. I, 1, 96. there's m. in thee, Oth. IV, 2, 207. I do 62. Ill, 6, 31. Ill, 12, 5. Ill, 13, 37. 73. IV, 1, 2. IV, think there is m. in death, which commits some loving act upon her, Ant. I, 2, 147. 6, 22. V, 2, 324. Confounded with message by Mrs Quickly: Wiv. AbstT. pro concr.: good sparks and lustrous, a II, 2, 98. word, good —s, All's II, 1, 42. he was quick m. when Meaalna, town in Sicily: Ado I, 1, 2. 18. 39. he went to school, Caes. I, 2, 300. 116. Ill, 5, 35. IV, 2, 85. V, 1, 193. 290. V, 4, 128. M e f o m e r p h e e e , to change into a different form: Metal or Mettle (no distinction made in O. Edd. Gent. I, 1, 66. II, 1, 32 (in evident allusion to the between the two words, either in spelling or in nse); Metamorphoses of Ovid). 1) heavy, hard and shining substance, not combustible, Metamerpheals (M. Edd. Metamorphoses^, title but fnsible by heat: no use of m. Tp. II, 1, 153. is of the principal work of the poet Ovid: Tit. IV, 1, 42. not lead a m. heavy, L L L III, 60. no m. can bear half Metapher, a simile comprised in a word: All's the keenness, Merch. IV, 1,124. to what m. this counter- V, 2, 12. 13. 14. T w . I, 3, 76. feit lump of ore will be melted, All's III, 6, 39. that I Metaphysical, supernatural: the golden round, must draw this m. from my side, John V, 2, 16. the which fate and m. aid doth seem to have thee crowned fineness of which m. is not found in fortunes love, Troil. withal, Mcb. I, 5, 30. I, 3, 22. tn., steel to the very back, T i t IV, 3, 47. touchMetaphysics, the science of mind: the mathemaed and found base m. Tim. Ill, 3, 6. here's m. more tics and the m.,fall to them as you find your stomach attractive, Hml. Ill, 2, 116. a mineral of —s base, IV, serves you, Shr. I, 1, 37. 1, 26. Par excellence = gold: with twisted m. amoMete (cf. Bemete) to measure, to judge o f : their rously impleached, Compl. 205. ail the m. in your shop, memory shall as a pattern or a measure live, by which Err. IV, 1, 82. a breed for barren m. Merch. I, 3, 135. his grace must m. the lives of others, H4B IV, 4, 77. my m. of India, Tw. II, 5, 17 ( = my jewel; Germ. W i t h at, = to measure or jndge by in aiming, to aim Goldmadchen. The later F f nettle). like bright m. on at: let the mark have a prick in't, to m. at, L L L IV, a sullen ground, H 4 A I, 2, 236. the verge of golden 1, 134. m. R3 IV, 1, 60. the imperial m. circling now thy brow, Metellus, name in Caes. I, 3, 134. 149. II, 1, IV, 4, 382. Perhaps also in T p . II, 1, 153. 218 etc. 2) the substance or material of which a thing is Meteer, a bright phenomenon, thought to be composed: let there be some more test made of my m., portentous, appearing in the atmosphere (cf. Exhalabefore so noble and so great a figure be stamped upon tion) : it shall hang like a m. o'er the cuckold's horns, it, Meas. I, 1, 49; cf. to put m. in restrained means to W i v . II, 2, 292. his heart's — s tilting in his face. make a false one (life) II, 4, 48 (in both passages the Err. IV, 2, 6. they will pluck away his natural cause simile taken from minting), not till God make men of and call them —s, prodigies and signs, John III, 4, some other m. than earth, Ado II, 1, 63. suits his folly 157. had I seen the vaulty top of heaven figured quite to the m. of my speech, As II, 7, 82 ( = contents, pur- o'er with burning — s , V, 2, 53. —s fright the fixed port). that you were made of is m. to make virgins, stars of heaven, R2 II, 4, 9. like the —s of a troubled All's I, 1, 141. that womb, thatm., that self mould that heaven, H4A I, 1, 10. do you see these —si do you fashioned thee, R2 I, 2, 23. show us here the m. of your behold these exhalations1 what think you they portend? pasture, H5 HI, 1, 27. children even of your m., of II, 4, 351. and be no more an exhaled m., a prodigy your very blood, R3 IV, 4, 302. of what coarse m. ye of fear, V, 1, 19. it is some m. that the sun exhales, are moulded, H8 III, 2, 239. whose self-same m. en- Rom. Ill, 5, 13. 1 missed the m. once, H8 V, 4, 52. genders the black toad, Tim. IV, 3, 179. I am made of Mete-yard, a measuring yard: Shr. IV, 3, 153. the self-same m. Lr. I, 1, 71. Metheglln, a sweet beverage composed of vari3) constitutional disposition, character, temper: ous ingredients: Wiv. V, 5, 167 ( — s ; Evans*speech). I am one that had rather go with sir priest than sir L L L V, 2, 233. knight: I care not who knows so much of my m. Tw. Ill, Methlnka (cf. Think) it seems to me: Sonn. 14, 4, 300. your service, so much against the m. of your 2. 62, 5. 104, 11. 112, 14. Pilgr. 168. Tp. I, 1,31. sex, V, 330. if thou hast the m. of a king, John II, II, 1, 68. 206. 269. Gent. 1, 1, 41. I, 2, 90. II, 4, 203. 401. whether their basest m. be not moved, Caes. I, 1, IV, 2, 26. Wiv. II, 2, 249. IV, 4, 23. 24. Meas. IV, 66. thy honourable m. may be wrought from that it is 2, 120. V, 500. Err. I, 2, 66. IV, 4, 157. V, 417. disposed, I, 2, 313. thy undaunted m. should compose Ado I, 1, 173. Ill, 2, 16. Ill, 4, 43. 91. L L L I, 2, nothing but males, Mcb. 1, 7, 73. gentlemen of brave 67. 91. V, 2, 798. Mids. Ill, 1, 145. 203. IV, 1, 36. m. Tp. II, 1, 182. good m. H4A II, 4, 383. 194. V, 183. 322 etc. etc. Sometimes not parentheti4) a fiery temper, ardour, spirit of enterprise, high cal, but preceded by conjunctions: because m. that courage: that horse his m. from his rider takes, Compl. she loved you as well, Gent. IV, 4, 84. for m• 1 am 107. if you take it not patiently, why, your m. is the marvellous hairy, Mids. IV, 1, 26. and now m. I have

718

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13. 35. 3 ) M . Hopkins: H 8 I, 1, 221 ( M . Edd. Nicholas). 4 ) M . Cassio: Oth. I, 1, 20. II, 1, 26 etc. M l e h a e l m a a , the twenty ninth o f September: W i v . I, 1, 212. H 4 A II, 4, 60. M l e h e r , a truant: shall the blessed sun of heaven prove a m. and eat blackberriest H 4 A II, 4, 450. M l c h l n g m a l l e e h e ( F f miching Malicho, Qq munching Mallico) probably = secret and insidious mischief (cf. Mallecho): this is m.; it means mischief, Methad,regulated proceeding,« manner o f acting Hml. Ill, 2, 146 (Florio's Italian p i c t i o n a r y , 1598, based on roles: why with the time do 1 not glance aside in v. Acciapinare: to miche, to shrug or sneak in some to new-found —s and to compounds strangef Sonn. 76, corner). M i e k l e , much, great: more m. was the pain, P i l g r . 4. what sayest thou to this tune, matter and m.1 Meas. III, 2, 52. I will beat this m. in your sconce, Err. II, 219. the one ne'er got me credit, the other m. blame, 2, 34. to answer by the m. T w . I, 5, 244. or am not Err. Ill, 1, 45. an oath of m. might, H o II, 1, 70. I able verbatim to rehearse the m. of my pen, H 6 A III, shall die with m. age, H 6 A IV, 6, 35. bows unto the 1, 13 ( i . e. in the order in which I wrote it down). grave with m. age, H 6 B V, 1, 174. m. is the powerful and fall into a slower m. R 3 I, 2, 116. though this be grace, Rom. II, 3, 15. madness, yet there is m. in it, Hml. II, 2, 208. called M l c r e c e s m , little world; man considered as an it an honest m. 465. you do not hold the m. to enforce epitome of the universe: if you see this in the map of the like from him, A n t . I, 3, 7. my m. Cor. II, 1, 68.

a mind to it, Merch. IV, 1, 433. and since m. I would not grow to fast, R 3 II, 4, 14. cf. but O, m., how slow this old moon wanes, Mids. I, 1, 3. how much m. I could despise this man, H8 111, 2, 297. so m. Mids. IT, 1, 195. Sometimes = it is just as if (Germ, mir ist als ob): when a man thanks me heartily, m. J have given him a penny and he renders me the beggarly thanks. A s II, 5, 28. m. it should be now a huge eclipse, Oth. V, 2, 99.

M e t h e u g h t , it seemed to m e : T p . Ill, 3, 96. W i v . IV, 2, 215. L L L II, 242. Merch. I, 3, 70. A s V, 4, 29. A l l ' s V, 3, 199. T w . I, 1, 20. II, 2, 21. II, 4 , 4 . Ill, 4, 396. W i n t . I, 2, 159. V, 2, 7. John V, 5, 1. H 4 B II, 2, 88. II, 4, 227. H5 III, 7, 51. H 6 A IV, 1, 175. H 6 C II, 1, 13. H8 II, 4, 186. Cor. IV, 5, 164. M c b . II, 2, 35. V, 5, 34. Hml. I, 2, 215. V, 1, 70. 72. V, 2, 5. L r . IV, 6, 69. V, 3, 175. = it was as i f : when J said 'a mother', m. you saw a serpent, A l l ' s I, 3, 147. = it seemed to me in sleep, I dreamt: T p . Ill, 2, 150. Mids. II, 2, 149. IV, 1, 82. 213. 216. H 6 B I, 2, 25. 36. R 3 I, 4, 18. 21. 24. 36. V, 3, 204. Cymb. V, 5,426.

M i d , subst. middle: about the m. of night, R3 V, 3, 77. M i d , adj. middle: past the m. season, T p . I, 2, 239 (noon), m. age and wrinkled eld, T r o i l . II, 2, 104 (i. e. the prime o f l i f e ; cf. Sonn. 7 , 6 ) . I n H 6 B IV, 8, 64 Fl.2.3 through the very middest of you; F4 and most M . Edd. midst. M i d a s , the Phrygian king who received from God Bacchus the gift of transforming every thing he touched into gold, and in consequence of it was near dying of hunger: Merch. Ill, 2, 102.

M i d d a y , the time of the day when the sun is highest: Titan, tired in the m. heat, V e n . 177. the m. M e t h a n g h t a = methought: W i n t . 1, 2, 154. R 3 sun, 750. H 6 A I, 1, 14. H6C V, 2, 17. I, 4, 9. 24 ( Q q methought). 58. Merch. 1,3,70 ( F f Q'i). M i d d l e , subst. the part equally distant f r o m the M e t r e , verse, numbers: stretched m. of an antique extremities: upon the heavy m. of the night, Meas. IV, song, Sonn. 17, 12. thou never wast where grace was 1, 35. sit i' the m. A s V, 3, 10. now i' the m. W i n t . said. No f a dozen times at least. What, in m. t Meas. IV, 4, 59. in the m. of a word, R 3 111, 5, 2. beginning 1,2,22 (which perhaps means: in a play, on the stage). in the m. T r o i l . P r o l . 28. cut t the m. Cor. IV, 5 , 2 1 0 . lascivious — s , R 2 II, 1, 19. these same m. ballad- the m. of humanity thou never knewest, T i m . IV, 3, 300. mongers, H 4 A 111, 1, 130. in the dead vast and m. of the night, Hml. I, 2, 198. M a t r a p e l l i , mother city, scat of the head of the in the m. of her favours, II, 2, 237. cut the egg i the mother church: stood out against the holy church, the m. L r . I, 4, 174. 176. 205. in the m. ons face, I, 5, 20. the very m. of my heart is warmed, Cymb. I, 6, 27. great m. and see of Rome, John V, 2, 72. M e t t l e , see Metal. M i d d l e , adj. equally distant from the extremes: M e w (cf. Emmew) to shut up, to confine: Mids. resembling strong youth in his m. age, Sonn. 7, 6 ; i. I, 1, 71. R 3 I, 1, 132. W i t h up: Shr. I, 1, 87. 188. e. in the prime of l i f e ; cf. these are flowers of m. sumJohn IV, 2, 57. R 3 I, 1, 38. I, 3, 139. R o m . Ill, 4, 11 mer, and I think they are given to men of m. age, W i n t . Cto-night she is —ed up to her heaviness). IV, 4, 108. since the m. summer's spring, Mids. II, 1, M e w , imitation of the cry o f the cat: H 4 A 111, 82 ( = midsummer). I smell a man of m. earth, W i v . 1, 129. V, 5, 84 (the terrestrial world as the middle habitation M e w , to cry as a cat: Mcb. IV, 1, 1. the cat will between heaven and hell), the m. centre of this town, m. and dog will have his day, Hml. V, 1, 315. H 6 A II, 2, 6. M e w l , to cry like a cat, to squall: the infant, M i d n i g h t , the middle o f the night, twelve o' clock —ing and puking in the nurse's arms. A s II, 7, 144. at night: Lucr. 1625. T p . 1, 2, 128. IV, 207. V, 39. M e x l e e , country in A m e r i c a : Merch. I, 3, 20. A d o 111, 2, 132. V, 3, 16. Mids. V, 370. A s II, 4, 27. All's IV, 2, 54. IV, 3, 34. T w . II, 3, 2. W i n t . 1, 2, 290. 111,2, 271. M e y n y , multitude: the mutable, rank-scented m. John III, 3, 37. H 5 III, 7, 97. 118 V, 1, 72. Cor. Ill, 1, 85. Oies. I, 3, 163. Mcb. IV, 1, 48. H m l . Ill, 2, Cor. HI, 1, 66 ¡M. Edd. many), cf. Meiny. M l , the third note in the musical scale between 268. Ant. Ill, 13, 185. Cymb. 11,2, 2. dead m. Meas. re and fa: L L L IV, 2, 102. Shr. Ill, 1, 75. 78. L r . I, IV, 2, 67. H 5 111 Chor. 19. R3 V,3,180. deep m. Mids. 1, 1, 223. about m. W i v . V, 1, 12. Cymb. IV, 2, 283. 2, 149. M i c h a e l ) 1) Saint M . : knight of the noble order at m. T p . I, 2, 228. W i v . IV, 4, 19. Meas. V, 281. oj Saint George, worthy Saint M. and the Golden John IV, 1, 45. H 4 A II, 4, 107. 325. H 4 B III, 2, 228. Fleece, H 6 A IV, 7, 69. 2 ) Sir M . : H 4 A IV, 4, 1. 8. H8 V, 1, 14. Cymb. I, 3, 31. at still m. W i v . IV, 4,

M

719

30. by m. All's 111, G, 82. Oth. IV, 1, 225. and will formers, not to the worth of the performance^. to be to-morrow m. solemnly dance, Mids. IV, 1, 93. wise and love exceeds man's m. Troil. Ill, 2, 164. I Midriff, the diaphragm: all filled up with guts have a man's mind, but a woman's m. Caes. II, 4, 8 and m. H4A 111, 3, 175. I should not urge thy duty past thy m. IV, 3, 261. = • M a t , subst. middle: our ship was splitted in the validity, truth: unless this miracle have m. that in black in. Err. I, 1, 104. make periods in the m. of sentences, ink my love may still shine bright, Sonn. 65, 13. now Mids. V, 96. our archers shall be placed in the m. B3 Ifind thy saw of m. As III, 5, 82. V, 3, 295. it did remain in the m. of the body, Cor. I, 2) power, dominion: so shall I taste at first the 1, 102. unless our city cleave in the m. Ill, 2, 28. I'll very worst of fortune's m. Sonn. 90, 12. thy pyramids sit in the m. Mcb. Ill, 4, 10. in the m. of the fight, built up with newer m. 123, 2. no m. nor greatness can Ant. Ill, 10, 11. then in the m. a tearing groan did censure 'scape, Meas. Ill, 2,196. his (Cupid's) dreadbreak the name of Antony, IV, 14, 31. in the m., used ful little m. L L L III, 205. I spread my conquering m. to denote a contrast, by way of speaking of things V, 2, 566. Love was no god, that would not extend his not expected nnder the circumstances; but in the nu m. All's 1, 3, 118. England shall give him office, hoof his unfruitful prayer... even there he starts, Lncr. nour, m. H4B IV, 5, 130. if any rebel spirit of mine 344. in the m. of all her pure pretestings she burned ... did give entertainment to the m. of it (the ciown), with love, Pilgr. 95. first kiss me. What, in the m. of 174. that right should thus overcome m. V, 4, 28 (Mrs the street1 Shr. V, 1, 149. in the m. of this bright-shi- Quickly means to say the contrary), your grace hath ning day I spy a black cloud, H6C V, 3, 3. — In H6B cause and means and m. H5 I, 2, 125. with aU his m. IV, 8, 64 O. Edd. middest. to enforce it (the law) on, Oth. I, 2, 16. submits her • M a t , prep, in the middle of: and m. the sentence to thy m. Ant. Ill, 12, 17. so her accent breaks, Lucr. 566. they left me m. my Might, vb. see May. enemies, H6A I, 2, 24. Mlghtfnl, powerful: the m. gods, Tit. IV, 4, 5. Midsummer, the summer solstice, the time of Mightily, very much, egregiously: what could the greatest heat: As IV, 1, 102. T w . Ill, 4, 61 (m. he see but m. he notedt Lucr. 414. whose estimation madness), gorgeous as the sun at m. B4A IV, 1, 102. do you m. hold up, Ado II, 2, 25. the prince and ClauMidway, subst. 1) the middle way, the medium dio m. abused, V, 2, 100; Tit. II, 3, 87; Tim. V, 1, 97; between two extremes, the mean: he were an excellent Lr. IV, 7,53; A n t I, 3, 25. if he do not m. grace himself man that were made just in the m. between him and on thee, As I, 1, 155. her benefits are m. misplaced, I, Benedick, Ado II, 1,8. no m. 'twixt these extremes at 2, 37. that have so m. persuaded him from the first, aU, Ant. Ill, 4, 19. 218. strive m., but eat and drink as friends, Shr. I, 2, Adjectively, = being in the middle of the way: 279. how m. sometimes we make us comforts of our the crows and choughs that wing thi m. air show scarcelosses, All's IV, 3, 76. 78. kindreds are m. strengthenso gross as beetles, Lr. IV, 6, 13. ed, H4B II, 2, 30. thou wrongest thy children m. H6C Midway, adv. in the middle of the way, half way: III, 2, 74. his physicians fear him m. R3 I, 1, 137. m. between your tents and walls of Troy, Troil. 1, 3, Mightiness, 1) high power, greatness: let us fear 278. make a battery through his deafened parts, which the native m. and fate of him, H5 II, 4, 64. how soon now are m. stopped, Per. V, 1, 48 ( — half?). this m. meets misery, H8 Prol. 30. Midwife, a woman who assists other women in 2) Used as a title of dignity: wilft please your m. childbirth: K2 II, 2, 62. H4B II, 2, 28. H6B IV, 2, to wash your hands 1 Shr. Ind. 2, 78. your m. on both 46. H6C V, 6, 74. Tit. IV, 2, 141. 167. Bom. I, 4, parts best can witness, H5 V, 2, 28. braves your m. 54. Per. Ill, 1, 11. Term of contempt for an old Tit. II, 3, 126. woman: does it work upon him t Like aqua vitae with Might?, 1) having great physical power, vigoa m. Tw. II, 5, 215. with Lady Margery, your m. there, rous, strong: thyself artm.; myself a weakling, Lucr. Wiut. II, 3, 160. 583. he is in the m. hold of BoKngbroke, R2 III, 4, 83. Mien, a word unknown to Sh., but inserted by Achilles hath the m. Sector slain, Troil. V, 8, 14. a inexpert conjecturers in Gent. II, 4, 196 and Wiv. I, man no —er than thyself or me in personal action, Caes. 3, 111. 1, 3, 76. mad as the sea and wind, when both contend •fight, subst. 1) strength, force, efficiency: brag which is the —er, Hml. IV, 1, 8. not of thy m.,for mastering her, Ven. 113. which I to 2) very large, huge, vast: never be forgot in m. conquer sought with all my m. Lucr. 488. o'ercharged Rome, Lucr. 1644; two m. monarchies, H5 Prol. 20; with burden of mine own love's m. Sonn. 23, 8. (appe- the mistress-court of m. Europe, II, 4, 133 ; m. states tite) sharpened in his former m. 56, 4. in the praise characterless are grated to dusty nothing, Troil. Ill, 2, thereof spends all his m. 80, 3. to speak of that which195; m. kingdoms, Tit. V, 3, 74. the most m. Neptune gives thee all thy m. 100, 2, what needest thou wound(viz the sea) Tp. I, 2, 204; like a m. sea forced by the with cunning when thy m. is more than my o'erpressed tide to combat with the wind, H6C II, 5, 5. a bark to defence can bidet 139, 7. from what power hast thou brook no m. sea, E3 III, 7, 162. a m. rock, Err. I, 1, this powerful m. with insufficiency my heart to swayt 102. my brother Robert t Colbrand the giant, that same 150, 1. makes her absence valiant, not her m. Compl. m. mant John I, 225. the deep-mouthed sea, which likt 245. with all his m. for thee to fight, Wiv. II, 1, 18. a m. whiffler 'fore the king seems to prepare his way, affects, not by m. mastered, but by special grace, L L L H5 V Prol. 12. provokes the - est hulk against the I, 1, 153. all my powers, address your love and m. to tide, H6A V, 5, 6. a m.fire, Caes. I, 3, 107. on our honour Helen, Mids. II, 2, 143. to take from thence former ensign two m. eagles fell, V, 1, 81. all error with his m. Ill, 2, 368. what poor duty cannot 3) great, considerable: addressed a m. power, As do, noble respect takes it in m., not merit, V, 92 (ac- V, 4, 162; a m. and a fearful head they are, H4A III, commodates its judgment to the abilities of the per- 2, 167 ; with strong and m. preparation, IV, 1, 93; IV,

720

M

4, 12; H 6 A IV, 3, 2. 7 ; H6B III, 1, 348; IV, 9, 25; B 3 IV, 4, 535; V, 3, 38; Caes. IV, 3, 169; Oth. I, 3, 221; Ant. II, 1, 17. you do yourself m. wrong, W i v . III, 3, 221. the —est space in fortune nature brings to join like likes, All's 1, 1, 237. stand off in differences so m. II, 3,128. offence of m. note, V, 3, 14. the stripes I have received, which are m. ones and millions, W i n t . IV, 3, 61. a —er task, John II, 55. the bloom that promises a m. fruit, 473. ripe for exploits and m. enterprises, H 5 I, 2, 121. a m. sum, 133; Tim. V, 1, 8. —er crimes are laid unto your charge, H6B III, 1, 134. arguments of m.force, H6C II, 2, 44; 111, 1, 49. so m. and so many my defects, R3 III, 7, 160. his promises were, as he then was, m. H8 IV, 2, 41. the m. space of our large honours, Caes. IV, 3, 25. 4 ) important, weighty, forcible, efficacious: the —er is the thing that makes him honoured or begets him hate, Lucr. 1004. wherefore do not you a —er way make war upon this bloody tyrant Timet Sonn. 16, 1. that I may example my digression by some m. precedent, L L L 1, 2, 122. I had a m. cause to wish him dead, John IV, 2, 205. be not you spoke with, but by m. suit, R3 III, 7, 46. a state of m. moment, H8 II, 4, 213. a reason m., strong and effectual, Tit. V, 3, 43. m. business, L r . Ill, 5, 17.

Shr. II, 359. the instant burst of clamour that she made would have node m. the burning eyes of heaven, Hml. II, 2, 540 (apparently = weeping, shedding milky tears). M I M , tender and gentle, not fierce or severe: Lucr. 979. 1096. 1268. 1399. 1505. 1520. 1542. Pilgr. 86. Gent. IV, 4, 185. V, 2, 2. V, 4, 56. A d o II, 3, 34. L L L IV, 3, 349. V, 2, 584. Mids. II, 1, 232. IV, 1, 63. A s IV, 3, 53. Shr. I, 1, 60. 71. II, 50. All's III, 4, 18. R2 I, 3, 240. II, 1, 174. H6B II, 4, 48. Ill, 1, 9. 72. Ill, 2, 219. 392. H6C I, 4, 141. Ill, 1, 39. 91. IV, 1, 98. R 3 I, 2, 104. Ill, 1, 40. IV, 3, 7 (Qq kind). IV, 4, 160. 172. Cor. Ill, 2, 14. T i t . 1, 470. IV, 1, 85. Lr. IV, 2, 1. Per. I, 1, 68. HI, 1, 27. testy wrath could never be her m. companion, Per. I, I, 18 ( = the companion of her mildness; see A p pendix). Mildew, to taint with mildew, to blight, to blast: like a —ed ear, Hml. Ill, 4, 64 (cf. Genesis X L I , 6). —s the white wheat, Lr. Ill, 4, 123. Mildly, gently: Err. V, 87. R2 II, 1, 69. V, 1, 32. Cor. Ill, 2, 139. 142. 144. Tit. I. 475. Mildness, gentleness, clemencv: Lncr. 979. Shr. II, 192.252. H6C1I, 1,156. IV, 4,"20. IV, 8, 42. R3 III, 7, 123. Lr. 1,4,367. Mile, a measure of length, containing eight furlongs: Meas. Ill, 2, 38. L L L I, 1, 120. V, 2, 54. 187. 189. 193. 198. Mids. 1,2, 104. Wint. IV, 3, 86. 104. 135. H4B V, 3, 57. H5 III, 7, 87. R3 V, 3, 37. Cor. I, 4, 8. 34. I, 6, 16. 17. V, 1, 5. Tit. IV, 3, 65. Tim. IV, 3,421. Mcb. 111,3, 12. Lr. IV, 1, 44. Plur. mile: W i v . Ill, 2, 33. A d o II, 3, 17. H4B 111, 2, 310. V, 5, 69. Cyrab. IV, 2, 293. within this three m. Mcb. V, 5, 37. Plur. miles: Sonn. 44, 10. 50, 4 L L L V, 2, 184. 191. 197. Merch. HI, 4. 31. 84. A s I, 3, 46. R2 II, 3, 5. 93. H 4 A II, 2, 27. Ill, 3, 222. H6C II, 1, 144. H8 IV, 1, 27. Cor. I, 6, 20. Rom. Ill, 5, 82. Lr. II, 4, 304. Cymb. Ill, 2, 69. Ill, 4, 106. F f miles, Qq mile: H4B

5 ) powerful, having great command: the —er man, Lucr. 1004. how m. then you are, O hear me tell, Compl. 253. Love's a m. lord, Gent. II, 4, 136. instruments of some more —er member, Meas. V, 237. 'tis —est in the —est, Merch. IV, 1, 188. as his person's m. Wint. I, 2, 453. II, 3, 20. m. heaven, John V, 6, 37. m. magic, Oth. 1, 3, 92. cf. R2 V, 6, 32. H 4 A I, 3, 6. H5 II, 4, 44. H 6 A III, 2, 136. H6B III, 1, 220. H3 I, 1, 83. II, 1, 110. IV, 4, 347. Caes. 1, 3, 55. II, 2, 27. II, 3, 9. V, 3, 94. Hml. V, 2, 62. Lr. IV, 6, 34. Cyinb. IV, 2, 246. Per. 11 Prol. 1. V, 1,92. 6) As an epithet of honour, applied to persons of high rank, = high, illustrious: most m. duke, vouchsafe me speak a word, Err. V, 282. 330. here, m. The- II,4,179. R 3 IV, 4,461. seus, Mids. V, 38. he is nothing but a m. lord, Shr Mile-end or Mile-end Green, the usual exercise Ind. I , 65. O that a m. man of such descent should be ground of the London trainbands: All's IV, 3, 302. infused with so foul a spirit, 2, 15. a m. man of Pisa, H4B III, 2, 298. Shr. II, 105. most certain of one mother, m. king, John M l l f a r d , sea-town in Wales: R31V,4,535. Cymb. 1, 59. welcome, high prince, the m. duke of York, H 6 A III, 2, 61. 84. Ill, 6, 62. V, 5, 281. Milford-Haven: III, 1, 177. ere the —est Julius fell, Hml. I, 1, 114. Cymb. Ill, 2, 44. 51. Ill, 4, 29. 145. Ill, 5, 8. IV, 2, most m. princess, Cvmb. I, 6, 172. cf. John II, 395. 291. 335. 421. R2 I, 3, 93. Ill, 3, 172. H5 I, 2, 102. 108. II, M i l i t a r i s t , soldier: Parolles, the gallant m., — 4, 119. Epil. 3. H6B III, 2, 122. IV, 1, 80. H6C III, that was his own phrase, All's IV, 3, 161. 2, 76. Ill, 3, 4. K3 II, 4, 44. Ill, 7, 201. IV, 4, 466. M i l i t a r y , adj. 1) pertaining to the orl or pro479. 487. H8 V, 5, 3. 27. Troil. I, 3, 60. Tit. V, 2, fession of w a r : is there no m. policy, how vii jms might 26. V, 3, 40. Caes. II, 2, 69. Ill, 1, 33. 127. 148. blow up men? All's I, 1, 132. in m. rules, H4B II, 3, Hml. IV, 7, 43. Cymb. V, 5, 327. 30. troop in the throngs of m. men, H4B IV, 1, 62. he 7) Applied to heart, = magnanimous, heroic: will maintain his argument as welt as any m. man, H5 your hearts are m., your skins are whole, W i v . Ill, 1, 111, 2, 86. the direction of the m. discipline, 107. 111. little body with a m. heart, H5 II Prol. 17. then 2) soldierly, martial: speak from thy lungs m burst his m. heart, Caes. Ill, 2, 190. W i v . IV, 5, 18. most >n. sir, L L L V, 1, 38. chief maMilan, town and dukedom in Italy: Tp. I, 2, 54. jority and m. title capital, H 4 A III, 2, 110. 58. 115. 126. 130. 437. II, 1, 112. 279. 291. Ill, 3, M i l k , subst. the white fluid with which female 70. V, 107. Gent. I, 1, 57.61.71. II, 5,2. IV, 1, 19. animals feed their young: Ven. 902. T p . II, 1, 288. A d o 111, 4, 16. John III, 1, 138. V, 2, 120. L L L V, 2, 231. 925. Mids. II, 1, 36. V, 345. All's IV, = duke of Milan: he needs will be absolute M. 3, 124. Wint. Ill, 2, 101. H 6 A V, 4, 27. Cor. V, 4, 30. T p . I, 2, 109. as I was sometime M. V, 86. was M. Tit. II, 3, 144. Hml. I, 5, 69. Lr. I, 1, 86. Applied, metaphorically, to things of a gentle influence: adverthrust from M. 205. Milch, giving milk: like a m. doe whose swelling sity's sweet »•., philosophy, Rom. Ill, 3, 55. too full of dugs do ache, Ven. 875. makes m. kine yield blood, the m. of human kindness, Mcb. 1, 5, 18. take my m. for W i v . IV, 4, 33. I have a hundred m. kine to the pail, gall, 49. I should pour the sweet m. of concord into hell,

M

721

M l m l e , subst. actor, player: and forth my m. IV, 3, 98. Emblem of faintheartedness: such a dish of skim m. H4A II, 3, 36: cf. livers white as m. Merch. comes, Mids. Ill, 2, 19 (i. e. Bottom with an ass's III, 2, 86. Of boyish greenness: one would think his head. Ql minnick, Q2 minnock, Ff. mimmick). mother's m. were scarce out of him, Tw. I, 5, 171. M i n c e , 1) to cut into pieces: m. it (the babe) M i l k , vb. 1) to draw milk from the breast with sans remorse, Tim. IV, 3, 122. —ing her husbands the hand: Gent. HI, 1, 277. 302. Ant. IV, 15, 74. limbs, Hml. II, 2, 537. Transitively: As II, 4, 51. Wint. IV, 4, 461. 2) to make small, to extenuate, to palliate: thy 2) to suck: the babe that —s me, Mcb. I, 7, 55. honesty and love doth m. this matter, making it light to M l l k l n g - t l m e , the time of milkiug: Wint. IV, Cassio, Oth. II, 3, 247. speak to me home, m. not the 4, 246. general tongue, Ant. I, 2, 109. 3) to make small steps, to walk in a prim aDd afH l l k - l l « e r e d . fainthearted, pusillanimous: Lr. fected manner: hold up your head and m. Wiv. V, 1, IV, 2, 5 0 ; cf. Merch. Ill, 2, 86, and see Liver. M i l k - m a i d , a woman that milks or is employed 9. turn two —ing steps into a manly stride, Merch. Ill, 4, 67. Metaphorically: —ing poetry, 'tis like the in the dairy: Gent. Ill, 1, 268. Meas. 1, 2, 177. forced gait of a shufflingnag, H4A III, 1, 134. I know • I l k - p a p , a teat: Tim. IV, 3, 115. M i l k s * ) , an effeminate and pusillanimous fellow: no ways to m. it in love, but directly to say: I love you, H5 V, 2, 130. And in general, = to speak or act Ado V, 1, 91. R3 V, 3, 325. M i l k - w h i t e , white as milk: Pilgr. 119. Gent. with affectation: which gifts, saving your —ing, the III, 1, 250. Mids. II, 1, 167. H6B I, 1, 254. Tit. V, capacity of your soft cheveril conscience would receive, H8 II, 3, 31. —d = affected: is not birth, beauty, 1, 31. Tim. I, 2, 189. M i l k y , weak: has friendship such a faint and manhood, learning .... the spice and salt that season m. heart, it turns in less than two nights f Tim. Ill, 1, a mant Ay, a —d man, Troil. I, 2, 279 (alluding, 57. his sword, which was declining on the in. head of probably, to a minced pie). And transitively, = to reverend Priam, Hml. II, 2, 500. this m. gentleness and affect, to make a parade of on the slightest occasion: that —s virtue and does shake the head to hear of pleacourse of yours, Lr. I, 4, 364. Mill, a building in which corn is ground to meal: sure's name, Lr. IV, 6, 122. M i n d , subst. (fem. in Lucr. 1656 and Per. I, 1, more sacks to the m. L L L IV, 3, 81. more water glideth by the m. than wots the miller of, Tit. II, 1, 85. Wint. 153) 1) the soul, the mental power; opposed to the body: the burden of a guilty m. Lucr. 735. let beasts IV, 4, 309. Cor. 1, 10, 31. Lr. II, 3,18. M i l l e r , one whose occupation is to grind corn bear gentle — s , 1148. unseen, save to the eye of m. 1426; cf. Mids. I, 1, 234; Hml. I, 1, 112; I, 2, 185. to meal: Tit. II, 1, 86. immaculate and spotless is my m. Lucr. 1656. since Name in Wiv. I, 1, 160. M i l l i n e r , a man who deals in fancy articles: no m. at first in character was done, Sonn. 59, 8. did his m. can so Jit his customers with gloves, Wint. IV, 4, picture get, to serve their eyes, and in it put their m. Compl. 135 (cf. Cymb. V, 5,176). the bettering of my 192. he was perfumed like a m. H4A I, 3, 36. M l l l U n (ordinarily dissyll.; trisyll. in H5 Prol. m. Tp. I, 2, 90. to still my beating m. IV, 163. as his 16 and Tit. II, 1,49). 1) ten hundred thousand: a body uglier grows, so his m. canters, 192. the affliction crooked figure may attest in little place a m. H5 Prol. of my m. amends, V, 115. do not infest your m. with 16. = a sum of ten hundred thousand ponnds: Merch. beating on the strangeness of this business, 246. comIll, 1, 57. H4A 111, 3, 155. Tit. II, 1, 49. Cymb. 1, plete in feature and in m. Gent. II, 4, 73. jewel» move a woman's m. Ill, 1, 91. my m. is heavy, Wiv. IV, 6, 2. 4, 147. 2) any very great number, an infinite number: other sports are tasking of their —s, 30. the guiltiness Mids. Ill, 2, 93. Shr. Ill, 2, 241. Ant. I, 2, 39. IV, of my m. V, 5, 130. profits of the m., study and fast, 14, 18. Cymb 11,4, 143. With of: a m. of manners, Meas. I, 4, 61. whose —s are dedicate to nothing temGent. II, 1, 105. a m. of beating, Wint. IV, 3, 62. poral, II, 2, 154. Jit his m. to death, II, 4, 187. did the m. = the multitude: the play pleased not the m. but convey unto our fearful —5 a doubtful warrant of Hml. II, 2, 457. Plur. — s: Tp. II, 1, 7. Wint. IV, 3, immediate death, Err. 1, 1, 68. sorcerers that change 61. Cor. Ill, 3, 71. Oth. IV, 1, 68. With of: Sonn. the m. 1, 2, 99. thou art (transformed) in m. Nay, both 53, 2. Meas. IV, 1, 60. Caes. IV, 1, 51. Hml. V, 1, in m. and in my shape, II, 2, 198. 199. stigmatical in 304. making, worse in m. IV, 2, 22. policy of m. Ado IV, 1, M l l l l e n e d , millionfold, innumerable: time, whose 200. the m. shall banquet, though the body pine, L L L m. accidents creep in 'twixt vows, Sonn. 115, 5. I, 1, 25. nor hath love's m. of any judgment taste, Mids. M i l l - s i x p e n c e , an old English coin, milled in I, 1, 236. which never laboured in their —s till now, 1561, the earliest that was milled in this country: Mids. V, 73. not sick, unless it be in m. Merch. HI, 2, Wiv. I, 1, 158. 237. if the quick fire of youth light not your m., you M l l l s t a n e , used only in the proverbial expression are no maiden, All's IV, 2, 5. a m. that suits with this to weep — s = not to weep at all, to remain hard and thy fair and outward character, Tw. I, 2, 50. I fear to unfeeling as a stone: your eyes drop —s, when fools' find mine eye too great a flatterer for my m. I, 5, 328. eyes drop tears, R3 1, 3, 354. he will weep. Ay, —s, she bore a m. that envy could not but call fair, II, 1, 30. I, 4, 246. Applied to tears of laughter: Queen Hecuba thy m. is a very opal, II, 4, 77. not black in my m. Ill, laughed that her eyes ran o'er. With —s, Troil. I, 2, 4, 28. admire not in thy m. 166. grapple your —s to 158. sternage of this navy, H5 III Chor. 18. eke out our M i l l - w h e e l , the wheel of a mill: as fast as —s performance with your m. 35. in your fair —s let this acceptance take, Epil. 14. so (a king) I am, in m. strike, Tp. 1, 2, 281. Mllo, the famous Greek athlete, who was able t9 II6C 111, 1, 60. my m. exceeds the compass of her bear an ox on his shoulders: Troil. II, 3, 258. wheel. Then, for his m., be Edward England's king,

722 IT, 3, 48. men'« —s mistrust ensuing danger, R3 II, 3 , 4 2 . 1 have considered in my m. the late demand, IV, 2, 87. the error of our eye directs our m. Troil. V, 2, 110. Til ever serve his m. with my best will, Tim. IV, 2, 49; cf. duty and zeal to your unmatched m. IV, 3, 523. art thou but a dagger of the m. Mcb. II, 1, 38. I fear I am not in my perfect m. Lr. IV, 7, 63. tchich (his mistress' picture) by his tongue being made, and then a m. put in it, Cymb. V, 5, 176. our m. partakes her private actions to your secrecy, Per. I, 1, 152 etc. etc. = a man, with regard to his intellectual capacity: I have frequent been with unknown — s , Sonn. 117, 5. 2) sentiments, disposition, cast of thought and feeling: had thy mother borne so hard am. Ven. 203. 0 that you bore the m. that I do, Tp. II, 1, 267. cannot soon revolt and change your m. Gent. Ill, 2, 59. he bears an honourable m. V, 3, 13. it is the lesser blots, modesty finds, women to change their shapes, than men their —s, V, 4, 109. whatsoever I have merited, either in my m. or in my means. Wiv. II, 2, 211. keep in that m. Ill, 3, 89. else I could not be in that m. 91. yet hath he in him such a m. of honour, Meas. II, 4, 179 ( = honourable mind; cf. Of), my m. promises with my habit no loss shall touch her by my company, III, 1,181. to transport him in the m. he is were damnable, IV, 3, 72. God keep your ladyship still in that m. Ado I, 1, 135. would the cook were of my m. I, 3, 75. a proverb never stale in thrifty m. Merch. II, 5, 55. my father loved Sir Rowland as his soul, and all the world was of my father's m. As I, 2, 248. I would not have my Rosalind of this m. IV, 1, 110. I am a fellow of the strangest m. Tw. I, 3, 120. Iam not yet of Percy's m. H4A II, 4, 114. while Gloster bears this base and humble m. H6B I, 2, 62. I shall perceive the commons' m., how they affect the house and claim of York, 111, 1, 374. continue, still in this so good a m. IV, 9, 17. to make Lord Hastings of our m. I{3 III, 1, 1C2. that's my m. too, Tioil. IV, 1, 6. 'tis pity bounty had not eyes behind, that man might ne'er be wretched for his m. Tim. I, 2, 170. l'ld rather than the worth of thrice the sum, had sent to me first, but for my —'s sake; I had such a courage to do him good, III, 3, 23. he bears too great a m. Cacs. V, 1, 113. whose m. and mine in that are one, Lr. 1, 3, 15. I would we were all of one m , and one m. good, Cymb. V, 4, 212 etc. 3) reflection, thoughts: your m. is tossing on the ocean, Merch. I, 1, 9. I have a m. presages me such thrift, I, 1, 175 ( = anticipation, cf. Cacs. Ill, 1, 144). this murder had not come into my m. John IV, 2, 223. those men you talk of came into my m. R3 III, 2, 118. my m. gave me ... ye blew the fire that burns ye, H8 V, 3, 109 ( = I suspected); cf. my m. gave me his clothes made a false report of him, Cor. IV, 5, 157. have m. upon your health, tempt me no further, Caed- IV, 3, 36 ( = think of, take care of your health), but yet have lam. that fears him much, and my misgiving still falls shrewdly to the purpose, III, 1, 144 ( = suspicion; cf. Merch. I, 1, 175). that song will not go from my m. Oth. IV, 3, 31. to put sth. in a persons m. = to make him think of sth.: that same groan doth put this in my m. Sonn. 50, 13. put it in the physician's m. to help him to his grave, 112 I, 4, 59. God put it in thy m. to take it hence, H4B IV, 5,179. And inversely, to put a person in m.: the bells of Saint Jiennet may put you in m. Tw. V, 42. these masks put us in m. they hide the fair, Bom. I, 1, 237. it were well the general were

M put in m. of it, Oth. II, 3, 137 ( = were made aware of it). 4) recollection, memory: keep by children's eyes her husband's shape in m. Sonn. 9, 8. that this lives in thy m. Tp. I, 2, 49. still 'tis beating in my m. 176. my m. did lose it, Mids. I, 1, 114. have in m. where we must meet, Merch. I, 1, 71. let no fair be kept in m. As 111, 2, 99. this grief had wiped it from my m. H4B I, 1, 211. bearest thou her face in m.f Ant. Ill, 3, 32. to call to m. — to remember: Lucr. 1366. Gent. Ill, 1, 6. H6A 111, 3, 68. H8 II, 4, 34. to put in a person's mind = to remind him: let me put in your —s, what you have been ere now, R3 I, 3, 131. to put it in my m. II, 1, 120. to put a person in m., in the same sense: to put your grace in m. of what you promised me, R3 IV, 2, 113. will you be put in m. of his blind fortune? Cor. V, 6, 118. time out of m. = since time immemorial: Meas. IV, 2, 17. Rom. I, 4, 69. 5) that which a man thinks; thoughts, opinion: to me that brought your m. Gent. 1, 1, 147 (delivered your message). I'll show my m. I, 2, 7. might her m. discover, II, 1, 173. being of an old father's m. L L L IV, 2, 33. he tells you flatly what his m. is, Shr. I, 2, 78. he and his physicians are of a m. All's I, 3, 244 (of the same opinion), be not of that m. R2 V, 2, 107. will resolve him of my m. R3 IV, 5, 19. with every minute you do change a m. Cor. I, 1, 186. by Jove, 'twould be my m. It is a m. that shall remain a poison where it is, III, 1, 86. she holds her virtue still and I my m. Cymb. I, 4, 69 etc. tn the m. = of opinion: I am not in the m. but I were better to be married of him, As III, 3, 91. he was in the m. it was (cut well) V, 4, 75. in my m. = in my opinion: in my m. thy worst all best exceeds, Sonn. 150, 8. Wiv. II, 1, 39. Ado II, 3, 192. Mids. Ill, 2, 135. Merch. II, 4, 7. IV, 1, 407. H6B III, 1, 23S etc. to my m., in the same sense: Hml. 1, 4, 14. to break one's m. = to make a disclosure of one's opinion: H6A I, 3, 81. to know a person's m.: Ven. 308. Gent. I, 2, 33. IV, 3, 2. Wiv. 1, 4, 112. 135. Ill, 4, 80. IV, 4, 83. Err. II, 1, 47. Ado V, 1, 188. Tw. I,.5, 276. R2 V, 2, 104. II6B 1, 1, 139. III, 2, 242. H6C 111, 2, 17 etc. to say ones m.: Shr. IV, 3, 75. All's II, 1, 98. to speak one's m.: LLL V, 2, 589. As II, 7, 59. R2 II, 1, 230. H6B III, 1, 43. H8 V, 1, 41. to tell one's m.: Gent. I, 1, 148. Err. II, 1, 48 etc. in a tedious sampler sewed her m. Tit. II, 4, 39. I 'll call for pen and ink, and write my m. II6A V, 3, 66. write down thy m. Tit. II, 4, 3. if his m. be writ, give me his letter, Rom. V, 2, 3. Sonn. 59, 8. 6) will, desire, intention, purpose: all my m., my thought, my busy care is how to get my palfrey from the mare, Ven. 383. that you may know one another's m. Wiv. II, 2, 132. serrants must their masters' —s fulfil, Err. IV, 1,113. a time too brief to have all things answer my m. Ado II, 1, 376. it would better fit your honour to change your m. Ill, 2, 119. I'll hold my m., were she an Ethiope, V, 4,38. what would these strangers? know their —s, Boyet, L L L V, 2,174. my wooing m. shall be expressed in russet yeas, 412. to you our —s we will unfold, Mids. I, 1, 208. let it not enter in your m. of love, Merch. II, 8, 42 (the same as wooing mind in L L L V, 2, 412). already know my m. Merch. Ill, 4, 37. how far off from the m. of Bolingbroke it is, R2 III, 3, 45. the m. of Bolingbroke is changed, V, 1, 51. you perceive my m.f H6A II, 2, 59. mym. is changed, R3 IV, 4, 456. it is my father's m. that I

M repair to Rome, Tit. V, 3, 1. if your m. hold, Caes. I, 2, 295. to be free and bounteous to her m. Oth. I, 3, 266 etc. to have a m. = to be inclined: have you a m. to sink? Tp. I, 1, 42. Wint. IV, 4, 862. Ant. II, 5, 42. With to: you have a month's m. to them, Gent. I, 2, 137 (probably = a woman's longing, a morbid appetite . I have a m. to it, Merch. IV, 1,433. cf. command what cost your heart has m. to, Ant. Ill, 4, 38. hath more m. to feed on your blood, Gent. II, 4, 27. / have no m. of feasting forth, Merch. II, 5, 37. I had no in. to hunt, Cymb. IV, 2, 147. J have no m. to Isbel, All's 111,2,13. H i n d , vb. 1) to hare in the mind, to think of, to mean: —ing true things by what their mockeries be, H5 IV Chor. 53. 2) to attend t o , to take notice o f , to care for: perchance he will not m. me, Tp. II, 2, 17. you do not m. the play, Shr. I, 1, 254. to stop the inundation of her tears, which, too much —ed by herself alone, may be put from her by society, Rom. IV, 1, 13. not —ing whether I dislike or no, Per. II, 5, 20. 3) to remind, to make to think: that have — ed you of what you should forget, Wint. Ill, 2, 226. 1 do thee wrong to m. thee of it, H5 IV, 3, 13. m. thy followers of repentance, 84. I —ed him how royal 'twas to pardon, Cor. V, 1, 18. 4) to intend, to mean: we do not come as — ing to content you, Mids. V, 113. I mind to tell him plainly what I think, H6C IV, 1, 8. I shortly m. to leave you, 64. she —s to play the Amazon, 106. if you m. to hold your true obedience, 140. the gods not —ing longer to withhold the vengeance, Per. II, 4, 3. M i n d e d , adj. disposed, affected: Sonn. 11,7. Tp. V, 126. H8 III, 1, 58. Cor. I, 6, 73. Lr. Ill, 1, 2. cf. High'tninded, Proud-minded. M l n d f n l , careful: but now the m. messenger, come back, brings home his lord, Lncr. 1583. Kindle«*, careless, regardless: am. slave, Wint. 1, 2, 301. Athens, m. of thy worth, Tim. IV, 3, 93. M i n e , snbst. 1) ail excavation in the earth, from which metallic ores or other mineral substances are taken by digging: ¿urn like the —s of sulphur, Oth. Ill, 3, 329. Hence = a rich source of wealth: either was the other's m. Phoen. 36. I would not wed her for a m. of gold, Shr. I, 2, 92. H4A 111, 1, 169. H8 I, 1, 22. Caes. IV, 3, 102. Ant. IV, 6, 32. 2) a subterraneous passage dug under a hostile fortification: H5 III, 2, 59. 61. 62. 63. 92. Hml. Ill, 4, 208. 3) any subterraneous cavity: the wind is hushed within the hollow m. of earth, Oth. IV, 2, 79. M i n e , vb. to undermine, to sap, to destroy by slow degrees: — s my gentility with my education, As 1,1,21. rank corruption, —ing all within, infects unseen, Hml. Ill, 4, 148. M i n e , poss. pron. of the first pers. sing.; = belonging to me; 1) joined to nouns beginning with vowels, and used without any emphasis: look in m. eye-balls, Yen. 119. m. eyes are grey, 140. 503. Lucr. 228. m. infamy, 504. m. only care, Sonn. 48, 7. m. art, Tp. I, 2, 28 (v. 25 my art), m. eyes, 135. m. enemies, 179. m. art, 291. 435. 466. II, 1, 106. 111. 191. 313. 317. Ill, 1, 77. Ill, 2, 123. 147. Ill, 3, 89. IV, 28. 41. 120. 264. V, 53. 63. Gent. II, 1, 77. II, 4, 66. II, 5, 1. Ill, 1, 48. 74. 239. V, 4, 64. Meas. I, 1, 64. II, 1, 187. Ill, 1, 85. IV, 2,119. 180. V, 59. 198.

723

Err I, 2, 14. II, 1, 48. Ill, 1, 44. HI, 2, 62. 169. V, 30. 106. 243. 331 etc. etc. Joined with own: m. own love's might, Sonn. 23, 8. from m. own library, Tp. I, 2, 167. 342. 347. II, 2, 128. Ill, 1, 50. IV, 1, 3. Epil. 2. Gent. I, 2, 120. I, 3, 82. II, 4, 135. 156. 168. IV, 4, 61. Wiv. I, 1, 157. II, 1, 88. Meas. I, 1, 65. II, 1, 30. 218. V, 377. Err. I, 2, 33. Ill, 1, 120. Ill, 2, 61 etc. etc. Before h: lam pale at m. heart, Meas. IV, 3, 157. m. host: Gent. IV, 2, 28. Wiv. I, 1, 143. Err. II, 2, 4 etc. etc. (cf. Host). But my ranting host, Wiv. U, 1,196. Used for my, when separated from its noun: the lady is dead upon m. and my master's false accusation, Ado V, 1, 249. mine and my father's death come not upon thee, Hml. V, 2,341. m. and your mistress, Cymb. V, 5, 230. for m , if I may call offence, Per. I, 2, 92. Even before a consonant: his and m. loved darling, Tp. Ill, 3, 93. Placed after its noun: brother m. Tp. V, 75. master m. Wiv. I, 1, 164. Shr. I, 1, 25. lady m. H8 I, 2, 17. pupil m. Rom. II, 3, 82. 2) without a noun, but with reference to one preceding : the creatures that were m. Tp. I, 2, 82. to no sight but thine and m. 302. this island's m. 331. here's my hand. Andm. Ill, 1,90. IV, 201. V, 20. 189. 276. Gent. I, 1, 60. II, 1, 1. Ill, 1, 207. IV, 4, 142. Err. 1, 2, 66 etc. etc. to be m. — to belong to me: he never should be m. Gent. I, 2, 11. Ill, 1, 365. V, 4, 83. Meas. V, 497 etc. let that be m. = let that be my care; mind your own business, Meas. II, 2,12. Of m., immediately following a subst., properly = one of those whom or which I have: this fair child of m. shall sum my count, Sonn. 2, 10. there is a friend of m. come to town, Wiv. IV, 5, 78. he's a good friend of m. L L L IV, 1, 54. a good master of m. 106. kinsmen of m. H8 1,1, 81 etc. B a t as often = of me, my: they have murdered this poor heart of m. Ven. 502 ( = this my poor heart), clear from this attaint of m. Lucr. 825. in that sad hour of m. 1179. this face of m. G e n t IV, 4, 190. the revolt of m. is dangerous, Wiv. I, 3, 111 (some M. Edd., quite preposterously, of mien), to have it added to the faults of m. Meas. II, 4, 72. this finger of m. V, 316. your sister is no wife ofm. Err. Ill, 2, 42. give me the ring of m. IV, 3, 69. a ring he hath of m. worth forty ducats, 84. these ears of m. did hear thee, V, 26. 259. this grained face of m. 311. what stuff of m. hast thou embarked t 409. time hath not yet so dried this blood of m. Ado IV, 1, 195. despise me, when I break this oath of m. L L L V, 2, 441. his folly is no fault ofm. Mids. I, 1, 200. what wicked and dissembling glass of m. made^me compare with Hermia's sphery eynef II, 2, 98. this aspect of m. hath feared the valiant, Merch. II, 1, 8. the balls of m. ( = my eyeballs) III, 2, 118. my loving greetings to those of m. in court, All's I, 3, 259 (my friends or relations), the youngest wren of m. Tw. Ill, 2, 71 (M. Edd. nine), those provinces these arms of m. did conquer, H6B I, 1, 120. whose natural gifts were poor to those of m. Hml. I, 5, 52 etc. (cf. the young whelp of Talbot's, H6A IV, 7, 35. the mantle of Queen Hermione's, Wint. V, 2, 36. the horn and noise o' the monster's, Cor. Ill, 1, 95. these quick blows of Fortune's, Tim. I, 1, 91. this dotage of our general's, Ant. I, 1, 1. the business of Cleopatra's, I, 2, 182 etc.). 3) substantively, = a) my property: myself I'll

724

M

forfeit, so that other m. thou wilt restore, to be my comfort still, S o n n . 134, 3. if you like me, she shall have me and m. S h r . II, 385. one that fixes no bourn 'twixt his and m. W i n t . I, 2, 134. b) the persons depending on m e ; m y relations, m y f a m i l y : should presently extirpate me andm., T p . I, 2, 125. this title honours me and m. H 6 C IV, 1, 72. so thrive 1 and m. R 3 II, 1 , 2 4 . thy justice will take hold on me and you and m. and yours, 132. = my servants: how pomp is followed! m. will now be yours; and should we shift estates, yours would be m. A n t . V, 2, 151. M i n e r a l , 1) a mine: like some ore among a m. of metals base, Hml. IV, 1, 26 ( cf. W a l k e r ' s Crit. E x a m . II, 299 . 2) a fossile body nsed as a poisonous ingTedient: abused her delicate youth with drugs that weaken motion, Oth. 1, 2, 74. the thought whereof doth like a poisonous m. gnaw my inwards, II, 1, 306. she had for you a mortal m. Cynib. V, 5, 50. M i n e r v a , the goddess of wisdom: thou mayst hear M. speak, Shr. I, I, 84. laming the shrine of Venus, or straight-pight M. Cymb. V, 5, 164. M i n g l e , subst. m i x t u r e , u n i o n : 0 heavenly m. A n t . I, 5, 59. trumpeters, make m. with our rattling tabourines, IV, 8, 37. M i n g l e , vb. 1) trans, a) to m i x : there his smell with others being — d , Ven. 691. to m. beauty with infirmities, 735. milk and blood, being —d both together, 902. —ing my talk with tears, Lucr. 797. cheeks neither red nor pale, but —d so, 1510. my blood is —d with the crime of lust, Err. II, 2, 143. confess what treason there is —d with your love, Merch. Ill, 2, 27. the difference betwixt the constant red and — d damask, A s III, 5, 123. the web of our life is of a —d yarn, All's IV, 3, 83. the united vessel of their blood, —d with venom of suggestion, H 4 B IV, 4, 45. make a quagmire of your —d brains, H 6 A I, 4, 109. m. tears with smiles, Cor. I, 9, 3. —ing them with us, III, 1, 72. when it (love) is —d with regards, Lr. I, 1, 242. m. eyes with one that ties his points, Ant. Ill, 13, 156. grief and patience ... m. their spurs together, Cymb. IV, 2 , 5 8 . we'll m. our bloods together in the earth, P e r . 1, 2, 113. b) to j o i n : to m. friendship far is —ing bloods, W i n t . I, 2, 109. to m. faith with him, IV, 4, 471. part your —d colours, J o h n II, 389. —d his royalty with capering fools, H 4 A III, 2, 63. beauty and honour in her are so — d , H8 11, 3, 76. those that m. reason with your passion, L r . II, 4, 237. some dozen Romans have —d sums to buy a present for the emperor, Cymb. I, 6, 186. their discipline, now —d with their courage, II, 4, 24 ( F l wing-led). 2 ) intr. to be mixed and joined: m. tvith the state offloads, H 4 B V, 2, 132. ourself will m. with society, Mcb. Ill, 4, 3. fly and m. with the English epicures, V, 3, 8. though grey do something m. with our younger brown, Ant. IV, 8, 20. her fortunes —d with thine entirely, IV, 14, 24. M i n i k i n , small and pretty: for one blast of thy m. mouth, L r . Ill, 6, 45. M i n i m , see Minum. M i n i m a « , any thing very small: you m., of hindering knot-grass made, Mids. Ill, 2, 329. M l n l e n , 1) favourite, d a r l i n g : Sonn. 126, 9. T p . IV, 98. T w . V, 128. J o h n II, 392. H 4 A 1, 1, 83. I, 2, 30. Mcb. 1, 2, 19. Cymb. II, 3, 46.

2 ) one generally loved and flattered: u this the Athenian m., whom the world voiced to regardjully t T i m . IV, 3, 80. Duncan's horses, the —s of their race, Mcb. II, 4, 15 ( t h e pearls of their r a c e ; cf. darling in Oth. I, 2, 68). 3 ) Used with some c o n t e m p t , a ) of persons in whose company another finds pleasure: his company must do his —s grace, Err. II, 1, 87. she vaunted 'mongst her —s t'other day, H6B I, 3, 87. go, rate thy —s, proud insulting boy, H 6 C II, 2, 84. P e r h a p s also in T p . IV, 98 and Cymb. II, 3, 46. b) = a pert and saucy person (originally a spoiled favourite): how now, m.! Gent. I, 2, 88. you, m., are too saucy, 92. do you hear, you m.f Err. Ill, 1, 54. you'll cry for this, m. 59. you m. you, are these your customers1 IV, 4, 63. m., thou liest, Shr. II, 13. give me my fan: what, m., can you notf H 6 B I, 3, 141. this m. stood upon her chastity, Tit. II, 3, 124. mistress m. you, thank me no thankings, Rom. Ill, 5, 152. m., your dear lies dead, Oth. V, 1, 33. M i n i s t e r , subst. 1 ) one employed to a certain end; i n s t r u m e n t , executor: the —s for the purpose, T p . I, 2, 131. if they can find in their hearts the poor unvirtuous fat knight shall be any further afflicted, we two will still be the — s , Wiv. IV, 2, 234. he that of greatest works is finisher oft does them by the weakest m. All's II, 1, 140. in a weak and most debile m. II, 3, 40. who but to-day hammered of this design, but durst not tempt a m. of honour, W i n t II, 2, 50 ( i . e. one of high rank). I chose Camilla for the m. to poison my friend Polixenes, 111, 2, 161. for a m. of my attempt I have seduced a headstrong Kentishman, H6B III, 1, 355. thou son of hell, whom angry heavens do make their m. V, 2, 34. R 3 I, 2, 46. I, 3, 294. I, 4, 226. V, 3, 113. H 8 I, 1, 108. Troil. Prol. 4. Cor. III, 3, 98. T i m . II, 2, 140. Mcb. I, 5, 49. V, 8, 0 8 . Hml. Ill, 4, 175. Ant. Ill, 6, 88. Ill, 13, 23. V, 1, 20. V, 2, 4. Cymb. V, 3, 72. 2) a servant and messenger of God, an a n g e l : O you blessed —s above, Mcas. V, 115. angels and —s of grace defend us, Hml. I, 4, 39. 3) servant in g e n e r a l : what me your m., for you obeys, Compl. 229. by help of her most potent — s , T p . 1, 2, 275. Ill, 3, 61. 87. I may never lift an angry arm against his m. R2 I, 2, 41. thou m. of hell, H 6 A V, 4, 93. your master ( C h r i s t ) whose m. you are, H8 V, 1, 138. Tit. V, 2, 60. 61. 133. Oth. V, 2, 8. 4 ) a pnrson: send —s to me, T w . IV, 2, 100. the m. is here, 102. Master Dumbe, our m. H 4 B II, 4, 95. M i n i s t e r , vb. 1) to perform a f u n c t i o n , to do scrviee: pluck the grave wrinkled senate from the bench, and m. in their steads, T i m . IV, 1, 6. a —ing angel shall my sister be, when thou liest howling, Hml. V, 1, 264. W i t h to, = to serve, to execute the orders and supply the wants of: shall we serve heaven with less respect than we do m. to our gross selves? Meas. II, 2, 86. did m. unto the appetite and affection common of the whole body, Cor. I, 1, 106. to him the other two shall m. Cymb. Ill, 3, 76. Used of spiritual advicc: make me know the nature of their crimes, that I may m. to them accordingly, Meas. II, 3, 7. how sweetly you do m. to love, A d o I, 1, 314. 2) to perform, to execute: before all sanctimonious ceremonies may with full and holy rite be —ed, Tp. IV, 1, 17. 3) to suggest, to afford, to supply, to give: to m.

M occasion to these gentlemen, Tp. II, 1, 173. though sometimes you do blench from this to that, as cause doth m. Meas. IV, 5, 6. if you three will but m. such assistance as I shall give you direction, Ado II, 1,385. what help we have that to your wanting may be —ed, As II, 7, 126. unless you laugh and m. occasion to him, Tw. 1, 5, 93. how quickly should this arm... chastise thee and m. correction to thy fault, R2 II, 3, 105. ruder terms, such as my wit affords and overjoy of heart doth m. H6B I, 1,31. what did this vanity but m. communication of a most poor issue, H8 I, 1, 86. or from what other course you please, which the tune shall more favourably m. Oth. II, 1,277. which (learning) he took, as we do air, fast as 'twas —ed, Cymb. I, 1, 45. 4) to administer (medicines), to prescribe, to order: you gave me bitter pills, and I must m. the like to you, Gent 11,4, 150. thy physic I will try, that—s thine own death if I die, All's II, 1, 189. present medicine must be —ed, John V, 1, 15. may m. the potion of imprisonment to me, H4B I, 2, 145. a poison which the friar subtly hath — ed, Rom. IV, 3, 25. canst thou not m. to a mind diseased, Mcb. V, 3, 40. 46- —est a potion unto me, Per. I, 2, 68. there's nothing can be —ed to nature that can recover him, III, 2, 8. Ministration, service, the going through an incumbent function: my course, which holds not colour with the time, nor does the m. and required office on my particular, All's II, 5, 65. M l n n e w , a very small fish; used as a term of contempt: that low-spirited swain, that base m. of thy mirth, LLL 1, 1, 251 (Armado's letter), hear you this Triton of the —si Cor. HI, 1, 89. Mlnela, name in Shr. I, 2, 97. 99. 165. Minority, state of being under age: his m. is put unto the trust of Richard Gloster , R3 1, 3, 11. = childhood: proving from world's m. their right, Lucr. 67. he shall present Hercules in m. LLL V, 1, 141. quoniam he seemeth in m. V, 2, 596. which, in the m. of them both, his majesty did first propose, All's IV, 5, 77. •Unas, fabulous king of Crete: H6C V, 6, 22. M l n e t e n r , the monster dwelling in the labyrinth of Crete: H6A V, 3, 189. • I n s t r e l , one who sings and makes music for money: feast-finding —s, tuning my defame, Lucr. 817. I will bid thee draw, as we do the —s, Ado V, ], 129. none but —s like of sonneting, LLL IV, 3,158. I hear the —s play, Shr. Ill, 2, 185. consort! what, dost thou make us —st an thou make —s of us, look to hear nothing but discords, Rom. Ill, 1, 49. 50. no money, on my faith, but the gleek; I will give you the m. IV, 5, 116. Minstrelsy, 1) the place and office of a minstrel (which partly consisted in relating fabulous stories): I love to hear him lie and I will use him for my m. LLL I, 1,177. 2) music: when every room hath blazed with lights and brayed with m. Tim. II, 2,170. m. and pretty din, Per. V, 2, 7. H i n t , subst. the plant Mentha Piperita: LLL V, 2, 661. Wint. IV, 4, 104. H i n t , subst. the place where money is coincd; metaphorically a place of invention and fabrication: LLL 1, 1, 166. Tw. Ill, 2, 24. Troil. I, 3, 193. Mlnnm, the shortest note in music; a very short moment: he rests his m., one, two, and the third in your

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bosom, Rom. II, 4, 22 (Q? he rests, his minum rests; Q3.4.5 he rests his minum rests; the spurins Ql and M. Edd. rests me his minim rest). M l n a t e , snbst. the sixtieth part of an hour; a very short time: Ven. 746. 1187. Lucr. 213. 297. 329. 962. Sonn. 14, 5. 60, 2. 77, 2. 126, 8. Pilgr. 206. Tp. I, 2, 37. IV, 141. Wiv. II, 2, 328. V, 5, 2. LLL IV, 3, 182. Mids. II, 1, 176. II, 2, 2. 112. As III, 2, 321. IV, 1, 45. 47. 195. All's I, 2, 39. II, 1, 169. Tw. I, 1, 14. V, 98. Wint. I, 2, 290. John III, 4, 134. IV, 1, 46. R2 I, 3, 226. V, 5, 51. 58. H4A I, 2, 8. H4B I, 1, 7. IV, 1, 83. H6B III, 2, 338. H6C II, 5, 25. 38. H8 I, 2, 121. 149. Rom. II, 4, 156. II, 6, 5. Ill, 5, 45. V, 3, 257. Mcb. Ill, 1, 117. IV, 3, 176. Hml. I, 1, 27. I, 3, 9. Oth. II, 1, 41. Ill, 3, 169. Ant. 1, 1, 46. Ill, 7, 82. Cymb. II, 5, 31. Per. I, 3, 25. II, 4, 44. V, 1, 160. 214. every m. while, H6A I, 4, 54. to steal at a — s rest, Wiv. I, 3, 31 (in the shortest moment), at the latest m. of the hour, LLL V, 2, 797 ( = at the last moment), by them. = every minnte, incessantly: Ant. Ill, 1, 20. Cymb. V, 5, 51. with every m. you do change a mind, Cor. I, 1, 186. M l n a t e - J a c k s , probably persons who change their minds every minute and are not to be trusted: trencher-friends, time's flies, cap and knee slaves, vapours, and —s, Tim. Ill, 6, 107 (generally interpreted to mean the same as jacks of the clock, q. v.). Minutely, adj. happening every minute, continual: now m. revolts upbraid his faith-breach, Mcb. V, 2, 18. Minx, a pert and wanton woman (cf. Minion 3 b): Tw. Ill, 4, 133. Oth. Ill, 3, 475. IV, 1, 159. Mirable, admirable: not Neoptolemus som., on whose bright crest fame with her loudest Oyes cries This is he, could promise to himself a thought of added honour torn from Hector, Troil. IV, 5, 142. Miracle, 1) a supernatural event: Sonn. 65, 13. Tp. II, 1, 6. V, 177. Wiv. Ill, 5, 119. Ado V, 4, 91. All's II, 1, 144. II, 3, 1. Wint. IV, 4, 545. John II, 497. H5 I, 1, 67. H6B II, 1, 60. Troil. V, 4, 37. Lr. I, 1, 225. II, 2, 172. IV, 6, 55. Per. V, 3, 58. by m. Err. V, 264. H4A II, 4, 184. to do a m. H6B II, 1. 131. 161. 163. to work a m. Merch. Ill, 2, 90. Shr. V, 1,127. H6AV, 4, 41. 66. 2) a wonder, something wonderful: 'tis that m. and queen of gems that nature pranks her in attracts my soul, Tw. II, 4, 88. O m. of men, H4B II, 3, 33. be not offended, nature's m. H6A V, 3, 54. Miracle, vb. refl., to m. itself = to make itself a miracle, to be incomprehensible: who this should be, doth m. itself, loved before me, Cymb. IV, 2, 29 (but perhaps subst). Mlraeoleos, working miracles,supernatural: Tp. II, 1, 86. Mcb. IV, 3, 147. Hml. II, 2, 623. Miranda, the daughter of Prospero: Tp. I, 2, 48. 53. Ill, 1, 36. 37. 60. Mire, subst. mud, earth soaked with water: Lucr. 1009. Tp. II, 2, 5. Wiv. IV, 5,69. Err. V, 173. LLL II, 121. Rom. I, 4, 41. Tim. I, 2, 60. Lr. II, 2, 5. Cymb. V, 5, 222. Mire, vb. 1) to soil with mud: smirched thus and —d with infamy, Ado IV, 1, 135. 2) to sink in mud: paint till a horse may m. upon your face, Tim. IV, 3, 147. Mirrer, subst. 1) looking-glass: Lucr. 1760. Wint. I, 2,381. R2 IV, 265. R3 II, 2, 51. Caes. I, 2,

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M

56. Hml. Ill, 2, 24. V, 2, 124. A n t V, 1, 34. Per. I, 1, 45. 2) pattern, exemplar: the m. of all Christian Icings, H5 II Chor. 6. m. of all martial men, H6A I, 4, 74. it hose wisdom was am, to the wisest, H6C III, 3, 84. them, of aU courtesy, H8 II, 1, 53. Mirth, 1) great gayety, jollity: Lncr. 213. 1109. G e n t I, 1, 30. V, 4, 161. Wiv. II, 1, 28. II, 2, 231. Meas. IV, 1, 13. Err. III. 1, 108 (cf. Despite). Ado III, 2, 10. L L L I, 1, 251. 11,67. V, 1, 121. V, 2, 79. 520. 867. Mids. I, 1, 13. II, 1, 56. V, 28. 35. Mercb. 1, 1, 80. II, 2, 211. As I, 2, 3. V, 4, 114. Shr. Ind. 2, 137. Tw. II, 3, 49. Wint. IV, 4, 42. 54. J o h n V, 2, 59. H4B IV, 4, 38. H5 II, 2, 132. V, 2, 318. H6A I, 6, 15. II, 3, 44. H8 II, 3, 101 (make yourself m.). Troil. I, 1, 40. 1, 3, 173. Cor. I, 3, 117. 123. Mcb. 111,4, 11. 109. Hml. I, 2, 12. II, 2, 307. Ant. I, 2. 86. 1,3,4. Cymb. I, 6,58. V, 4, 163. Per. II, 1, 99. II, 3, 7. 2) a subject of merriment: the m. whereof so larded with my matter, Wiv. IV, 6, 14. to speak all m. and no matter, Ado II, 1, 343. very tragical m. Mids. V, 57. he's all my exercise, my m., my matter, Wint. I, 2, 166. I'll use you for my m. Caes. IV, 3, 49. 114. to give a kingdom for a m. Ant. I, 4, 18. M l r t h r n l , merry: m. comic shows, H6C V, 7, 43. M i r t h - m o v i n g , causing merriness: a m. jest, L L L II, 71. Miry, muddy: Shr. IV, 1, 77. Tit. Ill, 1, 126. Misadventure, mischance, misfortune: your looks are pale and wild, and do import some m. Rom. V, 1, 29. what m. is so early up, V, 3, 188. Mlsadventnred, unfortunate: whose m. piteous overthrows, Rom. Prol. 7. Misanthropes, a hater of mankind: I am i f . Tim. IV, 3, 53. Misapply, to use for bad purposes: Rom. 11,3,21. Misbecame (impf. misbecame, partic. misbecomed) to suit ill, not to befit, to be unseemly in: L L L V, 2, 778. H4B V, 2, 100. H5 II, 4, 118. Mlsbegat, of a bad origin, and hence pernicious: which indeed is valour m. Tim. Ill, 5, 29. Mlsbegatten, of a bad origin: free from other m. hate, R2 I, 1, 33. Hence = pernicious: that m. devil Faulconbridge, J o h n V, 4, 4. three m. knaves in Kendal green, H4A II, 4, 246. contaminated, base and m. blood I spill of thine, H6A IV, 6, 22. Misbehaved, conducting one's self improperly, ill-bred: like a m. and sullen wench, Rom. Ill, 3, 143. Misbeliever, one who holds a false religion, an infidel: you call me m. Merch. I, 3, 112. Misbelieving, holding a false religion, infidel: that m. Moor, Tit. V, 3, 143. Miscall, to call by a wrong name, to name irapioperly: simple truth —ed simplicity, Sonn. 66, 11. my heart will sigh when I m. it so, R2 I, 3, 263. thou dost m. retire, Troil. V, 4, 21. Miscarry, vb. intr. 1) to be carried wrongly, to come into wrong hands: a letter which accidentally hath —ed, L L L IV, 2, 144. the cardinal's letters to the pope —ed, H8 III, 2, 30. 2) to fail, not to succeed, to be lost, to perish, to die: who —ed at sea, Meas. Ill, 1, 217. there —ed a vessel of our country, Merch. II, 8, 29. my ships have all —ed, III, 2, 318. which (my body), but for him, had quite —ed, V, 251. I would not have him m. Tw. Ill, 4, 70. if they (the French) m., we m. too, J o h n V,

4, 3. all that by indictment and by dint of sword have since —ed under Bolingbroke, H4B IV, 1, 129. if they m, theirs shall second them, IV, 2, 46. if a son ... m. upon the sea, H5 IV, 1, 155. if he m., farewell wars in France, H6A IV, 3, 16. better ten thousand baseborn Cades m. H6B IV, 8, 49. it must be, if the king m. R3 I, 3, 16. all that have —ed by underhand corrupted foul injustice, V, 1, 5. who —ing, Troil. I, 3, 351. what —cs shall be the generals fault, Cor. I, 1, 270. if aught in this —ed by my fault, Rom. V, 3, 267. our sister's man is —ed, Lr. V, 1, 5. if you m. 44. I may m. in it, Oth. V, 1, 6. Applied to failing fruits and abortions: if horns that year m. LLL IV, 1, 114. an the child I now go with do m. H4B V, 4,10. 15. Mischance, misfortune: Ven. 738. Lucr. 968. 976. Tp. I, 1, 28. IV, 206. G e n t II, 2, 11. V, 3, 3. R2 III, 4, 92. H4A I, 3, 232. IV, 1, 58. H6A I, 1, 89. IV, 6, 49. H6B III, 2, 284. 300. H6C III, 3, 8. 18. 254. IV, 3, 43. R3 IV, 4, 114. Rom. V, 3, 221. Mcb. HI, 4, 43. Hml. Ill, 2, 238. V, 2, 405. Oth. V, 1, 38. Cymb. II, 3, 137. Mischief, subst. 1) fatal event, calamity, misfortune : so in thyself thyself art made away, a m. worse than civil home-bred strife, Ven. 764. invert what best is boded me to m. Tp. Ill, I, 71. any extremity rather than a m. Wiv. IV, 2, 76. apply a moral medicine to a mortifying m. Ado I, 3, 13. I pray God his bad voice bode no m. II, 3, 83. 0 m. strangely thwarting, III, 2, 135. a portent of broached m. to the unborn times, H4A V, 1, 21. so success of m. shall be born, H4B IV, 2, 47. had your watch been good, this sudden m. never could have fallen, H6A II, 1, 59. a plaguing m. light on Charles, V, 3, 39. till m. and despair drive you to break your necks, V, 4, 90. m., thou art afoot, Caes. Ill, 2, 265. a m. that is past and gone, Oth. I, 3, 204. 205. Even in a subjective sense, — misery: here they (our griefs) are felt and seen with —'s eyes, Per. I, 4, 8 (Steevens mistful, Walker misery's). 2) evil done on purpose, harm, injury: for —s manifold and sorceries, Tp. I, 2, 264. any model to build m. on, Ado I, 3, 49. my thoughts are ripe in m. Tw. V, 132. would mean m. Wint. IV, 4, 197. John III, 2, 3. H4B IV, 2, 14. H5 IV, 3, 106. IV, 7, 186. H6A 111, 1, 115. H6B IV, 8, 59. V, 2, 84. R3 I, 3, 325. H8 I, 1, 160. I, 2, 187. II, 1,66. V, 1,49. Tit. III, 1, 274. V, 1, 65. 110. Rom. V, 1, 35. Tim. IV, 3, 168. Caes. IV, 1, 51. Hml. Ill, 2, 148. Lr. Ill, 7, 82. With a genitive: wherever you wait on nature's m. Mcb. I, 5, 51 (i. e. on harm done to human life, on the destruction of life; cf. Nature). with them, of your person it (his displeasure) would scarcely allay, Lr. I, 2, 178. to do H I . : Tp. IV, ¡¡17. H4B II, 1, 16. Lr. IV, 2, 55. to do a p. m.: Mids. II, 1, 237. 239. Caes. Ill, 1, 93. to do to a p. m.: Cor. IV, 5, 73. to make m. 118 II, 1, 22. to work m. Lucr. 960. H6A III, 2, 39. H6B II, 1, 186. M i s c h i e f , vb. to harm, to injure: grant I may ever love, and rather woo those that would m. me than those that do, Tim. IV, 3, 475. Mischievous, injurious, harmful: most m. foul sin, As II, 7, 64. which hatched would grow m. Caes. II, 1, 33. Misconceived, having a wrong conception, misjudging, erring: no, m.l Joan of Arc hath been a virgin, H6A V, 4, 49.

M Mlseanstriictlan, wrong interpretation, misapprehension : Lr. II, 2, 124. Miscanstrne (O. Edd. mostly misconster), to interpret erroneously, misjudge, misunderstand: lest I be —d, Merch. II, 2, 197. he —* all that you have done, As I, 2, 277. H4A V, 2, 69. H6A II, 3, 73. B3 111, 5, €1. Caes. V, 3, 84. Miscreant, a vile wretch: thou art a traitor and a m- R2 I, 1, 39. well, m., I'll be there as soon as you, H6A 111, 4,44. curse, m., when thou contest to the stake, V, 3, 44. 0 vassal, m.l Lr. I, 1, 163 (Qq recreant). Mlsereate, illegitimate: opening titles m. whose right suits not in native colours with the truth, H5 I, 2, 16. Misdeed, a wicked action: Lucr. 609. 637. H6C III, 3, 183. B3 I, 4, 70. Mlsdemean, vb. refl. to behave ill: you have —ed yourself toward the king, H8 V, 3, 14. Misdemcananrs, ill behaviour: Tw. II, 3, 106. Mlsdaofct, subst. suspicion, diffidence, apprehension: A« cannot so precisely weed this land as his —s present occasion, H4B IV, 1, 206. steel thy fearful thoughts and change m. to resolution, H6B 111, 1, 332. Mlsdanbt, vb. to mistrust: I do not m. my wife, Wiv. II, 1, 192. let this letter be read: our parson—s it, L L L IV, 3, 194. I could neither believe nor m. All's 1, 3, 130. if you m. me that I am not she, 111, 7, 1. the bird —eth every bush, H6C V, 6, 14. this sudden stab of rancour Im. B3 III, 2, 89. do you m. this swordf Ant. Ill, 7, 63. Mlsdread, fear of evil: the passions of the mind, that have their first conception by m., have after-nourishment and life by care; and what was first but fear what might be done, grows elder now and cares it be not done, Per. I, 2, 12. Mlseaum ( O Edd. Mesena) a promontory in ancient Campania: A n t II, 2, 183. Miser, 1 ) a misei*ble wretch, decrepit m., base ignoble wretch, H6A V, 4, 7. 2) a niggard: Sonn. 75, 4. As V, 4, 63. H5 II, 4, 47. Troil. Ill, 3, 143. Per. II, 1, 33. Miserable, 1) unhappy, wretched: Tp. I, 1, 36. Gent. IV, 1, 35. V, 4, 28. Meas. Ill, 1, 2. Mids. Ill, 2, 234. As IV, 3, 133. Wint. I, 2, 351. H5 II, 2,178. H6B 111, I, 201. H6C I, 4, 85. 11, 5, 88. K3 I, 2, 27. I, 3, 258. 1, 4, 2. Ill, 4, 105. IV, 1, 76. Tit. II, 3, 108. Ill, 2, 28. IV, 3, 18. Bom. Ill, 3, 145. IV, 5, 44. Tim. IV, 3, 248. 462. Mcb. IV, 3, 103. Lr. V, 3, 46. Ant. IV, 15, 51. Cymb. I, 6 , 6 . 2) worthless, despicable, wretched: a m. world, As II, 7, 13. 0 m. age, H6B IV, 2, 11. gross and m. ignorance, 178. 0 m. thought, H6C III, 2, 151. we worldly men have m., mad, mistaking eyes. Tit. V, 2, 66. what m. praise hast thou for her, Oth. II, 1, 140. Quibbling in Tim. IV, 3, 249. Miserably, calamitously: he be as m. slain as I, H6C I, 3, 42. Misery, 1) wretchedness, great distress, calamity: Ven. 707. 738. Pilgr. 404. Tp. II, 2, 41. Err. V, 322. Merch. Ill, 4, 21. IV, 1, 272. As II, 1, 51. Ill, 2, 296. Shr. IV, 3, 34. Tw. Ill, 4, 383. Wint. Ill, 2, 123. V, 1, 146. John III, 4, 35. R2 II, 1, 85. H6A III, 2, 137. HCB HI, 1, 200. H6C 111, 3, 264. R3 IV, 1, 53. H8 Prol. 30. Cor. I, 1, 21. IV, 5, 94. V, 2, 103. Tit. II, 5, 57. Ill, 1, 134. Bom. I, 2, 60. V, 1, 41. Tim. IV, 2, 32. IV, 3, 242. 531. Lr. 11, 2, 173. IV, 1, 79. IV, Schmidt, Shakespeare Lexicon. ». Ed. T. 1L

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5, 12. IV, 6, 63. Oth. Ill, 3, 171. Cymb. I, 5, 55. Per. 1,4, 55. 66. and the m. is, example cannot dissuade succession, All's 111, 5, 23; cf. when we in our viciousness grow hard — 0 m. on't! — the wise gods seel our eyes. Ant. Ill, 13, 112. he covets less than m. itself would give, Cor. II, 2, 131 (explained by most, but unnecessarily, as meaning avarice). Plur. —ies - calamities, misfortunes: Merch. I, 2, 4. All's III, 2, 122. Wint. IV, 4, 579. 822. H6A 1, 1, 88. II, 5, 29. H6B II, 4,16. B3 IV, 4 , 1 7 . 129. H8 III, 1, 108. Ill, 2, 389. 430. Tit. Ill, 1, 220. 244. Tim. IV, 3, 76. Caes. IV, 3, 221. Lr. Ill, 6, 110. V, 3, 180. Cymb. V, 4, 86. 144. Per. 1,4, 88. V , 3 , 4 1 . 2) contemptibleness: O noble m., to be >" the field, and ask 'what news', Cymb. V, 3, 64 ( = contemptibleness in a nobleman). Misfortune, evil accident, calamity: Lucr. 1713. Ado V, 1, 17. Merch. I, 1, 21. II, 4 , 3 6 (fem.). R2 I, 2, 49. V, 5, 71. H6CIV, 4, 3. 20. Bom. I, 4, 91. V, 3, 82. Per. II, 3, 88 (by m. of the seas). 90. Plur. — s : Err. 1,1,120. R2 V, 5,29 (Ff m.). H8 III, 2, 374. Misgive, to have a presentiment of evil: my —ing still falls shrewdly to the purpose, Caes. Ill, 1, 145. my mind —s, Oth. Ill, 4, 89. Followed by a clause: my mind —s some consequence yet hanging in the stars shall bitterly begin his fearful date, Rom. I, 4, 106. With a dative: my heart —s me, Wiv. V, 5, 226. so doth my heart m. me, in these conflicts what may befall him, H6C IV, 6, 94. Misgoverned, ill behaved, rude (cf. Government): rude m. hands from windows' tops threw dust and rubbish on King Richards head, R2 V, 2, 5. Misgoverning, want of self-control, bad conduct: black lust, dishonour, shame, m., who seek to stain the ocean of thy blood, Lncr. 654. Mlsgaverunent, the same: thus, pretty lady, I am sorry for thy much m. Ado IV, 1, 100. Mlsgraffed, grafted amiss, ill placed: (love) n . in respect of years, Mids. I, 1, 137. Misguide, to lead a wrong way: her great charms m. thy opposers' swords. Cor. I, 5, 23. Mishap, subst. ill chance, misfortune: Err. I, 1, 142. H6A I, 1, 23. Plur. —s: Ven. 603. Err. I, 1, 121. Tit. I, 152. Mishear, to mistake in hearing: thou hast misspoke, misheard, J o h n III, 1, 4. Misinterpret, to explain in a wrong sense: your exposition —ing, Per. I, 1,112. Trans.: you did make him m. me, R2 111, 1, 18. Mislead (impf. not used, partic. misled), to lead astray, to guide a wrong way: Lucr. 369. Meas. IV, 1, 4. Ado IV, 1, 189. Mids. II, 1, 39. All's IV, 5, 1. R2 III, 1, 8. H4A IV, 3, 51. V, 1, 105. H4B I, 2,163. H6B IV, 8, 8. H6C III, 3,35. V, 1, 97. Mlsleader, one who leads to ill: H4A II, 4, 508. H4B V, 5, 68. H6B V, 1, 163. Mlsllke, subst. dislike, aversion: setting your scorns and your m. aside, H6C IV, 1, 24. Mlsllke, vb. to dislike, to disapprove: m. me not for my complexion, Merch. II, 1, 1. 'tis not my speeches that you do m. H6B I, 1, 140. if he m. my speech and what is done, Ant. Ill, 13, 147. Mlssrdered, out of order, deranged, irregular: the time m. H4B IV, 2, 33. Misplace, to put in a wrong place; absol.: do you hear how he — s f Meas. II, 1, 90 ( = misapplies 47

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the words). Trans.: gilded honour shamefully —d, Sonn. 66, 5. her benefits are mightily —d, As I, 2, 37. the —d John, J o h n III, 4, 133. the crown to foul —d, R 3 111, 2, 44. M i s p r i s e or M l i f r l s e , to undervalue, to slight, to despise ( F r . mipriser): —ing what they look on, Ado 111, 1, 52. I am altogether —d, As I, X, 177. your reputation shall not be — d , I, 2, 192. by the —ing of a maid too virtuous for the contempt of empire, All's III, 2, 33. —ing the knight opposed, Troil. IV, 5, 74 (Ff disprising). Misprised, mistaken: you spend your passion on a m. mood, Mids. HI, 2, 74. Misprision, 1) the taking one thing for another, mistake, error: thyself thou gavest, thy own worth then not knowing, or me, to whom thou gavest i t , else mistaking; so thy great gift, upon m. growing, comes home again, on better judgment making, Sonn. 87, 11. there is some strange m. in the princes, Ado IV, 1, 187. a fever in your blood! why, then incision would let her out in saucers: sweet m. L L L IV, 3, 98. of thy m. must perforce ensue some true love turned, Mids. Ill, 2, 90. m. in the highest degree, Tw. I, 5, 61. envy, therefore, or m. is guilty of this fault, H4A 1, 3, 27. 2) undervaluing, contempt: proud scornful boy that dost in vile m. shackle up my love and her desert, All's II, 3, 159. Mlsprond, viciously proud: m. York, H6CII, 6,7. Misquote, to misinterpret, to misconstrue: interpretation will m. our looks, H4A V, 2, 13. Mlsreport, vb. to speak ill of, to slander: a man that never yet did m. your grace, Meas. V, 148. Miss, vb. 1) to fail in aiming at, not to hit: he could not m. it, Tp. II, 1, 40. he —es not much, 56. you find not the apostraphas, and so m. the accent, L L L IV, 2, 124. you m. my sense, Shr. V, 2, 18. a health to all that shot and —ed, 51. I —edmy aim, H6A 1, 4, 4. I —ed the meteor once, H8 V,4,52. hit or m. Troil. I, 3, 384. in that hit you m. Bom. I, 1, 214. maym. our name and hit the woundless air, Iiml. IV, 1, 43. 2) to fail of finding or obtaining: so may I, blind fortune leading me, m. that which one unworthier may attain, Merch. II, 1, 37. so may you m. me, III, 2, 12. who ever strove to show her merit, that did m. her love? All's I, 1, 242. your free undertaking cannot m. a thriving issue, Wint. II, 2, 44. if misfortune m. the first career, R2 I, 2, 49. though thy master —ed it (the way) H8 111, 2,439. he could not m. them (the daggers) Mcb. II, 2, 13. he that hath —ed the princess is a thing too Sad forbad report, Cymb. I, 1, 16. I could not m. my way, III, 6, 9. With an inf.: if we m. to meet him handsomely, Tit. II, 3, 268. 3) to be without, to want: thy record never can be —ed, Sonn. 122, 8. we cannot m. him, Tp. I, 2, 311. what I can help thee to thou shall not m. All's I, 3, 262. he would m. it rather than carry it but by the suit of the gentry to him, Cor. II, 1, 263. 4) to perceive and feel the want of: the moon being clouded presently is —ed, Lucr. 1007. I shall m. thee, but yet thou shall have freedom, Tp. V, 95. when he shall m. me, Wint. IV, 4, 505. your Coriolanus is not much —ed, Cor. IV, 6, 13. our dear friend Banquo, whom we m. Mcb. Ill, 4, 90. the friends we m. V, 8, 35. you 'hall be —ed at court, Cymb. Ill, 4, 129. 189. Ill, 5, 90. 5) to fail, tc omit, not to observe, not to keep:

one that will not m. you morning nor evening prayer, Wiv. II, 2, 102. for —ing your meetings and appointments, III, 1, 92. I will not . IV, 232. R3 I, 4, 202. Kom. V, 1, 81. Hml. Ill, when creeping m. and the poring dark fills the wide 2, 248. Ill, 3, 54. V, 1, 86. Oth. I, 2, 3. V, 2, 106. vessel of the universe, H5 IV Chor. 2. 2) rumour: then 'twas fresh in m. Tw. I, 2, 32. to enact a m. H6A 111, 1, 115. to perform a m. Mcb. • a r m o r , vb. 1) to give a low and indistinct Ill, 4, 77. With a genitive: a brother's m. Hml. Ill, 3, 38. by m. of a king, H6B IV, 1, 95. Tit. IV, 4, 54. sound: the —ing stream, As IV, 3, 80. the —ing surge, Hml. II, 2, 563. 624. Lr. II, 1, 46. he m. cries, Mids. Lr. IV, 6, 20. trans.: the fresh streams ran by her and III, 2, 26. H4B II, 1, 55. Used as a masc.: m. as ha- —ed her moans, Oth. IV, 3, 45. 2) to speak to one's self and indistinctly: —ing ting what himself hath done, John IV, 3, 37. Murder or Murther, vb. to kill criminally: aba.: '•Where's my serpent of old Nile't A n t I, 5, 25. trans.: H5 V, 2, 17. H6B 111, 2, 324. H6C II, 5, 122. II, 6, I heard thee in. tales of iron wars, H4A II, 3, 51. 49. Mcb. 1,5,49. 11,3, 91. trans.: Ven. 502. Lucr. 3) to grumble: if thou more —est, Tp. I, 2, 294. Arg. 2. Lucr. 929. 1634. Err. IV, 4, 112. Mids. Ill, the —ing lips of discontent, John IV, 2, 53. • a r m o r e r , grumbler: H8 II, 2,131. 2, 56. 58. Shr. V, 1, 61. 90. All's I, 1, 151. Tw. 11, M u r r a i n , an infections disease among cattle; 1, 36. Wint. 1, 2, 412. John IV, 2, 205. K2 V, 6,40. H4B IV. 5, 168. H6A I, 3, 34. V, 4, 63. H6B II, 2, used as a curse: a m. on your monster, Tp. Ill, 2, 88. 27. 11,3,107. 111,2, 123. 177. IV, 1, 136. IV, 7, 81. a red m. o' thy jade's tricks, Troil. II, 1, 20. a m. H6C I, 1, 260. I, 3, 8. V, 6, 32. E3 I, 4, 178. 260. on't, Cor. I, 5, 3. In Mids II, 1, 97 some M. Edd. m., Tit. V, 1, 91. Rom. Ill, 2, 109. V, 3, 50 etc. = to kill: 0 . Edd. murrion. I'll m. all his wardrobe, H4A V, 3, 27. smilest upon • a r r a y , name in H4A I, 1, 73. the stroke that —s me, Bom. Ill, 3, 23. the repetition • u r r l e u , infected with the murrain: crows are would m. as it fell, Mcb II, 3, 91. Metaphorical use: fatted with the m. flock, Mids. II, 1, 97 (some M. Edd. what follows more she —s with a kiss, Ven. 54 (i. e. murrain). cats short), her eyes, as —ed with the view, like stars Murther, subst and vb. see Murder. ashamed of day, themselves withdrew, 1031. thou smoM a r t h e r e r , see Murderer. therest honesty, thou —est troth, Lucr. 885. in my Murthereua, see Murderous. death I m. shameful scorn, 1189. 1 will m. your ruff Mascadel, a sweet sort of wine: Shr. Ill, 2, 174. for this, H4B II, 4, 144 (Pistol's speech), m. thy breath • o a c a t , the same: fortune's cat, but not a m. in the middle of a word, R3 III, 5, 2. —ing impossi- All's V, 2, 21 (M. Edd. musk-cat, perhaps rightly). bility , Cor. V, 3, 61 (explained in what follows: to • o a c l e (O. Edd. mussel) a bivalvnlar shell-fish: make what cannot be, slight work), to m. our solemnity, Tp. I, 2, 463. m. shell, a name given by Falstaff to Rom. IV, 5, 61. Simple, because he stands with his mouth open, Wiv. Murderer or M u r t h e r e r (the two forms used IV 5 29. indiscriminately; dissyll. and trisyll.) one who kills ' M u n t U « , a Russian: LLL V, 2,121. 265. 303. or has killed criminally: Meas. IV, 2, 65. V, 39. LLL • o a c e r y , Russia: LLL V, 2, 393. IV, 1, 8. Mids. Ill, 2, 57. 60. As HI, 5, 14. Tw. Ill, 2, • a s e , 1) one of the nine goddesses presiding 82. R2 V, 6,40. H6B III, 1, 128. 254. Ill, 2, 92. 181. over the liberal arts; especially the goddess of poetry: H6C V, 5, 52. R3 I, 1, 40. 1, 2, 64. I, 4, 268. V, 3, Sonn. 38, 9. 78, 1. 85,4. 100, 1. 5. 9. Mids. V, 52. 184. Tit. II, 3, 178. Ill, 2, 54. Rom. Ill, 1, 143. Ill, H5 Prol. 1. 3, 94. Mcb. 11, 3, 120. Hml. Ill, 4, 96. Oth. V, 2, 294. 2) a particular power and practice of poetry: so Cymb. V, 5, 211 etc. is it not with me as with that M. stirred by a painted Murderlng-plece, apiece of ordnance charged beauty to his verse, Sonn. 21, 1. had my friends M. with grapeshot: this, like to a m., in many places gives grown with this growing age, 32, 10. how can my M. me superfluous death, Hml. IV, 5, 95. want subject to invent, 38, 1. my sick M. doth give Murdereu* or M u r t h e r e u s (dissyll.; only once, another place, 79, 4. thou wert not married to my M. R3 IV, 1, 56, trisyll. at the end of the line) commit- 82,1. my tongue-tied M. in manners holds her still, ting murder, sanguinary: Lncr. 1735. Sonn. 9, 14 85,1. my M. labours, Oth. II, 1, 128. (m. shame —- shameful murder). 10, 5. 129, 3. Tw. • u s e , vb. 1) to give one's self up to thonght, III, 1, 159 (m. guilt — guilt of murder). John IV, 2, particularly of a painful nature: why m. youf Gent 255. H4A I, 3, 163. H6B 111, 2, 49. 220. V, 1, 185. II, 1, 176. I will m. no further, Wiv. V, 5, 253 will H6C III, 2, 193. R3 I, 2, 94. I, 3, 134. IV, 1, 56. no longer foster my grudge). — ing and sighing, Caes. IV, 4, 226. Tit. II, 3, 267. IV, 2. 88. Caes. IV, 3, II, 1, 240. With o f , = to think, to dream of: when 267. Mcb. II. 3, 147. Hml. V, 2, 336. Lr. 11, 1, 64. he hath —d of taking kingdoms in, Ant. Ill, 13, 83. IV, 6, 282. Oth. V, 1, 61. V, 2, 233. Cymb. IV, 2, The gerund substantively: made with — ing weak, 328 (m. to the senses). Gent. 1, 1, 69. given to allicholy and —ing, Wiv. I, 4, H a r e , a wall: the incessant care and labour of 164. thick-eyed —ing and cursed melancholy, H4A II, his mind hath wrought the m. that should confine it in 3, 49. Plur.: he should still dwell in his —ings, 118 so thin that life looks through and will break out, II4B III, 2, 133. drew —ings into my mind, Per. 1, 2, 97. IV, 4. 119. 2) to wonder; with at: do not m. at me, Mcb. Ill, M a r k , darkness, gloom: ere twice in m. and occi- 4,85. With a clause: —ing the morning is so much dental damp moist Hesperus hath quenched his sleepy o'erworn, Ven. 866. m. not that 1 thus suddenly prolamp. All's II, 1, 166. ceed, Gent. 1, 3, 64. rather m. than ask why I entreat Murky, dark, gloomy: hell is m. Mcb. V, 1, 41. you, All's 11, 5, 70. / m. your majesty doth seem so the —est den, Tp. IV, 25. cold, John 111, 1, 317. I m. you make so slight a

752

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question, H4B IT, 1, 167. I m. 10« met not with the • o a k - e a t , emendation of M. Edd. for muscat of Dauphins grace, H6A II, 2, 19. I m. my Lord of 0 . Edd. in All's V, 2, 21. Gloster is not come, H6B III, 1, 1. you m. what chat Musket, a hand-gun: All's III, 2, 111. we two have had, H6C III, 2, 109. I m. why she's at H n i k w , name in All's IV, 1, 76 (the M. regiliberty, R3 I, 3, 305 (Qq wonder). I m. my mother ment). dot» not approve me, Cor. Ill, 2, 7. • u k - r m , a very fragrant rose: Mids. II, 1,252. Trans., to wonder at: 1 cannot too much m. 11, 2,3. IV, 1, 3. Mass, "a scramble, when any small objects are such shapes, Tp. Ill, 3, 36. thrown down, to be taken by those who can seize MoMt, see Musit. IiiIumb, a plant of the order of Fungi: to them" (Nares): when I cried Ho, like boys unto a tn., kings would start forth, Ant. Ill, 13, 91. make midnight —s, Tp. V, 39 (OEdd. mushrumps). Mussel, see Muscle. • o d e , 1) the art and science of harmonical H o s t , the verb expressing a necessity, whether sounds: if m. and sweet poetry agree, Pilgr. 103. 112. skilled in m. Gent. Ill, 2, 92. Merch. V, 83. Shr. I, 1, physical, or moral, or fatal, or logical; 1) a physical 36. I, 2, 134. II, 1, 56. Ill, 1, 7. 10. Per. II, 5, 30 necessity: the sun doth burn my face; Im. remove, Ven. (fem.). IV Prol. 8 (trained in — s letters; cf. Letter; 186. so m. my soul (decay), her bark being peeled away, Lucr. 1169. through the painter m. you see his skill, M. Edd. in music, letters). 2) rocal or instrumental harmony: Ven. 432. Sonn. 24, 5. the death-bed whereon it m. expire, 73, 1077. Sonn. 8, 1. 102, 11. 128,1. 130, 10. Pilgr. 14. 75, 12. 81,6. 126,11. Tp. I, 2, 330. 111,3,4. 68. Phoen. 14. Tp. I, 2, 387. 391. Ill, 2, 154. Ill, 3, Gent. II, 2, 2. II, 4, 188. II, 6, 20 etc. etc. Impf.: those 19. IV, 178. V, 52. Gent. II, 7, 28. 111, 1,179. IV, 2, palates who, not yet two summers younger, m. have in17. 31. 35. 55. 66. 68. 86. Meas. IV, 1, 14. LLL I, ventions to delight the taste, would now be glad of 1, 167. Mids. II, 1, 154. IV, 1, 29. 86. 88. 111. V, 40. bread, Per. I, 4, 40. 2) Moral necessity: affection is a coal that m. be Merch. Ill, 2, 43. V, 68. 76. 79. 82. 88. 97. Tw. HI, 1, 1. R2 V, 5, 61. H5 V, 2, 263 etc. etc. give us some cooled, Ven. 387. that posterity which by the rights of m. As II, 7, 173. Tw. II, 4, 1. Ant. II, 5, 1. Cymb. II, time thou needs m. have, 759. truth I m. confess, 1001. 3, 13. m.from the spheres, Tw. Ill, 1,121; cf. Merch. 1117. Lucr. 486. 612. 1195. 1799. Sonn. 35, 13. 36, V, 60. broken m. As I, 2, 150. H5 V, 2, 263. Troil. 1. 44, 12. 108,6. 120,3. 14. 136,10. Tp. I, 2, 33. Ill, 1,52 (cf. Break), m. in parts, Shr. Ill, 1,60. Troil. 241.261. 372. 11,2,4. Gent. 1,1, 159. 1,3,75. II, Ill, 1, 19 (cf. Part). Metaphorically: m. to hear, Sonn. 7, 53. Wiv. Ill, 4, 96. Meas. II, 2, 48. LLL V, 2, 552. 8, 1 (i. e. thou whom to hear speak is as delightful Mids. I, 2, 90. Merch. II, 4, 30. 111,4,14. IV, 1, 182. as to hear music), thou, my m. 128, 1. never words 205 etc. etc. you m. know = let me tell you, Meas. were m. to thine ear, Err. II, 2, 116. it is my father's I, 1, 18. With a negative: foul words and frowns m. m. to speak your deeds, Wint. IV, 4, 529. H6B II, 1, not repel a lover, Ven. 573. we m. not beJoes. Son. 40,14. 56. Rom. II, 5, 23. II, 6, 27. Tim. I, 2, 252. Hml. Ill, I m. ne'er love him whom thou dost hate, 89, 14. 121, 4, 141. Adjectively: sucked the honey of his m. vows, 12. H5 IV, 2, 32 etc. Im. not say so = far be it from me to say so, R3 III, 1, 106. cf. Im. not believe you, Hml. Ill, 1, 164 (Qq musickt). 3) a band of musicians: wild m. burthens every Troil. IV, 5, 221. you m. in no way say he is covetous, bough, Sonn. 102, 11. play, m., then, LLL V, 2, 211. Cor. I, 1, 43. I m. not think there are evils enow to bring your m. forth, Merch. V, 53. your m. of the house, darken all his goodness, Ant. I, 4, 10. 98. Ado I, 2, 2. V, 3,11. V, 4,123. As V, 4, 184. 3) a fatal necessity, one ordained by fate, or imH4B II, 4, 245. H8 IV, 1, 91. IV, 2, 94. Rom. IV, 4, posed by circumstances (often = to be to): such 21. Ant. II, 5, 2, Cymb. II, 3, 12. Per. Ill, 2, 91. Plur. hazard now m. doting Tarquin make, pawning his —s: every night he comes with —s of all sorts, All's honour to obtain his lust, and for himself himself he m. III, 7, 40. I have assailed her with —s, Cymb. II, 3, forsake, Lncr. 155. whereat a waxen torch forthwith 44 (M. Edd. m.). he lighteth, which m. be lodestar to his lustful eye, 179. Musical, producing harmony, harmonions: found as from this cold flint I enforced this fire, so Lucrece me here so m. Meas. IV, 1, 11. as sweet and m. as m. I force to my desire, 182. m. our mouths be coldt bright Apollo's lute, LLL IV, 3, 342. Mids. IV, 1, 115. Tp. 1, 1, 56. he m. fight singly to morrow with Hector, Troil. Ill, 3, 247. a charmed life, which m. not yield 123. As II, 7, 5. H4A III, 1, 237. H5 III, 7, 18. Mnslclan, one skilled in music, or making music: to one of woman born, Mcb. V, 8, 12. Lucr. 348. 383. Gent. IV, 2,57. Ado II, 3,36. Merch. V, 106. As IV, 385. 512. 513. 618. 703. 795. Sonn. 4, 13. 12, 10. I,11. Shr. I, 2, 174. 11,145. 111, 1,63. 111, 2,149. 16, 14. 73,11. 133,4. Merch. II, 6,40. R2 1,1,51 IV, 2, 17. R2 I, 3, 288. H4A III, 1, 226. 235. H4B etc. etc. Impf.: and I m. be from thence! Mcb. IV, 3, II, 4, 403. H8 IV, 2, 78. Troil. Ill, 1, 21. Rom. I, 5, 212. 27. IV, 5, 102. 107. 136. 143. Oth. IV, 1, 199. 4) a logical necessity: then m. the love be great Muslcked (?), mutical: his m. vows, Hml. Ill, 1, 'twixt thee and me, because thou lovest the one, and I 164 (Qq musickt, Ff music). the other, Pilgr. 105. it m. needs be of subtle, tender Musing, subst. see Muse, vb. and delicate temperance, Tp. 11, 1, 41. the story of your Muslt, a hole for creeping through; " the open- life, which m. take the ear strangely, V, 312. Meas. ing in a fence or thicket through which a hare or II,4,30. V, 123 Mids. Ill, 2,119. Merch. Ill, 4, 18 etc. other beast of sport is accustomed to pass" (Nares ): The verbs to go, to get or the like, omitted after the many —s through the which he goes are like a la- it: I m. after, Gent. II, 4, 176. I m. unto the road, byrinth to amaze his foes, Ven. 683. 187. now m. we to her window, IV, 2, 16. I m. of Mask, an odorous substance: smelling so sweetly, another errand to Sir John Falstaff, Wiv. Ill, 4, 113. all m. Wiv. II, 2, 68. he m. before the deputy, Meas. Ill, 2, 35. thither I m.

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753

Err. IV, 1, 112. I m. now to Oberon, Mids. II, 2, 83. • a t a b l e , inconstant: the at. rank-scented many, / m. to the barber's, IV, 1, 25. Im. to Lorenzo, Merch.Cor. Ill, 1, 66. Matatlen, change (as an effect of inconstancy): II, 2, 114. Im. away, IV, 1, 403. thus m. I from the 0 world! but that thy strange —s make us hate thee, smoke into the smother, As 1,2,299. Im. away to-day, Sbr. Ill, 2,192. she m. uith me, 229. thither m. I, V, Lr. IV, 1, 11. his humour was nothing but n., ay, and I, 11. ice m. to horse again, All's V, 1, 37. we m. tothat from one bad thing to worse, Cymb. IV, 2, 133. the king, Wint. IV, 4, 848. m. I back, John V, 2, 95. • a t e , adj. dumb, silent, notspeaking: Ven.208. I m. to Coventry, B2 1, 2, 56. you m. to the court, H4A335. Lucr. 227. Sonn. 83, 11. 97,12. Tp.1V, 126. L L L V, 2, 277. Shr. II, 175. All's U, 3, 83. Wint II, 4, 368. we m. away ail night, IV, 2,63. we m. hence, II4B II, 4, 397. a' m. to the inns of court, 111, 2, 14. I, 2, 271. H5 I, 1, 49. T i t V, 3, 184. Cymb. I, 6, I m. hence again, H6B IV, 5, 13. Edward needs m.116 (superl. —st). Per. IV Prol. 26. m. and dumb: down, H6C IV, 3,42. King Edwards friends m. down,Lucr. 1123. R3 IV, 4, 18 (Ff still andm.). Hml. II, IV,4,28. Im.away, 831,4,289 ( F f will). Im.to 2,137. bed, H8 IV, 2, 166. I m. to him, V, 1, 8. thou m. to Mat«, subst. one that is silent; a dumb spectator: thy father, Troil. IV, 2, 97. I m. then to the Grecians tare but —s or audience to this act, Hml. V, 2, 346. IV, 4, 57. I m. to the learned, Rom. I, 2, 45. we m.In Turkey a dumb officer acting as executioner: be out and talk, Caes. V, 1,22. In. to England, Hml. you his eunuch, and yarn m. 1'U be: when my tongue III, 4, 200. truth's a dog m. to kennel, Lr. I, 4, 124. blabs, then let mine eyes not see, Tw. I, 2, 62. or else Im. needs after him, IV, 5, 15. we m. to the watch,our grave, like Turkish m., shall have a tongueless Oth. II, 3, 12. you m. to Parthia, Ant. II, 3, 41. to mouth, H5 I, 2, 232. that thou wilt be a voluntary m. to my design, Cymb. Ill, 5, 158. prepare this body,like to them, to what Im. Per. I, 1,44. H n i t u h U , hair on the lip: to lean upon my poor •latine, subst. a rebel: do like the —s of Jerushoulder and dally with my m. L L L V, 1, 110. salem, John II, 378 (like the factions in Jerusalem Muatachla-purple-hned, having red mustaches: combining their strength against the Romans). I lay these mad m. matt-worms, H4 A II, 1, 83 (most M. Edd. worse than the —s in the bilboes, Hml. V, 2, 6. mustachio purple-hued). Matine, vb. to rebel: if thou canst m. in a maMactard, the seed of Sinapis nigra, used to tron's bones, Hml. Ill, 4, 83. season meat: As I, 2, 68. 70. 85. Shr. IV, 3, 23. 25. Mutineer, rebel: Tp. Ill, 2, 40. 26. his wit's as thick as Tewlcsbury m. H4BII,4,262. Matlner, the same: Cor. I, 1, 254. Muater4-aee*, name of a fairy: Mids. HI, 1, 165. Matlneat, rebellions: Tp. V, 42. H6C II, 5, 90. 195. 196. 201. IV, 1,18. 20. IV, 8, 10. Cor. I, 1, 115. 153, I, 2, 11. V, 3, 59. Moater, subst. 1) a review of troops under arms: Matlny, subst 1) rebellion, insurrection: Ven. let us take a m. speedily, H4A IV, 1, 133. 1049. R2 IV, 142. H6A I, 1, 160. V, 1, 62. H6B 2) a levy of troops: make fearful —s and pre- 111, 2,128. H6C I, 4, 77. Troil. I, 3, 96. Cor. Ill, 1, pared defence, H4B Ind. 12. defences, —s, prepara-126. T i t IV, 1, 85. Caes. Ill, 1, 86. Ill, 2, 127. 215. tions should be maintained, H5 II, 4,18. hasten his —* Lr. I, 2, 116. Oth. II, 3, 157. Per. Ill Prol. 29. and conduct his powers, Lr. IV, 2,16. 2) discord, strife, contention: gives false alarms, 3) troops under arms: our present —s grow uponsuggesteth m. Ven. 651. his eye, which late this m. the file to five and twenty thousand men, H4B I, 3, 10. restrains, unto a greater uproar tempts his veins, Lucr. the m. of his kingdom too faint a number, H5 111, 6, 139. 426. with herself she is in m. 1153. whom right and his eyes, that o'er the files and —* of the war havewrong have chose as umpire of their m. L L L I, 1, 170. glowed like plated Mars, Ant. 1,1, 3. to raise a m. betwixt yourselves, H6A IV, 1, 131. there Master, vb. 1) trans, to collect, to assemble is a m. ins mind, H8 HI, 2, 120. this m. were better (troops): Lucr. 773. L L L V, 2, 85. R2 II, 2, 108. Ill, put in hazard, Cor. II, 3, 264. from ancient grudge 3,86. H6A I, 1, 101. H6C1I, 1, 112. R3 IV, 3, 56. break to new m. Rom. I Chor. 3. you'll make a m. IV, 4,496. Cor. IV, 5,134. Cymb. IV, 2, 344. IV, 4,10 among my guests, I, 5, 82. (not —ed among the bands, i.e. not entered on the Matlny. vb. 1) to rebel: As I, 1, 24. R3 I, 4, muster-roU). With up: R2 II, 2, 118. B6C IV, 8, 11. 142. Caes. Ill, 2, 234. 235. 18. R3 IV, 4, 489. Dubious passage: they wear them2) to be at odds, to fall out, to quarrel: all too selves in the cap of the time, there do m. true gait, All's late comes counsel to be heard, where will doth m. with II, 1, 55 (some M. Edd. master). wit's regard, R2 II, 1, 28. out of that will I cause 2) intr. to assemble (as troops): is this Moorfields these of Cyprus to m. Oth. II, 1, 282. my very hairs to m. inf H8 V, 4, 33. With to, = to repair as to a do m., for the white reprove the brown for rashness, meeting-place: they, —ing to the quiet cabinet, Lucr.and they them for fear and doting, Ant. Ill, 11, 13. 442. to whose weak ruins m. troops of cares, 720. why Mutlua, name in Tit. I, 348. 363 etc. does m>j blood thus m. to my heartt Meas. II, 4, 20. the Matter, to utter with a low voice or with impercommoners ... m. to their captain, the heart, H4B IV, fect articulation: whatm.youl H4AU,4,148. amongst 3, 120. the soldiers this is —ed, H6A I, 1, 70. what m. you, Master -beek, a book in which the forces are or what conspire you, lordst H6C I, 1, 165. what does registered: H4B III, 2, 146. his cashiered worship m.t Tim. Ill, 4, 61. or stand so Master-file, a register of forces: All's IV, 3, 189. —ing on, Oth. Ill, 3, 70 (reading of Ql; the rest of Muaty, mouldy, stale: Ado I, 1, 50. I, 3, 61. Cor. 0. Edd. mammering). there are a kind of men so loose I, 1, 230. V, 1, 26. Rom. V, 1, 46. Hml. Ill, 2, 359. of soul, that in their sleeps will m. their affairs, 417. Lr. IV, 7, 40. Mutten, 1) a sheep: Gent. I, 1, 101..106. Merch. Mutability, changeableness, inconstancy: Cymb. 1, 3, 168. As III, 2, 57. II, 5, 26. Used for mutable by Fluellen: H5 III, 6, 36. 2) the flesh of sheep dressed for food: L L L I, 1,

754 304. S i r . IV, 1, 163. Tw. I, 3, 130. H 4 B II, 4, 376. V, 1, 28. 2) woman's flesh: the duke would eat m. on Fridays, Meas. Ill, 2, 192; cf. H4B II, 4, 376. See Laced mutton. Mutual, 1) taking place on both sides, pertaining to each of two (Germ, beiderseitig): mark how one string, tweet husband to another, strikes each in each by m. ordering, Sonn. 8, 10. but m. render, only me for thee, 125, 12. confirmed by m. joinder of your hands, Tw. V, 160. there is division, although as yet the face of it be covered with m. cunning, Lr. Ill, 1, 21. when such a m. pair and such a twain can dot, Ant. I, 1, 37. 2) intimate, cordial: the stealth of our most m. entertainment, Meas. I, 2, 158. the m. conference that my mind hath had, by day, by night, waking and in my dreams, with you, my alderliefest sovereign, H6B I, 1, 25. 3) common: till m. overthrow of mortal kind, Ven. 1018. Phoenix and the turtle fled in a m. flame from hence, Phoea. 24. one feast, one house, one m. happiness, Gent. V, 4, 173. the skies, the fountains, every region near seemed all one m. cry, Mids. IV, 1, 122. you shall perceive them make a m. stand, Merch. V, 77. in m. well-beseeming ranks, H4A I, 1, 14. that bear this m. heavy load of moan, B3 II, 2, 113. choice, being m. act of all our souls, Troil. I, 3, 348. to knit again this scattered corn into one m. sheaf, Tit. V, 3, 71. make a m. closure of our house, 134. Mutuality, intimacy, familiarity: when these —es so marshal the way, hard at hand comes the master and main exercise, the incorporate conclusion, Oth. II, 1, 267. Mutually, 1) on both sides: your most offenceful act was m. committed, Meas. II, 3, 27. 2) in return: who m. hath answered my affection, Wiv. IV, 6, 10. 3) in common, all together: pinch him, fairies, m. Wiv. V, 5, 103. the other instruments did see and hear, devise, instruct, walk, feel, and, m. participate, did minister unto the appetite, Cor. I, 1, 106. Muszle, subst. a fastening for the mouth, which hinders from biting: Ado I, 3, 34. H4B IV, 5, 132. Mnzsle, vb. to restrain from biting by binding the mouth: Wint.l,2,156. J o h n 11,249. H8 I, 1, 121. My, poss. pron. of the first pers. sing.: Ven. 101. 105. 108. 112. 115. 139 etc. etc. Before vowels, 1) without emphasis: answered my affection, Wiv. IV, 6, 10. this is the period of my ambition, 111, 3, 47. my ancient skill beguiles me, Meas. IV, 2, 164. over my altars hath he hung his lance, Ven. 103. making my arms his field, 108. lie there, my art, Tp. I, 2, 25. my authority bears of a credent bulk, Meas. IV, 4, 29. gazed for tidings in my eager eyes, Lucr. 254. my expense, Wiv. Ill, 4, 5. show no colour for my extremity, IV, 2, 169. from the tempest of my eyes, Mids. I, 1, 131 (Ff mine), your kindred hath made my eyes water, HI, 1,200. to jollow me and praise my eyes and face, 111, 2, 223. go to my inn, Err. I, 2, 23. conceit, my comfort and my injury, IV, 2, 66. to feed my innocent people, Tp. II, 1, 164. I often did behold in thy sweet semblance my old age new born, Lucr. 1759. my old bones ache, Tp. Ill, 3, 2. that power which gave me first my oath, Gent. II, 6, 4. members of my occupation, Meas. IV, 2, 40. how, with my honour, I may

M undertake, G e n t II, 7, 6. and, by my honour, depart untouched, Caes.lll, 1,141. I cannot put off my opinion, Wiv. II, ] , 243. my uncle can tell you, III, 4, 38. 66. measure my strangeness with my unripe years, Ven. 524. my untimely death, Lucr. 1178. remove your siege from my unyielding heart, Ven. 423 etc. etc. 2) Emphatically: I will not poison thee with my attaint, Lucr. 1072. they that level at my abuses reckon up their own, Sonn. 121, 10. the Perries, finding his usurpation most unjust, endeavoured my advancement to the throne, H6A II, 5, 69. my ear should catch your voice, my eye your eye, Mids. I, 1, 188. my eyes are oftener washed than hers, II, 2, 93. from thy cheeks my mage thou hast torn, Lucr. 1762. his mother was a votaress of my order, Mids. II, 1, 123 etc. Or expressing tenderness: my Ariel, Tp. I, 2,188. Ill, 3, 84. IV, 1, 57. V, 316. my eyas-musket, Wiv. Ill, 3, 22. 0, my old master, Err. V, 338. my Oberon, Mids. IV, 1, 81. O my Antonio, Merch. 1, 1, 173. my Icarus, H6A IV, 7, 16 (cf. my Lucio, Meas. I, 2, 129). Before own: Gent. IV, 2, 4. Err. V, 90. Mids. Ill, 2, 243 etc. Superfluous: I am one that am nourished by my victuals, Gent. II, 1, 180. if my gossip Report be an honest woman of her word, Merch. Ill, 1, 7. I am past my gamut long ago, Shr. Ill, 1,71. my hostess of the tavern, H4A I, 2, 45. 54. as full of quarrel as my young mistress' dog, Oth. II, 3, 53. Transposed: dear my liege, R2 I, 1, 184. dear my lord, Ado IV, 1, 46. Caes. U, 1, 255. Hml. 111,3,35. Ant. IV, 15,22. dear my brother, Wint. V, 3, 53. dear my sweet, Tw. II, 5, 191. dread my lord, Hml. I, 2, 50 (Qq my dread lord), gentle my lord, Wint. II, 1, 98. Mcb. Ill, 2, 27. good my brother, Troil. IV, 3, 3. Hml. 1, 3, 46. good my complexion, As III, 2,204. good my fellows, Ant. IV, 14, 135. good my friend, Rom. V, 3, 124. good my friends, Cor. V, 2, 8. good my girl, H6A V, 4, 25. good my glass, L L L IV, 1, 18. good my knave, III, 153. good my liege, IV, 3, 152. As 1, 3, 66. Cymb. IV, 3, 16. 28. good my lord, Ado II, 3, 46. As V, 4, 40. H6C II, 2, 75. Ant. Ill, 6, 55. good my lords, Wint. 11, 3, 27. H6A IV, 1, 133. good my mother, J o h n I, 249. II, 163. good my mouse of virtue, Tw. I, 5, 69. gracious my lord, Wint. IV, 4, 477. Mcb. V, 5, 30. Lr. Ill, 2, 61. kind my lord, Tim. I, 2, 177. sweet my child, L L L I, 2, 71. sweet my coz, As I, 2, 1. sweet my mother, Rom. Ill, 5, 200. M y r m l d a n , one of the people of Achilles: the great M. (Achilles) Troil. I, 3, 378. Plur. — s: Tw. II, 3, 29 (O. Edd. ilermidons). Troil. V, 5, 33. V, 7, 1. V, 8, 13. Myrtle, the tree Myrtus communis: Ven. 865. Pilgr. 144. 364. 376. Meas. II, 2, 117. m. leaf. Ant. III, 12, 9. Myself (in two words in O. Edd.) 1) the same as I, another I : Silvia is m. Gent. Ill, 1, 172. I would have daffed all other respects and made her half m. Ado II, 3, 177 (i. e. my wife). 2) my own person, I or me in my own person; marking emphatically the distinction between the speaker and others: Tp. I, 1, 22. I, 2, 434. Ill, 3, 5. V, 22. 151. Gent. I, 1, 65. II, 3, 25. II, 4, 62. 64. II, 6 , 20. 22. 23. Ill, 1, 12. 24. 147 148. 171. IV, 1, 47. Meas. I, 4, 27. Err. I, 1, 70. As III, 2, 269. H4A I, 3, 157. R3 I, 2, 259. V, 3 , 185. 186. 188. 190 etc. etc. Used as a subst.

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and followed by the third person of the verb: my heart of my m. Hml. Ill, 2, 382. take upon's the m. of self bewails good Gloster's cote, H6B III, 1, 217. things, Lr. V, 3, 16. —es = mysterious rites: the myself hath often overheard them say, Tit. IV, 4, 74. —es of Hecate, Lr. 1,1,112. Jocularly used of strange for praising myself, who... is praiseworthy, AdoV,2, and incomprehensible fashions: the spells of France 89. With I (perhaps seldomer than without it): Tp. should juggle men into such strange —es, H8 I, 3, 2. II, 1, 365. Gent. Ill, 1, 268. B3 V, 3, 188. Mcb. 1, 2: calling, trade, profession: he will discredit our 3, 14 etc. m. Meas. IV, 2, 30. do you call your occupation am.t 3) Refl. pron. of the first person: Tp. II, 1, 202. 36. 37. painting is a m. 39. 41. 44. instruction, manII, 2, 157. 158. V, 85.144. Gent. IV, 2, 103 etc. etc. ners, —es and trades, Tim. IV, 1, 18. not to have us Mystery, 1) a secret, any thing not easily com- (thieves) thrive in our m. IV, 3, 458. your m. (as a prehended : to thy great comfort in this m. of ill opinions, bawd)! Oth. IV, 2, 30. 3) professional skill: if you think your m. in straWiv. II, 1, 73. now I see the m. of your loneliness, All's I, 3, 177. Phttus ... hath not in nature's —es tagem can bring this instrument of honour again into more science, V, 3, 103. this m. remained undiscovered,his native quarter, All's III, 6, 68. • y t l l e n e (some M. Edd. Mitylene) name of a Wint. V, 2, 130. there is a m. in the soul of state, Troil. Ill, 3, 201. those —es which heaven will not havetown ( i n the island of Lesbos?): Per. IV, 2, 3. V, earth to know, Cor. IV, 2, 35. you would pluck out the 1, 3 etc.

N. Naboehadnezxar (M. Edd. Nebuchadnezzar) the famous Babylonian king: All's IV, 5, 21 (cf. Daniel IV, 33). Mas, a worthless horse: the forced gait of a shuffling n. H4A 111, 1, 135. Term of contempt for a loose woman: know we not Galloway —sf H4B II, 4, 205. you ribaudred n. of Egypt, Ant. Ill, 10, 10. Naiad, a water nymph: Tp. IV, 128. Nail, subst. 1) a pointed piece of metal by which things are fastened together: Tp. Ill, 2, 69. Gent II, 4, 193. All's II, 2, 26. Cor. IV, 7, 54. Lr. II, 3, 16. Proverbial phrase: is the old king dead J as n. in door, H4B V, 3, 126 (cf. Door-nail). 2) the homy substance covering the ends of the fingers and toes: Lucr. 739. 1472. 1564. Tp. II, 2, 172. Err. IV, 4, 107. Mids. Ill, 2, 298. IV, 2, 41. All's V, 2, 31. Tw. IV, 2, 140. Wint. II, 3, 103. R2 V, 5, 19. H5 IV, 4, 76. H6A 1,4,45. I16B I, 3, 144. B3 I, 2, 126. IV, 4, 231. Troil. II, 1, 115. Lr. I, 4, 329. Ant. IV, 12, 39. V, 2, 223. the parings of one's n. (a trifle) Err. IV, 3, 72. the very parings of our —s shall pitch a field when we are dead, H 6 A III, 1, 102. to blow one's n. (in order to warm one's hands) L L L V, 2, 923. = to take patience: their love is not so great, but we may blow our —s together and fast it fairly out, Shr. I, 1, 109. cf. H6C U, 5, 3. 3) & measure of about two inches: thou yard,threequarters, half-yard, quarter, n. Shr. IV, 3, 109. Nail, vb. to fasten with spikes of iron: —ed on the bitter cross, H 4 A I, 1, 26. Naked, 1) not covered with clothes: Pilgr. 80. Compl. 317. Wint. Ill, 2, 212. R2 I, 3, 298. HI, 2, 46. H4B 111, 2, 333. H5 III, 3, 38. V, 2, 321. 324. 325. H6B III, 2, 336. B3 II, 1, 117. Cor. II, 2, 141. Mcb. I, 7, 21. II, 3, 132. Lr. Ill, 4, 28. IV, 1, 42. 46. Oth. IV, 1, 3. IV, 2, 143. Ant. V, 2, 59. who sees his true love in her n. bed, Ven. 397 ( " a person undressed and in bed was formerly said to be in naked bed. It may be observed that, down to a certain period, those who were in bed were literally naked, no night linen being worn." Nares). he doth despise his n. armour of still slaughtered lust, Lucr. 188 (a play upon the word).

2) not sheathed, drawn: with n. swords, Err. IV, 4, 148. T w . Ill, 4, 275. H4B II, 4, 222. H5 IV, 2, 21. Rom. I, 1, 39. 3) unarmed: he but n., though locked up in steel, H6B III, 2, 234. n. as lam, I will assault thee, Oth. V, 2, 258. H6C V, 4, 42. R3 I, 2, 178. Cor. 1, 10, 20. Cymb. V, 5, 4. 4) unprovided, unfurnished, destitute: some good conceit of thine in thy souls thought, alln., will bestow it (my duty) Sonn. 26, 8. Meas. Ill, 1, 73. L L L V, 2, 805. John II, 387. R2 I, 2, 31. H4A IV, 3, 77. H4B 1, 3, 61. H5 V, 2, 34. H8 III, 2, 458. Tim. II, 1, 31. IV, 3, 228. Caes. IV, 3, 101. Hml. IV, 7, 44. 5) open, plain, undisguised: the n. truth, L L L V, 2, 716. H6A II, 4, 20. I clothe my n. villany with old odd ends, R3 I, 3, 336. let it go n., men may see't the better, Tim. V, 1, 70. 6) mere, bare, simple: the very n. name of love, Gent. II, 4, 142. NaketneM, 1) want of clothing: Lr. II, 3, 11. 2) state of being unfurnished with what is wanted: in his n. he appears but a man, H5 IV, 1, 109. nothing I'll bear from thee but n. Tim. IV, 1, 33. 3) plainness, openness to view: to cover with excuse that which appears in proper n. Ado IV, 1, 177. Name, subst. 1) individual appellation: naming thy n. blesses an ill report, Sonn. 95, 8. what is your n.t Tp. Ill, 1, 36; Meas. 11,1,45; Ado IV, 2, 11; Tw. I, 2, 26; III, 1, 106 etc. repeat their —s, Gent I, 2, 7. Aún. 16. 111. 120. what do you call your knight's n.t Wiv. Ill, 2, 21; Err. Ill, 1, 53; V, 286; Shr. IV, 5, 55; H5 IV, 7, 13. could not be distinguished but by —s, E n . 1, 1, 53. call us by our —s, II, 2, 168; IV, 3, 3; Cor. V, 1, 9; Tim. I, 1, 187. give a name (like a godfather) to every fixed star, L L L 1, 1, 89; 93; R2 IV, 256. friend Simple by your n. Wiv. Ill, 1, 3. which Lion hight by n. Mids. V, 140. one Snout by n. 157; Há 11,1,81. a very valiant rebel of the n. H4A V, 4,62 etc. etc. With of: the n. of Prosper, Tp. 111,3,99. Wiv. II, 1,72. AslII,2,381. John V. 2, 19. R3I,1,58 etc. Of omitted: thy stolen n. Coriolanus, Cor. V, C, 89. 2) common or generic appellation: thou dost usurp the n. (of king) Tp. 1, 2, 454. he couples it to his com-

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and followed by the third person of the verb: my heart of my m. Hml. Ill, 2, 382. take upon's the m. of self bewails good Gloster's cote, H6B III, 1, 217. things, Lr. V, 3, 16. —es = mysterious rites: the myself hath often overheard them say, Tit. IV, 4, 74. —es of Hecate, Lr. 1,1,112. Jocularly used of strange for praising myself, who... is praiseworthy, AdoV,2, and incomprehensible fashions: the spells of France 89. With I (perhaps seldomer than without it): Tp. should juggle men into such strange —es, H8 I, 3, 2. II, 1, 365. Gent. Ill, 1, 268. B3 V, 3, 188. Mcb. 1, 2: calling, trade, profession: he will discredit our 3, 14 etc. m. Meas. IV, 2, 30. do you call your occupation am.t 3) Refl. pron. of the first person: Tp. II, 1, 202. 36. 37. painting is a m. 39. 41. 44. instruction, manII, 2, 157. 158. V, 85.144. Gent. IV, 2, 103 etc. etc. ners, —es and trades, Tim. IV, 1, 18. not to have us Mystery, 1) a secret, any thing not easily com- (thieves) thrive in our m. IV, 3, 458. your m. (as a prehended : to thy great comfort in this m. of ill opinions, bawd)! Oth. IV, 2, 30. 3) professional skill: if you think your m. in straWiv. II, 1, 73. now I see the m. of your loneliness, All's I, 3, 177. Phttus ... hath not in nature's —es tagem can bring this instrument of honour again into more science, V, 3, 103. this m. remained undiscovered,his native quarter, All's III, 6, 68. • y t l l e n e (some M. Edd. Mitylene) name of a Wint. V, 2, 130. there is a m. in the soul of state, Troil. Ill, 3, 201. those —es which heaven will not havetown ( i n the island of Lesbos?): Per. IV, 2, 3. V, earth to know, Cor. IV, 2, 35. you would pluck out the 1, 3 etc.

N. Naboehadnezxar (M. Edd. Nebuchadnezzar) the famous Babylonian king: All's IV, 5, 21 (cf. Daniel IV, 33). Mas, a worthless horse: the forced gait of a shuffling n. H4A 111, 1, 135. Term of contempt for a loose woman: know we not Galloway —sf H4B II, 4, 205. you ribaudred n. of Egypt, Ant. Ill, 10, 10. Naiad, a water nymph: Tp. IV, 128. Nail, subst. 1) a pointed piece of metal by which things are fastened together: Tp. Ill, 2, 69. Gent II, 4, 193. All's II, 2, 26. Cor. IV, 7, 54. Lr. II, 3, 16. Proverbial phrase: is the old king dead J as n. in door, H4B V, 3, 126 (cf. Door-nail). 2) the homy substance covering the ends of the fingers and toes: Lucr. 739. 1472. 1564. Tp. II, 2, 172. Err. IV, 4, 107. Mids. Ill, 2, 298. IV, 2, 41. All's V, 2, 31. Tw. IV, 2, 140. Wint. II, 3, 103. R2 V, 5, 19. H5 IV, 4, 76. H6A 1,4,45. I16B I, 3, 144. B3 I, 2, 126. IV, 4, 231. Troil. II, 1, 115. Lr. I, 4, 329. Ant. IV, 12, 39. V, 2, 223. the parings of one's n. (a trifle) Err. IV, 3, 72. the very parings of our —s shall pitch a field when we are dead, H 6 A III, 1, 102. to blow one's n. (in order to warm one's hands) L L L V, 2, 923. = to take patience: their love is not so great, but we may blow our —s together and fast it fairly out, Shr. I, 1, 109. cf. H6C U, 5, 3. 3) & measure of about two inches: thou yard,threequarters, half-yard, quarter, n. Shr. IV, 3, 109. Nail, vb. to fasten with spikes of iron: —ed on the bitter cross, H 4 A I, 1, 26. Naked, 1) not covered with clothes: Pilgr. 80. Compl. 317. Wint. Ill, 2, 212. R2 I, 3, 298. HI, 2, 46. H4B 111, 2, 333. H5 III, 3, 38. V, 2, 321. 324. 325. H6B III, 2, 336. B3 II, 1, 117. Cor. II, 2, 141. Mcb. I, 7, 21. II, 3, 132. Lr. Ill, 4, 28. IV, 1, 42. 46. Oth. IV, 1, 3. IV, 2, 143. Ant. V, 2, 59. who sees his true love in her n. bed, Ven. 397 ( " a person undressed and in bed was formerly said to be in naked bed. It may be observed that, down to a certain period, those who were in bed were literally naked, no night linen being worn." Nares). he doth despise his n. armour of still slaughtered lust, Lucr. 188 (a play upon the word).

2) not sheathed, drawn: with n. swords, Err. IV, 4, 148. T w . Ill, 4, 275. H4B II, 4, 222. H5 IV, 2, 21. Rom. I, 1, 39. 3) unarmed: he but n., though locked up in steel, H6B III, 2, 234. n. as lam, I will assault thee, Oth. V, 2, 258. H6C V, 4, 42. R3 I, 2, 178. Cor. 1, 10, 20. Cymb. V, 5, 4. 4) unprovided, unfurnished, destitute: some good conceit of thine in thy souls thought, alln., will bestow it (my duty) Sonn. 26, 8. Meas. Ill, 1, 73. L L L V, 2, 805. John II, 387. R2 I, 2, 31. H4A IV, 3, 77. H4B 1, 3, 61. H5 V, 2, 34. H8 III, 2, 458. Tim. II, 1, 31. IV, 3, 228. Caes. IV, 3, 101. Hml. IV, 7, 44. 5) open, plain, undisguised: the n. truth, L L L V, 2, 716. H6A II, 4, 20. I clothe my n. villany with old odd ends, R3 I, 3, 336. let it go n., men may see't the better, Tim. V, 1, 70. 6) mere, bare, simple: the very n. name of love, Gent. II, 4, 142. NaketneM, 1) want of clothing: Lr. II, 3, 11. 2) state of being unfurnished with what is wanted: in his n. he appears but a man, H5 IV, 1, 109. nothing I'll bear from thee but n. Tim. IV, 1, 33. 3) plainness, openness to view: to cover with excuse that which appears in proper n. Ado IV, 1, 177. Name, subst. 1) individual appellation: naming thy n. blesses an ill report, Sonn. 95, 8. what is your n.t Tp. Ill, 1, 36; Meas. 11,1,45; Ado IV, 2, 11; Tw. I, 2, 26; III, 1, 106 etc. repeat their —s, Gent I, 2, 7. Aún. 16. 111. 120. what do you call your knight's n.t Wiv. Ill, 2, 21; Err. Ill, 1, 53; V, 286; Shr. IV, 5, 55; H5 IV, 7, 13. could not be distinguished but by —s, E n . 1, 1, 53. call us by our —s, II, 2, 168; IV, 3, 3; Cor. V, 1, 9; Tim. I, 1, 187. give a name (like a godfather) to every fixed star, L L L 1, 1, 89; 93; R2 IV, 256. friend Simple by your n. Wiv. Ill, 1, 3. which Lion hight by n. Mids. V, 140. one Snout by n. 157; Há 11,1,81. a very valiant rebel of the n. H4A V, 4,62 etc. etc. With of: the n. of Prosper, Tp. 111,3,99. Wiv. II, 1,72. AslII,2,381. John V. 2, 19. R3I,1,58 etc. Of omitted: thy stolen n. Coriolanus, Cor. V, C, 89. 2) common or generic appellation: thou dost usurp the n. (of king) Tp. 1, 2, 454. he couples it to his com-

756

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plaining —s, Gent. I, 2, 127. had J more n . / o r badnets ( ¿ a n villain) Meaa. V, 59. a noble duke, in nature a* in n. T w . I, 2, 25. I have no n., no title, R2 IT, 255. know not what n. to call myself, 259. had his great n. (of king) profaned with their acorns, H4AIII, 2, 64. gave his countenance, against his n., to laugh at gibing boys, 65. called me all these bitter —s, R3 I, 3, 236. a traitor to the n. of God, 1, 4, 210. let life bear his n. Tit. Ill, 1, 249. be thy thoughts imperious, like thy n. (of emperor) IV, 4, 81 etc. etc. With of: our dear love lose n. of single one, Sonn. 39, 6. the n. of king, Tp. I, 1, 18. no n. of magistrate, II, 1, 149. Gent. II, 4, 142. Wiv. V, 5, 239. Meas. HI, 1, 39. Err. II, 2, 137. Ado I, 1, 302. J o h n V, 2, 67. Mcb. Ill, 1, 58. Lr. IV, 3, 27 etc. By the n. of = in the quality of, as being; I have wooed Margaret by the ». of Hero, Ado III, 3, 155. I arrest thee by the n. of Richard Earl of Cambridge, H5 II, 2, 145. 147. 149. and by that n. (of traitor) must die, H8 II, 1, 59. this diamond he greets your wife withal by the n. of most kind hostess, Mcb. II, 1, 16. In the n. of or in n. of = nnder the title, as: to carry me in the n. of foul clothes to Datchet-lane, Wiv. Ill, 5, 101. I'U to him again in n. of Brook, IV, 4, 76. thus answer I in n. of Benedick, Ado II, 1, 179. now take upon me, in the n. of Time, to use my wings, Wint. IV, 1, 3. which comes to me in n. of fault, III, 2, 61. received eight thousand nobles in n. of tendings, R2 I, 1, 89. = by virtue of, by means of: and in the lawful n. of marrying, to give our hearts united ceremony, Wiv. IV, 6, 50. cf. wretched shall France be only in my n. H6A I, 4, 97. Under n. = under pre* tence: he does it under n. of perfect love, Shr. IV, 3, 12. 3) reputation, character: my good n. Lucr. 820. no man that hath an., by falsehood and corruption doth it shame, Err. II, 1, 112. he hath an excellent good n. Ado III, 1, 98. Ill, 3, 14. H4A I, 2, 94. Iam in good n. and fame, H4B II, 4, 81. you are in an ill n. 98. let our nation lose the n. of hardiness and policy, H5 I, 2, 220. expected to prove so worthy as since he hath been allowed the n. o f , Cymb. I, 4, 3 etc. 4) renown, honour, eminence: and for a n., now puts the drowsy and neglected act freshly on me, 'tis surely for a n. Meas. I, 2, 173. 175. none of n. Ado 1, 1, 7. R2 II, 3, 56. H5 IV, 8, 110. R3 IV, 5, 8. V, 5, 12. great n. in arms, H4A 111, 2, 108. V, 1, 98. that, Talbot dead, great York might bear the n. H6A IV, 4, 9 ( = have all the glory of the war), he gives my son the whole n. of the war, Cor. II, 1, 149 etc. Abstr. pro concr.: our battle is more full of —s than yours, H4B IV, 1, 154. Tullus Aufidius, the second n. of men, Cor. IV, 6, 125. 5) descent, ancestry: I am from humble, he from honoured n. All's 1, 3, 162. good alone is good without a n. II, 3, 136. thou dislikest of virtue for the n. 131. the honour of a maid is her n. HI, 5, 13. 6) authority, behalf, part: I did in your n. receive it, Gent. 1, 2, 40. charge you in the duke's n. to obey me, Err. IV, 1, 70. J have wooed in thy n. Ado II, 1, 310. Ill, 3, 177. IV, 2, 40. Shr. V, 1, 92. Wint. Ill, 2, l i a . J o h n III, 1, 140. H6A II, 1, 26 etc. Common phrases of exhortation or obsecration: a God's n. H6A I, 2, 102. i' God's n. Ado I, 1, 144. V, 1, 319. Shr. 1, 2, 195. IV, 5, 1. H4B IV, 1, 227. R3 V, 2, 14 etc. in the —s of all the Gods at once, Caes. I, 2, 148.

f deviTs n. Shr. IV, 3, 92. »" the n. of Beelzebub, Mcb. II, 3, 4. I the n. of something holy, Tp. Ill, 3, 94. close, in the n. of jesting, Tw. II, 5, 23. in the n. of sanctity, III, 4, 93. t" the n. of truth, Mcb. I, 3, 52. f the n. of me, Wint. IV, 3,54 (the clown's speech. Anon. me-, as abbreviated from mercy), n. of mercy, when was this1 111, 3, 105. what an unweighed behaviour hath this Flemish drunkard picked — with the devil's n. — out of my conversation f Wiy. II, 1, 24. Name, vb. 1) to call: teach me how to n. the bigger light, Tp. I, 2, 335. do not n. Silvia thine, Gent. V, 4, 128. which we may n. tough, L L L I, 2, 18. fairer than tongue can n. thee, R3 I, 2, 81. a servant —d Lucilius, Tim. I, 1, 111. 2) to give a name or appellation t o : my father —d me Autolycus, Wint. IV, 3, 24. we will not n. desert before his birth, Troil. III, 2, 101. he whom my father —dt your Edgar 1 Lr. II, 1, 94. = to give a title t o : nobly —d so, Cor. 11, 3, 251. henceforth be earls, the first that ever Scotland in such an honour —d, Mcb. V, 8, 64. 3) to mention by name, to specify: when thou didst n. the boar, I feared thy fortune, Ven. 641. •—ing thy name blesses an ill report, Sonn. 95, 8. I guess the sequel; and yet I will not n. it, Gent. II, 1, 123. never n. her, if she be a whore, Wiv. IV, 1, 65. Meas. Ill, I, 102. Ado III, 1, 18. L L L 1, 2, 71. Ill, 167. Mids. 1, 2, 20. 41. Ill, 1, 37. Merch. I, 2, 40. As V, 4, 96. Tw. I, 2, 28. Ill, 4, 414. Wint I, 2, 386. IV, 1, 23. IV, 2, 24. H4A IV, 3, 48. H4B II, 2, 120. H8 1, 2, 60. Mcb. II, 3, 70. Lr. I, 1, 73 etc. 4) to appoint, to designate, to nominate: n. the day of marriage, Ado II, 1, 311. you may n. the time, R3 III, 4, 19. the event is yet to n. the winner, Cymb. III, 5, 15. Marcius, whom late you have —d for consul, Cor. Ill, 1, 196. and n. thee in election for the empire, Tit. I, 183. he is already — d , Mcb. II, 4, 31. Nameleaa, 1! having no name: thy issue blurred with n. bastardy, Lucr. 522. the secret n. friend of yours, Gent. II, 1, 111. 2) inexpressible: she hath many n. virtues, Gent. III, 1, 319. what I cannot name; 'tis n. woe, I wot, R2 II, 2, 40. Namely, to mention by name; that is to say: n., no time to recover hair lost by nature, Err. II, 2, 103. except it be the last, n. some love, V, 56. to him that owes it, n. this young prince, John II, 248. as well appeareth by the cause you come, n. to appeal each other, R2 1,1, 27. the borrowed glories ... n. thecrown, H5 II, 4, 81. to many simple gulls, n. to Hastings, Derby, Buckingham, R3 1, 3, 329. Nan, diminutive of Anne: Gent. II, 3, 23. Wiv. I, 4, 160. Ill, 4, 2. 98. 104. IV, 4, 47. 71. 74. 85. IV, 6, 20. V, 3, 12. Nap, the woolly substance on the surface of cloth: Jack Cade the clothier means to dress the commonwealth, and turn it, and set a new n. upon it, H6BIV, 2,7. Nap, a short slumber: Shr. Ind. 2, 83. take a n. Tw. V, 52. R3 V, 3, 104. Nape, the joint of the neck behind: turn your eyes toward the —s of your necks, Cor. II, 1, 43. Napkin, handkerchief: oft did she heave her n. to her eyne, Compl. 15. and to that youth he sends this bloody ». As IV, 3, 94. 139. 155. an onion ... in a n. close conveyed, Shr. Ind. 1,127. Wiv. Ill, 5, 92. H4A IV, 2, 47. H6C I, 4, 79. 159. II, 1, 62. Tit. Ill, 1,

N

757

140. 146. Caes. Ill, 2, 138. Mcb. II, 3, 6. Hml. V, R2 III, 2, 25. your crown and kingdom, indirectly held from him the n. and true challenger, H5 II, 4, 95. let 2, 299. 0th. Ill, 3, 287. 290. 321. K t f l e i , 1 ) kingdom in the south of Italy: Tp. us fear the n. mightiness and fate of him. 64 (innate I, 2, 112. 121. 235. 431. 448. II, 1, 112. 245. 247. in his race), did I put Henry from his n. right, H6C 256. 259. 262. 292. II, 2, 72. Ill, 3, 27. V, 149. 206. III, 3, 190. the senator shall bear contempt hereditary, Epil. 5. H6A V, 3, 52. 94. T, 4, 78. V, 5, 40. H6B the beggar n. honour, Tim. IV, 3, 11. 1, 1, 48. V, 1, 118. H6C I, 4, 121. II, 2, 139. Oth. 3) pertaining to home, or to the place of birth: Ill, 1,4 (the venereal disease appeared first in Naples). thy n. home, Err. I, 1, 30. her n. bay, Merch. II, 6, 15. in their assigned and n. dwelling-place, As II, 1, 2) king of Naples: myself am N. Tp. I, 2, 434. Napleu, threadbare: the n. vesture of humility, 63. bring this instrument of honour again into his n. quarter, All's III, 6, 70. at their n. homes, John II, Cor. II, 1, 250. Napping) to take n. = to take or surprise in the 69. shall leave his n. channel, 337. my n. English now very act, in committing an offence: I should blush to I must forego, R2 I, 3, 160. breathing a. breath, 173. be o'erheard and taken n. so, L L L IV, 3, 130. I have chasing the royal blood from his n. residence (i. e. the cheeks) II, 1, 119. to fright our n. peace with selfta'en you n. Shr. IT, 2, 46. Napa, name: John N. of Greece, Shr. Ind. 2, 95. borne arms, 11,3, 80 ( = domestic), bear our civil Narbcn, French name: All's 1,1,31.43. II, 1,104. swords and n. fire as far as France, H4B T, 5, 112. Narclsraa, a fabulous youth, who fell in love if these men have defeated the law and outrun n. with his own shadow in a brook: Ven. 161. Lucr. punishment, H5 IT, 1, 176 ( i . e. inflicted at home), a many of our bodies shaU find n. graves, IT, 3, 96 (i. e. 265. Ant. II, 5, 96. Narrow, l ) n o t broad, having bnt a small distance at home), he could not speak English in the n. garb, from side to side: Err. IT, 2, 38. Merch. II, 8, 28. T, 1, 80 (like a born Englishman), my n. clime, H6B Ill, 1, 4. All's IT, 5, 53. B2 T, 3, 8. H4A II, 2, 63. III, 2, 84. your n. coast, IT, 8, 52. in our n. place, H5 Prol. 22. I, 2, 201. H6C I, 1, 239. IV, 8, 3. Troil. Troil. II, 2, 96. your n town, Cor. T, 6, 50. back to Ill, 3, 154. Rom. II, 4, 88 (from an inch n. to an eU your n. spring, Rom. Ill, 2, 102. broad). Caes. I, 2, 135. II, 4, 33. Cymb. T, 3, 52. 4) born in a place, being at home: being n. burghers 2) not wide, very limited: 'tis too n. for your of this desert city, As II, 1, 23. their n. lords, H5 111, mind, Hml. II, 2, 259; cf. Caes. I, 2, 135. most n. 5, 26. lam n. here, Hml. I, 4, 14. like a creature n. measure lent me, Ant. Ill, 4, 8. and indued unto that element, IT, 7, 180. With of: Narrowly, closely, with minute scrutiny: if my are you n. of this placet As HI, 2, 356. 5) cognate, congenial, kindred: adoption strives cousin do not look exceeding n. to thee, Ado T, 4, 118. doth watch Bianca's steps so n. Shr. Ill, 2, 141. with nature, and choice breeds a n. slip to us from search the market n. Per. IT, 2, 3. foreign seeds, All's I, 3, 152. to join like likes and N > n a w . m i a t k « 4 , having a small opening: a kiss like n. things, I, 1, 238. the head is not more n. n. bottle, As 111, 2, 211. to the heart, Hml. I, 2, 47. N a r r a w - p r y i n f , watching closely: Shr. Ill, 2,148. Native, subst. natural origin, source: the accuNaro, family name of the poet Ovid: L L L IV, sation which they have often made against the senate, aU cause unborn, could never be the n. of our so frank 2, 127. Nasty, dirty, filthy, nauseous: H5 II, 1, 53. Hml. donation, Cor. Ill, 1, 129 (some M. Edd. motive). III, 4, 94. Nativity, birth: I have served him from the hour Nathaniel, name of 1) the cnrate in L L L IT, 2, of my n. to this instant, Err. IT, 4, 31. jrou the calen11. 50. 140. 156. 2) a servant in Shr. IT, 1, 91. dars of their n. T, 404. after so long grief such n. 125. 135. 406 (some M. Edd. festivity), be out of love with your N a t l r a , a people: Err. IT, 4, 158. Merch. I, 3, n. As IT, 1, 36. cursed be the time of thy n. H6A T, 49. Ill, 1, 59. 89. Ill, 3, 31. As I, 1, 49. All's IT, 3, 4, 27. Especially = birth or coming into life under 363. IT, 5, 4. John T, 2, 33. 144. R2 II, 1, 22. H4B particular circumstances bearing on the destiny of 1, 2, 241. V, 2, 137. H5 I, 2, 219. II, 4, 80. Ill, 2, the person born: marks descried in men's nativity are 131. H6A 111, 3, 23. 62. IV, 1, 138. IV, 2, 16. V, nature's faults, not their own infamy, Lucr. 538. n., 4, 99. H8 V, 5, 53. Troil. II, 2, 180. 185. Cor. Ill, once in the main of light, crawls to maturity, Sonn. 60, 3, 132. IV, 5, 186. Tit. I, 30. Tim. IV, 3, 43. Mcb. 5. there is divinity in odd numbers, either in n., chance, IV, 3, 103. Hml. I, 4, 18. II, 2, 370. IV, 7, 95. 101. or death, Wiv. V, 1, 4. vows so born, in their n. all Lr. I, 2, 4. Oth. I, 2, 68. Per. I, 4, 65. IV, 2, 123. truth appears, Mids. Ill, 2, 125. mark prodigious, such Native, 1) produced by nature, natural, genuine: as are despised in n. T, 420. at my n. the front of her cheeks possess the same which n. she doth owe, heaven was full of fiery shapes, H4A III, 1, 13. cf. L L L I, 2, 111. n. blood is counted painting now, IV, 26. to whom the heavens in thy n. adjudged an olive 3, 263. chase the n. beauty from his cheek, John III, branch, H6C IV, 6, 33. thou that wast sealed in thy 4, 83. in his true, n. and most proper shape, H4B IV, n. the slave of nature, R3 I, 3, 229. my n. was under 1, 37. titles miscreate, whose right suits not in n. co- Ursa major, Lr. I, 2, 140. thou hast as chiding a n. lours with the truth, H5 I, 2, 17. no pulse shall keep as fire, air, water, earth and heaven can make, Per. his n. progress, Rom. IV, 1, 97. if thou path, thy n. Ill, 1, 32. semblance on, Caes. II, 1, 83. the n. hue of resolution, Natural, adj 1) pertaining to nature, being an Hml. Ill, 1, 84. the n. act and figure of my heart, Oth. effect or forming part of nature: nothing n. I ever saw I, 1, 62. base men being in love have then a nobility so noble, Tp. I, 2, 418. a n. perspective, Tw. V, 224. in their natures more than is n. to them, II, 1, 218. children of divers kind we sucking on her (earth's) n. 2) resulting from birth, hereditary, legitimate: bosom find, Rom. II, 3, 12. the n. gates and alleys of ere her n. king shall falter under foul rebellion's arms, the body, Hml. I, 5, 67. thy n. magic and dire property,

758

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III, 2, 270. some n. notet about her body, Cymb. II, 2, 28. the held the very garment of Posthumus in more respect than my noble and n. person, III, 5, 140. 2) bestowed by nature, not acquired: our n. wits, As I, 2, 55. our n. goodness, Wint. II, 1, 164. her n. posture, V, 3, 23. n. graces, H6A V, 3, 192. n. gifts, Hml. I, 5, 51. a n. and prompt alacrity, Oth. I, 3, 233. Caesars n. vice, Ant. I, 4, 2. n. luck, II, 4, 26. the n. bravery of your isle, Cymb. Ill, 1, 18. that n. stamp, V, 5, 366. 3) subject t o , or caused by, the laws of natnre: blunt his n. edge, Meas. I, 4, 60. a n. guiltiness such as is his, II, 2, 139. to make it n. rebellion, All's V, 3, 6 ( = rebellion of nature), dearer than the n. bond of sisters, As I, 2, 288. the thousand n. shocks that flesh is heir to, Hml. Ill, 1, 62. 4) consonant to nature and its general or individual laws: come to my n. taste, Mids. IV, 1, 179. his n. scope, H4A HI, 1, 171. a fair and n. light, V, 1, 18. congreeing in a full and n. clause, H5 I, 2, 182. as two yoke-devils sworn to either s purpose, working so grossly in a n. cause, II, 2, 107. never to lie and take his n. rest, H6C IV, 3, 5. none of you may live your n. age, R3 I, 3, 213. that n. competency whereby they live, Cor. I, 1, 143. the n. ruby of your cheeks, Mcb. Ill, 4, 115. he wants the n. touch, IV, 2, 9. 5) prompted or governed by nature, not by art or study: such a one is a n. philosopher, As III, 2, 33. the painting is almost the n. man, Tim. I, 1, 157. I am even the n. fool of fortune, Lr. IV, 6, 195 ("born to be the sport of fortune." Walker). 6) genuine, not artificial or affected: a n. coward, without instinct, H4A II, 4, 542. their n. tears, H5 IV, 2, 13. thou art even n. in thine art, Tim. V, 1, 88. n. roses, Per. V Prol. 7. Adverbially: I do it more n. Tw. II, 3, 89 (Sir Andrew's speech). 7) according to the ordinary course of things, not supernatural: their words are n. breath, Tp. V, 157. these are not n. events, 527. which is the n. man, and which the spirit, Err. V, 333 (perhaps to be registered under def. 1). no n. exhalation, John III, 4, 153. his n. cause, 156. they are n. Caes. I, 3, 30. there is something in this more than n. Hml. II, 2, 385. 8) native, given by birth, not adopted: a contriver against me his n. brother, As I, 1, 151. whom should he follow but his n. kingt H6C I, 1, 82. dear divorce 'twixt n. son and sire, Tim. IV, 3, 383. myself they take for n. father, Cymb. Ill, 3, 107 (Germ, leiblich). 9) obedient to the impulse of nature, kind, tender: in his love toward her ever most kind and n. Meas. Ill, 1, 229. were all thy children kind and n. H5 II Chor. 19. loyal and n. boy, Lr. II, 1, 86. 10) foolish, idiotic: hath all the good gifts of nature. He hath indeed, almost n. Tw. 1,3, 30 (some M. Edd. all most n.). Natural, subst. an idiot: that a monster should be such a n. Tp. Ill, 2, 37. when Fortune makes Nature's n. the cutter-off of Nature's wit, As 1, 2, 52. sent this n.for our whetstone, 57. a great n. that runs lolling up and down, Rom. II, 4, 96. N a t u r a l i s e , to initiate, to familiarize: I will return perfect courtier, in the which my instruction shall serve to n. thee, All's I, 1, 223. N a t u r a l l y , 1) by nature: I am not n. honest, Wint. IV, 4, 732. a woman, n. born to fears, John III,

1,15. the cold blood he did n. inherit of his father, H4B IV, 3, 128. 2) to the life, with just representation: that part was aptly fitted and n. performed, Shr. Ind. 1, 87. Nature (usually fem., sometimes neuter, as in Wint. I, 2, 151 and Oth. Ill, 3, 2 2 7 ) 1) the world around as as created and creating by fixed and eternal laws: n. that made thee, Yen. 11. 291. the curious workmanship of n. 734. swear —'s death for framing thee so fair, 744. those whom n. hath not made for store, Sonn. 11, 9. 20, 10. 67, 9. 126,5. Tp. II, 1, 159. 162. Meas. I, 1 , 3 7 . Ado 111, 1,49. 63. IV, 1, 130. L L L II, 10. Mids. II, 2, 104. V, 296. Merch. 1, I,51. 111,2,90. As II, 4, 56. Ill, 2, 149. All's I, 1, 138. 148. 153. V, 3, 103 Tw. 1,2,48. Wint. II. 3, 104. IV, 4, 89. 489. V, 2,108. R2 II, 1, 43. H4B I, 1, 153. R3 IV, 3, 18. Rom. II, 3, 9. Caes. V, 5, 74. Per. Ill, 2, 38 etc. etc. wisdom of n. Lr. I, 2, 113 ( = natural philosophy). Denoting spontaneous growth and formation: a woman's face with —'s own hand painted, Sonn. 20, 1; cf. Tw. I, 5, 258. the blots of —'s hand, Mids. V, 416; cf. Hml. I, 4, 24. the something that n. gave me, As I, 1, 18. n. hath given us wit, 1,2,47. adoption strives with n. All's I, 3, 151. in these to n. she's immediate heir, 11,3,139. the affection of nobleness which n. shows above her breeding, Wint. V, 2,40. this fortress built by n. R2 II, 1, 43 etc. etc. diminutives of n. Troil. V, 1, 39 (cf. v. 5; i . e . diminutives from your birth and destined to be so for ever \ the slave of n. R3 I, 3,230. we fools of n. Hml. 1, 4, 54 (cf. Fool), this carl, a very drudge of—'s, Cymb. V, 2, 5. by n.: Lucr. 697. Sonn. 122, 6. Err. II, 2, 74. 104. Ado III, 3, 16. Tw. 1,3, 105. H6A III, 1, 18. H6B III, 1,258. Opposed to art: Ven. 291. Lucr. 1374. Meas. II, 2, 184. Mids. II, 2, 104. As III, 2, 31. All's II, 1, 121. Wint. IV, 4, 91. Rom. II, 4, 95. Caes. IV, 3, 195. Lr. IV, 6, 86. Opposed to fortune: Wiv. 111,3,70. Ado 111, 3, 16. As I, 2, 43. 45. All's I, 1,237. John III, 1, 52. Hml. I, 4, 32. Opposed to the agency of supernatural powers: there is in this business more than nature was ever conduct of, Tp. V, 243. Opposed to human institutions or tendencies: by law of n. thou art bound to breed, Ven. 171. by law of n. and of nations, H5 II, 4, 80. Troil. II, 2, 176. if we are —'s, these are ours, All's I, 3,135. the show and seal of —'s truth, 138. n. craves all dues be rendered to their owners, Troil. II, 2, 173. one touch of n. makes the whole world kin, III, 3, 175. a fault to n., to reason most absurd, Hml. I, 2, 102. o'erstep not the modesty of n. Ill, 2, 22. where n. doth with merit challenge, Lr. 1, 1, 54. the offices of n. 11,4, 181. thou, n., art my goddess, I, 2, 1. in the lusty stealth of n. 11 etc. etc. Implying the idea of necessity: he's walked the way of n. H4B V, 2, 4. when n. brought him to the door of death, H6C III, 3, 105. 2) native sensation, innate and involuntary affection of the heart and mind: n. hath charged me that I hoard them not, Compl. 220. expelled remorse and n. Tp. V, 76. n. dispenses with the deed so far that it becomes a virtue, Meas. Ill, 1, 135. my end was wrought by n., not by vile offence, Err. I, 1, 35. n., stronger than his just occasion, As IV, 3, 130. the mightiest space in fortune n. brings to join like tikes, All's I, 1,237. n. to her bias drew in that, Tw. V, 267. how sometimes n. will betray its folly, Wint. I, 2, 151. tears which n., love and filial tenderness shall pay thee, H4B IV, 5,

N 39. how quickly n. falls into revolt when gold becomes her object, 66. n. make» me relent, H6A III, 3, 59. with whom an upright zeal to right prevail* more than the n. of a brother's love, H6C V, 1, 79. fond n. bids us all lament, Rom. IV, 5, 82. not n. can bear great fortune, but by contempt of n. Tim. IV, 3, 8. my n. could not bear it so, Caes. IV, 3, 195. compunctious visiting s of n. Mcb. 1, 5, 46. so far hath discretion fought with n. Hml. I, 2, 5. if thou hast n. in thee, bear it not, I, 5, 81. 0 heart, lose not thy n. Ill, 2, 411. n. mates them partial, III, 3, 32. I am satisfied in n., but in my terms of honour I stand aloof, V, 2, 255. wrenched my frame of n. Lr. 1,4, 290. n. erring from itself, Oth. Ill, 3, 227. n. would not invest herself in such shadowy passion, IV, 1 , 4 0 etc. 3) the physical and moral constitution of man: our —s do pursue a thirsty evil, Meas. I, 2, 132. the weariest life that age ... can lay on n. Ill, 1, 131. so is all n. in love mortal t'n folly, As II, 4, 56. labouring art can never ransom n.from her inaidible estate, All's II, 1,121. aU the miseries which n. owes, HI, 2, 122. so long as n. will bear up with this exercise, Wint. Ill, 2, 241. n. does require her times of preservation, H8 III, 2, 146. to repair our n. with comforting repose, V, 1,3. in our own — s frail, V, 3, 11. n. to whom aU sores lay siege, Tim. IV, 3, 6. that n.... should yet be hungry, 176. whose naked—s live in aU the spite of ivreakful heaven, 228. the multiplying villanies of n. do swarm upon him, Mcb. I, 2, 11. their drenched —s lie as ta a death, I, 7, 68. the season of all—s, sleep, 111,4, 141. a violet in the youth of primy n. Hml. I, 3, 7. to hold the mirror up to n. Ill, 2,25. n. is fine in love, IV, 5, 161. n. finds itself scourged by the sequent effects, Lr. I, 2,114. oppressed n. sleeps, III, 6, 104. thou hast one daughter who redeems n. from the general curse, IV, 6, 210. the sides of n. will not sustain it, Ant. 1,3,16 etc. 4) individual constitution, personal character: though in my n. reigned all frailties, Sonn. 109, 9. my n. is subdued to what it works in, 111, 6. in my false brother awaked an evil n. Tp. I, 2, 93. that which good —s could not abide to be with, 359. my fathers of a better n. 496. on whose n. nurture can never stick, IV, 188. the n. of our people, Meas. I, 1,10. and yet my n. never in the fight to do it slander, I, 3, 42. to practise his judgment with the disposition of —s, III, 1,165. music doth change his n. Merch. V, 82. I have kept of them tame and know their — s , All's II, 5, 50. the younger of our n. Ill, 1, 17. my son corrupts a wellderived n. with his inducement, III, 2, 90. there's something in't that stings his n. IV, 3, 4. the tenderness of her n. became as a prey to her grief, 61. whose n. sickens but to spealc a truth, V, 3, 207. a noble duke, in n. as in name, Tw. I, 2, 25. nor can there be that deity in my n. V, 234. not noted but of the finer —s, Wint. I, 2, 226. my lord of York, out of his noble n. H8 III, 1, 62. I know his noble n. Ill, 2, 419. affairs that walk at midnight have in them a wilder n. V, 1, 15. thou hast a cruel n. V, 3, 129. all our abilities, gifts, — shapes, Troil. I, 3, 179. what he cannot help in his n. Cor. I, 1, 42. such a n., tickled with good success, 263. his gracious n. 11,3, 195. his surly n. 203. his n. is too noble for the world, III, 1, 255. wilt thou draw near the n. of the godsf Tit. I, 117. ranked with all deserts, aU kind of natures, Tim. I, 1, 65. this is in thee a n. but infected, IV, 3, 202. I will make thee S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. 9. Ed. T. n .

759

do thy right n. 44. the worm tha(s fled hath n. that in time will venom breed, Mcb. Ill, 4, 30. when the baser n. comes between mighty opposites, Hml. V, 2, 60. a tardiness in n. Lr. 1,1, 238. —s of such deep trust, II, 1,117. is this the n. whom passion could not shaiet Oth. IV, 1, 276 etc. 5) quality, sort, kind: sonnets that did amplify each stone's dear n., worth and quality, Compl. 210. love you 'gainst the n. of love, Gent V, 4, 58. a power I have, but of what strength and n. I am not yet instructed, Meas. I, 1, 80. the n. of their crimes, II, 3, 7. but in what n.f III, 1, 70. your capacity is of that n. L L L V, 2, 377. distinct offices and of opposed —s, Merch. II, 9, 62. of a strange n. is the suit you follow, IV, 1, 177. let my officers of tuch a n. make an extent upon his house, As HI, 1, 16. then, of our quarrel yet never brooked parle, Slir. 1,1,116. Icon him no thanks for't, in the n. he delivers it, All's IV, 3, 175. the n. of his great offence is dead, V, 3, 23 (almost = cause). the offence is not of such a bloody n. Tw. Ill, 3, 30. those pearls which heaven shall take in n. of a fee, John II, 170. all of one n., of one substance bred, H4A I, 1, 11. to know the n. of your griefs, IV, 3,42. this man's brow foretells the n. of a tragic volume, H4B I, 1, 61. figuring the n. of the times deceased, 111, 1, 81. a peace is of the n. of a conquest, IV, 2, 89. our vineyards, fallows, meads and hedges, defective in their — s, grow to wildness, H5 V, 2, 55. all (articles) according to their firm proposed —s, 362. the n. of it (an exaction) B8 I, 2, 53. thus we debase the n. of our seats, Cor. Ill, 1, 136. all these things change their —s, Caes. I, 3, 67. the state of man suffers the n. of an insurrection, II, 1, 69. the n. of bad news infects the teller, Ant. I, 2, 99. upon importance of so slight and trivial a n. Cymb. I, 4, 45 etc. 6) human life, vitality: hath from n. stolen a man already made, Meas. II, 4, 43. would have made n. immortal, All's I, 1, 22. n. and sickness debate it at their leisure, I, 2, 74. I would repent out the remainder of n. IV, 3, 272. m me, 0 n., cease, V, 3, 72. gentle sleep, —'s soft nur, 265 (to be on terms of enmity and contention with him). 10) indefinitely exceeding any number specified: pound ando. shilling, Wint. IV, 3, 34. three hundred 51

792

0

and o. pounds, H4A IT, 2 , 1 5 . nine score and o. posts, H4B IV, 3, 40. a fortnight and o. days, Bom. I, 3, 15. I will »in for him an I can; if not, I will gain nothing but my shame and the o. hits, Hml. V, 2, 185 (i. e. the hits received into the bargain). Not preceded by and, = at least: which doth amount to three o. ducats more them I stand debted to this gentleman, Err. IT, 1, 30. eighty o. years of sorrow have I seen, R 3 IT, 1, 96. of wounds two dozen o. Cor. II, 3, 135. Odd-eencelted, singularly devised: Gent. II, 7,46. O d d - e v e n , according to Henley, the interval between twelve at night and one in the morning: at this o. and dull watch o' the night, Oth. I, 1, 124 (not hyphened in O. Edd. Steevens odd Steven, Cartwright odd hour, Becket even at this odd). Oddly, 1) strangely: T p . T, 197. Merch. I, 2, 79. Bom. II, 5, 61. 2) not evenly, unequally: our imputation shall be o. poised in this wild action, Troil. I, 3, 339. Odda, 1) uneven number: were still at o., being but three, L L L HI, 86. 91 (quibbling), and stayed the o. by adding four, 93. 96. 99. 2) inequality: yet death we fear, that makes these o. all even, Meas. Ill, 1, 41. five to one ... 'tis a fearful o. H5 IT, 3, 5. forsaketh yet the lists by reason of his adversary's o.: a poor earl's daughter is unequal o. H6A T, 5, 33. 34. five men to twenty! though the o. be great, I doubt not of our victory, H6C I, 2, 72. 'twas o., belike, when valiant Warwick fled, II, 1, 148. this and my food are equals; there's no o. Tim. I, 2, 61. but now 'tis o. beyond arithmetic, Cor. Ill, 1, 245. I shall win at the o. Hml. T, 2, 222 (viz of twelve to nine). his quails ever beat mine at o. Ant. II, 3, 38 (at disadvantage). young boys and girls are level now with men, the o. is gone, IT, 15, 66. 3) superiority, advantage: Cupid's butt-shaft is too hard for Hercules' club, and therefore too much o. for a Spaniard's rapier, L L L I, 2, 183. there is such o. in the man, As I, 2, 169. I would allow him o. B2 I, 1, 62. and with that o. he weighs King Richard down, III, 4, 89. he shall take the o. oj his great name and estimation, H4AT, 1,97. yields up his life unto a world of o. H6A IT, 4, 25. that Iden took o. to combat a poor famished man, H6B IT, 10, 47. Hercules himself must yield to o. H6C II, 1, 53. advantageous care withdrew me from the o. of multitude, Troil. T, 4, 23. thou hast the o. of me, T i t T, 2, 19. we have therefore o. Hml. T, 2, 274. he beats thee 'gainst the o. Ant. II, 3, 27. 4) probability, likelihood: then he shall have no o. Shr. IT, 3, 155. the stars will kiss the valleys first; the o.for high and low's alike, Wint. T, 1, 207. if that thy gentry, Britain, go before this lout as he exceeds our lords, the o. is that we scarce are men and you are gods, Cymb. T, 2, 9. To lay o. = to lay a wager: I will lay o. H4B T, 5, 111. your grace hath laid the o. o' the weaker side, Hml. T, 2, 272. 5) quarrel, contention, discord: I desire nothing but o. with England, H5 II, 4, 129. that put'st o. among the rout of nations, Tim. IT, 3, 42. set them into confounding o. 392. I cannot speak any beginning to this peevish o. Oth. II, 3, 185. at o. = at variance, quarrelling: Wiv. Ill, 1, 54. B3 II, 1, 70. Rom. I, 2, 5. Tim. ill, 5, 116. Mcb. Ill, 4, 127. Lr. 1, 3, 5. Ode, a short poem, a panegyric in verse: L L L IT, 3, 99. As HI, 2, 379

O i l r a i , hateful: T p . Ill, 1, 5. Wiv. II, 1, 123. Mid*. Ill, 1, 84. As III, 3, 52. All's II, 1, 175. H4B II, 4, 160. H6B IT, 4, 46. H8 III, 2, 331. Oth. T, 2, 180. Per. I, 4, 31. ( M t r i r c r t u , fragrant: L L L IT, 2, 128. John III, 4, 26. O d a r a n s , the same: Mids. II, 1,110. Blunderingly for odious: Ado III, 5, 18; cf. Mids. Ill, 1, 84. O d a n r , sweet scent, fragrance: Sonn. 54, 4. 12. 69, 13. 98, 6. Mids. Ill, 1, 85. Tw. 1, 1, 7. Ill, 1,96. 98. 101. Per. Ill, 2, 61. Oellladea (O. Edd. illiads, eliads, aliads) amorous glances, ogles: examined my parts with most judicious o. Wiv. I, 3, 68. she gave strange o. and most speaking looks to noble Edmund, Lr. IT, 5, 25. O'er, see Over. O ' t H M t r (cf. Overbear) to bear down, to overpower, to bring under: oil and fire, too strong for reason's force, —s it and burns on, All's T, 3 , 8 . —ing interruption, John III, 4, 9. to command, to check, to 0. such as are of better person than myself, H6C III, 2, 166. my desire all continent impediments would o. Mcb. IT, 3, 64. Particularly used of waters overwhelming the land: Cor. Ill, 1, 249. IT, 5, 137 (O. Edd. o'erbeat). IT, 6, 78. Hml. IT, 5, 102. Oth. I, 3, 56. Cymb. T, 3, 48. Per. T. 1, 195. O ' e r b e a t , reading of O Edd. in Cor. IT, 5, 137; M. Edd. rightly o'erbear. , O ' e r b l a w , to blow away, to disperse by wind: whiles yet the cool and temperate wind of grace —sthe filthy and contagious clouds, H 5 III, 3, 31. O ' e r h a a r d , from on board, out of the ship: Tp. II, 2, 127. T, 219. Per. IT, 2, 70. O ' s r a s t , darkened, clonded: the sun's o. with blood, J o h n III, 1, 326. how soon the day o. R3 III, 2, 88. O ' e r c h a r g e , to load beyond the power of bear, ing: Sonn. 23, 8. Mids. T, 85. Wint. Ill, 2, 151. H6A I, 3, 64. H6C II, 5, 78. Per. Ill, 2, 54. O'erclayed, filled beyond satiety: B3 T, 3, 318. O ' e r c a m e , 1) to spread over, to cover: the trees . . . o. with moss and mistletoe, Tit. II, 3, 95. 2) to conquer; absol.: in thirteen battles Salisbury o'ercame, H6A I, 4, 78. Trans.: Hamlet o'ercame Fortinbras, Hml. T, 1, 156 (Qq overcame). 3) to subjugate, to rule, to domineer over: .1farcius was a worthy ojficer i" the war, but insolent, o. with pride, Cor. IT, 6,31. to o.you with her show, Cymb. T, 5, 54. O ' e r e a n n t , to outnumber: at land, thou knowest how much we do o. thee. At land, indeed, thou dost o. me of my father's house, Ant. II, 6, 26. 27. In the second place of = by; cf. Of. O ' e r e a v e r e d , completely covered: o. quite with dead men's rattling bones, Rom. IV, 1, 82. O ' e r c r a w , to triumph over, to overpower: the potent poison quite —s my spirit, Hml. T, 2, 364. O ' e r d a , to exaggerate: I would have such a fellow whipped for —ing Termagant, Hml. Ill, 2, 15. O ' e r d n s t e d , covered with dust: give to dust that is a little gilt more laud than gilt o. Troil. Ill, 3, 179. O ' e r d y e d , dyed over, bedaubed with another colour: were they false as o. blacks, Wint. I, 2, 132, 1. e. black things painted with another colour, through which the ground will soon appear; cf. Tit. IT, 2,100. O ' e r e a t e n , eaten and begnawn on all sides: th*

0

793

fragment!, scraps, the bitt and greasy relict of her o. faith are bound to Dicmed, Troil. V, 2, 160. O'ereye, to see, to observe: here »it I in the slcy and wretched fools' secrete heedfully o. LLL IV, 3, 80. O'erfed, fed to excess: Per. Ill Prol. 3. O'erflaniished, Tarnished over: the beauteous evil art empty trunks o. by the devil, Tw. Ill, 4,404. O'erflaw, vb. 1) intr. a) to swell and ran over tbe banks: the —ing Nilus, Ant. I, 2, 49. Metaphorically, = to abonnd: to make the coming hour o. with joy and pleasure drawn the brim, All's II, 4, 47. b) to hare too much water, to be drowned: when heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o. f Tit. Ill, 1, 222. 2) trans, a) to swell over, to overran, to inundate, to drown: who, being stopped, the bounding banks —s, Lncr. 1119. he that in this action contrives against his own nobility, in his proper stream —s himself, All's IV, 3, 30. this dotage —s the measure, Ant. I, 1, 2. the earth, fearing to be —ed, Per. IV, 4, 40. b) to stream with, to pour ont in abundance: such brooks are welcome to me, that o. such liquor, Wiv. II, 2, 157. O'erfr aiight, too heavily loaded: the o. heart, Mcb. IV, 3, 210. O'ergalled, too mnch injnred and worn away: their eyes o. with recourse of tears, Troil. V, 3, 55. O'erglance, to look hastily over: I have but with a cursorary eye —d the articles, H5 V, 2, 78. O'erga, to walk or pass over: of many weary miles you have —ne, LLL V, 2, 196. O'ergreat, too great: the o. cardinal, H81,1,222. O'ergreen, to cover with verdure, to embellish: so you o. my bad, my good allow, Sonn. 112, 4. O'ergraw, to cover with growth: corn —n by weeds, Lncr. 281. —n with hair, As IV, 3, 107. they (weeds) will o. the garden, H6B III, 1, 32. yourself so out of thought, and thereto so —n, cannot be questioned, Cymb. IV, 4, 33 (i. e. covered with hair; cf. As IV, 3, 107). O'ergrawn, having become too old: like an o. lion in a cave, that goes not out to prey, Meas. I, 3, 22. Perhaps also in Cymb. IV, 4, 33. O'ergrawth, excessive growth: by the o. of some complexion, Hml. I, 4, 27. O'erhang, to jut or hang over: as doth a galled rock o. and jutty his confounded base, H5 III, 1, 13. this brave —ing firmament, Hml. II, 2, 312 (Ff only this brave —ing). O'erhanging, subst. that which hangs over like a canopy: this brave o., this majestical roof fretted with golden fire, Hml. II, 2, 312 (Qq o. firmament). O e r h a i t r , too hasty: our o. marriage, Hml. II, 2, 57 (Qq hasty). O'erhear, to hear without being addressed: LLL IV, 3, 130. As II, 2, 11. Hml. Ill, 3,32. Lr. Ill, 6, 96. O'erjayed, transported with gladness: Cymb. V, 5, 401. O'eiiabanred, worn with labour, weary: Cymb. II, 2,11. O'erleap, to leap over, to clear by leaping: a step on which I must fall down, or else, o. Mcb. I, 4, 49. Metaphorically, " to omit: let me o. that custom, Cor. II, 2, 140. To o. one's self -— to exert one's self too much in leaping, to leap too far or too high: vaulting ambition,

which —s itself and falls on the other (side) Mcb. I, 7, 27. O'erleaven, to leaven too much, to corrupt: some habit that too much —s the form of plausive manners, Hml. I, 4, 29. O'erlaak, I) to inspect, to survey: o. the waUs, R3 III, 5, 17. o. what shipping and what lading 's in our haven, Per. I, 2, 48. 2) to peruse: Sonn. 82, 2. Gent. I, 2, 50. Mids. II, 2, 121. Lr. I, 2, 40. V, 1, 50. 3) to despise, to slight: stoop low within those bounds we have —ed, John V, 4, 55. 4) to subdue by the look, to confound, to unsettle: vile worm, thou wast —ed even in thy birth, Wiv. V, 5, 87. beshrew your eyes, that have —ed me and divided me, Merch. Ill, 2, 15. cf. overseen in Lucr. 1206. O ' e r a a s t e r , 1) to have in one's power: which owe the crown that thou —est, John II, 109. 2) to subdue: Jor your desire to know what is between us, o. it as you may, Hml. I, 5,140. O'ermatched, oppressed by superior force: H6 A IV, 4,11. H6CI, 4, 64. O ' e r m a o n t , to rise above: I could o. the lark, H8 II, 3, 94. O ' e r n l g h t , during the night before something: (such rest) as wretches have o. that wait for execution in the morn, Gent. IV, 2, 133. shame her with what he saw o. Ado III, 3, 174. Substantively: to cure thy —'s surfeit, Tim. IV, 3, 227. O'er-afDee, vb. to get the better of and lord over by virtue of an office: it might be the pate of a politician, which this ass now —s, Hml. V, 1, 87 (Qq o'erreaches'). O'erparted, having too difficult a part assigned: he is a marvellous good neighbour and a very good bowler: but, for Alisander, — alas, you see how 'tis, — a little o. L L L V, 2, 588. O'erpaat, passed by, gone: in the time o. R3 IV, 4, 388.396. O ' e r f t y , to pay more than sufficiently: Lr. IV, 7,4. Cymb. II, 4,10. O'erpecr, to overtop, to rise above: too highly heaped for truth to o. Cor. II, 3,128. O'erperch, to fly over: with love's light wings did I o. these wattsf Rom. II, 2, 66. O'erpletnre, to be a better picture than: —ing that Venus where we see the fancy outwork nature, Ant. II, 2,205. v O'erpast, to get quickly and easily over, to get clear of cheaply: you may thank the unquiet time for your quiet —ing that action, H4B I, 2, 171; cf. posted over in H6B III, 1, 255. O'erpawer, to conquer, to overcome: R2 V, 1, 31. Ant. 11,3,22. O'erpressed, oppressed by superior force, overwhelmed : thy might is more than my o. defence can bide, Sonn. 139, 8. he bestrid an o. Soman, Cor. II, 2, 97. death may usurp on nature many hours, and yet the fire of life kindle again the o. spirits, Per. Ill, 2, 84. O'erprlae, to exceed in value: —d all popular rate, Tp. I, 2, 92. O'errate, to rate at too much: Cymb. I, 4, 41. O'erreaeh (impf. and partic. o'erraught), 1) to overtake: certain players we o'erraught on the way, Hml. Ill, 1, 17. 2) to trick, to dupe: so gross —ing as this, Wiv 51*

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V, 5, 145. the villain is o'erraught of alt my money, Err. I, 2, 96. o. them in their own devices, Tit. T, 2,143. the pate of a politician, which this a u now —et, Hml. V, 1, 87 (Ff o'er-offices). 0 ' e r r e « 4 , to peruse: Sonn. 81, 10. H4B III, 1, 2. Caes. Ill, 1,4. Lr. 1,2, 38. O ' e r r a l e , absol. to prevail: then fate —s, that, one man holding troth, a million fail, Mid«. Ill, 2, 92. Trans., = to prevail with: let me o. you now, LLL T, 2, 516. —d by prophecies, H4A IV, 4, 18. you shall o. my mind for once, R3 III, 1, 57. With to: so you will not o. me to a peace, Hml. IT, 7, 61. O ' e r r a n , 1) to tread nnder foot: I will o. thee with policy, As V, 1, 61. o. and trampled on, Troil. III, 3, 163. 2) to overflow: till it o the stew, Meas. V, 321. the tears ... o. her lovely face, Shr. Ind. 2, 67. a chilling sweat —s my trembling joints, Tit. II, 3, 212. 3) to look over, to review: in thy thought o. my former time, H6C I, 4,45. O'eraet, to turn bottom upward, to overthrow: H4BI, 1, 185. O'ershaJe, to make dark and gloomy: fear —s me, Wint. I, 2, 457. dark cloudy death —s his beams of life, HGC II, 6, 62. black night o. thy day, R3 I, 2, 131. O'ershlne, to outshine, to excel in lnstre: H4B IV, 3, 57. O'erahaat; 1) to o. one's self = to go too far, to say too much: I have o'er shot myself to tell you of it, Caes. Ill, 2,155. 2) Partic. o'ershot = blundering, having the worse, pot to shame: are you not ashamed, nay, are you not, all three of you, to be thus much o'ershot t LLL IV, 3, 160. cf. Overshoot. O ' e r i h f v e r , to rain upon: with sighs shot through, and biggest tears —erf, Per. IV, 4, 26. O'eralsed, smeared as with glntinous matter: o. with coagulate gore, Hml. II, 2,484. O ' e n k l p , to neglect, to treat with indifference: then the mind much sufferance doth o., when grief hath mates, Lr. 111,6, 113. O'ersllp, to pass unheeded: when that hour —s me in the day wherein I sigh not, Gent. II, 2, 9. O'eranawed, covered with snow: Sonn. 5, 8. O'erapread, to cover: the dragon wing of night - s the earth, Troil. V, 8, 17. with hostile forces he'll o. the land, Per. I, 2, 24. O'eratare, to look more fiercely than: I would o. the sternest eyes that look, Merch. II, 1, 27 (Ql outstare). O'erstep, to step over, to transgress: that you n. not the modesty of nature, Hml. Ill, 2, 21. O ' e r s t l n k , to drown a bad smell by one still worse, to stink more than: the foul lake o'erstunk their feet, Tp. IV, 184. O ' e r s t r a w e l = orerstrewed (rhyming): the top o. with sweets, Ven. 1143. O'eraway, 1) to control, to rule, to lord over: so pertaunt-like would Io. his state, that he should be my fool and I his fate, LLL V, 2, 67. if he be so resolved, I can o. Aim, Caes. II, 1,-203. 2) to surpass in power: sad mortality —s their power, Sonn. 65, 2. great command —* the order, Hml. V, 1, 251. O ' e n w e l l , 1) intr. to rise above the banks: let

flood* o. H5 II, 1, 97 (Pistol's speech). 2) trans, to overflow: o. thy shores, John II, 337. till the wine o. the cup, Caes. IV, 3,161. O'crtake (partic. o'ertook) 1) to come upon, to take, to catch: to let base cloud* o. me in my way, Sonn. 34, 3. if the trial ofthe law o. ye, H8 III, 1, 96. o'ertook in's rouse, Hml. II, 1, 58. whom leprosy o. A n t III, 10,11. 2) to come up with one going before: his act did not o. his bad intent, Meas. V, 456; cf. the flighty purpose never is o'ertoik unless the deed go with it, Mcb. IV, 1, 145. o. me, if thou canst, H6A I, 5, 15. if thou wilt o. us, hence a mile or twain, Lr. IV, 1, 44. I'll o. you, V, 1, 39. I will o. thee, Ant. IV, 14,44. would 1 might never o. pursued success, V, 2, 103. (Almost = to follow, in H6A I, 5, 15. Lr. V, 1, 39. Ant. IV, 14, 44). O'erteemed, worn by bringing forth children: her o. loins, Hml. II, 2, 531. O'erthraw. vb. to throw down, to defeat, to bring to nothing: Tp. Epil. 1. LLL V, 2, 153. Wint. IV, 1, 8. V, 1, 230. B2 111, 2, 72. H6A 1,1, 108. H6B 111, I, 181. Hml. Ill, 1, 158. Ant. IV, 15, 14. Cyinb. Ill, 6, 20. O ' e r t t r , to rise above, to be higher than: H8 II, 4, 88. Troil. Ill, 3, 164. Hml. V, 1, 276. O'ertrlp, to trip over: did Thisbe fearfully o. the dew, Merch. V, 7. O ' e r t a r n , to throw down: H4A IV, 1, 82. Hi IV, 2, 24. O'ervalne, to be more worth than: I dare pawn the moiety of my estate to your ring, which in my opinion —s it something, Cymb. 1, 4, 120. O'erwalk, to go over, to cross: to o. a current, H4A 1,3,192. O ' e r w a t e h e i , worn out with watching: Caes. IV, 3, 241. Lr. II, 2, 177. O'erween, to think arrogantly, to presume: or I o. to think so, Wint. IV, 2, 9. a hot —ing cur, H6I5 V, 1, 151. my heart —s too much, HCC 111, 2, 144. O'erweigh, to outweigh, to overbalance: Mean. II, 4,170. Hml. Ill, 2, 31. O'erwhelm, 1) to overspread and cover entirely: foul deeds will rise, though all the earth o. them, Hml. I, 2, 258. humming water must o. thy corpse, Per. Ill, 1, 64. 2) to hang down upon in a threatening manner: his louring brows —ing his fair sight, Ven. 183. let the brow o. it as fearfully as doth a galled rock o'erhamj his base, H5 HI, 1, 11. 3) to bear down, to crush, to overpower entirely: to plant and o. custom, Wint. IV, 1, 9. like a sow thnt hath — ed all her litter but one, H4B 1,2, 13 (crushed ? or devoured? Q overwhelmed). wrath —ed my pity. Cor. I, 9, 86. despite o. thee, HI, 1, 164. with the hellhated lie o. thy heart, Lr. V, 3, 147. —ed with your grief Oth. IV, 1, 77. O'erwarn, 1) worn out, spent, advanced in time: musing the morning is so much o. Ven. 866. 2) wom and spoiled by time: Ven. 135. Sonn. 63, 2. R3 1,1,81. - O'arwreata* (0> Edd. ore-rested) strained: such to be pitied and o. seeming he acts thy greatness in, Troil. I, 3, 157. Of, = from, in its different senses: one that J brought up of a puppy, Gent. IV, 4, 3. being of so youny

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days brought up with him, Hml. II, 2, 11. the imprison- fields with harness, H4A III, 2, 100. which of a weak ed absence of your liberty, Sonn. 58, 6. tear the stain- and niggardly projection doth like a miser spoil his coat ed skin of my harlot brow, Err. II, 2, 138 (M. Edd. with scanting a little cloth, H5 II, 4, 46. you have subo f f ) , we John Cade, so termed of our supposed father,orned this man, of purpose to obscure my noble birth, H6B IV, 2, 33. no more can you distinguish of a man H6A V, 4, 22. earnest thou here by chance or of devothan of his outward favour, B3 III, 1, 10. Lepidus of tion 1 H6B II, 1, 88. art thou a messenger, or come of the triumvirate should be deposed, A n t III, 6, 28. in pleasure t V, 1, 16. the king, of his own royal disposithe world's volume our Britain seems as of it, but not tion, makes him to send, R3 I, 3, 63. if great minds, in it, Cymb. Ill, 4, 141 (severed from it). I take all of partial indulgence to their benumbed wills, resist the my comfort of thy worth and truth, Sonn. 37, 4. of same, Troil. II, 2, 178. a madness, of which her life is this book this learning mayst thou taste, 77, 4. of whom in danger, Cymb. IV, 3, 3. and of that natural luck he 1 have received a second life, Tp. V, 194. that cost me beats thee 'gainst the odd», Ant. II, 3, 26. so, of his two shilling and two pence a piece of Yead Miller, gentleness, he furnished me with volumes, Tp. I, 2, 165. Wiv. I, 1, 160. what he gets more of her than sharp I no question make to have it (money) of my trust, words, II, 1, 190. where is the thousand marks thou Merch. I, 1, 185. God of his mercy give you patience, hast of met Err. I, 2, 81. he had of me a chain, IV, 1, H5 II, 2,179. King Henry gives consent, of mere com10? T, 2. 256. that I of him received the chain, 228. passion and of lenity, H6A V, 4, 125. accept the title take of me my daughter, Ado II, 1, 313. where hadst thou usurpest, of benefit proceeding from our king, and thou itt Of Costard, LLLIV, 3, 197. there is the very not of any challenge of desert, 152. from Scotland am remuneration I had of thy master, V, 1, 76. the Jew's I stolen, even of pure love, H6C 111, 1, 13. of his great bond which he hath of me, Merch. II, 8, 41. a ring grace and princely care foreseeing those fell mischiefs, that he had of your daughter for a monkey, III, 1,124. H8V, 1, 48. Used in adjurations: of charity, what which you received of me, V, 185. thou shalt have to kin are you to met Tw. V, 237. speak, of all loves, pay for it of us, As II, 4, 93. take this of me, Shr. II, Mids. II, 2, 154; cf. Wiv. II, 2, 119 and Oth. Ill, 1, 13. 191. would you take the letter of her, All's III, 4, 1. And in adverbial phrases: of force I must attempt you holding of the pope your sovereign greatness, John V, further, Merch. IV, 1, 421. I must of force, H4A II, 1,3. good wishes shall Suffolk ever have of Margaret, 3, 120. some more audience than a mother... should P6A V, 3, 174. you took bribes of France, H6B III, o'erhear the speech of vantage, Hml. Ill, 3, 33 (i. e. I, 104. get a thousand crowns of the king, H6B IV, 10, besides, to boot), though he speak of comfort, Oth. II, 29. what he shall receive of us in duty, Troil. Ill, 1, I , 3 1 (perhaps = comfortably). See besides the articles 169. what wouldst thou of ust III, 3, 17. taking bribes Boast, Die, Repent, Relish, Smack, Taste, Weary etc. of the Sardians, Caes. IV, 3, 3. to recover of us those = by, after passive verbs: be of thyself rejected, lands, Hml. I, 1, 102. his majesty shall have tribute of Ven. 159. I am expected of my friends, 718. 0 happime, II, 2, 333. the spurns that patient merit of the un- ness enjoyed but of a few, Lucr. 22. to be admired of ieorthy takes, III, 1, 74. of whom he had this ring, lewd eyes, 392. thou art beloved of many, Sonn. 10, 3. Cymb. V, 5, 136. of your royal presence I'll adventure loved of more and less, 96, 3. 150, 14. Ado I, 1,126. the borrow of a week, Wint. 1,2, 38. I of these (winks, LLL II, 57. Mids. 1,1,104. As 1,1,116. 174. Shr. I, nods etc.) will wrest an alphabet, Tit. Ill, 2, 44. there's 2, 176. All's 1, 3, 203. H6B I, 2, 44. too base of thee a testril of me too, Tw. II, 3, 34. his cocks do win the to be remembered, Sonn. 74,12. to be praised of ages yet battle still of mine, Ant. II, 3, 36. can get goal for goal to be, 101, 12. of him, myself, and thee I am forsaken, of youth, IV, 8, 22. I would know that of your honour, 133, 7. when I forgot am of myself, 149, 4. of you Meas. II, 1, 166. if you will know of me what man I well favoured, Gent. II, 1, 57. unseen of any, V, 4, 4. am, As IV, 3, 96. what shall I know of theet H5 III, desired of such a person, Meas. II, 4, 91. to be disdain6, 122. we desire to know of him of whence he is, Per. ed of all, Ado 1,3, 30. taken up of these men's bills, II, 3, 73. to help him of his blindness, Gent. IV, 2, 47. III, 3, 191. excused of every hearer, IV, 1, 219. that a I discharge thee of thy prisoner, Ado V, 1, 328. rid lady, of one man refused, should of another therefore the house of her, Shr. I, 1, 150. that which may unfur- be abused, Mids. II, 2, 133. hated most of those they nish me of reason, Wint. V, 1,123. how I may be de- did deceive, 140. 142. much marked of the melancholy livered of these woes, John III, 4, 55. we'll deliver you Jaques, As II, 1, 41. abandoned of his friends, 50. unof your great danger,-Cor. V, 6, 15. heaven make thee claimedof any man, 11, 7, 87. I have been told so oj free of it, Hml. V, 2, 343. my trust did beget of him a many, III, 2,361. to be married of him, III, 3, 92. wooed falsehood, Tp. I, 2, 94. if my lord get a boy of you, of a snail, IV, 1, 52. discipled of the bravest, All's I, Troil. Ill, 2, 113. brawls bred of an airy word, Rom. 2, 28. worse of worst extended, II, 1, 176. to be relinI, 1, 96. 1 am descended of a gentler blood, H6A V, 4, quished of the artists, II, 3, 10. owed and worn of six 8. 115 I, 2, 67. had ta'en his last leave of the weeping ancestors, V, 3, 196. of many accounted beautiful, Tw. morn, Ven. 2. I took my leave of Madam Silvia, Gent. II, 1, 27. not noted but of the finer natures, Wint. I, IV, 4, 38. cf. the verbs to acquit, beg, bereave, beware, 2, 226. pitied of thee, III, 2, 235. blessed of the King borrow, cheat, cleanse, clear, crave, cure, deliver, de- of kings, H6A I, 1, 28. assailed of none, IV, 7, 10. prive, discharge, ease, heal, purge, rob, wash etc.; tbe honoured of the people, H6B I, 1, 198. hated of God adjectives barren, clean, clear, devoid, free, short, void and man, H6C I, 3, 9. scorned of me, R3 IV, 4, 102. etc.; the adverbs forth, out, upward etc.; the prepo- feared of aU, 103. a night of groans endured of her, sition within etc. Hence = out of, in consequence of, 304. tempted of the devil, 418. commanded of Agaby virtue of: we were dead of sleep, Tp. V, 230. what memnon, Troil. II, 3, 69. worshipped of that we hold shall become of thist Ado IV, 1, 211. bold of your an idol, 199. of Rome worse hated than of you, Cor. worthiness, LLL II, 28. of thine own good will, R2 IV, I, 2, 13. how you are censured, I mean of us, II, 1, 25. 177. of no right, nor colour like to right, he doth fill 'tis thought of every one, II, 2, 3. we have been called

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0

to of many, II, 3, 19. highly honoured of your grace, Tit. I, 246. and it received of the most pious Edward, Mcb. Ill, 6, 27. teen of iit, Hml. 1, X, 25. the observed of aU observers, III, 1,162. to be demanded of a sponge, IV, 2, 12. known tf thee, Lr. II, 2, 28. that my charity be not of him perceived, III, 3, 17. to be but named of thee, Cymb. II, 3, 138. disdained of fortune. III, 4, 20. 'tis no better reckoned but of those who worship dirty gods, III, 6, 55. I was taught of your daughter the difference, V, 5, 194. Denoting a means, = with: I am provided of a torch-bearer, Merch. II, 4, 24. you are not satisfied of these events at full, V, 297. whose selfsame mettle, whereof thy proud child, arrogant man, is puffed, Tim. IV, 3,180. Macdonald... from the western islet of kerns and gallowglasses is supplied, Mcb. I, 2, 13. Seldom after active verbs: why of that loam might they not stop a beer-barrelf Hml. V, 1, 233. thou dost o'ercount me of my father's house, Ant. II, 6, 27 (probably a play on the word: thou outnumberest me by my fathers house; and: thou art too fond of my father's house; cf. Count), cf. Lr. II, 4, 161. Of one's self «= by one's self, in one's self, alone, if let alone, without the help or interference of anything else: beauty itself doth of itself persuade the eyes of man without an orator, Lucr. 29. simple of itself; I'll no pullet-sperm in my brewage, Wiv. Ill, 5, 32. which they'll do fast enough of themselves, IV, 1, 69. better 'twere that both of us did fast, since of ourselves ourselves are choleric, than feed it with such overroasted flesh, Shr. IV, 1, 177. for then we wound our modesty and make foul the clearness of our deservings, when of ourselves we publish them, All's I, 3, 7. who of herself is a good lady, V, 2, 33. the world, who of itself is peised well, John II, 575. the iron of itself, though heat red-hot, approaching near these eyes, would drink my tears and quench his fiery indignation, IV, I, 61. he being of age to govern of himself, H6B I, 1, 166. that of itself England is safe, if true within itself, H6C IV, 1, 39. it holds its estimate and dignity as well wherein 'tis precious of itself as in the prizer, Troil. II, 2, 55. nor doth he of himself know them (his parts) for aught till he behold them formed in the applause where they're extended, 111, 3, 118. they (the gates) will open of themselves, Cor. I, 4, 19. had borne the action of yourself, IV, 7, 15. Used to denote any manner of proceeding from a cause or agent: it was a mad fantastical trick of him, Meas. Ill, 2, 98. it was well done of you, LLL II, 217. this is a knavery of them, Mids. Ill, 1, 116. well aimed of such a young one, Shr. II, 236. who seeks for better of thee, Tim. IV, 3, 24. it was a brute part of him, Hml. Ill, 2, 110. what of thist what of thatf = what follows from this? Ven. 717. Wiv. IV, 4, 41; cf. What. Denoting the material constituting a thing: compact of fire, Ven. 149. I'll make a shadow for thee of my hairs, 191. a goal of snow, 362. a flock of sheep, 685. the choir of echoes, 840. my life, being made of Jour, Sonn. 45, 7. made such a sinner of his memory, Tp. I, 2, 101. make a vassal of him, 374. of his bones are coral made, 397. this bottle which I made of the bark of a tree, II, 2, 128. composed of harshness, III, 1, 9. created of every creature's best, 48. make a stockfish of thee, III, 2, 79. a ladder made of cords, Gent III, 1, 117. to make a virtue of necessity, IV, 1, 62. till he have made an oyster of me, Ado II, 3, 27. to make

a lamp of her, Err. Ill, 2, 98. to make her heavenly comforts of despair, Meas. IV, 3, 114. they make an att of me, Tw. V, 20. he it composed and framed of treachery, Ado V, 1, 257. Henry is of a king become a banished man, H6C 111, 3, 25. what would betide of mef B3 1,3, 6. made peace of enmity, fair love of hate, II, 1, 50 etc. etc. Hence the following expressions: even such a husband hast thou of me, Merch. Ill, 5, 89. you shall find of the king a husband, All's 1,1, 7. you have won a wife of me, IV, 2, 65. we lost a jewel of her, V, 3, 1. you have an unspeakable comfort of your prince, Wint. I, 1, 38. that did but show thee of a fool inconstant and damnable ingrateful, III, 2, 187. they shall find dear deer of us, H6A IV, 2, 54. we should have found a bloody day of this, IV, 7, 34. thou shall find — A fool of thee, Tim. IV, 3, 232. we shall find of him a shrewd contriver, Caes. II, 1, 157. you have a nurse of me, Per. IV, 1, 25. cf. Cor. I, 9, 10. Denoting the stuff or material filling a thing, as f. i. a butt of sack, Tp. II, 2, 126; a glass of rhenish wine, Merch. I, 2, 104. an excellent head of hair, Tw. 1, 3, 101 etc. elc. cf. the adjectives big, full, liberal etc. Likewise that which affords matter to thought or language, = on, about: so of concealed sorrow may be said, Ven. 333. to think but nobly of my grand, mother, Tp. I, 2, 119. to hear thee speak of Naples, 433. you make me study of that, II, 1, 82. I wonder of their being here together, Mids. IV, 1, 136. I did dream of money-bags, Merch. II, 5,18. mine own escape unfoldeth to my hope the like of him, Tw. I, 2, 21. who but to-day hammered of this design, Wint. II, 2, 49. inquire of him, R2 III, 2, 186 ( = about him), having determined of the Volsces, Cor. II, 2,41. to use as you think needful of the man, Tit. V, 1, 39; cf. Mcb. HI, 1, 101. what it should be, I cannot dream o f , Hml. II, 2, 10. I told him of myself, Ant. II, 2, 78. did you hear of a stranger, Cymb. II, 1, 35. must know of her departure, IV, 3, 10 etc. etc. cf. Acquaint, Brag, Despair, Doubt, Complain, Demand, Instruct, Read, Tell etc. Hence, in general, introducing the object of a verbal: the expense of spirit, Sonn. 129, 1. thy neglect of truth, 101, 2. in care of thee, Tp. I, 2, 16. make not too rash a trial oj him, 467. for fear of the storm, II, 2, 116. for love of you, Gent. II, 4, 5. Ill, 1, 46. 'tis not in hate of you, III, 1, 96. 'tis pity of him, Meas. II, 3, 42. Mids. Ill, 1, 44. Ant. I, 4, 71. make choice of which your highness will see first, Mids. V, 43. I have no mind of feasting forth, Merch. II, 5, 37. the borrow of a week, Wint. I, 2, 39. in haste whereof, R2 I, 1, 150. any challenge of desert, H6A V, 4, 153. the sight of me is odious in their eye, H6B IV, 4, 46. give us a prince of blood in change of him, Troil. Ill, 3, 27. of this my privacy I have strong reasons, 190. I have an eye of you, Hml. II, 2, 301. since of your lives you set so slight a valuation, Cymb. IV, 4, 48 etc. etc. Remarkable passages: you should not have the eminence of him, Troil. II, 3, 266. by the sovereign power you have of us, Hml. II, 2,27. niggard of question, but of our demands most free in his reply, 111, 1, 13 (for to our demands), by an enforced obedience of planetary infiuence, Lr. 1,2,135 (for to planetary influence). After adjectives: ignorant of what thou art, Tp. I, 2, 18. Meas. IV, 3,113. afeard of your four legs, Tp. 11, 2, 62. what I am glad o f , 111, 1,74. of so great a favour growing proud, Gent. 11, 4,161 etc. (cf. Ashamed, Capable,

0

797

Certain, Enamoured, Fearful, Guilty, Fond, Innocent, unloading of his mules, A n t IV, 6, 24. honouring of Heedful, Joyful, Sensible, Sure etc.)- Used after tran- Neptune's triumphs, Per. V, 1, 17. sitive verbs implying the idea of speaking or thinking, Partitive use: certain of his friends, Ven. 588. by to express the particular import of the action: accu- all of us, Tp. II, 1, 129. three inches of it, 283. here sing you of injury, Sonn. 58, 8. to appeal each other is more of us, V, 216. which of you know Ford, Wiv. of high treason, R2 I, 1, 27. I am suspected of this I, 3, 29. all three of you, LLL IV, 3, 160. of enjoined murder, Rom. V, 3, 224. he shall never more be feared penitents there's four or five at my house, All's III, 5, ofdoingharm, Lr.1,2,113. I shall desire you of more 97. both of you, H6B III, 2, 182. Mcb. Ill, 1, 114. acquaintance, Mids. Ill, 1, 185. I humbly do desire worth five of Agamemnon, H4B II, 4, 237 ( c t Cor. your grace of pardon, Merch. IV, 1, 402. I desire you IV, 5, 174). of those enough, Ant. IV, 1, 13. all of it, of the like, As V, 4, 56. whom of succours u>e entreated, Lr. I, 1, 202 (cf. All and Both), 'twas Aeneas' tale to H5 III, 3, 45. I humbly do beseech you of your pardon, Dido, and thereabout of it especially, where he speaks Oth. Ill, 3, 212. till forging Nature be condemned of of Priam's slaughter, Hml. II, 2, 468 etc. etc. Pecutreason, Ven. 729 etc. etc. After gerunds: by telling liar passages: which, of he or Adrian, first begins to of it, Tp. I, 2, 100. for kissing of their feet, IV, 174. crow, Tp. II, 1, 28 (a Gallicism), whose right, of thine by losing of your eyes, LLL I, 1, 79. by noting of the or mine, is most in Helena, Mids. HI, 2, 337. he shall lady, Ado IV, 1, 160. by taking nor by giving of excess, kill two of us, Ado V, 1, 80 ( = us both), how many Merch. I, 3, 63. the enjoying of my love, III, 2, 29. the be there of themt H4A II, 2, 66 ( = how many are praising of myself, III, 4, 22. this making of Christians, they ?). there be four of us here have ta'en a thousand III, 5, 25. the getting up of the negro's belly, 41. the pound, II, 4, 175 ( = we four here), a hundred upon kissing of her batlet, As II, 4, 49. he professes not keep- poor four of us, 180. four of which you please, H4B ing of oaths, All's IV, 3, 282. for tainting of my love, HI, 2, 259 ( = which four you please), some twenty Tw. V, 141. at knowing of thy choice, Wint IV, 4, 427. of them fought in this black strife, Rom. HI, 1, 183 by shaking of thy head, John HI, 1, 19. with halloing (there were some twenty who fought), some dozen and singing of anthems, H4B I, 2, 213. call you that Romans of us, Cymb. I, 6, 185 (cf. oris in Lr. Ill, 4, backing of your friendsl H4A II, 4, 166. with straining 110). there's two of you; the devil make a third, H6B of my courage, H6A I, 5, 10. about relieving of the 111, 2, 303. The partitive particle dependent on the sentinels, II, 1, 70. by reputing of his high descent, verb: I have kept of them tame, Ail's 11,5,50 ( = some H6B III, 1, 48. for stealing of sheep, IV, 2, 67. for of them), you have of these pedlars, Wint. IV, 4, 217. giving up of Normandy, IV, 7, 30. ihreat you me with my lord hath spent of Timon's wealth, Tim. Ill, 4, 26. telling of the Icing f R3 I, 3, 113. for crowning of the when your false masters eat of my lords meat, 50. I king, 111, 4, 29. in tempting of your patience, H8 I, 2, did want of what I was in the morning', Ant. II, 2, 77; 55. by pronouncing of some doubtful phrase, Hml. I, cf. what hour now? I think it lacks of twelve, Hml. I, 5,175. for chiding of his fool, Lr. I, 3, 1. so find we 4, 3. what should you need of morel Lr. II, 4, 241. profit by losing of our prayers, Ant. II, 1, 8 (Instances By the omission of a superlative before the partiof its omission see Tp. I, 2, 104. Lr. IV, 4, 9. Oth. tive o f , the latter receives the sense of more than, Ill, 4,22 according to the reading of Ff). In the same above: he whom next Ay self of all the world I loved, manner after participles of transitive verbs: another Tp. I, 2, 69. he, of all the rest, hath never moved me, licking of his wound, Ven. 915. fearing of time's ty- Gent. I, 2, 27. to see my friends in Padua, but of all ranny, Sonn. 115, 9. so they mourn, becoming of their my best beloved and approved friend Hortensio, Shr. woe, 127, 13. tearing of papers, Compl. 6. whom I I, 2, 2. but of all, the burst and the ear-deafening voice left cooling of the air with sighs, Tp. I, 2, 222. as will- o' the oracle surprised my sense, Wint. Ill, 1, 8. York ing as bondage e'er of freedom, HI, 1, 89. while other is most unmeet of any man, HCB I, 3, 167. 1 do not sports are tasking of their minds, Wiv. IV, 6,30. he's like the Tower of any place, R3 HI, 1, 68. I would hearing of a cause, Meas. II, 2, 1. you granting of my not be a Roman of all nations, Cor. IV, 5, 185. of all suit, II, 4, 70. raising of more aid we came again, Err. men else I have avoided thee, Mcb. V, 8, 4. of all the V, 153. nature drawing of an antic, Ado in, 1, 63. va- days in the year, I came to't that day, Hml. V, 1, 155. luing of her, IV, 1,141. so I, admiring of his qualities, Used to denote a quality: his art is of such power, Mids. I, 1, 231. both warbling of one song, 111,2, 206. Tp. 1, 2, 372. be of comfort; my father's of a better I am debating of my present store, Merch I, 3, 54. nature, 495. it must needs be of subtle, tender and delisearching of Ay wound, As II, 4, 44. here was he merry, cate temperance, II, 1,41. who are of such sensible and hearing of a song, II, 7,4. as she was writing of it, IV, nimble lungs, 174. are you offourscore pound ayeart 3, 10. ovtreyeing of his odd behaviour, Shr. Ind. I, 95. Meas. II, 1, 204. I am not of many words, Ado I, 1, 'tis by the seaside, browsing of ivy, Wint HI, 3, 69. 158. his hair is of the dissembling colour, As 111, 4, their neighing courses daring of the spur, H4B IV, 1, 7. now I find thy saw of might, III, 5, 82. shall my 119. disgracing of these colours, H6A III, 4, 29. we father's will be of no forced John I, 130. is not my took him setting of boys' copies, H6B IV, 2, 95. War- arm of lengthf R2 IV, 11. are you of good or evilf Oth. wick, backing of the Duke of York, H6C II, 2, 69. the V, 1, 65 etc. After substantives: the expense of spirit shepherd, blowing of his nail, II, 5, 3. here ye lie bait- in a waste of shame is hut in action, Sonn. 129, 1 ing of bombards, H8 V, 4, 85. visiting of him, Troil. (waste of shame = shameful waste), two loves I have II, 3, 87. engaging and redeeming of himself , V, 5, 39. of comfort and despair, 144, 1 (the one giving comwanting of thy love, Rom. II, 2, 78. culling of simples, fort, the other making me desperate), god of power, V, 1, 40. I was writing of my epitaph, Tim. V, 1, 188. Tp. I, 2, 10 ( = powerful god), a prince of power, 55. saving of thy life, Caes. V, 3, 38. shaking of my arm, the fire and cracks of sulphurous roaring, 204. gentleHml. II, 1, 92. the ocean, overpeering of his list, IV, 5, men of brave mettle, II, 1,182. this lord of weak remem99. mumbling of wicked charms, Lr. II, 1, 41. is now brance, 232. men of sin, III, 3, 53. a gentleman of bloody

798 Gent. Ill, 1,121. pageant» of delight, IT, 4, 164. in a robe of white, Wiv. IT, 4, 72. our dance of autom, T, 5, 79. save that toe do the denunciation lack of outward order, Mens. I, 2, 152. a man of stricture and firm abstinence, I, 3, 12. a dish of tome three-pence, 11, 1, 95. a man of fourscore pound, 127. a mind of honour, II, 4, 179. one alt of luxury, T, 506. many such-like liberties of sin, Err. I, 2, 102. spots of grey, Ado T, 3, 27. an eye of favour, T, 4, 22. an eye of love, 24. yon fiery oes and eyes of light, Mids. HI, 2, 188. your mind of love, Merch. II, 8,42, cf. 6,43. terms of zeal, T, 205. it was a passion of earnest, As IT, 3, 172. Kate of my consolation, Sbr. II, 191. my similes of comfort, All's T, 2, 26. before I have got strength of limit, Wint. Ill, 2, 107. eyes of blood, John IT, 2, 265. an eye of death, H4A I, 3, 143. a man of falsehood, II, 1, 71. looks of favour, T, 1, 31. an adopted name of privilege, V, 2, 18. their eyes of fire, II4B IT, 1, 121. apes of idleness, IT, 5, 123. an enemy of craft and vantage, H5 III, 6, 153. a lad of life, an imp of fame, IT, 1, 45. we have consented to all terms of reason, V, 2, 357. planets of mishap, H6A I, 1, 23. why a king of years should be to be protected like a child, H6B II, 3, 28. this staff of honour, 43. a quicksand of deceit, H 6 C T , 4, 26. lump of de/ormity, R3 1, 2, 57. the king's name is a tower of strength, T, 3, 12. those suns of glory, H8 1, 1, 6. from a mouth of honour, 137. consequence of dread, II, 4,214. you take a precipice for no leap of danger, T, 1, 140. this oracle of comfort, T, 5, 67. the thing of courage, Troil. I, 3, 51. to end a tale of length, 136. a proof of strength, T, 2, 113. the coal of fire, Cor. I, 1, 177. the man of my soul's hate, I, 5, 11. those maims of shame, IT, 5, 93. thou boy of tears, T, 6, 101. his fruit of bastardy, Tit. T, 1, 48. the parties of suspicion, Bom. T, 3, 222. no Rome of safety for Octavius yet, Caes. Ill, 1, 289. a fetch of wit, Hral. II, 1, 38 (Ff of warrant). we of wisdom and of reach, 64. they have dealt with me like thieves of mercy, IT, 6, 21. her brow of youth, Lr. I, 4, 306. a fixed figure for the time of scorn, Oth. IT, 2, 54. the Jove of power make me your reconciler, Ant. Ill, 4, 29. a thing of pity, Cymb. T,4,47. some marks of secret on her person, T, 5, 206. Joined to adjectives, = concerning, with respect to, in: false of heart, Sonn. 109, 1. Wint. IT, 3, 116. slow of sail, Err. I, 1, 117. so shrewd of thy tongue, Ado II, 1, 20. black of hue, Mids. Ill, 1, 128. pale of cheer, 111, 2, 96. quick of apprehension, 178. too rude and bold of voice, Merch. II, 2, 190. an honest woman oj her word, III, .1, 8. hard of hearing, Shr. II, 184. true of heart, Tw. II, 4, 109. my nearest of kin, Wint. Ill, 2, 54. a tall fellow of thy hands, T, 2, 177. forward of her breeding, IV, 4, 591. full warm of blood, John T, 2, 59 (M. E d d . f u l l of warm blood), so light of foot, R2 III, 4, 92. a proper fellow of my hands, H4B II, 2, 72. hard of heart, H5 111, 3, 11. of parents good, of fist most valiant, IT, 1, 46. he is the next of blood, H6B I, 1, 151. so weak of courage and in judgment, H6C IV, 1, 12. not ignoble of descent, 70. too late of our intents, R3 111, 5, 69 (cf. Short), of his own body he was ill, H8 IT, 2, 43. firm of word, Troil. IT, 5, 97. thin of substance, Horn. I, 4, 99. so senseless of expense, Tim. II, 2, 1. unshaked of motion, Caes. HI, 1, 70. it\firm of purpote, Mcb. II, 2, 52. sure of foot, III, 1, 38. false of heart, light of ear, bloody of hand, Lr. Ill, 4, 95. lame of sense, Oth. I, 3, 63. swift

0 of foot, 11,3, V&l.free of speech, 111,3,185. so loose of 416. true of mind, 111« 4,27. dull of tongue, Ant. Ill, 3, 19. quenched of hope, not longing, Cymb. T,5,196. Supplying the place of the genitive case of other languages; in a possessive sense: the heat of this descending sun, Yen. 190. the circuit of this ivory pale, 230. the engine of her thoughts, 367. the deadly bullet of a gun, 461. the sweetness of the spoil, 553. tn the very lists of love, 595. the deep dark cabins of her head, 1038. the principal men of the army, Lacr. Arg. 5. at the tent of Sextus Tarquinius, ib. the virtues of his wife, 6 etc. etc. Before personal pronouns: heir to the lands of me, Shr. T, 1, 89. these curses turn the force of them upon thyself, H6B III, 2, 332. he rubs the vein of him, Troil. II, 3, 210. Denoting the subject of an action: barred the aidance of the tongue, Ven. 330. the conflict of her hue, 345. a war of looks, 355. the warm approach of sweet desire, 386. workmanship o/ nature, 734 etc. etc. Peculiar expression: the bringing home of bell and burial, Hml. T, 1, 256. Before personal pronouns: do not omit the heavy offer of it, Tp. II, 1, 194. it was the death of him, H4A II, 1, 14. not a man comes for redress of thee, B6C III, 1, 20 ( = that thou mayst redress), miserable by the death of him, R3 1, 2, 27. grapples you to the heart and love of us, Mcb. Ill, 1, 106. to add the death of you, IT, 3, 207. Joining things pertaining to each other in any manner: the precedent of pith and livelihood, Ven. 26. god of war, 98. law of nature, 171. the sense offeeling, 439. the rights of time, 759. the manner of his dealing, Lucr. Arg. 21. the family of the Tarquins, 22. the king of Naples, Tp. I, 2, 112. she was of Carthage, II, 1, 82. men ofjnd, II, 2, 61. widows of this business' making, II, 1, 133. wilt thou be of our consort f G e n t IT, 1, 64. is nor of heaven nor earth, V, 4, 80. which of you know Ford of this town? Wiv. I, 3, 29. the old fantastical duke of dark corners, Meas. IV, 3, 164. two ships, of Corinth that, of Epidaurus this, Err. I, 1, 94. you are of Epidamnum, I, 2, 1. Kate of Kate-hall, Shr. II, 189. it is something of my negligence, nothing of my purpose, Tw. Ill, 4, 280. of whence are yout not of this country, Meas. Ill, 2, 230. Hector of Troy, H4B II, 4, 237. is she of the wickedt 354. of prisoners Hotspur took Mordake etc. H4A I, 1, 70. I had thought I had had men of some understanding and wisdom of my council, H8 T, 3, 136 (cf. the words City, Country, River, Town, Name etc. etc.). Peculiar use: the stillitory of thy face, Ven. 443 (the face itself being the stillitory). the closure of my breast, 782. written in the margent of his eyes, Rom. I, 3, 86 ( t h e eyes themselves being the margin of the face), the division of the twentieth part, Merch. IV, 1, 329. the jewel of life, John V, 1, 40. Mis frail sepulchre of our flesh, R2 1, 3 , 1 9 6 . this Hydra son of war, H4BIV, 2,38 (i. e. war, this son of Hydra). a very little thief of occasion, Cor. II, 1, 32 (occasion itself being the thief'. In a temporal sense, — during, in: not be seen to wink of all the day, L L L I, 1, 43. there sleeps Titania sometime of the night, Mids. II, 1, 253. did I never speak of all this timet Shr. Ind. 2, 84. did you not of late days hear, H8 II, 1, 147. as of late days our neighbours can dearly witness, T, 3, 29. my custom always of the afternoon, Hml. I, 5, 60. Perhaps also of her widowhood — during her w. in Shr. II, 124. Of late, of old etc. see under Late, Old etc. SOMI,

0

799

Confounded with on (cf. O n ) : pox of your love- II, 2, 44. the farthest off you could have been to him, letters, Gent. Ill, 1, 390. a plague of all drums, All's Wint. IV, 4, 723. three leagues o f f , Gent. V, 1, 11. IV, 3, 332. H4A II, 4, 127. God's blessing of your Ado I, 1, 4. Merch. Ill, 4, 31. H4B IV, 1, 19. H6C good heart, H 4 B II, 4, 329. A« c a n e of an errand, II, 1, 144. six miles off from Ampthill, H8 IV, 1, 27 Wiv. I, 4, 80. I go of message from the queen to etc. etc. Metaphorically: stand no more o f f , but give France, H6B IV, 1, 113. what your name is else I thyself unto my sick desires, All's IV, 2, 34. he shall in know not, nor by what wonder you do hit of mine, Err. strangeness stand no further off than in a politic disIII, 2, 30. to bestow it all of your worship, Ado III, tance, Oth. Ill, 3, 12. if you please to hold him off 5, 24. All's III. 5, 103. Tw. Ill, 4, 2. Cor. II, 3, 215. awhile, 248. that's o f f . Cor. II, 2, 64 (not to the purI hear as good exclamation on your worship as of any pose). 2) to a distance, away from a place: set her two man, Ado III, 5, 29. ride of a horse, 40. we'll have dancing afterward. First, of my word, V, 4, 123. Tit. courses off to sea again, Tp. I, 1, 53 (away from the IV, 3, 59. therefore of all hands must we be forsworn, shore), lay her o f f , ib. I'U go farther o f f , Tp. Ill, 2, L L L IV, 3, 219. a box of the ear, Merch. I, 2, 86. 81. I will fetch off my bottle, IV, 213. go o f f ; I discard turn of no hand, II, 2, 45. he had more hair of his tail you; go o f f , Tw. Ill, 4, 99. on mine own accord I'U o f f , than I have of my face, 104. both of one horse, Shr. Wint. II, 3, 63. he is settled, not to come o f f , in his IV, 1, 71. I'll venture so much of my hawk or hound, displeasure, H8 III, 2, 23. alone he entered the mortal but twenty times so much upon my wife, V, 2, 72. I'll gate,... aidless came o f f , Cor. II, 2, 116. let me request be revenged of her, H4B II, 4, 167 (Ff on), he cried you o f f , Ant. II, 7,127. the soul and body rive not more out of sack, H511,3,29. Cor. 1,1,273. of purpose, B 6 A in parting than greatness going o f f , IV, 13, 6 etc. V, 4, 22. a proper man, of mine honour, H6B IV, 2, 3) denoting separation in general: leave off dis103. of the city's cost, IV, 6, 3; cf. 1, I, 60. his virtues, course of disability, Gent. II, 4, 109 (cf. Leave), innot virtuously of his own part beheld, Troil. II, 3, 127 constancy falls off ere it begins, V, 4, 113 (cf. Fall), (Qq on), they take vengeance of such kind of men, Tit. hang o f f , thou cat, Mids. Ill, 2, 260. off with it while V, 2, 63. take it of my soul, Tim. HI, 4, 70. how fares 'tis vendible, AU'sI, 1,168. spin it (your hair) o f f , Tw. our cousin Hamlet t Of the chameleon's dish, Hml. Ill, 1, 3, 110. some must go o f f , Mcb. V, 8, 36 ( = be de2,98. to keep one's eyes of either side's nose, Lr. 1,5,22. ducted). my crown I should give o f f , John V, 1, 27. Omitted -, at either end the mast, Err. I, 1, 86. she shake it off (your heaviness). Tp. I, 2, 307. shake off is t the rear our birth, Wint. IV, 4, 592. upon this slumber, II, 1, 304. I will put off my hope, III, 3, 7. side the sea, J o h n II, 488. on this side Tiber, Caes. sit like a jackanapes, never o f f , H 5 V, 2, 148 (cf. Ill, 2, 254. of either side's nose, L r . I, 5, 22. on each Break). Used of a head cut from the body: Meas. side her, Ant. 11, 2, 206. o* the other side your monu- IV, 3 , 1 2 0 . H6B IV, 1,17. B 3 IV, 5 , 4 . Caes. II, 1,183. ment, IV, 15, 8. it went o' the backside the town, Cymb. off with his head, Meas. IV, 2, 222. All's IV, 3, 342. I, 2, 14. all the rest revolted faction, B2 II, 2, 57 (only H6C V, 5, 3. B3 III, 4, 78. V, 3 , 3 4 4 . Applied to arin Q l ; the other O. Edd. rest of the r.). on either hand ticles of dress: Ven. 1089. Meas. V, 360. Mids. IV, thee there are squadrons pitched, H6A IT, 2, 23. south 1, 85. Shr. IV, 1, 147. All's III, 2, 60. Wint. IV, 3, the city mills, Cor. I, 10, 31. Cymb. I I , 4 , 81. no 55. 58. B2 1,4,31. H5 III, 7, 57. H6BII, 1,150. Lr. manner person, R3 III, 5, 108 (Qq of person), what III, 4 , 1 1 3 . Ant. II, 7,63. IV, 14,37. Cymb. 11,2,33 trade art thout Caes. I, 1, 5. any moment leisure, Hml. etc. Peculiar passage: since the wisdom of their choice I, 3, 133. many my near occasions, Tim. Ill, 6 , 1 1 . is rather to have my hat than my heart, I will praetue many our contriving friends in Rome, Ant. I, 2, 189. the insinuating nod and be off to Stem most counterfeitly, the Duke Alenfon, L L L II, 61. the stout Earl Northum- Cor. 11,3,107 (i. e. take off my hat, stand bareheaded; berland, H8 IV, 2, 12. the country Maine and Anjou, cf. R2 1 , 4 , 3 1 . Ant. II, 7, 63). Followed by of: a faU H6A V, 3, 154. in the famous ancient city Tours, off of a tree, H6B II, 1, 96. Off and on = to and fro: H6B I, 1, 5. I, 3, 53. Cor. I, 3, 111. V, 6, 93. within I swam, ere I could recover the shore, five and thirty the parish Saint Lawrence Poultney, H8 I, 2, 152. his leagues off and on, Tp. Ill, 2, 17. surname Coriolanus, Cor. V, 3, 170. thy stolen name 4) modifying verbs by the idea of an easy and Coriolanus, V, 6, 89. happy proceeding (almost = to the best advantage): Superfluous: cousin of Hereford, B2 1,1, 28. H6B to bear off any weather, Tp. II, 2 , 1 9 . do not smile at I, 1, 65. 167. 172. H6C IV, 8, 34. R3 III, 4, 37. Ill, me that I boast her o f f , IV, 1, 9. it came hardly o f f , 7, 227. IV, 2, 1. uncle of Exeter, H5 II, 2, 39. IV, Gent. II, 1, 115. this comes off well, Meas. II, 1, 57. 7, 191. H6B I, 1, 56. brother of Gloster, H6C III, 2, it comes so smoothly o f f , L L L IV, 1, 145 (cf. Come), a 1. IV, 5, 16. B 3 I, 3, 62. father of Warwick, H6C fine volley of words, and quickly shot o f f , Gent. II, 4, V, 1, 81. my son of York, B 3 II, 4, 6. Lr. I, 1, 42. 34. and speak off half a dozen dangerous words, Ado 43. aunt of Gloster, E 3 IV, 1, 2. — Used after many V, 1, 97 (O. Edd. of), she did print your royal father transitive verbs, originally perhaps in a partitive o f f , conceiving you, Wint. V, 1, 125. the truth of it sense: see Accept, Allow, Bear, Dislike, Distinguish, stands off as gross as black and white, H5 II, 2, 103 Hope, Like etc. etc. (striking the eye), your skill shall, like a star f the Off (sometimes confounded with of in O. Edd.), darkest night, stick fiery off indeed, Hml. V, 2, 268. adv. 1) not near or by the side of a thing, but at a to drink off = to drink without hesitation: drinks off distance from i t : that our bloods stand off in differences candles' ends, H4B II, 4, 267. this distilled liquor drink so mighty, All's II, 3, 127. far o f f , Ven. 697. 973. Tp. thou o f f , Bom. IV, 1, 94. drink off this potion, Hml. I, 2,44. V, 316. Caes. Ill, 2,171. Ant. II, 5,11. Cymb. V, 2, 337. Ill, 3, 60. far off from, R2 III, 3, 45. afar o f f , Wiv. 5) from off — from: from off a hill, Compl. 1. 1, 1, 216. Ado 111, 3, 160. farther o f f , Tp. Ill, 2, 92. ere I take this charm from off her sight, Mids. II, 1, farther off from thee, Sonn. 28, 8. lie further o f f , Mids. 183. take this transformed scalp from off the head,

800

0

IV, 1, 70. retire from off these fields, H5 IV, 3, 87. precipitation from off the rock Tarpeian, Cor. Ill, 3, 103. leap from off the battlements, Bom. IT, 1, 78. he was carried from off our coast, Cymb. Ill, 1, 26. put my brogues from off my feet, IT, 2, 214. Off, prepos. from, away from: lead off this ground, Tp. II, 1, 323. fetch you a hair off the great Cham's beard, Ado II, 1, 277. speaks a little off the matter, HI, 5, 10 (O. Edd. o f ) . I could shake them off my coat, As I, 3, 16. to pluck him off me, Shr. IT, 1, 80. thou hast a son shall take this disgrace off me, All's II, 3, 250. this present enterprise set off his head, H4A T, 1, 88. to come off the breach, H4B II, 4, 55. her pinked porringer fell off her head, H8 T, 4, 50. to lay his fingers off it, Caes. I, 2, 243. pulling scarfs off Caesar's images, 289. brought off the field, Mcb. T, 8, 44. keep off them, Ant. II, 7, 66. our Britain seems as off it, but not in it, Cymb. Ill, 4, 141 (O. Edd. of; cf. Of), thou mayst cut a morsel off the spit, Per. IV, 2, 142. Offal, waste meat, the parts of a butchered animal not fit for use: a barrow of butcher's o. Wiv. Ill, 5, 5. Hence — refuse: what trash is Rome, what rubbish and what o. Caes. 1, 3, 109. I should have fatted all the region kites with this slave's o. Hml. II, 2, 608 (i. e. with this slave, who is no more worth than offal). Offeap, to take off the cap: three great ones ... —ed to him, Oth. I, 1,10 (Qq oft capt). Offence, 1) harm, hart: worm nor snail, do no o. Mids. II, 2, 23. faster than his tongue did make o. his eye did heal it up, As III, 5, 117. to do o. and scath in Christendom, John II, 75. and then our arms, like to a muzzled bear,... hath all o. sealed up, 250. when I give occasion of o., then let me die, H6C I, 3, 44. you have some sick o. within your mind, Caes. II, 1, 268 {sick o. = harmful disorder), so shall he waste his means, weary his soldiers, doing himself o. IV, 3, 201. than it should do o. to Cassio, Oth. II, 3, 222. there is more o. in that than in reputation, 268 (Ff sense). 2) any thing that wonnds the feelings and causes displeasure, mortification, or even disgust, from the slightest mistake to the most grievous injury: him that bears the strong —'s cross, Sonn. 34, 12. where their love must appear o. Meas. II, 4, 30. Ado 111, 3, 88. IV, 1,99. All's II, 3, 270. H5 IV, 8, 49. H6A V, 5,35. Cor. V, 1,28. Hml. I, 5, 135. 111,2,243. 245. Ant. IV, 15, 45 (provoked by my o., i. e. the o. committed by me). Cymb. I, 5, 6. Per. II, 5, 52. With to: what my o. to him is, Tw. Ill, 4, 279. no o. to the general, Oth. II, 3, 109. to commit o. to: Cymb. II, 1, 32. to do o. to: Tw. Ill, 4, 249. Lr. 1, 4, 231. Oth. IV, 2, 166. to give o. to: Lr. II, 2, 121. Cymb. II, 1, 29. to take o. at: H6CIV, 1, 13. Per. II, 5,72. take no o. that 1 would not offend you, Ant. II, 5, 99. 3) displeasure, mortification: every o. is not a hate at first, Merch. IV, 1,68. a remorseful pardon, slowly carried, to the great sender turns a sour o. All's V, 3, 59. I am now so far in o. with my niece, Tw. IV, 2, 75. their souls are topful of o. John HI, 4, 180. your looks are sad; hath the late overthrow tDrought this o.l H6A 1, 2, 49. banish all o. V, 5, 96. full of quarrel and o. Oth. II, 3, 52. sith love breeds such o. 111,3,380. in his o. should my performance perish, Ant. Ill, 1, 26. to bar your n. herein, Cymb. I, 4, 122. 4) any transgression, from the slightest fault to the greatest crime: Lucr. 613. 738. 749. 1071. 1483.

1702. Sonn. 51, 1 (slow o. = fault of slowness). 89, 2. 110,4. Compl. 183. G e n t IV, 1, 25. T, 4, 76. Wiv. IV, 4, 12. V, 5, 238. Meas. I, 2, 90. 125. 139. II, 1, 27. 195. II, 2, 88. 102. II, 4, 85. Ill, 1, 100. IV, 2, 113. V, 540. Err. I, 1, 35. V, 127. Ado IV, 1, 284. V, 1,216. 235. L L L l , 2 , 151. V, 1, 147. As III, 2, 367. All's IV, 3, 271. V, 3, 23. Tw. Ill, 3, 30. WinL IV, 4, 822. J o h n I, 257. B2 III, 2, 134. IV, 230. H4A I, 2, 240. 11,3, 41. Ill, 2, 19. V, 2, 7. 20. H4B IV, 1, 69. 160. IV, 5, 103. H5 II, 2,181. H6A IV, 1, 75. R3 I, 4, 187. II, 4, 45. H8 II, 1, 84. II, 2, 68. V, 1, 12. V, 3, 125. Troil. Ill, I, 80. V, 2, 53. Cor. I, 1, 179. Tit. V, 3, 182. Rom. Ill, 1, 191. Tim. V, 1, 154. Caes. I, 3, 158. Ill, 2, 43. IV, 3, 8. Hml. I, 5, 137. Ill, 1, 127. III,3,36. 47. 58. IV, 3, 7. IV, 5, 218. Lr. I, 1, 221. I, 2, 127. II, 2, 95. II, 4, 199. IV, 2, 47. Oth. II, 3, 211. Ill, 4, 115. Cymb. I, 1, 106. Ill, 6, 64. V, 5, 334. Per. I, 2, 28. 92. II, 3, 68. II, 4, 5. II, 5, 52. With to; his last —s to us, Cor. V, 6, 127. to do an o.: Meas. II, 3, 14. Ado V, 1, 217. All's V, 3, 14. Tw. Ill, 4, 344. W i n t I, 2, 83. H6B III, 1, 59. R3 111, 7, 111. to make an o.: Meas. Ill, 2, 15. IV, 2, 200. H5 IV, 8, 59. Lr. II, 4, 61. Peculiar use: may one be pardoned and retain the o.t Hml. 111,3,56 (i.e. the fruits of his crime). OfTcncefal, criminal: your most o. act was mutually committed, Meas. II, 3, 26. Offencelesa, inoffensive, harmless: beat his o. dog to affright a lion, Oth. II, 3, 275. Offend, 1) trans, a) to harm, to hurt, to injure: dispersed those vapours that —ed us, Err. I, 1, 90. thou —est thy lungs to speak so loud, Merch. IV, 1, 140. the dust that did o.it(mj eye) All's V, 3, 55. he shall not o. your majesty, John 111, 3, 65. Hubert will not o. thee, IV, 1, 132. these rebels o. none but the virtuous, H4A III, 3, 214. she is pistol-proof; you shall hardly o. her, H4B II, 4, 126. this last surrender of his will but o. us, Lr. I, 1, 310. Absol.: a stone is silent and —eth not, Tit. Ill, 1, 46. b) to annoy, to pain, to molest: if the true concord ...do o. thine ear, Sonn. 8, 6. the rankest compound of villanous smell that ever —ed nostril, Wiv. Ill, 5, 94. if bawdy talk o. you, Meas. IV, 3, 188. your silence most —s me, Ado U, 1,345. himself being ed, Merch. IV, 1, 58. the loathsomeness of them —s me, Wint. IV, 3, 59. we'll not o. one stomach, H5 II Chor. 40. they o. our sight, IV, 7, 62. buzz to o. thine ears, H6C II, 6, 95. such things as might o. the weakest spleen, Troil. II, 2, 128. what —s you, ladyl III, 2, 151. no more of this; it does o. my heart, Cor. II, 1, 185. we but o. him, Tim. IV, 3, 175. it —s me to the soul to hear, Hml. Ill, 2, 9. a salt and sorry rheum —s me, Oth. III, 4, 51. I will not stay to o.you, IV, 1, 258. no more o. our hearing, Cymb. V, 4, 94. c) to sin against, to trespass on, to wrong: he would give't thee, from this rank offence, so to o. him still, Meas. Ill, 1, 101. he hath —ed the law, III, 2, 16. who have you —ed, that you are thus bound, Ado V, 1, 232. never did I o. your highness, As I, 3, 54. if you o. him, I for him defy you, Tw. HI, 4, 345. —ing charity, J o h n 111, 4, 173. to see a son of mine o. you, H4B V, 2, 106. to cut off those that have —ed him, R3 I, 4, 225. in what have I — ed youl H8 II, 4, 19. how loath you are to o. daylight, Troil. Ill, 2,51. o. the stream of regular justice, Tim. V, 4, 60. wherein you may have —ed him, Lr. 1 , 2 , 1 7 5 . 1 never dido, you, Oth. V, 2, 59. I have —ed reputation, Ant. Ill, 11,49.

0

801

d) to displease, to mortify, to affront; absol.: / take an o. ( = to accept): Gent. IV, 1, 70. Merch. IV, thai! o. in dedicating my lines to ¡/our Iprdthip, Yen. 1, 318. As III, 5, 61. IV, 3, 60. All's III, 5, 104. H4A Dedic. 1. to o., himself being —ed, Merch. IV, 1, 58. V, 1, 106. Lr. Ill, 4, 161. Ant. II, 6, 31. 42. Offer, vb. 1) to present for acceptance or rejecit is not that — » , H6A III, 1, 35. if this servile usage once o. V, 3, 58. O, pardon, 1 o. Troil. IV, 5, 182. tion ; absol.: tee o. fair, H4A V, 1,114. Governing an this tongue had not —cd so, Caes. V, 1, 46. I cannot accns.: Tp. Ill, 1, 77. Gent. IV, 1, 69. Err. II, 2, 188. name it but I shall o. Per. IV, 6, 75. With an obj.: III, 2, 186. Merch. I, 3, 143. IV, 1, 293. Shr. II, 382. A d o III, 3, 87. Ill, 4, 34. V, 1,40. Mids. Ill, 2, 160. 383. B2 II, 1, 204. IV, 178. R3 II, 1, 77. H8 III, 1, As I, 1, 84. Shr. Ind. 1, 98. Tw. V, 220. Wint. IV. 66. 113. Troil. I, 2, 309. Cor. V, 3, 13. Tim. V, 1, 4, 711. H5 IV, 8, 51. H 6 A 11, 3, 76. R3 1, 4, 182. 48. 127. Hml. V, 2, 262. Lr. I, 1, 197. IV, 6, 270. 183. IV, 4, 178. Troil. V, 3, 4. Tit. II, 1, 100. II, 3, Ant. II, 7, 89. Cymb. I, 3,4. With a dat. and accus.: 161. Caes. Ill, 2, 32. 34. 36. 39. Mcb. Ill, 4, 57. Gent. IV, 4, 58. 61. Err. IV, 3, 6. Ado II, 1, 224. II, Hml. I, 5, 134. Ill, 4, 9. 10. Lr. V, 3, 127. Oth. II, 2, 41. Merch. IV, 1, 227. Shr. Ind. 1, 78. I, 2, 132. 3, 63. A n t II, 5, 99. Ill, 1, 26. —ed = displeased, All's IV, 3, 92. Wint. IV, 3, 87. John V, 1, 34. B2 angry: are you —ed toot B6C IV, 1, 19. it is —ed, II, 3, 32. H4B IV, 1, 75. H5 III Chor. 29. Ill, 5,60. Hml. I, 1, 50. devils, being —ed, Oth. II, 1, 112. if IV, 4, 21. H6A III, 1, 126. H6B IV, 8, 12. Tim. V, I should say myself—ed, Ant. II, 2,32. the —ed king, 1, 75. Caes. I, 2, 220. 221. 237. 241. 268. Hml. II, Cymb. I, 1, 75. be not —ed, L L L II, 204. All's I, 3, 2, 331. Lr. Ill, 1, 41. 202. T w . IV, 1, 54. H6A V, 3, 54. Mcb. IV, 3, 37. 2) to sacrifice: Lucr. 194. Wint. Ill, 1, 8. H4A Followed by with: I am —ed with you, Troil. V, 3, IV, 1, 115. H6B II, 1, 92. H6C II, 2, 32. Troil. IV, 77. with no man here he is —ed, R3 III, 4, 58. I can- 3, 9. Per. V, 3, 70. With up: H5 IV, 5, 18. H6A I, not be —ed with my trade, Per. IV, 6, 76. By in ( = 1, 46. Bom. Ill, 2, 104. Mcb. IV, 3, 16. Metaphoriby): make me not —ed in your distrust, Ant. Ill, 2, 33. cally, == to bring in like a sacrifice, to dedicate: she 2) intr. to commit a fanlt or a crime, to sin, to hath —ed to the doom a sea of melting pearl, Gent. trespass: Ven. 810. Meas. I, 2, 140. II, I , 29. 251. III, 1, 222. thou —est fairly to thy brother's wedding: II, 2, 4. V, 110. Ado III, 3,43. L L L IV, 3, 126. 132. to one his lands etc. As V, 4, 173. cf. W i n t IV, 4, 389. Mids. V, 108. 430. Merch. II, 9, 61. Shr. V, 1, 116. 3) to intend, to be ready, to attempt, (sometimes All's 111, 4, 6. Wint. I, 2, 57. H4A I, 2, 240. H4B almost = to dare); with an inf.: so —s he to give 1,1, 97. H5 I, 1, 29. IV, 3, 29. H6B II, 4, 59. IV, what she did crave, Ven. 88. if by strong hand you o. 7, 103. H6C V, 5, 54. Tim. V, 4, 35. 42. Lr. I, 2, to break in, Err. Ill, 1, 98. man is but a patched fool, 42. II, 4, 198. IV, 6, 172. Oth. I, 3, 80. IV, 1, 209. if he will o. to say what methought I had, Mids. IV, 1, Cymb. I, 4, 50. Per. IV, 1, 80. IV, 2, 40. 216. if he should o. to choose, Merch. I, 2, 99. my Offender, 1) one that has wronged another: the conscience is but a kind of hard conscience to o. to —'# sorrow lends but wealc relief to him that bears the counsel me to stay with the Jew, 11, 2, 30. o. to swear strong offence's cross, Sonn. 34, 11. upon a book, 167. to o. to get your living by the co2) one that has committed a sin or crime, a guilty pulation of cattle, As III, 2, 84. what are you that o. person, a criminal: Lucr. 612. Sonn. 42, 5. Wiv. II, to beat my servants f Shr. V, 1, 65. if he do not o. to 2, 196. Meas. IV, 2, 116. Ado IV, 2, 7. V, 1, 314. betray you, All's III, 6, 31. a ram-tender, to o. to have Merch. IV, 1, 355. As IV, 1,204. All's V, 3, 26. Wint. his daughter come into grace, Wint. IV, 4, 805. I had V, 1, 59. E2 I, 2, 8. H4A V, 5, 15. H4B IV, 1,216. as lief they would put ratsbane in my mouth as o. to H5 III, 6, 113. H6A III, 1, 130. H6B I, 3, 136. II, stop it with security, H4B I, 2, 48. Agamemnon is a 1, 203. Ill, 1, 122. 126. 176. B3 HI, 4, 67. H8 V, fool to o. to command AchiUes, Troil. II, 3, 67. I—ed 3, 121. Tit. V, 2, 40. Hml. IV, 3, 6. Lr. II, 1, 91. to awaken his regard for his private friends, Cor. V, Cymb. V, 5, 300. With to: as an o. to your father, I , 23. all that o. to defend him, Lr. Ill, 6, 101. he —ed H4B V, 2, 81. to cut a caper at the proclamation, but he made a groan Offendress, the fem. of offender: a desperate o. at it, Per. IV, 2, 116. against nature, All's I, 1, 153. With an accns., = to attempt, to prepare, to meOffensive, 1) causing offence, stirring to anger, nace, to bring npon, to inflict: when every grief is quarrelsome: an o. wife that hath enraged him on to entertained that's —ed, Tp. 11, 1, 16. I do not think offer strokes, H4B IV, 1, 210. the knight would o. it, Wiv. II, 1, 180. wit... —edby 2) displeasing, disagreeable: what most he should a child to an old man, L L L V, 1, 65. that women are dislike seems pleasant to him; what like, o. Lr. IV, 2,11. so simple to o. war where they should kneel for peace, Offer, subst. a tender or proposal to be accepted Shr. V, 2, 162. you o. him a wrong something ut\filial, or rejected: Pilgr. 54. Merch. IV, 1, 438. As Epil. Wint. IV, 4, 416. that greatness should so grossly o. 23. Shr. II, 388. Wint. II, 2, 48. H4A IV, 3, 80. V, it (foul play) John IV, 2, 94. a mighty and a fearful 2, 2. V, 5, 4. II4B IV, 1, 147. 150. H5 1, 1, 82. Ill head as ever —ed foul play in a state, 114 A III, 2, Chor. 32. Rom. II, 4, 190. Mcb. IV, 3, 43. Hml. I, 169. hath enraged him on to o. strokes, H4B IV, 1, 2, 46. Ant. II, 6, 40. Ill, 12, 29. to accept an o. R2 211. o. nothing hereI H5 II, 1, 41. 'tis as arrant a II, 3, 162. to embrace an o. Ado V, 1, 303. Tw. V, piece of knavery as can be —ed, IV, 7, 4. those bitter 328. John IV, 3, 13. V, 7, 84. Per. Ill, 3, 38. to for- injuries which Somerset hath —ed to my house, H6A sake an o. ( = to refuse): H6A IV, 2, 14. to make an II, 5, 125. o. him no violence, H6C 1, 1, 33. more mi0. L L L V, 2, 810. Merch. IV, 1, 81. 289. H5 I, 1, 75. series than my enemies dare o. H8 111, 2,390. that time Ant. II, 6, 34. to omit an o. ( = to refuse): Tp. II, —ed sorrow; this, generaljoy, IV, 1,6. it (double deal1, 194. H8 III, 2, 4. to pass an o. (in the same sense): ing) were an ill thing tobe —ed to any gentlewoman, Rom. John II, 258. to refuse an o. R2 IV, 16. Ill, 2, 31. to II, 4,180. to o. it the show of violence, Hml. 1,1,144. we shake off an o. (in the same sense): Ant. Ill, 7, 33. to scorn her most, when most she—s blows, Ant. Ill, 11,74.

802

0

Absol., •= to menace, to act offensively: tee o/ike 7) persons entrusted with public functions, of—ing side must keep aloof from strict arbitrement, H4Aficers: the o. did distinctly his full function, H8 1, 1, IV, 1, 69. his power, like to a jangle*» Bon, may o., but 44. the insolence of o. Hml. Ill, 1, 73. not hold, H4B IV, 1, 219. 8) a room or apartment intended for particular Offerlag, oblation, sacrifice: Tw. V, 117. H4A duties attached to the service of a honse: unpeopled I, 2, 141. Trail. V, 3, 17. Caes. II, 2, 39. Mcb. II, — s, R2 I, 2, 69. draw anew the model in femer —», H4B I, 3, 47. through the cranks and —* of man, Cor. 1, 52. Oflle«, subst. 1) particular duty: not only in the 1, 1, 141. when all our —s have been oppressed with simple o. of love, Wiv. IV, 2, 5. you have forgot a hus-riotus feeders, Tim. 11,2,167. sent forth great largess band's o. Err. Ill, 2, 2. I will attend my husband, for to your —», Mcb. II, 1,14. all —s are open, Oth. II, 2,9. Ofllc«, vb. to perform a particular duty or funcit is my a. V, 99. the ministration and required o. on tion, to serve in a place: although the air of paradise my particular. All's II, 5, 65. know the o. that belongs did fan the house and angels —doll, All's III, 2, 129. to such, H6A III, 1, 55. 2) a charge conferred by pnblic or private autho- With an accns. denoting the effect: cannot o. me from rity; a place: Lncr. 628. Tp. I, 2, 84. Wiv. V, 5, 44. my son Coriolanus, Cor. V, 2, 68. Offlce-kadfe, sign or emblem of office: H6B I, Meas. I, 3, 40. II, 1, 276. IV, 2,10. 119. V, 466. Err. III, 1, 44. Ado III, 3, 54. 59. Merch. II, 9, 41. 61. 2, 25. Offlced, having a place or function: so stands Shr. Ind. 2, 36. R2 II, 3, 27. H4A V, 1, 34. H4B IV, 5, 130. V, 3, 120. 128. H6A I, 1, 175. H6B 1, this squire o. with me, Wint. I, 2, 172. my speculative 3, 138. B3 III, 7, 119. H8 I, 2, 16. 172. II, 4, 115. and o. instruments, Oth. I, 3, 271 (Qq active). Oflleer, 1) one who performs an office or service Ill, 2, 156. IV, 1, 15. V, 3, 33. Troil. I, 3, 88. 231. V, 6, 4. Cor. II, 1, 238. II, 3, 129. Ill, 3, 64. Tim. for another: 'tis an office of great worth, and you I, 2, 207. Caes. IV, 3, 11. Mcb. I, 7, 18. Lr. IV, 6, (Lucetta) an o. fit for the place, Gent. I, 2, 45. that's 163. Oth. I, 3, 118. II, 3, 218. Ill, 3, 375. IV, 2, 91. my office. Spoke like an o. Shr. V, 2, 37 (like one who does her bnsiness). a filthy o. he is in those suggestions 132. Ant. II, 3, 1. IV, 6, 27. Per. II, 1, 97. 3) the duty and function imposed by virtue of a for the young earl, All's III, 5, 18. your master, in his place conferred: do thy o., Muse, Sonn. 101,13. Meas. own change, or by ill —s, hath given me some worthy II, 2, 13. IV, 2, 129. Tw. Ill, 4, 359. H4B II, 1, 43. cause to wish things done undone, Caes. IV, 2, 7. soaks H5 III, 6, 148. speak your o. Tw. 1, 5, 223. so muchup the king's countenance, his rewards, his authorities; my o. H5 III, 6, 145. it is my o. H6B II, 4, 102. 103. but such —s do the king best service in the end, Hml. take thy o. from thee, R3 IV, 1, 26. your o., sergeant; IV, 2, 18. Caesar and Antonio have ever won more in execute it, H8 I, 1, 198. what are your —s, Cor. Ill, their o. than person, Ant. Ill, 1, 17. the gods can have no mortal o. more like a god than you, Per. V, 3, 62. 1, 35. bears that o. Tim. I, 2, 125. 2) retainer, servant: every o. his wedding garment 4) any particular function, agency, or employment: they (the eyes) resign their o. and their light, on, Shr. IV, 1, 50. calling my —s about me, Tw. II, Ven. 1039. time's o. is to fine the hate of foes, Lucr. 5, 53. his spongy —s, Mcb. I, 7, 71. 936. who so base would such an o. have as slanderous 3) a public functionary: Tp. I, 2, 84. Meas. II, death's-man to so base a slave t 1000. these —s shall2, 112. IV, 2, 93. L L L II, 162. As III, 1, 16. R2 1, profit thee and much enrich thy book, Sonn. 77, 13. 1, 204. I, 3, 44. H4B IV, 5, 118. H5 I, 2, 190. H6A Pilgr. 196. Tp. I, 1, 40. I, 2, 312. V, 156. Gent. I, I, 3, 72. I, 4, 44. H6C III, 1, 98. Cor. I, 5, 28. Ill, 2, 44. HI, 2, 40. 44. Meas. V, 369. 383. Ado II, 1, I, 93. 330. Ill, 3, 45. 78. V, 2, 3. Hml. IV, 5, 102. 183. 390. Ill, 1, 12. IV, 1, 268. V, 1, 27. V, 4, 14. Oth. I, 1, 183. Ant. Ill, 5, 19. Cymb. Ill, 1, 65 (cf. L L L IV, 3, 332. V, 2, 350. Mids. II, 2,8. Merch. II, Domestic). Especially applied to constables or catch6, 43. II, 9, 61. As I, 2, 43. Shr. Ind. I, 73. IV, 1, polls: Wiv. Ill, 3, 114. Meas. I, 3, 198. II, 1, 58. 34. 37. V, 2, 36. All's IV, 3, 68. V, 2, 52. V, 3, 305. 186. 194. Ill, 2, 32. V, 120. Err. IV, 1, 6. 61. 69. Wint. II, 2, 31. IV, 4, 582. V, 1, 77. John IV, 1, 119. 76. IV, 3, 29. IV, 4, 117. V, 230. 233. Ado III, 5, V, 2, 177. V, 7, 71. R2 I, 3, 256. II, 1, 47. IV, 5, 22. IV, 2, 73. 83. V, 1, 217. L L L I, 1, 271. Merch. 177. H4A V, 1, 112. H4B Ind. 28. I, 1, 101. H5 11, Ill, 1, 131. Shr. V, 1, 94. 98. Tw. Ill, 4, 352. H4A 1, 88. H6B III, 2, 93. B6C I, 4, 109. V, 6, 19. R3 II, 2, 114. H4B II, 1, 56. 117. 139. H6C 1, 4, 43. V, III, 5, 10. H8 11, 4, 190. Bom. IV, 5, 85. V, 1, 23. 6, 12. Or to other servants of public justice: R3 V, Tim. IV, 3, 237. Caes. V, 5, 29. Mcb. Ill, 3, 3. IV, I, 28 (Ff come lead me, —s, to the block of shame; 1, 68. Lr. Ill, 1, 42. V, 3, 248 (toho hath the o. = Qq come, sirs, convey me to etc.). Lr. V, 3, 1. Cymb. who is on duty). Oth. 1, 3, 394. Ill, 3, 410. Ant. I, V, 4, 180 ( = hangman). I, 5. II, 2, 216. Ill, 12, 10. Cymb. I. 6, 92. Ill, 5, 4) one who has a military command under ano10. V, 5, 257. ther: All's IV, 3, 226. 301. H5 IV, 1, 37. H6A III, 2, 5) an act of good will, a kind service: I would I 127. Cor. IV, 6, 30. 126. Oth. I, 1, 17. I, 3, 281. could do a good o. between you, Wiv. I, 1, 102. Ill, 1, II, 3, 198. 249. 280. IV, 1, 214. Ant. I, 2, 183. 49. I will no more enforce mine o. on you. All's II, 1, Offlelal, pertaining to an office or place: in the 129. these thy —s, so rarely kind, Wint. V, 1, 149. o. marks invested, Cor. II, 3, 148. Merch. IV, 1, 33. All's IV, 4, 5. Tw. Ill, 4, 278. Wint. Offlelana, ready to do service, busy : be every one II, 3, 189. IV, 3, 81. B2 II, 2, 137. H4B IV, 4, 24. o. to make this banquet, Tit. V, 2, 202. In a bad sense, H5 II, 2, 33. V, 2, 29. Mcb. II, 3, 142. Lr. II, ] , 108. = obtruding one's service, meddling: Mids. Ill, 2, II,4,107. 181. Oth. Ill, 4,113 (Ql duty). Per.11,5,48. 330. Wint. II, 3, 159. IV, 1, 871. H8 111, 2, 237. 6) an act of worship: for holy —s I have a time, Cor. I, 8, 14. H8 III, 2, 144. bows you to a morning's holy o. Cymb. Offspring, issue of the body, child or children, III, 3, 4. descendants: Lucr. 1757. Merch. 11, 5, 44. John II,

0

803

13. H6C IV, 4, 18. R3 V, 3, 136. Troil. II, 2, 207. Eldest). 1) advanced in years, aged: Ven. 837.1152. Compl. 128. Sonn. 68, 12. 97, 4. Tp. II, 1, 30. Ill, Tit. IV, 2, 79. Oft, frequently: Ven. 567. 1068. Lucr. 38. 70. 3, 2. 4. IV, 159. V, 15. Gent. II, 4, 69. Wiv. II, 1, 118. 131. Sonn. 77, 13. 78, 1. 128, 1. 142, 7. Compl. 11,2, 134. 144. Meas. I, 1,46. Ill, 1, 36. EIT. I, 1, 97. 15. Pilgr. 339. Gent. II, 4, 103. II, 6, 15. V, 4,103. IV, 2, 19. V, 317. Tw. 1, 3, 126. B2 V, 2, 13. Troil. Meas. I, 4, 78. II, 1, 280. 297. II, 4, 117. Ill, 1, 18. II, 2, 104 (Q elders). Cor. Ill, 1, 228 etc. etc. this fair IV, 1, 14. IV, 2, 159. Err. I, 2, 19. V, 56. LLL V, 2, child of mine shall sum my count and make my o. ex556. Mids. Ill, 2,389. Merch. 1,1.144. Ill, 3,22. As cuse, Sonn. 2, 11 ( = the excuse of my oldness). r U 111,4,50. 111,5,106. IV, 3, 135. V, 4, 87. All's 1,1, rack the* with o. cramps, Tp. I, 2, 369 such as old 115. 11,1,140. Tw. 111,4, 3 Cmore o.). John IV, 2, people are wont to sutler; cf. Aged), he'll shape his 204. H6A I, 4,3. H6B II, 4, 89. Ill, 2,161. IV, 1, o. course in a country new, Lr. I, 1, 190 (the course 134. IV, 4,1. V,2, 54. H6C I, 4, 11. 128. V, 2, 20. of his old age). B3 III, 1, 55. Troil. Ill, 2, 78. Ill, 3, 20. Bom. V, 3, 2) of any specified age: how o. are yovt As V, 1, 88. Ant. Ill, 6, 18. Cymb. I, 5, 14 etc. etc. many a 20. Lr. 1,4, 39. three years o. Tp. I, 2, 41. Wiv. I, I, time and o. Merch. I, 3, 107; cf. Many. 55. Meas. Ill, 2, 214. LLL IV, 2, 36. As IV, 1,95. V, As an adjective: by o. predict that I in heaven find, 2, 66. Shr. V, 1, 86 etc. at nine months o. H6B IV, 9, Sonn. 14, 8. 4. H6C HI, 1, 76. B3 II, 3, 17. at two hours o. II, 4, O f t e n , frequently: Ven. 825. Lacr. 565. 1237. 28. at twelve year o. Bom. I, 3, 2. Cymb. I, 1, 58. Ill, Sonn. 18,6. 105,13. Compl. 19. 20. Pilgr. 91. Tp. 3, 101. Peculiar phrases: one that is a prisoner nine 1, 2, 33. II, 1, 227. V, 193. Gent. I, 1, 74. II, 1, 171. years o. Meas. IV, 2, 135 ( = a prisoner since nine Ill, 1, 90. 350. IV, 1, 35. IV, 2, 74. Wiv. IV, 2, 108. years), my absence was not six months o. Err. I, 1,45. Meas. II, 4, 8. 13. Err. I, 1, 41. V, 66. LLL V, 2, in Ephesus I am but two hours o. II, 2, 150. ere we 752. Mids. I, 1, 214. II, 1, 125. V, 161. 190. 192. were two days o. at sea, Hml. IV, 6,15. changing still Merch. II, 7, 66. As III, 2, 63. V, 4, 42. Wint. V, 1, one vice, but of a minute o., for one not half so o. as 200. H6A II, 2, 56. V, 3, 193. H6B I, 1, 80. Ill, 1, that, Cymb. 11,5, 31. 268.367. Ill, 2, 114. IV, 1, 56. H6C I, 1, 127. Ill, 3) being of long continuance: o. woes, not infant 3, 131. Troil. Ill, 3, 20 etc. etc. many a time and o. sorrows, bear them mild, Lacr. 1096. to try an —er Tim. Ill, 1, 25; cf. Many. Compar. oftener: Meas. IV, friend, Sonn. 110, 11. the o. saying, Gent. V, 2, 11. 2, 54. Mids. II, 2, 93. H6BII, 1,90. Mcb. IV, 3,110. LLL IV, 1, 121 (cf. o. ends sub End), the o. Windsor As an adjective: in which my o. rumination wrapt way, Wiv. Ill, 1, 6. 'tis o. but true, IV, 2, 109. an o. me in a most humorous sadness, As IV, 1, 19. tale, IV, 4, 28. Ado I, 1, 218. this news is o. enough, Oftentimes, frequently: Ven. 845. Gent. Ill, 1, Meas. Ill, 2, 243. 296. IV, 3, 4. V, 2. Ado III, 2, 41. 26. Err. Ill, 1, 113. Shr. Ill, 2, 76. John IV, 2, 30. IV, 1, 208. V, 2, 78. LLL III, 21. IV, 3, 78. Mids. I, H4A III, 1, 27. 183. Mcb. I, 3, 123. I , 4 . Shr. Ill, 1,80. 81. Ill, 2, 30. 42. Tw. II, 4,3. O f t - s u M u e d , conquered many times: H6A I, John III, 4,145. H4AV,4, 102. B3 IV, 1,73. Caes. 5, 32. IV, 3, 31. Oth. I, 1, 37. Cymb. Ill, 5, 54 etc. Hence OfttUnea, often: Cymb. I, 6, 62. = accustomed, practised, customary: your o. vice still, O h , exclamation expressive of pain or sorrow: Gent. Ill, 1, 283. an o. lovemongtr, LLL II, 254. o. Tp.ll, 2,58.66. Wiv. V, 5,93. B3 I, 3 , 1 1 (Ff e here beheld, R2 IV, 321. to play my part in Fortune's p. H6B I, 2, 67. the flattering index of a direful p. R3 IV, 4, 85. shows, —s and sights of honour, H8 IV, 1, 11. in all Cupids p. there is presented no monster, Troil. Ill, 2, 81. I will put on his presence ... you shall see the p. of Ajax, III, 3, 273 (i. c. Ajax mimicked), 'tis a p., to keep us in false gaze, Olh. I, 3, 18. they are black vesper's —s, Ant. IV, 14, 8. Pageant, vb. to play, to mimic as in a theatre: he - »us, Troil. I, 3, 151. Pageantry, theatrical spectacles: Per. V, 2. 6. Pah, an exclamation of disgust: Hml. V, 1, 221 (FfpuA). Lr. IV, 6, 132. Pall, a wooden vessel in which water or milk is carried: Err. V, 173. L L L V,2,925. I have a hundred milch-kine to the p. Shr. II, 359. P a l l f n l , the quantity that a pail will hold: yond same cloud cannot choose but fall by —s, Tp. II, 2, 24. P a i n , subst. 1) an afflicting sensation of the body, smart, ache, throe, torture: Ven. 1034. Wiv. V, 5,

p

829

P a i n f u l , 1) giving distress to the body, torment90. Err. Ill, 1, 65. LLL IV, 3, 172. As III, 2, 340. R2 II, 1, 8. H6B III, 1, 377. Ill, 3, 4. R3 I, 4, 21. ing: the aged man is plagued with cramps and gouts Tit. II, 3, 285. Bom. I, 2, 47. Lr. V, 3, 185. Oth. and p. fits, Lucr. 856. with most p. feeling of thy speech, Ill, 3, 284. Ill, 4, 148. V, 2, 88. Ant. V, 2, 255. Per. Meas. 1,2, 38. 2) laborious, toilsome: the p. warrior, Sonn. 25, V, 1, 193. Used of the throes of childbirth: H6C I, 1, 221. V, 6, 49. B3 IV, 4, 303. Tit. IV, 2, 47. of the 9. some sports are p. Tp. Ill, 1, 1. i f it had been p. I would not have come, Ado II, 3, 261. p. study, LLL tortures of hell: John IV, 3, 138. B2 III, 1, 34. 2) any heavy suffering: this momentary jog breeds II, 23. p. labour both by sea and land, Shr. V, 2, 149. months of p. Lucr. 690. thrall to living death and p. marching in the p. field, H5 IV, 3, 111. the p. service, perpetual, 726. perplexed in greater p. 733. to should Cor. IV, 5, 74. by many a dem and p. perch, Per. Ill I have co-partners in my p. 789. 861. looking with Prol. 15. pretty ruth upon my p. Sonn. 132,4. 139, 14. 140, 4. P a l n f n l l y , 1) with distress of the body or mind: 141, 14. Pilgr. 219. Err. II, 1, 36. LLL I, 1, 73. IV, within which r i f t thou didst p. remain a dozen years, 3, 122. Mids. 1,1, 250. H6C III, 3, 128. B3 I, 3,168. Tp. I, 2, 278. thou hast p. discovered, Tim. V, 2 , 1 (so H8 IV, 2, 8. Hml. V, 2, 359. Lr. HI, 6, 115. Cymb. IV, as to distress us by the result of thy discovery). 2) laboriously: p. to pore upon a book, LLL I, 1, 2, 290. 3) punishment; preceded by on: accountant to the 74. who p. have brought a countercheck, John II, 223. P a i n t (cf. the subst. Painting) 1) to produce or law upon that p. Ueas. II, 4, 86. on p. of losing her tongue, L L L I, 1, 124. on p. to be found false, B2 I, to represent by delineation and colours: Ven. 212. 3, 106. 111. on p. of their perpetual displeasure, Lr. 601. Lucr. 1466. 1492. 1541. 1577. Sonn. 47, 6. Ill, 3 , 4 . on p. of punishment, Ant. 1,1, 39. on p. of 53, 8. Tp. II, 2,30. Wiv. IV, 5, 8. Meas. IV, 2,38. death, B2 I, 3, 42. H4B V, 5, 67. H6A I, 3, 79. IV, 1, Ado 1,1, 267. Mids. 1, 1, 235. Shr. Ind. 2, 52. 58. 47. B3 I, 3, 167. on the p. of death, H6B III, 2, 288. B2 V, 2, 16. H5 HI, 6, 32. 34. Tit. IV, 2, 98. Tim. I, upon p. of l i f e , B2 I, 3, 140. 153. on p. of torture, I, 156. 200. Mcb. II, 2, 55. V, 8, 26 ( — e d u p o n a pole, Rom. I, 1, 93. Preceded by in; no man should disturb 1. e. on cloth suspended on a pole). Hml. 11, 2, 502. your rest in p. of your dislike or p. of death, H6B III, Ant. II, 5, 116. Cymb. Ill, 4, 6. — ed cloth, i. e. cloth or canvas painted in oil and used for hangings in 2, 257. 4) work, toil, effort: since thou dost give me —s, rooms ;cf. Cloth)', who fears a sentence or an old Tp. I, 2, 242 (work or task to perform), to refresh man's saw shall by a —ed cloth be kept in awe, Lucr. the mind oj man after his studies or his usual p. Shr. 245. you will be scraped out of the —ed cloth, LLL III, 1, 12. which I with more than with a common p. V, 2, 579. I answer you right —ed cloth, from whence 'gainst all the world will r i g h t f u l l y maintain, H4B IV,you have studied your questions, As HI, 2, 290. as rag5, 224. my —s are quite forgot, B3 I, 3,117. he is ged as Lazarus in the —ed cloth, H4A IV, 2, 28. set franked up for hit — s, 314. your country's fat shall this in your —ed cloths, Troil. IV, 10, 46. 2) to colour, to dye: with Nature's own hand —ed, pay your —s the hire, V, 3, 258. so conversant with p. Sonn. 20,1. —ed Maypole, Mids. Ill, 2, 296. and p. Per. Ill, 2, 35. your knowledge, personal p. 46. 5) labour or trouble undergone for a certain pur- your face, Shr. 1,1, 65 (i. e. make it bloody), where of incensed pose: p. pays the income of each precious thing, Lncr. revenge did paint the fearful difference 334. the p. be mine, but thine shall be the praise, Sonn. kings, John III, 1, 237. to gild refined gold, to p. the 38, 14. in spite of physic,painting,p. and cost, Pilgr. l i l y , IV, 2, 11. —ed with the crimson spots of blood, 180. with p. purchased, LLL I, 1, 73. conned with 253. H5 III, 5,49. H6A II, 4, 50. H6C 1,4, 12. Cor. cruel p. Mids. V, 80. H6AV, 3, 138. B3 IV, 4, 303. II, 2,115. Rom. 1, 4, 5. Tim. IV, 3, 59. Especially Troil. Ill, 3, 30. IV, 1, 57. Mcb. II, 3, 55. Lr. Ill, 1, used of colours laid on the face for embellishment; 53. Cymb. Ill, 3, 50. to take p. Merch. II, 2, 194. hath absol.: why should false —ing imitate his cheek, Sonn. ta'en much p. 118 III, 2, 72. take the p., but cannot 67, 5. in spite of—ing, Pilgr. 180. your whores using pluck the p e l f , Pilgr. 192. —ing, Meas. IV, 2, 40. —ing and usurping hair, LLL Pain* (always used as a sing.: Gent. II, 1, 118. IV, 3, 259. 263. does Bridget p. still? Meas. Ill, 2, 83. Ado II, 3, 270. Shr. IV, 3, 43. Tim. V, 1, 92. Ant. IV, p. till a horse may mire upon your face, Tim. IV, 3, 6, 15) in the same sense: Gent. II, 1, 118. Wiv. Ill, 147. let her p. an inch thick, Hml. V, 1, 213. you shall 4,104. Meas. II, 1, 279. V, 246. Ado II, 3, 258. V, 1, p. Ant. I, 2, 18. trans.: the one is —ed, Gent. II, 1, 323. 326. V, 4, 18. Merch. II, 6, 33. IV, 1, 412. Shr. 61. 64. were I —ed, Wint. IV, 4, 101. refl.: to p. IV. 3, 43. All's I, 1, 240. R2 IV, 150. H6B 1, 4, 47. himself, Ado III, 2, 58. red —s itself black, LLL IV, Rom. II, 4, 194. Oth. I, 1, 184. IV, 2, 93. Ant. IV, 6, 3, 265. 15 etc. to take —s: Tp. I, 2, 354. IV, 189. Ado II, 3, 3) to diversify with colours: cuckoo-buds of yellow 259. 260. 270. Mids. I, 2, 112. Merch. IV, 1, 7. V, hue do p. the meadows with delight, LLL V, 2, 907. 182. Tw. I, 5, 186. John I, 219. Troil. Ill, 2, 207. pluck the wings from—ed butterflies, Mids. Ill, 1,175. Tim. Ill, 5, 26. V, 1, 92 etc. you have taken the —s to the adder's —ed skin contents the eye, Shr. IV, 3, 180. set it together, Gent. I, 1, 123. Err. V, 393. John I, from Cupid's shoulder pluck his —ed wings, Troil. Ill, 78. V, 4, 15. 2, 15. the skies are —ed with unnumbered sparks, Caes. Pain, vb. 1) to put to bodily distress or torment: III, 1, 63. that kills and —s not, Ant. V, 2, 244. Partic. —ed: 4 ) to colour, to adorn, to deck with artificial cogive physic to the sick, ease to the —ed, Lucr. 901. to lours: my sable ground of sin I will not p. Lucr. 1074. enforce the —ed impotent to smile, LLL V, 2, 864. —ing my age with beauty of thy days, Sonn. 62, 14. Superl. —edst: the —edst fiend of hell, Per. IV, 6,173. their gross —ing, Sonn. 82, 13. I never saw that you 2) to put to labour and trouble: that I have em- did — ing need and therefore to your fair no —ing set, ployed and—edyour unknown sovereignty, Meas.V,391. 83, 1. —ing thy outward walls so costly gay, 146,4.

830 with colours fairer —ed their foul ends, Tp. I, 2, 143. the —ed flourish of your praise, L L L II, 14. never p. me now: where fair is not, praise cannot mend the brow, IV, 1, 16. fie, —ed rhetoric, IT, 3, 239. gilded loam or —ed clay, B21,1,179. Helen must needs be fair, when with your blood you daily p. her thus, Troil. I, 1, 94. Hence —ed = artificial, counterfeit, unreal: that Muse stirred by a —ed beauty to his verse, Sonn. 21, 2. —ed pomp, As II, 1, 3. —ed peace, J o h n III, 1, 105. poor —ed queen, R 3 I, 3, 241. IV, 4, 83. your —ed gloss, H8 V,3,71. and with that —edhope braves your mightiness, Tit. II, 3, 126 (the later Ff she braves'), to have his pomp and all what state compounds but only —ed, Tim. IV, 2, 36. my most —ed word, Hml. Ill, 1, 53. 5) to describe, to represent: the word is too good to p. out her wickedness, Ado III, 2, 112. I p. him in the character, Cor. V, 4, 28. P a i n t e r , one skilled in the art of representing objects by colours: Ven.289. Lucr. 1371. 1390. 1450. Sonn. 24,1. 4. 5. Gent. IV, 4, 192. L L L V, 2, 648. Merch. Ill, 2, 121. Bom. I, 2, 41. Tim. I, 1, 202. IV, 3 , 3 5 6 . Lr.II, 2, 64. P a i n t i n g (cf. Paint) 1) the art or practice of a painter: Tim. I, 1, 156. this is the very p. of your fear, Mcb. Ill, 4, 61. a piece of p. Lucr. 1367. Tim. 1, 1, 155. 2) a picture: Lucr. 1499. Ado 111, 3, 143. L L L III, 21. Tim. I, 1, 90. 157. Hml. IV, 7, 109. 3) colour laid on: you'll stain your lips with oily p. Wint. V, 3, 83. this p. wherein you see me smeared, Cor. I, 6, 68. 4) the practice of laying colours on the face: their very labour was to them as a p. H8 I, 1, 26. I have heard of your —s, Hml. Ill, 1, 148 (Ff prattlings). whose mother was her p. Cymb. Ill, 4, 52. Pair, subst. 1) two things of the same kind used together: a p. of maiden worlds (i. e. brensta) Lucr. 408. of eyes, 1680. John IV, 1,99. of anchoring hooks, Gent. Ill, 1, 118. oj horns, Wiv. V, 1, 7. of shears, Meas. I, 2, 28. of stocks, Err. Ill, 1, 60. Shr. Ind. 1, 2. of lips, As III, 4, 16. of stairs, V, 2, 41. of breeches. Shr. Ill, 2, 44. of boots, 45. of gloves, Wint. IV, 4, 253. of gallows, II4A II, 1, 74. of heels, II, 4, 53. of sheets, H4B II, 4, 243. of legs, H5 III, 6, 158. of spectacles, Troil. IV, 4, 14. of chaps, Ant. Ill, 5, 14. of bases, Per. II, 1, 167. 169. Uninflected in the plural: twenty p. of eyes, Gent. II, 4, 95. how many p. of stockings, H4B II, 2, 17. 2) couple, brace: a p. of honourable men, Ado V, 1, 275. a p. of these, Tw. Ill, 1, 55. oj kings, Wint. V, 3, 146. of carved saints, R2 HI, 3, 152. of graves, 167. of knaves, H6B 1, 2, 103. of bleeding hearts, B3 IV, 4, 272. of strange ones, Cor. II, 1, 89. of tribunes, V, 1, 16. of hell-hounds, Tit V, 2, 144. of maidenhoods, Rom. Ill, 2, 13. of kisses, Hml. Ill, 4, 184. of indentures, V, 1, 119. of twins, Ant. Ill, 10,12. of sons, Cymb. V, 5, 356. = two beings of different pex joined in love: As V, 4, 37. H6A II, 2, 30. Rom. Prol. 6. Ant. I, 1, 37. V, 2, 363. Plur. —s: the —s of faithful lovers, Mids. IV, 1, 96. Pair, vb. 1) to couple: so turtles p. Wint IV, 4, 154. 2) to snit, to fit as a counterpart: he (our prince) had —ed well with this lord, V, 1, ] 16. P ^ J e c k , peacock: and now reigns here a very, very p. Hml. Ill, 2, 295.

P Palabraa, Ado III, 5, 18 and paucas pallabris, Shr. Ind. I, 5, a mutilution and corruption of the Spanish pocas palabras, i. e few words. P a l a c e , a royal house: T p . IV, 152. Meas. V, 544. Mids. 1, 2, 104. IV, 2, 38. V, 425. Merch. I, 2, 15. Wint. IV, 4, 731 (at p., in the speech of the clown). 737. 789. B2 III, 3, 148. H6A V, 2, 7. V, 3, 170. H6B III, 2, 100. 246. IV, 1, 102. 1I6C 1, 1, 25. IV, 8, 33. V, 1, 45 Cat the bishop's p.). Tit. I, 327. II, 1,46. 127. Mcb. 111,1,132. IV, 1,57. Lr. 1,2, 117. 1, 4, 267. Ant. IV, 8, 32. Cymb. Ill, 3, 84. V, 4, 113. Figuratively: my soul's p. is become a prison, H6C II, 1, 74. that deceit should dwell in such a gorgeous p. Kom. Ill, 2, 85. this p. of dim night, V, 3, 107. where's that p. whereinto foul things sometime intrude not f Oth. Ill, 3, 137. thou seemest a p. for the crowned truth to dwell in, Per. V, 1, 122. P a l a e e - a a t e i H6C 1, 1, 92. Ill, 2, 119. Tit. IV, 2, 35. Mcb. Ill, 1,47. 111,3, 13. P a i a m e d e s , name of a Greek in Troil. V, 5, 13. P a l a t e , subst. the roof of the mouth as an organ of taste: Sonn. 114, 12. 118, 2. Compl. 167. Merch. IV, 1, 96. Tw. II, 4, 101. Troil. I, 3, 338. Ill, 2, 22. IV, 4, 7. Cor. II, 1, 61. Tim. IV, 3, 24. Oth. I, 3, 263. IV, 3, 96. Ant. I, 4, 63. Per. I, 4, 39. P a l a t e , vb. to perceive by the taste, to taste: not —ing the taste of her dishonour, Troil. IV, 1, 59. you are plebeians, if they be senators: and they are no less, when, both your voices blended, the greatest taste most —s theirs, Cor. Ill, 1, 104 (when the predominant taste of the compound is that of their voices). and never —s more the dung, Ant. V, 2, 7. P a l a t i n e ) count or county p. = Palsgrave: Merch. I, 2, 49. 64. P a l e , subst. 1) an enclosure (especially of a park): I have hemmed thee here within the circuit of this ivory p.; I'll be a park, and thou shall be my deer, Ven. 230. too unruly deer, he breaks the p. Err. II, 1, 100. over ]>ark, over p. Mids. II, 1,4. why should we in the compass of a p. keep law, li2 III, 4, 40. parked and bounded in a p. H6A IV, 2, 45. which, like a bourn, a p., a shore, confines thy parts, Troil. II, 3, 260. breaking down the —s and forts of reason, Hml. I, 4, 28. Doubtful passage: I'll peck you o'er the —s else, 118 V, 4, 94. 2) paleness; see Adj. Pale, vb. 1) to enclose, to encompass: the English beach —s in the flood with men, H5 V Chor. 10. will you p. your head in Henry's glory (i. e. the crown) H6C I, 4, 103. whate'er the ocean —s or sky enclips, Ant. II, 7, 74. stands as Neptune's park, ribbed and —d in with rocks, Cymb. Ill, 1, 19. 2) to make pale: the glow-worm shows the matin to be near and 'gins to p. his uneffectual fire, Hml. I, 5, 90. P a l e , adj. not fresh of colour, not red or ruddy; wan: Ven. 21. 76. 347. 468. 739. 1123. 1169. Lucr. 441. 478. 1391. Sonn. 97, 14. Compl. 5. Gent. Ill, 1, 228. Err. IV, 2, 4. IV, 4, 96. V, 82. Ado 1, 1, 250. V, 1, 131. L L L I, 2, 107. IV, 3, 129. Mids. I, 1, 15. As I, 1, 164 etc. I am p. at mine heart to see thine eyes so red, Meas. IV, 3, 157 (cf. Pale-hearted). Used of ashes: Lucr. 5. R3 I, 2, 6. Rom. Ill, 2, 55. Of things wanting lustre and brightness; as of the moon: Gent. IV, 2, 100. Mids. II, 1, 104. As III, 2, 3. Wint. IV, 3, 16. Rom. Ill, 5, 20. Tim. IV, 3, 441. of moonlight:

p

831

Merch. V, 125. of a dim sky: As I, 3, 106. H4A V, acquired, Troil. II, 3, 201. gives us more p. in beauty 1, 2. H5 III, 5, 17. H6C II, 1, 28. of lack-lustre eyes: than we have, 111, 1, 170. bear the p. for having bravely look, how thou diest! look, how thy eye turns p. Troil. shed thy wife and children's blood. Cor. V, 3, 117. V, 3, 81 (cf. Hml. Ill, 4, 125). of lead: Rom. II, 5, 17. you shall see him a p. in Athens again and flourish of silver: Merch. Ill, 2, 103. cf. gilding p. streams with the highest, Tim. V, 1, 12 (cf. Psalms 92, 12). with heavenly alchemy, Sons. 33, 4. Synonymous to bear the p. alone, Caes. I, 2, 131. as love between them white: a lily p. Pilgr. 89. hands as p. as milk, Mids. like the p. might flourish, Hml. V, 2, 40. V, 345 (Thisbe's speech), p. primroses, Wint. IV, 4, Palmer, a pilgrim: Lucr. 791. All's III, 5, 38. 122. H6B III, 2, 63. Cymb. IV, 2, 221. Mi« p. and R2 111, 3, 151. H6B V, 1, 97. Rom. I, 5, 102. maiden blossom, H4A II, 4, 47 (cf. Maid-pale and Palm-tree, a tree of the order Palma: what I Pale-visaged). that p., that white-faced shore, John 11, found on a p. As III, 2, 186. 23. H5 V, 2, 378. Compar. — r : Pilgr. 118. Merch. Palmy, glorious: in the most high and p. state of V, 125. As IV, 3, 178. Rome, Hml. I, 1, 113. Substantively: a sudden p. usurps her cheek, Ven. Palpable, such as might be touched and handled: 589. nor ashy p. (showed) the fear, Lucr. 1512. the in form as p. as this (dagger) which now I draw, Mcb. red blood reigns in the winter's p. Wint. IV, 3, 4 (per- 11, 1,40. Hence = obvious, manifest: (lies) gross as haps with a play on the word: p. = district, confine). a mountain, open, p. H4A II, 4, 250. this p. device, Adverbially: so p. did shine the moon on Pyramus, R3 111, 6, 11. a very p. hit, Hml. V, 2, 292. 'tis proTit. II, 3, 231. how p. he glares, Hml. Ill, 4, 125 (cf. bable and p. to thinking, Oth. I, 2, 76. Troil. V, 3,81). Adverbially: this p. gross play, Mids. V, 374, i. e. P a l e « , writing of M. Edd. iu Compl. 198; O. so gross, that it requires no judgment to perceive its Edd. palyd or palid; see Pallid. grossness (some M. Edd. palpable-gross). Pale-dead, lack-lustre as in death: their p. eyes, Palsied, affected with a palsy: Meas. Ill, 1, 36. H5 IV, 2, 48. Cor. V, 2, 46. Pale-dull (O. Edd. not hyphened), wanting coPalsy, paralysis, cessation of animal function: lour and life: their p. mouths, H5 IV, 2, 49. R2 II, 3, 104. H6B IV, 7, 98. Troil. I, 3, 174 ( 0 . Pale-faced: Vcn. 5G9. K2 II, 3, 94. II, 4, 10. Edd. p. fumbling, M. Edd. palsy-fumbling). Plur. H4A I, 3, 202. H6B 111, 1, 335. —ies: Troil. V, 1, 23. Pale-hearted, wanting courage, cowardly: Mcb. Palter, to shift, to dodge, to shuffle, to equivoIV, 1, 85. cf. Meas. IV, 3,157. cate: a whoreson dog, that shall p. thus with us, Troil. Paleness, wanness: swooning p. Compl. 305. = II, 3, 244. you p. V, 2, 48. this —ing becomes not want of lustre or colour: thy (lead's) p. moves me Rome, Cor. Ill, 1, 58. Romans that have spoke the more than eloquence, Merch. Ill, 2, 106. the p. of this word and will not p. Caes. II, 1, 126. these juggling flower, H6A IV, 1, 106. fiends, that p. with us in a double sense, Mcb. V, 8, 20. Palestine, the country of the Saviour: John II, I must dodge and p. in the shifts of lowness, Ant. Ill, 4. Oth. IV, 3,39. 11, 63. Pale-Tisag ed i your own ladies and p. maids, John Paltry, vile, contemptible, sorry: Wiv. II, 1,164. V, 2, 154 (cf. Maid-pale). Merch. V, 147. Shr. IV, 3, 81. Tw. Ill, 4, 420. John Palfrey, a noble horse: to get my p. from the mare, II, 54. H6A IV, 6, 45. H6B IV, 1, 105. V, 2, 67. R3 Ven. 384. 385. i< is the prince of —s, H5 III, 7, 29. V, 3, 323. Troil. II, 3, 218. Ant. V, 2, 2. Paly, pale: p. flames, H5 IV Chor. 8. his p. lips, 35. in Cheapside shall my p. go to grass, H6B IV, 2, 75. provide thee two proper —s, to hale thy vengeful H6B i l l , 2, 141. p. ashes, Rom. IV, 1, 100. Pamper, to feed to the full: those —ed animals waggon swift away, Tit. V, 2, 50. PaUsadees, stakes set in the ground by way of that rage in savage sensuality. Ado IV, 1, 61. I am your sorrow's nurse, and I will p. it with lamentations, defence: H4A II, 3, 55. Pall, to wrap np as in a cloak: come, thick night, R3 II, 2, 88. Used nonsensically by Pistol: hollow and p. thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, Mcb. I, 5, 52.—ed jades of Asia, H4B II, 4, 178 (a parody of a P a l l , to become vapid, to wane, to decay: our passage in Marlowe's Tamburlaine: holla, you —ed indiscretion sometimes serves us well, when our deep jades of Asia, what, can you draw but twenty miles a plots do p. Hml. V, 2, 9. I'll never follow thy —ed for- dayt). tunes more, Ant. II, 7, 88. Pamphlet, a written composition: whereof this Pallas, the goddess Minerva: Tit. IV, 1, 66. Name p., without beginning, is but a superfluous moiety, Lucr. of a planet: IV, 3, 55. 64. Dedic. 1. with written —s studiously devised, H6A Pallet, a mean bed: upon uneasy —s stretching III, 1,2. thee, H4B III, 1, 10 (Ff pallads). Pancahe, a cake fried in a pan: As I, 2, 67. 69. Palllament, a robe: Tit. I, 182. 85. All's II, 2, 25. Pallid (O. Edd. palyd or palid), pale: p. pearls Pandar, abbreviated from Pandarus: Troil. I, 1, and rubies red as blood, Compl. 198. 98. 106. I, 2, 311. V, 10, 49. P a l m , the inner part of the hand: Vcn. 25. 144. Pandarus, the archetypc of pimps in Troil. 1, Err. Ill, 2, 124. L L L V, 2, 816. As III, 5, 24. Wint. I, 48 etc. shall I Sir P. of Troy becomet Wiv. 1, 3, I, 2, 115. 126. John II, 590. Ill, 1, 244. H4B I, 2, 24. 83. I would play Lord P. of Phrygia, Tw. Ill, 1, 58. Troil. I, 1, 59. V, 1, 25. Cor. V, 2, 46. Rom. I, 5, 102. Alluded to in All's II, 1, 100. Caes. IV, 3, 10. Hml. I, 3, 64. Oth. II, 1, 168. 259. Pander or Pandar, snbst. a pimp, a procurer: Ant. I, 2, 47. 53. Wiv. V, 5, 176. Ado V, 2, 31. Wint. II, 1, 46. Ho Palm, a tree of the order Palma; the emblem of IV, 5, 14. Troil. Ill, 2, 210. 212. 220. V, 10, 48. Lr. glory and superiority: must not so stale hit p. nobly II, 2, 23. Cymb. Ill, 4, 32. Ill, 5, 81.

832

P

Pander, vb. to pimp for, to procure for : reason Pander, the servant who had charge of the pan—* will, Hml. Ill, 4, 88 (Qq pardons). try: Wint IV, 4, 56. H4B II, 4, 258. 342. Cymb. II, Panderly, adj. pimpiDg: Wiv. IV, 2, 122. 3, 129. Pandl«n, king of Athens and father ofPhilomela, Pantry, a room in which provisions are kept: who was transformed into a nightingale: Pilgr. 395. Rom. I, 3, 102. Pandnlph, name of the cardinal in John III, 1, Panyn, an unintelligible word (according to some 138. V, 7, 82. = painim) used by Sir Toby in the state of intoxiPanel, a piece of board inserted into the groove cation : a passy measures p. T w . V, 207. The later of a thicker surrounding frame: As 111, 3, 89. (cf. Ff and most M. Edd. pavin. Impanneled). Pap (cf. Milk-pap) the nipple of males: thou hast P a n s , subst. extreme pain, torment, agony: thumped him with thy bird-boll under the left p. L L L Compi. 272. Wiv. Ill, 5, 109. Meas. Ill, 1, 80. Tw. IV, 3, 25. out, sword, and wound the p. of Pyramus, I, 5, 81. II, 4, 16. 93. Ill, 4, 262. John V, 4, 59. H4B Mids. V, 302. 303. IV, 4, 117. H6B HI, 3, 24. H6C II, 3, 17. H8 II, 3, 1. Paper, subst. 1) snbstance made to write on, and Ill, 2, 370. V, 1, 69. Tim. V, 1, 203. Hml. Ill, 1, 72. for other purposes: Lucr. 1289. 1297. Wiv. I, 4, 93. Cymb. I, 1, 82. 136. Per. Ill, 1, 13. Meas. IV, 3, 6. Ado II, 3, 138. 249. L L L IV, 2, 26. Pans, vb. to afflict with great pain, to torment: V, 2, 7. Merch. II, 4, 13. Ill, 2, 255. B2 III, 2, 146. a sufferance —ing as soul and body's severing. H8 II, H5 II, 2, 74. R3 I , 3, 175. V, 3, 23. Rom. V, 1, 3, 15. thy memory will then be —ed by me, Cymb. Ill, 25 etc. 4, 98. 2) a piece of paper: let the —s lie, Gent. I, 2, 100 (the fragments of the torn letter), each several p. 108. Pannel, subst. see Panel. Pannel, vb. reading of 0 . Edd. in A n t IV, 12, wrapped in a p. All's V, 3, 94. 21: Me hearts that pannelled me at heels. Most M. 3) any thing written, as a letter, a document, a Iidd. spanieTd, some pantler'd, others paged. bond, a deed, a poem etc.: Compl. 6. Sonn. 17, 9. Pannier, a large basket carried on a horse : H4 A 38, 4. Gent. I, 2, 34. 46. 73. Ill, 1, 284. IV, 4, 128. Ado V, 4, 86. L L L I, 1, 116. IV, 2, 145. Merch. Ill, II, 1, 30. Pannanlan, inhabitant of Pannonia: Cvmb. Ill, 2, 246. Shr. I, 2, 151. All's V, 1, 31. R2 I, 3, 250. H4A II, 4, 583. H6C 111, 3, 176. H8 III, 2, 121. Tim. I,74.111,7,3. Pansa, name in Ant. I, 4, 58. 1, 2, 248. Lr. IV, 6, 266 etc. Criminals undergoing Pansy, the flower Viola tricolor: there is —t'es, punishment usually wore papers on their backs conthat's for thoughts, Hml. IV, 5, 176 (cf. the French taining their offence: he comes in like a perjure, wearpensée). ing —s, L L L IV, 3, 47. mailed up in shame, with —* Pant, subst. palpitation of the heart: make love's on my back, H6B II, 4, 31. quick —s in Desdemona's arms, Oth. II, 1, 80 Qq and Paper, vb. to set down in a list, to note: his swiftly come to D.). leap to my heart, and there ride own letter .... must fetch him in he —s, H8 I, 1, 80 on the —s triumphing, Ant. IV, 8, 16. (Campbell the papers, Staunton he paupers). Pant, vb. 1) to have the breast heaving and the Paper-faced, pale: H4B V, 4, 12; cf. H5 II, heart palpitating: —ing he lieth and breatheth in her 2, 74. face, Ven. 62. while in his hold-fast foot the weak Paper-mill, a mill in which paper is manufacmouse —eth, Lticr. 555. she like a wearied lamb lies tured: H6B IV, 7, 41. — ing there, 737. and —s and looks pale, Tw. Ill, 4, Paphlasenla, country in Asia Minor: Ant. Ill, 323. smothered it within my —ing bulk, R3 I, 4, 40. 6, 71. now breathless wrong shall sit and p. in your great Paphea, town in Cyprus, sacred to Venus: Ven. chairs of state, Tim. V, 4, 11. Sometimes the idea of 1193. Tp. IV, 93. Per. IV Prol. 32. palpitation, sometimes that of breathlessness prevaPapist, an adherent of the pope: All's I, 3, 56. lent: my boding heart —s, teats and takes no rest, Parable, a word perversely used by Launce: Ven. 647. the —ing sides of his poor jade, H4B 1, 1, thou shalt never get such a secret from me but by a p. 45. half breathless, —ing forth from Goneril his mis- Gent. II, 5, 41 (he means to say: indirectly). tress salutations, Lr. II, 4, 31. 1 p. for life, V, 3, 243 Paracelsus, the famous reformer of medical ( = I gasp for life 1 , having lost her breath, she spoke science: All's II, 3, 12. and —ed, Ant. II, 2, 235. Paradise, 1) the garden of Eden, where Adam 2) to take breath after great exertion : find we a and Eve lived at first: what largeness thinks in P. time for frighted peace to p. H4A I, 1, 2. he never was sawn, Compl. 91. not that Adam that kept the P. stood to ease his breast with —ing, Cor. 11, 2, 126. Err. IV, 3, 16. Pantaleen, an old fool ; a standing character of 2) the blissful seat of sanctified souls: make this the Italian comedy: the lean and slippered p., with place P. Tp. IV, 124. you would for P. break faith, spectacles on nose and pouch on side, As II, 7, 158. L L L IV, 3, 143. the air of P. did fan the house, All's that we might beguile the old p. Shr. Ill, 1, 37. III, 2, 128. Pantheen, a temple at Rome dedicated to all the 3) any place of bliss: a p. Pilgr. 42 and L L L IV. gods: Tit. I, 242 (Qq Fl Pathan). 333 (Qq and ear- 3, 73. Meas. Ill, 1, 131. Mids. I, 1, 205. H5 I, 1, 30 lier Ff Pantheon). in mortal p. of such sweet flesh, Rom. Ill, 2, 82. if Panther, the animal Felis pardus: Tit. I, 493. ye should lead her in a foots p., as they say, II, 4, 176, II, 2, 21. II, 3, 194. i. e. if you should disappoint, make an April fool Panthlna, name in Gent. 1, 3, 1. 76. of her. Pantlngly, as if gasping for breath: she heaved Paradax, an absurdity: no face is fair that is not the name of father p. forth, Lr. IV, 3, 28. full so black. Op.! L L L IV, 3, 254. success or loss,

p what is or is not, serves as stufffor these two to make —es, Troil. I, 3, 184. you unaergo too strict a p., striving to make an ugly deed look /air, Tim. Ill, 5, 24. this was sometime a p., tut now the time gives it proof, Hml. Ill, 1, 115. these are old fond—es to make fools laugh, Oth. II, 1, 139. P i r a f t i i , subst. a model, a pattern, something of supreme excellence: Tp. II, 1, 75. Gent. II, 4, 146. Mids. IV, 2, 13. Wint. V, 1, 153. Hml. II, 2, 320. Cymb. Ill, 6, 44. V, 5, 147. Per. IV, 1, 36. IV, 2, 152. P a r a f e n , vb. 1) to show off as a pattern: before the primes! creature that's —ed o' the world, H8 II, 4, 230. 2) to serve as a pattern for, to excel: a maid that —* description and wild fame, Oth. II, 1, 62. 3) to compare as with a pattern: I will give thee bloody teeth, if thou with Caesar p. again my man of men, Ant. I, 5, 71. P a r a l l e l , subst. 1) a line on the same plain and in the same direction as another: delves the —s in beauty's brow, Sonn. 60, 10. that's done, as near at the extremest ends of —s, Troil. I, 3, 168 (i. e. as the opposed extremities of two parallels). 2) equal: without a p. Tp. I, 2, 74. this ring, whose high respect and rich validity did lack a p. All's V, 3, 193. where was he that could stand up his p. Cymb. V, 4, 54. P a r a l l e l , adj. conformable to the purpose: to counsel Cassio to this p. course, directly to his good, Oth. II, 3, 355. P a r a l l e l , vb. 1) to keep in the same direction, to make conformable: his life is —ed even with the stroke and line of his great justice, Meas. IV, 2, 82. 2) to equal: for rapes and ravishments he —s Nessxts, All's IV, 3, 281. whom the worlds large spaces cannot p. Troil. II, 2, 162. 3) to allege or addnce as equal, to compare: my young remembrance cannot p. a Jellow to it, Mcb. II, 3, 67. P a r a m a n r , 1) mistress: Mids. IV, 2,12. 13 (not understood by Quince). H6A V, 1, 23. V, 3, 82. Bom. V, 3, 105. 2) lover: hag of all despite, encompassed with thy lustful —s, H6A III, 2, 53. P a r a p e t , a breastwork: H4A II, 3, 55. P a r a b u l i a , a little parrot: H4A II, 3, 88. P a r a s i t e , a trencher friend, a mean and fawning flatterer: Ven. 848. Wint. I, 2, 168. R2 II, 2, 70. Cor. I, 9, 45. Tim. Ill, 6, 104. P a r c a , one of the three goddesses who wove and cnt the thread of human life: fold up —'s fatal web, H5 V, 1,21 (Pistol's speech). Alluded to in Mids. V, 343 and Merch. II, 2, 66. P a r c e l , subst. 1) a single constituent part, a particular, a piece, an article, an item: every light occasion of the wind upon his lips their (his curls') silken —s hurls, Compl. 87. to your audit comes their distract —s in combined sums, 231. the lips is p. of the mouth, Wiv. I, 1, 237 (Evans' speech), it is a branch and p. oj mine oath, Err. V, 106. had they marked him in —s as I did, As 111, 5, 125. these main —s of dispatch, All's IV, 3, 104. his eloquence the p. of a reckoning, H4A II, 4, 113. ere break the smallest p. of this vow, 111, 2, 159. I sent your grace the —s and particulars of our grief, H4B IV, 2, 36. many a thousand, which now mistrust no p. of my fear, H6C

833 V, 6, 38. the several —i of his plate, H8 III, 2, 125. some —s of their power are forth already, Cor. I, 2, 32. 'tis as it were a p. of their feast, IV, 5, 231. here comes a p. of our hopeful booty, Tit. II, 3, 49. whereof by —* she had something heard, Oth. I, 3, 154. men's judgments are a p. of their fortunes, Ant. Ill, 13, 32. 2) a bundle, a package: 1 have about me many —s of charge, Wint. IV, 4, 261 (or articles, items?). that swollen p. of dropsies, H4A II, 4,496. 3) a number of persons, a party: a holy p. of the fairest dames, L L L V, 2,160. this p. of wooers, Merch. 1, 2, 119. this youthful p. of noble bachelors, All's II, 3, 58. P a r c e l , vb. to enumerate by items, to specify: that mine own servant should p. the sum of my disgraces by addition of his envy, Ant. V, 2, 163 (cf. Addition). Partic.—erf = particular: their woes are —ed, mine are general, R3 II, 2, 81. P a r e e l - h a w d and P a r e e l - c l l t , words used by Elbow and Mrs Quickly, and explained by the commentators as meaning half bawd and half gilt; but not hyphened in O. Edd. and probably intended to have another sense (nearly = species): a tapster, sir, parcel bawd, one that serves a bad woman, Meas. II, I, 63 (i. e. perhaps a tapster of that species whose particular business is procuring), thou didst swear to me upon a parcel gilt goblet, B4B II, 1, 94 (a goblet which was gilt, as must be specially stated). P a r c h , 1) tr. to scorch, to dry: — ing heat, Lucr. 1145. H6A I, 2, 77. H 6 B I , 1 , 8 1 . — ed lips, John V, 7, 40. hath thy fiery heart so — ed thine entrails, H6C I, 4, 87. impasted with the —ing streets, Hml. II, 2, 481. 2) intr. to be scorched: p. in Afric sun, Troil. I, 3, 370. P a r c h m e n t , sheep-skin made fit for writing on: Err. Ill, 1, 13. Wint. I, 2, 360. John V, 7, 33. R2 II, 1, 64. H6B IV, 2, 87. Caes. Ill, 2, 133. Hml. V, I, 123. P a r « , leopard: Tp. IV, 262. Mids. II, 2, 31. As II, 7,150. Troil. Ill, 2, 201. P a r i a n , subst. 1) forgiveness of any offence: I p. crave of thee, Pilgr. 141 let me ask my sister p. Meas. Ill, 1, 173. As III, 5, 6. Oth. V, 1, 93 etc. Not governed by a verb: p., master! Tp. I, 2, 296. Gent. 1, 2, 17. Wiv. V, 5, 229. Mids. IV, 1, 146 etc. p., 1 pray thee, for my mad mistaking, Shr. IV, 5, 49. p., my lord, for me and for my tidings, All's II, 1, 63. your honour's p. = forgiveness granted by your hononr: Meas. II, 2, 14. Mcb. I, 4, 6. our p. = forgiveness granted by us: All's V, 3, 22. H6C IV, 1, 87. H8 I, 2, 56 etc. But sometimes with the poss. pron. in the sense of forgiveness granted to a person: has brought his p. All's II, 1, 65. I beg my p. V, 3, 12. beg thy p. R2 V, 2, 113. 0, my p.! Ant. Ill, 11, 61. I will o'ertake thee and weep for my p. IV, 14, 45; cf. Meas. IV, 2, 104. to give p. or one'» p.: Meas. V, 390. H4B V, 3, 113. R3 II, 1, 103. Troil. I, 3, 357. Hml. V, 2, 237. Cymb. I, 6, 162. to have p. — to be pardoned : as you look to have my p. Tp. V, 293. Plur. —s: Wint. V, 3, 147. H4B V, 5, 119. H6B IV, 8, 23. Cor. Ill, 1, 65. III, 2, 88 (they have —s = they know to pardon). Used as a form of courteous denial or contradiction: no, p. Meas. Ill, 2, 142. I crave your p. Err. I, 2, 26. p., sir! L L L V, 1, 137. your p., sir! Wint. IV,

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4, 594. by your p. Caes. Ill, 1, 235. A n t I, 5, 72. neral : but —d my present havings, to bestow my bounCymb. 1, 4, 46. under your p. Caes. IV, 3, 213. under ties upon you, H8 III, 2, 159. p. Lr. I, 4, 365. Parel, for apparel, in the language of the old Sometimes almost = leave, permission: p., guest- man in Lr. IV, 1, 51. justice, Wiv. 11,3,59. by your grace'» p. Ado II, 1, Parent, father or mother: Tp. I, 2,94. Cor. v, 354. under p., sir, what are the contenlst L L L IV, 2, 3, 56. L r . I, 2, 158. Per. I, 1, 131. II, 3, 46. Plur. 103. and bow them to your gracious leave and p. Hml.—s = father and mother: Err. I, 1, 57. V, 360. L L L I, 2, 56. asking your p. thereunto, IV, 7, 46. whereon IV, 2, 162. All's 1, 3, 163. Wint. I, 2, 393. 442. 115 I begged his p. for return, Ant. Ill, 6, 60. IV, 1, 46. H6C V, 6, 42. R3 IV, 4, 391. 393. H8 V, 2) forgiveness of a crime and remission of a pe- 5, 8. Rom. Prol. 8. 10. Tim. IV, 1, 8. Lr. Ill, 4, 83. nalty ; mercy, grace: p. is still the nurse of second woe,Cymb. V, 4, 70. Metaphorically, - authors: we are Meas. II, 1, 298. ignomy in ransom and free p. are of their (evils'; —s and original, Mids. II, 1, 117. two houses, II, 4, 111. sign me a present p. for my Parentage, extraction, birth: As III, 4, 39. Shr. brother, 152. you hope of p. from Lord Angelo, III, 1, II, 96. Tw. 1, 5, 296. V, 238. H6A II, 5, 73. V, 4, I. IV, 2, 74. 104. 111. IV, 3, 112. H6B IV, 8, 9. 14. 14. H6B IV, 2, 152. Rom. Ill, 5, 181. Per. II, 3, 74. 23. R3 V, 5, 16. H8 IV, 2, 121. = absolution: pur- V, 1, 93. 98. 100. 130. 190. chase corrupted p. of a man, who in that sale sells p. Parfect, Costard's blunder for perform in L L L from himself, John III, 1, 166. V, 2, 503. Pardan, vb. 1) to forgive; absol.: you must p. Paring (cf. Cheese -paring) that which is pared Meas. V, 407. if you p., we will mend, Mids. V, 437. off: virginity breeds mites much like a cheese; consumes With an accus. a) noting the person who has offend- itself to the very p. All's I, 1, 155. Plur. — s : some ed: Compl. 246. Tp. Epil. 7. Gent. II, 4, 165. V, 4, devils ask but the —s of one's nail, Err. IV, 3, 72. the 158. Wiv. Ill, 3, 240. 243. Ado V, 3, 12. Tw. V, 221. very —s of our nails shall pitch a field, H6A III, 1, Shr. IV, 4, 38. H6C IV, 1, 89 etc. Passively: you are 102. here comes one of the —s, Lr. I, 4, 206. —ed, Meas. V, 392. R2 II, 1, 188. Rom. V, 3, 308. Parlng-knlfe, a knife used to pare things off: Hml. HI, 3, 56. b) the offence committed: p. the fault, like a glover s p. Wiv. I, 4, 21. Gent. I, 2, 40. p. it, Meas. V, 89. p. this fault, Merch. Paris, name of 1) the son of Priam who ravished V, 247. Wint. Ill, 2, 154. R2 IV, 214. H4A I, 3, 149 Ilclen: Lucr. 1473. Shr I, 2, 247. H6A V, 5, 104. etc. Person and offence placcd together: p. me my Troil. Prol. 10. 1, 1, 112 and passim. 2) Count P.: wrongs, Tp. V, 119. p. love this wrong, L L L IV, 2, Rom. I, 2, 16 and passim. 3) the capital of France: 121. Tw. II, 1, 34. Wint. V, 2, 160. H6C V, 1, 24. All s I, 2, 22. 1, 3, 225. 237. 239. H5 II, 5, 131 ( P . V, 5, 70. R3 III, 7, 102. Troil. IV, 5, 257 etc. The balls). 132 (P. Louvre). H6A I, 1, 61. 65. Ill, 2, 128. person placed after with to: my high-repented blames IV, 1, 3. IV, 7, 95. V, 2, 4. H6B 1, 1, 94. 215. I, 3, p. to me, All's V, 3, 37. The offence with from or of: 175. R3 II, 3, 17. Hml. II, 1, 7. to you it doth belong yourself to p. of self-doing crime, Paris-garden ( 0 . Edd. Parish-garden) a bearSonn. 58, 12. as you from crimes would —ed be, Tp. garden on the Bankside in Southward: H8 V, 4, 2. Epil. 19. Parish, the district belonging to a particular Used to express courteous denial or contradiction: church: Meas. II, 1, 287. H6A V. 4. 11. H8 I, 2, 152 p. me, Gent. IV, 4, 127. 131. Wiv. I, 1, 225. Meas. (within the p. Saint Lawrence Poultney). Cymb. IV, II,4,117. IV,2,194. L L L IV, 1,13.V, 2,710. Merch.IV, 2, 168. Per. II, 1, 38. 47. Adjectively: the p. curate, 1, 437. Ant. IV, 14,80 etc. all women shall p. me, Ado L L L V, 2, 538. p. church, As II, 7, 52. the p. heifers, I, 1, 244 (i. e. excuse me from doing so), no, you shall H4B 11,2,171. p. me, II, 1, 131. I do entreat your grace to p. me, Parlih-garden, sec Paris-garden. Mids. I, 1, 58. I p. you for that, As 111, 2, 395 ( I do ParUhleners, the persons belonging to a parish: not ask you to do that), let me entreat of you to p. L L L IV, 2, 76. As III, 2, 164. me yet for a night or two, Shr. Ind. 2, 121. would Parl*h>tep, a large top kept for public exercise you Id p. me , Tw. Ill, 3, 24. your grace shall p. me, in a parish: till his brains turn o' the toe like a p. Tw. John V, 2, 78. p. me in that, Tim. 1, 2, 219. I, 3, 44. = to give leave (of departure): even now about Parisian«, inhabitants of Paris: H6A V, 2, 2. it! I will p. you, Gent. Ill, 2, 98. Paris-ward: their powers are marching unto P. 2) to absolve, to release (from a penalty): you H6A III, 3, 30, i. e. towards Paris; cf. Bedward, might p. him, Meas. II, 2, 49. II, 4, 43. V, 496. 504. Parkward; Brooke has even to himward. 540. Err. I, 1, 98. L L L I, 2, 152 etc. The penalty the Pari tar, apparitor, an officer of the Bishop's object: take my life and all, p. not that, Mcrch. IV, Court, who carries out citations: (Cupid) sole impe1, 374. I p. that man's life, Lr. IV, 6, 111. I p. thee rator and great general of trotting —s, L L L III, 188 thy life, Merch. IV, 1, 369. ("as citations are most frequently issued for forniPardener, one who absolves an offender: Meas. cation, the p. is put under Cupid's government." IV, 2, 112. Johnson). OEdd. parrators. Pardonmees, courteous persons who always say Park, a piece of ground enclosed and stored with 'pardon me": Rom. II, 4, 35 jTheob. pardonnez-moy's; beasts of chase: Ven. 231. 239. Wiv. I, 4, 115. Ill, Cambr. Ed. perdona-mi's). 3, 240. IV, 4, 19. V, 1, 12. V, 3, 4. L L L I, 1, 210. Pare, to shorten by trimming and cutting: let not 242. 1, 2, 123. 136. Ill, 165. IV, 3, 374. Mids. II, 1, 4. him p. his nails, Mids. IV, 2, 41. All's V, 2, 31. Tw. Merch. Ill, 4, 83 (p. gate). Shr. IV, 1, 133. R2 111, IV, 2, 140. 110 IV, 4, 76. to have his princely paws 1, 23. H4A II, 3, 75. H6C IV, 5, 3. 19 (p. corner). —d all away, Tit. II, 3, 152. thou hast —d thy wit o' V, 2, 24. Tit. Ill, 1, 88. Cymb. Ill, 1, 19. both sides, Lr. I, 4, 204. Hence = to diminish in geParked, enclosed as in a park: how are we p.

p and bounded in a pale, a little herd of England's timorous deer, H6A IV, 2, 45. P t r k w a H , towards the park: the pittie-ward, the p., every way, W i t . Ill, 1, 5. cf. Paris-ward. P a r l e , subst. parley, conversation, conference (with a view to come to an agreement): the gentlemen that every day with p. encounter me, Gent. I, 2, 5. Chiefly a conference with enemies tending to restore peace: the nature of our quarrel yet never brooked p. Shr. I, 1, 117. our trumpet called you to this gentle p. John II, 205. vouchsafe a p. 226. sound so base a p. R2 I, 1, 192. send the breath of p. into his ruined ears, III, 3, 33 (Qq par lee). this is the latest p. we will admit, H 5 III, 3, 2. sound a p. H6C V, 1, 16. break the p. Tit. V, 3, 19. in an angry p. Hml. I, 1, 62. P a r l e , vb. to speak, to converse with a view to come to an agreement: she could pick no meaning from their —ing looks, Lucr. 100. their purpose is to p., to court and dance, L L L V, 2, 122 (O. Edd. par lee). Parley, snbst a conversation or conference tending to come to an agreement: in such a p. (of looks) should I answer thee, H4A III, 1, 204. calls to p. the sleepers of the house, Mcb. II, 3, 87. what an eye she haul methinks it sounds a p. of provocation, Oth. II, 3, 23 (Ff a p. to provocation). Chiefly a conference with enemies: Lucr. 471. John V, 1, 68. R2 III, 3, 33 (Qq parlee, F f p a r l e ) . H4B IV, 1,159. Ho III, 2, 149. H6A III, 3, 35. 36. 37. V, 3, 130. H6B IV, 8, 5. H6C II, 2, 110. Tit. IV, 4, 101. V, 1, 159. Caes. V, 1, 21. P a r l e y , vb. to confer with a view to come to an understanding; absol.: they are at hand, to p. or to fight, J o h n II, 78. set your entreatments at a higher rate than a command top. Hml. I, 3, 123. With to: therefore we p. to you: are you content to be our generait Gent. IV, I, 60. this tongue hath —ed unto foreign kings for your behoof , H6B IV, 7, 82. With with: to p. with the sole inheritor, L L L II, 5. p. with sin, J o h n IV, 2, 238. I will p. with Jack Cade, H6B IV, 4, 13. P a r l i a m e n t , the legislative council of the representatives of the nation: Wiv. II, 1, 29. B2 V, 2, 44. H4B IV. 2, 18. V, 2, 134. V, 5, 109. H6A II, 4, 117. 11,5, 127. 111,2,60. H6B 11,4,70. 111, 1,197. IV, 7, 17. V, 3, 25. H6C I, 1, 35. 39. 64. 249. I, 4, 71. II, 1, 118. 173. 11,2,91. P a r l l a m e n t - h e n s e , the honse where the representatives of the nation meet: H6C I, 1, 71. P a r l e n r , the room in a honse in which the family nse to meet and receive company: Ado III, 1, 1. Shr. V, 2, 102. Oth. II, 1, 111. = Parian*, a popular corruption of perilous, alarming, mischievous: a p. Jear, Mids. Ill, 1, 14 (Snout's speech), thou art in a p. state. As III, 2, 45. a p. boy, R 3 II, 4, 35. In R3 III, 1, 154 and Rom. I, 3, 54 most M. Edd. parlous, O. Edd. perilous. Parmaceti, spermaceti: H4A I, 3, 58. Parellea, name in All's 1,1, 201 and passim. Parricide, 1) the murder of a father: Mcb. Ill, 1, 32. 2) the murderer of his father: Lr. II, 1, 48. Parrot, the bird Psittacns: Merch. I, 1, 53. Ill, 5, 51. As IV, 1, 152 (more clamorous than a p. against rain). H4A II, 4, 111. H4B II, 4, 282. Troil. V, 2, 193. Oth. II, 3, 281. Mistress, respite finem, respect your end; or rather the prophecy like the p.,'beware the rope's end, Err. IV, 4, 45 (a quibble between finem and funem, end and rope. Warburton: the passage alludes to people's teaching parrots unlucky words.

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with which when any passenger was offended, it was the standing joke of the owner to say: 'take heed, sir, my parrot prophesies', cf. the following verses from Butler's Hudibras: could tell what subtlest parrots mean, what member 'tis of whom they talk, when they cry rope, and walk, knave, walk.). P a r r e t - t e a c h e r , one who teaches parrots to speak: Ado I, 1, 139. Parsley, the plant PetToselinnm sativum: for p. to stuff a rabbit, Shr. IV, 4, 101. Paraen (supposed to be derived from persona; cf. the quibble in L L L IV, 2, 84; in IV, 3, 194 O. Edd. person) the priest of a parish: Wiv. I, 1, 9. I, 4, 34. 81. II, 1, 218. II, 2, 317. Ill, 1, 36. 45. 50. 75. 106. L L L IV, 2, 84. IV, 3, 194. V, 2, 932. All's I, 3, 89. Tw. IV, 2, 13. 17. 18. 31. Rom. I, 4, 80. P a r t , subst. 1) a piece or quantity taken from the whole: her p. (of the mast) Err. I, 1, 108. in what p. of her body stands Irelandt III, 2, 118. the third p. of a minute, Mids. II, 2, 2. if every ducat were in six —s, and every p. a ducat, Merch. IV, 1, 86. Ado III, 1, 31. IV, 1, 136. L L L II, 136. Merch. 1,3, 152. IV, 1, 329. As III, 2, 157. IV, 1, 45. 46. R2 I, 1, 128. H5 I, 1, 51. H6A IV, 5, 39 etc. etc. a p. -. Lucr. 1328. Sonn. 37, 12. Pilgr. 428. Rom. I, 2, 17. Ant. Ill, 2, 24. p., without the article: Lucr. Dedic. 4. Tp. V, 302. L L L IV, 3, 15. Wint. II, 3, 3. IV, 2, 51. R2 IV, 194. H6A IV, 5, 38. H8 111, 1, 24. Lr. Ill, 3, 13. Oth. II, 3, 187. Ant. Ill, 6, 35. three —s = three quarters: three —s of that receipt, R2 I, 1, 126. where being three —s melted away, the fourth would return, Cor. II, 3, 35. three —s of him is ours already, Caes. 1, 3, 154. a thought which, quartered, hath but one p. wisdom and ever three —s coward, Hml. IV, 4, 43. the half p. = half: he is the h. part of a blessed man, J o h n II, 437. most p.: H6A II, 1, 67. Oth. II, 1, 24. for the most p.: As III, 2, 435. Wint. IV, 2, 5. Hml. Ill, 2, 13. the better p. either - that which is most valuable in sth.: thou art all the better p. of me, Sonn. 39, 2. 74, 8. Atalanta's better p. As III, 2, 155. mine own selfs better p. Err. Ill, 2, 61. the better p. of valour is discretion, H4A V, 4, 121. or = the greatest number or quantity: thy dear selfs better p. Err. II, 2, 125. the better p. of my affections would be abroad, Merch. I, 1, 16. were I not the better p. made mercy, As HI, 1, 2. the better p. of us, H4A IV, 3, 27. the better p. burnt out, H4B 1, 2, 178. the best p. of an hour, H4A I, 3, 100. great p. — a great deal, much; little p. = little: Imogen, the great p. of my comfort, Cymb. IV, 3, 5. that I should purchase the day before for a little p. and undo a great deal of honour, Tim. Ill, 2, 53. nop.: All's II, 1, 135. H6B IV, 1, 47. some p.: As I, 1, 82. Caes. 1, 2, 28. in p. — partly: Compl. 144. H4B IV, 1, 99. Tit. I, 236. Tim. V, 2, 13. Hml. I, 1, 165. II, 1, 15. Lr. I, 2, 43. Cymb. II, 5, 28. in some p. Shr. Ill, 2, 109. p., alone, = partly: (mine eye) doth p. his function and is partly blind, Sonn. 113,3. and p. being prompted by your present trouble, Tw. Ill, 4, 377. this wretch hath p. confessed his villany, Oth. V,2,296. p. shame, p. spirit renewed, Cymb. V, 3, 35. 2) any thing pertaining to and constituent in a whole: when every p. a p. of woe doth bear, Lucr. 1327. all is semblative a woman's p. Tw. I, 4, 34 (constituting a woman), my lessons make no music in three — s , Shr. Ill, 1, 60 (i. e. no trio}, cf. if thou'lt bear

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a p., thou shall hear; 'tis in three —s, Wint. IV, 4, such envy from him as did that one. What p. is thatt 299. it is music in —s, Troil. Ill, 1, 20. Particularly Hml. IV, 7, 77. the continent of what p. a gentleman aged of the component organs and powers of man: would see, V, 2, 115. when thou reviewest this (i. e. my poems), thou dost 5) share of action, particular business, task: every review the very p. was consecrate to thee, Sonn. 74, 6 p. a p. of woe doth bear, Lncr. 1327. confounds in (i. e. my mind), although in me each p. will be for- singleness the —s that thou shouldst bear, Sonn. 8, 8. gotten, 8 1 , 4 (body and sonl). I do betray my nobler whether beauty, birth, or wealth, or wit, ... entitled in p. to my gross body's treason, 151, 6. dispossessing their parts, do crowned sit, Sonn. 37, 7 (M. Edd. in all my other —s of necessary fitness, Meas. II, 4, 22. thy parts; cf. Entitled). one that can my p. in him adI profane my lips on thy foot, my eyes on thy picture, vertise, Meas. I, 1, 42. the general, subject to a welland my heart on thy every p. LLL IV, 1, 87. what is wished king, quit their own p. and in obsequious fondinfirm from your sound —* shall fly, All's II, 1, 170. ness crowd to his presence, II, 4, 28. and never could these weeds to each p. of you do give a life, Wint. IV, maintain his p. Ado I, 1, 238. that is your grace's p. 4, 1. my reasonable p. produces reason, John III, 4, 215. you may do the p. of an honest man in it, II, 1, 54. the outward — s , V, 7, 15. every p. about you 172. the extreme —s of time extremely forms all causes blasted with antiquity. H4B I, 2, 207. the immortal p. to the purpose of his speed, LLL V, 2, 750. which you needs a physician, II, 2, 112; cf. Rom. V, 1, 19 and use in abject and in slavish —s, Merch. IV, 1,92. is this Oth. II, 3. 264. course from the inwards to the —s ex- your speedingt nay, then, good night our p. Shr. II, treme, H4B IV, 3, 116. he gave his blessed p. to heaven, 303. ours be your patience then, and yours our —s, H8 IV, 2, 30. the mutinous —s, Cor. I, 1, 115. this, All's V, 3, 339. by all the —s of man which honour being smelt, with that p. cheers each p. Rom. II, 3, 25. does acknowledge, Wint. I, 2, 400. I have done the p. every p. about me quivers, II, 4, 171. each p. stiff and of a careful friend, H4B II, 4, 348. Lord Hastings cold, IV, 1, 102. it hath cowed my better p. of man, had pronounced your p., I mean your voice, R3 III, 4, Mcb. V, 8, 18. to the secret —s of fortune, Hml. II, 28. it is our p. and promise to the Athenians to speak 2, 239. none our —s so poor, Ant. I, 3, 36. make a with Timon, Tim. V, 1, 123. it is the p. of men to fear battery through his deafened — s , Per. V, 1, 47. cf. and tremble, Caes. I, 3, 54. your highness' p. is to rebesides: Ven. 436. 892. 1049. Sonn. 31, 3. 46, 13. ceive our duties, Mcb. I, 4, 23. that p. thou must act 62, 2. LLL IV, 2, 28. 30. Merch. Ill, 2, 82. As I, 2, for me, Cymb. Ill, 4, 26. the gods have done their p. in you, Per. IV, 2, 74. cf. besides: Lucr. 278. 1135. 261. John 1H, 1, 291. Troil. I, 3, 200. II, 3, 1S4. 3) a portion assigned, a share: who all their —s 1830. H8 1, 2, 195. Cor. IV, 3, 56. of me to thee did give, Sonn. 31, 11. the clear eye's Particularly = the character appropriated in a moiety and the dear heart's p. 46, 12. and in his play, and what is like it: Sonn. 23, 2. Wiv. V, 4, 2. thoughts of love doth share a JI. 47, 8. in all external Meas. IV, 6, 3. Ado I, 1, 323. Ill, 1, 18. LLL V, 2, grace you have some p. 53, 13. of his guiclc objects 150. 336. Mids. I, 2, 20. 32. Ill, 1, 76. IV, 2, 38. V, hath the mind no p. 113, 7. till each to razed oblivion 206. Shr. I, 1, 199. Tw. I, 5, 191. Cor. Ill, 2, 105 yield his p. of thee, 122, 7. my p. of this sport, Tw. II, etc. to play a p.: Tp. I, 2, 107. Gent. IV, 4, 165. 171. 5, 195. Sir Robert might have eat up his p. in me, Ado II, 1, 220. Ill, 2,79. Wint. I, 2, 188 etc. John I, 234. the p. I had in Woodstock's blood, R2 6) particular task done, characteristic action, meI, 2, 1. our p. therein we banish with yourselves, I, 3, rit or demerit: this device ... upon some stubborn and 181. IRA I, 2, 58. 111, 1,75. 111,3,87. R 3 I , 3 , 308. uncourteous —s we had conceived against him, Tw. V, V, 3, 268. Cor. V, 3, 168. Rom. IV, 5, 67. Ant. Ill, 369. Mis p. of his conjoins with my disease, H4B IV, 6, 26. Hence = lot, fate: my p. of death, no one so 5, 64. if not for any —s in him — though his right true did share it, Tw. II, 4, 58. To take in good p. = arm might purchase his own time and be in debt to none to receive or judge with kindness: take them (my — yet, more to move you, take my deserts to his, Tim. cates) in good p. Err. Ill, 1, 28. in the duke's tehalf III, 5, 77. it was a brute p. of him to kill so capital a I'll give my voice, which I presume, he'll take in gentle calf, Hml. Ill, 2, 110. my —s, my title, and my perp. R3 III, 4, 21. fect soul shall manifest me rightly. Oth. I, 2, 31. hit 4) that which is bestowed upon one, gift, endow- honours and his valiant —», I, 3, 254. ment, quality; mostly in the plnral: thy outward —s, 7) side: from all —s they are coming, H8 V, 4, 72. Ven. 435. shows not half your —s, Sonn. 17, 4. those Particularly in the sense of interest, party: with either —s of thee that the world's eye doth view, 69, 1. when —'s agreement, Shr. IV, 4, 50. to stand on either p. in his fair —s she (love) did abide, Compl. 83. my All's I, 2, 15. holy seems the quarrel upon your grace'» —s had power to charm a sacred nun, 260. that I thy p. Ill, 1, 5. brings in the champion Honour on my p. — s admire, Pilgr. 66 and LLL IV, 2, 118. Wiv. I, IV, 2, 50. let confusion of one p. confirm the other's 3, 67. II, 2, 110. Ado V, 2, 60. 65. LLL II, 44. Mids. peace, John II, 359. upon which better p. dur prayers Ill, 2, 153. Merch. 1, 2, 46. II, 2, 191. As I, 1, 150. come in, III, 1, 293. of the p. of England, V, 6, 2. on II, 2, 13. Shr. V, 2, 168. All's I, 2, 21. Tw. II, 4, 86. his p. I'll empty all these veins, H4A I, 3, 133 (Ff John I, 89. Ill, 4, 96. H4A III, 1, 188. H5 V, 2, 213. in his behalf). those that are misled upon your cousin's H8 II, 3, 27. II, 4, 139. Troil. Ill, 3, 117. Rom. HI, p. V, 1, 105. the numbers dead on both our —s, 115 3, 2. Ill, 5, 183. Tim. II, 2, 23. Ill, 1, 40. Hml. IV, IV, 7, 123. banding themselves in contrary —s, H6A 7, 74. Lr. I, 4, 285. Oth. Ill, 3, 264. Scldomer in III, 1, 81. the frozen bosoms of our p. H6B V, 2, 35. the sing.: they will not admit any good p. to intermingle uncurable discomfit reigns in the hearts of all our prewith them, Ado V, 2, 64. for fame's sake, for praise, sent —s, 87 (p.?). my father came on the p. of York, an outward p. LLL IV, 1, 32. I'Id bid you mark her H6C II, 5, 66. our Trojan p. Troil. IV, 5, 156. the eye and tell me for what dull p. in't you chose her, p. that is at mercy, Cor. I, 10, 7. fought on p. and p. Wint. V, 1, 64. your sum of — s did not together pluck Rom. I, 1, 121. who parted either p. 122. though in

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general p. we were opposed, Tim. V, 2, 7. I'll fight against the p. I come with, Cymb. V, 1, 25 etc. to take p. = to embrace one's side or party: which (heart) once corrupted takes the worser p. Lucr. 294. with my nobler reason 'gainst my fury do I take p. Tp. V, 27. take my p. Meas. V, 435. Mids. Ill, 2, 322. 333. As I, 2, 140. 1,3, 22. H4B V, 2, 96. H6A 1,1, 94. H6B I, 1, 240. IV, 2, 197. Rom. Ill, 3, 26. Lr. I, 4, 111 etc. Hence the phrase for my p., for your p. = as for m e , as far as concerns me etc.: Tp. Ill, 2, 15. Wiv. I, 1, 178. Ado V, 4,110. Merch. Ill, 1, 29. Ill, 2, 229. V, 144. As I, 1, 7. All's III, 2, 46. H4B III, 2, 270. H6B I, 3, 104. R3 II, 4, 70. Caes. Ill, 1, 172 etc. for mine own p.: Wiv. Ill, 4,65. Meas. II, 1,219. Ado 111, 5, 23. L L L V, 2, 502.507.732. Merch. II, 2,109 etc. for mine own poor p. Hml. I, 5, 131. On one's p. = a) on one's side, in or by one: (honour) much deserved on his p. Ado I, 1, 12. that is too much presumption on thy p. H6B V, 1, 38. this interchange of love upon my p. shall be unviolable, R3 II, 1, 27. all his virtues, not virtuously on his own p. beheld, Troil. II, 3, 127 (Ff of his own p.). if on both —s this be not cherished, Ant. Ill, 2, 32. b) in one's behalf: to guard the lawful reasons on thy p. Sonn. 49, 12. upon thy p. lean set down a story, 88, 6. plead on her p. some cause to you unknown, Err. Ill, 1, 91. to speak on the p. of virginity, All's I, 1, 148. we do here pronounce upon the p. of the people, Cor. Ill, 1, 210. Similarly in one's p.: what in your own p. can you say to this? Oth. I, 3, 74. 8) Plur. —s = quarters, regions, districts: skilless in these —s, Tw. Ill, 3, 9. have in these —s from morn till even fought, H5 III, 1, 20. to be our regent in these —s of Prance, H6A IV, 1, 163. H6B I, 1,' 67. R 3 IV, 2, 47. Cor. IV, 5, 148. Caes. Ill, 1, 264. Per. V, 1,171. cf. Tw. Ill, 4 , 2 9 4 . H5 II, 4, 22. Part, vb. 1) trans. ax to divide into pieces or into shares: let's p. the word, L L L V, 2, 249. like to a double cherry, seeming —ed, but yet an union in partition, Mids, III, 2, 209. I see these things with —ed eye, when every thing seems double, IV, 1, 194. the old proverb is very well —ed between my master Shylock and you, Merch. II, 2, 158. we'U p. the time between' s, W i n t I, 2, 18. to tug and scamble and to p. by the teeth the unoaed interest of state, John IV, 3, 146. raught at mountains, yet —ed but the shadow with his hand, H6C I, 4, 69 (i. e. cat it in two by extending his hand), p. in just proportion our smaU strength, R3 V, 3, 26. I had thought they had —edso much honesty among 'em, H8 V, 2, 28. — s bread with him, Tim. I, 2, 48. p. the numbers, Caes. Ill, 2, 4. top. the glories of this happy day, V, 5, 81. this coronet p. betwixt you, Lr. I, 1, 141. have my heart—ed betwixt two f iends, Ant. Ill, 6, 77. bl to separate: the ocean which —s the shore, Sonn. 56, 10. to p. a fray, Ado V, 1, 114. how canst thou p. sadness and melancholy f L L L I, 2, 7. thou —est a fair fray, V, 2, 484. when we have chid the hasty-footed time for —ing us, Mids. HI, 2, 201. for —ing my fair Pyramus and me, V, 191. the wall that —ed their fathers, 359. the narrow seas that p. the French and English, Merch. II, 8, 28. severed lips, — ed with sugar breath, III, 2, 119. thus misery doth p. the flux of company, As II, 1, 51. V, 2, 45. V, 4, 137. Shr. I, 2, 23. All's III, 6, 113. Wint. IV, 4, 354. John II, 389. V, 5, 18. R2 V, 1, 76. II4B I, 2, 257.

H5 Prol. 22. H6B IV, 7, 140. R3 II, 2, 150. Troil. Ill, 2, 55. Rom. I, 1, 76. 122. Lr. V, 3, 22. Oth. II, 1, 93. Per. Ill, 2, 101. c) to leave: your souls must p. your bodies, R2 III, I , 3 . when we —ed Pentapolis, Per. V, 3, 38. 2) intr. a) to divide, to go asunder: the bushes, as fearful of him, p., through whom he rushes, Ven. 630. who (the pillow) therefore angry, seems to p. in sunder, Lncr. 388. if what —s can so remain, Phoen. 48. make thy knotted and combined locks to p. and each particular hair to stand on end, Ilml. I, 5, 18. b) to be separated, to quit each other, to take farewell: let us p. Ven. 421. summon us to p. 534. the honey fee of—ing, 538. Gent. II, 2, 21. II, 3, 13. Err. V, 321. L L L V, 2, 57. 220. 821. Merch. II, 8, 36. 49. As I, 3, 100. V,4, 91. Shr. Ill, 2, 181. All's II, 1, 36. Wint. IV, 4, 155. J o h n V, 4, 47. R2 I, 4, 5. II, 1, 222. V, 1, 70. H4B II, 1, 207. H6B III, 2, 355. 403. H6C IV, 3, 30. V, 5, 7. Rom. I, 1, 71. Caes. V, 1, 119. 122. Ant. Ill, 2, 1 etc. Followed by from: Gent. IV, 4, 102. Wiv. II, 2, 274. Mids. Ill, 2, 80. Merch. Ill, 2, 174. 186. As IV, 3, 99. R2 II, 2, 13. H4A V, 4, 71. Troil. IV, 4, 63. Lr. I, 4, 44. By with: Gent. II, 5, 11. Ill, 1, 253. Err. V, 221. Mids. II, 1, 137. As III, 2, 235. Shr. II, 64. Wint. V, 1, 160. R2 I, 4, 10. II, 2, 2. Ill, 2, 8. H4A I, 2, 187. Ill, 1, 194. H6C II, 6, 4. R3 1, 4, 251. Rom. Ill, 3, 174. Cymb. V, 5, 386 etc. Sometimes — to give away: to p. so slightly with your wife's first gift, Merch. V, 167. 171. I will not p. with a village of it, H5 V, 2, 183. you will p. but with light gifts, R 3 III, 1, 118. you cannot take from me any thing that I will more willingly p. withal, Hml. II, 2, 220. With to: therefore I p. with him, and p. with him to one that I would have him help to waste his borrowed purse, Merch. II, 5, 49. a greater sum than ever the clergy yet did to his predecessors p. withal, H5 I, 1, 81. c) to depart, to go away: from whence at pleasure thou mayst come and p. Sonn. 48, 12. at my —ing sweetly did she smile, Pilgr. 187. but now he —ed hence, Gent. I, 1, 71. the company —s, IV, 2, 81. we shall p. with neither, - Err. Ill, 1, 67. thus losers p. Merch. II, 7, 77. procured his leave for present —inq. All's II, 5, 61. an thou let p. so, Tw. I, 3, 65. we will not p. from hence, V, 394. pay then when you p. Wint. I, 2, 10. let them have pay and p. H4B IV, 2, 70. if the trial of the law o'ertake ye, you'll p. away disgraced, H8 111, 1, 97. so she —ed, IV, 1, 92. after we p. from Agamemnon's tent, Troil. IV, 5, 285. when I —ed hence, Cor. V, 6, 73. I would not p. a bachelor from the priest, Tit. I, 488. we must all p. into this sea of air, Tim. IV, 2, 21. France in choler — e d , Lr. I, 2, 23. what thing was that which — ed from yout IV, 6, 68. was not that Cassio —ed from my wifet Oth. Ill, 3, 37. Octavia weeps to p. from Rome, Ant. Ill, 2 , 4 . and —ed with prayers for the provider, Cymb. Ill, 6, 52. Euphemism for to die: a' —ed between twelve and one, H5 II, 3, 12. now in peace my soul shall p. to heaven, R3 11, 1, 5. thy —ing soul, H6A II, 5, 115. he —ed well, Mcb. V, 8, 52. Part, adv. partly; see Part snbst. P a r t a k e (partic. partaken: All's IV, 5, 11) 1) to take another's party, to side: canst thou say I love thee not, when I against myself with thee p. f Sonn. 149, 2. 2) to have part, to share; with in: not meaning to

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p. with me in danger, T w . V, 90. would not let him p. his thought over by each p. star in heaven, W i n t I, 2, in the glory of the action, Ant. Ill, 5, 9. With of: if 425. the king is not bound to answer the p. endings of the had —n of my flesh, All's IV, 5, 11 (i. e. had been his soldiers, H5IV, 1,163. whose tenours and p. effects my daughter), you may p. of any thing we say, K3 I, you have enscheduled briefly in your hands, V, 2, 72. 1, 89 ( = hear). Absol.: what, what, whatt let's p. but what p. rarityt Tim. I, 1, 4. in what p. thought to ( = hear) Cor. IV, 5, 184. Trans.: one may drink and work I know not, Hml. I, 1, 67. yet p. no venom, Wint. II, 1,41. thy bosom shall p. the 3) pertaining to a single person or thing: I will secrets of my heart, Caes. II, 1, 305. have it in a p. ballad else, H4B IV, 3, 52. doth any 3) to communicate: your exultation p. to every one, name p. belong unto the lodging1 IV, 5, 233. the preWint. V, 3, 132. our mind —* her private actions to script praise and perfection of a good and p. mistress, H5 III, 7, 50. hath robbed many beasts of their p. adyour secrecy, Per. 1, 1, 153. Partaker, 1) one who takes the party of another, ditions, Troil. I, 2, 20. the success although p., shall confederate: for your p. Pole and you yourself, I'll give a scantling of good or bad unto the general, I, 3, 341. value dwells not in p. will, II, 2, 53. yet is the note you in my book of memory, H6A II, 4, 100. 2) participator, sharer: p. in thy happiness, Gent. kindness but p.; 'twere better she were kissed in geneI, 1, 14. —s of a little gain, H6A II, 1, 52. to let me ral, IV, 5, 20. whereby he does receive p. addition, Mcb. HI, 1, 100. why seems it so p. with theet Hml. be p. Ant. I, 4, 83 ( = to let me hear of it). Part• created, half-made, half-accomplished: I, 2, 75. H4B I, 3, 60. Hence = individual, private, personal: that no p. Parted, gifted, endowed: how dearly ever p. Troil. scandal once can touch but it confounds the breather, Meas. IV, 4, 30. their profits, their own p. thrifts, Ill, 3, 96. Parthla, country in Asia, at war with Rome: Wint. I, 2, 311. upon my p. knowledge of his direcCaes. V, 3, 37. Ant. II, 2, 15. II, 3, 32. Ill, 1, 1. 33. tions, H5 III, 2, 84. to lay apart their p. functions, 111, 7, 41. make yourself mirth with your p. fancy, and Ill, 6, 14. Parthian, 1 ) subst. a native of Parfhia: Ant. leave me out on't, H8 II, 3, 101. but by p. consent proIll, 1, 7. Cymb. I, 6, 20. 2) adj. pertaining to Par- ceeded under your hands and seals, II, 4, 221. thine own p. wrongs, Cor. IV, 5, 92. the glorious gods sit in thia: Ant. I, 2, 104. Ill, 1, 6. IV, 14, 70. Partial, inclined to favour one party more than hourly synod about thy p. prosperity, V, 2, 74. though the other: and nothing come in p. Meas. II, 1, 31 (let in general part we were opposed, yet our old love made no body speak for me as you do for Claudio). a p. a p. force, Tim. V, 2, 8. as he in his p. act and place slander sought I to avoid, R2 I, 3, 241 ( = reproach may give his saying deed, Hml. 1, 3, 26 (Ff in his peof partiality). H4B III, 1, 26. Troil. II, 2, 178. Hml. culiar sect and force), inform her full of my p. fear, Ill, 3, 32. With to: Lr. I, 4, 334. With an inf : Err. Lr. 1, 4, 360. these domestic and p. broils, V, 1, 30. my p. grief, Oth. I, 3, 55. from which the world should I, 1, 4. Unintelligible: Pilgr. 302. note something p. Ant. Ill, 13,22 (some personal merit). Partlallae, to make partial: R2 I, 1, 120. Partially, with undue favour: Lucr. 634. Oth. Particular, subst. 1) single person: he's to make II, 3, 218. his request by —s, wherein every one of us has a single Participate, vb. to have in common with others: honour, Cor. II, 3, 48. I wish, sir — I mean, for your that dimension which from the womb I did p. Tw. V, 245. p. — you had not joined in commission with him, IV, Participate, adj. acting in common: and mutu- 7, 13. though no man lesser fears the Greeks than I ally p. did minister unto the appetite of the whole body, as far as toucheth my p. Troil. II, 2, 9. for his p., I'll receive him gladly, but not one follower, Lr. II, 4, 295. Cor. I, 1,106. Participation, community, fellowship: thou hast 2) a single point, a single thing: these —s glory, lost thy princely privilege with vile p. H4A III, 2, 87. skill, wealth etc. ) are not my measure, Sonn. 91, 7. their spirits are so married in conjunction with the p. give us —s of thy preservation, Tp. V, 135. to say ay of society that they flock together in consent, like so and no to these —s is more than to answer in a catemany wild geese, H4B V, 1, 78. chism, As 111, 2, 240. your doing, so singular in each Particle, any single part, particular, item: it p. Wint. IV, 4, 144. examine me upon the —s of my shall be inventoried, and every p. and utensil labelled life, H4A II, 4, 414. I sent your grace the parcels and to my will, Tw. I, 5, 264. if he do break the smallest —s of our grief, H4B IV, 2, 36. a tapster's arithp. of any promise, Caes. 11, 1, 139. metic may soon bring his —s therein to a total, Troil. Particular, adj. 1) single: what a hell of witch- I, 2, 124. in whom I know all the —s of vice so graftcraft lies in the small orb of one p. tear! Compl. 289. ed, Mcb. IV, 3, 51. that all —s of duty know, Lr. I, oft it chances in p. men, Hml. I, 4, 23. take corruption 4, 286. your fortunes are alike. But howl give me —s. from that p. fault, 36. each p. hair to stand on end, I, Ant. I, 2, 57. more —s must justify my knowledge, 5, 19. come you more nearer than your p. demands Cymb. II, 4, 78. will touch it, II, 1, 12. cf. the jest of Cade: where's our 3) private concern, personal relation: my course, generalt Here I am, thou p. fellow, H6B IV, 2, 119. which holds not colour with the time, nor does the mi2) special, one among many considered in itself: nistration and required office on my p. All's II, 5, 66. the p. accidents gone by since I came to this isle, Tp. my brother general, the commonwealth, to brother born V, 305. thy oaths, though they would swear down eachan household cruelty, I make my quarrel in p. H4B IV, p. saint, Meas. V, 243. you shall recount their p. duties 1, 96. every function of your power should, notwithafterwards, Ado IV, 1, 3. thus did she transshape thy standing that your bond of duty, as 'twere in love's p., p. virtues, V, 1, 172. that I should love a bright p. star, be more to me, your friend, than any, H8 III, 2, 189. All's 1,1, 97. in what p. action to try him, III, 6, 18. who loved him in a most dear p. Cor. V, 1,3. him that, the p. confirmations, point from point, IV, 3, 71. swear his p. to foresee, smells from the general weal, Tim.

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IV, 3, 159. my more p. is Fulvta't death, Ant. 1, 3, 54. forgive me in thine own p., but let the world rank tne in register a master-leaver, IV, 9, 20. 4) minnte detail of things singly enumerated: let me answer to the p. of the inter'gatories: demand them singly, All's IV, 3,207. with every course in his p. H4B IV, 4, 90. let me question more in p., what have you deserved at the hands of fortune, Hml. II, 2, 244. P a r t i c u l a r i t i e s , single or private respects: being as good a man as yourself, both in the disciplines of war, and in the derivation of my birth, and in other p. H 5 HI, 2, 142 (Flnellen'i speech), now let the general trumpet blow his blast, p. and petty sounds to cease, H6B V, 2 , 4 4 . P a r t i c u l a r i s e , to specify: as an inventory to p. their abundance, Cor. 1,1, 21. P a r t i c u l a r l y , personally, privately: who hath done to thee p. and to all the Volsces great hurt, Cor. IV, 5, 72. my free drift halts not p. Tim. 1 , 1 , 4 6 (does not stop at any single person). P a r t i s a n , see Partixan. P a r t i t i o n , 1) division: like to a double cherry, seeming parted, but yet an union in p. Mids. Ill, 2, 210. 2) distinction: and good from bad find no p. H4B IV, 1, 196. and can we not p. make 'twixt fair and foult Cymb. I, 6 , 3 7 . 3) a party-wall: it is the wittiest p. that ever I heard discourse, Mids. V, 168. P a r t i s a n , a kind of halberd: Bom. I, 1, 80. 101. Hml. I, 1, 140. Ant. II, 7, 14. Cymb. IV, 2, 399. P a r t l e t , the name of the hen in the story-book of Reynard the F o x : thy dame P. here, W i n t II, 3, 75. how now, Dame P. the hen, H4A III, 3, 60. P a r t l y , in part, in some measure: Sonn. 113,3. Gent. IV, 1, 55. Meas. II, 1, 231. V, 450. Ado V, 4, 96. Mids. Ill, 2, 243. Merch. Ill, 5,11. As II, 4, 24. Tw, V, 125. Wint. Ill, 2, 19. V, 3, 142. H5 III, 6, 52. H6C III, 2, 66. R3 III, 7, 235. IV, 2, 41. Troil. III, 1, 19. Cor. 1,1, 40. II, 3, 270. Caes. V, 1, 79. 90. Oth. I, 1, 123. II, 1, 303. Ant. Ill, 13,66. V, 2 , 3 2 5 . Cymb. IV, 2,64. p. ...p.... and p. H5 III, 2, 102. p. ... but in chief, Meas. V, 219. p ...but chiefly, G e n t IV, 4, 69. Rom. V, 3, 29. p p.... but chiefly, Ado III, 3, 166. H4A II, 4, 444. P a r t m e r , subst. companion, associate; with in: to be thy p. in this shameful doom, Lucr. 672. Wint. IV, 2, 58. Ant. II, 2, 59. Cymb. I, 6, 184. With of: wishing me with him, p. of his fortune, Gent. I, 3, 59. Wint. IV, 4, 558. H6A III, 2, 92. Mcb. I, 5, 12. my vows are equal —s with thy vows, H6A 111, 2, 85. = colleague: Meas. IV, 2, 19. Ado III, 3 , 6 5 . Ill, 5, 62. IV, 2, 4. Cor. V, 3, 2. V, 6, 39. Mcb. 1, 3, 54. 142. Ant. I, 4, 8. II, 2, 22. = one who stands godfather with anothes: H8 V, 3, 168. V, 5, 6. = one who dances with another: H8 I, 4, 103. = accomplice: Meas. II, 3, 37. P a r t n e r e d , associated, consorted: to be p. with tomboys, Cymb. I, 6, 121. P a r t r i d g e , the bird Perdix cinerea: Ado II, 1, 155. II6B III, 2, 191. P a r t y , 1) part, side, cause, interest: till she had kindled France and all the world upon the right and p. of her «on, John I, 34. whose p. do the townsmen yet admitf 11,361. to brag and stamp and swear upon my p. Ill, 1,123. your southern gentlemen in arms upon hit p. R2 III, 2, 203 (Ff faction), which on thy royal

p. granted once, III, 3 , 1 1 5 . maintain the p. of the truth, H6A II, 4, 32. will I upon thy p. wear this rose, 123. to find you forward upon his p. R3 111,2,47. they came from Buckingham upon his p. IV, 4, 528. factionary on the p. of your general, Cor. V, 2, 30. have you nothing said upon his p. 'gainst the Duke of Albanyt Lr. II, 1, 28. 2) one of two litigants: thy adverse p. is thy advocate, Sonn. 35, 10. when the —es were met, As V, 4, 104. in witness whereof the —s, Troil. Ill, 2, 61. hearing a matter between p. and p. Cor. II, 1, 82. calling both the —es knaves, 88. 3) one concerned or interested in any affair; with in: I mutt be a p. in this alteration, Wint. I, 2, 383. are you a p. in this business t IV, 4, 843. I do suspect this trash to be a p. in this injury, Oth. V, 1, 86. W i t h to: not a p. to the anger of the king, W i n t II, 2, 61. Absol.: where neither p. is nor true nor kind, Compl. 186. canst thou bring me to the p.t Tp. Ill, 2, 67. from the two —es, Wiv. IV, 5 , 1 0 7 . the —es themselves, the actors, L L L V, 2, 500. the p. is gone, she is gone, 678. the p. 'gainst the which he doth contrive, Merch. IV, 1, 352. the p. tried the daughter of a king, Wint. Ill, 2, 2. bring forth the —es of suspicion, Rom. V, 3, 222. the love of the —es, Ant. II, 6, 127. Hence = person in general: and the three p. is mine host, Wiv. I, 1, 142 (Evans' speech), the p. writing, L L L IV, 2, 138. tax any private p. As II, 7, 71. the p. thai owed it, H4B I, 2, 4. the people of Rome, for whom we stand a special p. Tit. I, 21. your p. in converse, Hml. II, 1, 42. I would not be the p. that should desire you to touch him, A n t V, 2, 246. though it be allowed in meaner —es, Cymb. II, 3, 121. 4) an association or confederacy formed in a community against others of a contrary opinion: then both —es nobly are subdued, and neither p. loser, H 4 B IV, 2, 90. 91. to fight on Edwards p. R3 I, 3, 138. IV, 4, 190. making —es strong, Cor. I, 1, 198. lest —es break out, III, 1, 315. win the noble Brutus to our p. Caes. 1,3,141. what p. I do follow, Lr.lV,5,40. 5) one of two powers at war with each other; preceded by on: three knights upon our p. slain, H4A V, 5 , 6 . which they upon the adverse p. want, R 3 V, 3, 13 ( F f f a c t i o n ) , there's not the meanest spirit on our p. Troil. II, 2, 156. and he upon my p. Cor. I, 1,238. 6) armed force, army: our p. may well meet a prouder foe, J o h n V, 1, 79. to fright our p. H4B I, 1, 67. from his metal was his p. steeled, 116. the English army, that divided was into two —es, H6A V, 2, 12 (some M. Edd. parts, as indeed the metre requires). I saw our p. to their trenches driven, Cor. I, 6 , 1 2 . 'tis fit you make strong p. Ill, 2,94. seek him out upon the British p. Lr. IV, 6, 256. to the king's p. there's no going, Cymb. IV, 4, 9. 7) ally, confederate: in himself too mighty, and in his —es, his alliance, Wint. II, 3, 21. these promises are fair, the —es sure, H4A III, 1, 1. wherein you wished us —es, Cor. V, 6, 14. which approved him an intelligent p. to the advantages of France, Lr. Ill, 5, 12. P a r t y - e M t e d , dressed in a coat of divers colours, like a fool: L L L V, 2, 776. P a r t y - c * l * u r e d , having divers colours: Merch. I, 3, 89. Party-verdict, a judgment given by a particular member of a court of justice: whereto thy tongue a p. gave, R2 I, 3, 234. 54

S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. S. Ed.

T. I I

840

P

P a s h , subst. t h e bead ( J a m i e s o n ' s Etym. D i e t , of the Scot. L a n g u a g e / : thou wanteit a rough p. and the shoot* that 1 have, to be full like me, W i n t . 1,2,128. P u b , vb. to strike, to strike down: with my armed Jut I'll p. him o'er the face, Troil.11,3,213 ( Q push), standi ... upon the —ed corses of the kings, V, 5, 10. P t u , sabst. 1) the act of going f r o m one place t o a n o t h e r , passage: charming the narrow seas to give you gentle p. H 5 II Chor. 39. to give quiet p. through your dominions, H m l . II, 2, 77. 2) permission or right of g o i n g , license: when evil deeds have their permissive p. and not the punishment, Meas. I, 3, 38. 3) currency, e s t i m a t i o n : common speech gives him a worthy p. All's II, 5, 58. 4 ) act, proceeding, course: your grace, like power divine, hath looked upon my —e», Meas. V, 375. P e r haps also in S o n n . 103, 11: to no other p. my verses tend than of your graces and your gifts to tell. 5 ) a n a r r o w passage, a defile: the strait p. was dammed with dead men hurt behind, Cvmb. V, 3, 11. 6) an embarrassing situation, predicament, extremity : being at that p., you would keep from my heels, E r r . Ill, 1, 17. till I be brought to such a silly p. Shr. V, 2, 124. have his daughters brought him to this p. t L r . Ill, 4, 65. 7) As a term of fencing, a) a push, a thrust at the adversary: 'tis dangerous when the baser nature comes between the p. and fell incensed points of mighty opposites, Hml. V, 2, 61. b ) a course of fencing, till one of the combatants is h i t : in these times you stand on distance, your —es, stoccadoes, Wiv. II, 1, 233. I had a p. with him, T w . Ill, 4, 302. in a dozen —es between yourself and him, H m l . V, 2, 173. Figuratively: an excellent p. of pate, T p . IV, 244 ( a sally of w i t ) , and in a p. of practice requite him for your father, Hml. IV, 7, 139. f u , vb. 1) to m a k e one's w a y , to proceed, to g o , to c o m e : that o'er the green cornfield did p. As V , 3 , 1 9 . to think your father should p. this way, W i n t . IV, 4, 20. your gallery have we —ed through, V, 3, 11. if we may p., we will, H 5 III, 6, 169. —ing to and fro, I I 6 A II, 1, 69. if one of so mean condition may p. into the presence of a king, H 6 B V, 1, 65. Edward hath —ed in safety through the narrow seas, H 6 C IV, 8, 3. let the coffin p. R 3 1, 2, 38. that I may see my shadow as I p. 264. his long trouble now is —ing out of this world, H8 IV, 2, 162. when they p. back from the christening, V, 4, 78. find a way out to let the troop p. fairly, 89. a. most unspotted lily shall she p. to the ground, V, 5, 62. as they p. toward Ilium, T r o i l . I, 2, 194. p. no further, Cor. Ill, 1, 24. if you will p. to where you are bound, 53. I'll tell thee as we p. Rom. II, 3, 63. let me p. quietly, T i m . Ill, 4, 54. these words become your lips as they p. through them, V, 1,198. any promise that hath —ed from him, Caes. II, 1, 140. —ing through nature to eternity, Hml. I, 2, 73. this trusty servant shall p. between us, Lr. IV, 2, 19. let poor folk p. IV, 6, 243. as my farthest band shall p. on thy approof, Ant. Ill, 2, 27. top. along: Gent. V, 4, 168. L L L II, 245. As I, 3, 115. R 2 V, 2, 21. H 6 C II, 1, 195. R 3 III, 1, 136. H 8 V, 2, 11. T r o i l . Ill, 3, 51. Caes. II, 3, 11. Ant. Ill, 1, 37. to p. away: H 8 I, 4, 33. L L L I, 1, 4 9 ( = to avoid), to p. by: H 6 B II, 4, 48. Ill, 1, 16. IV, 8, 18. T r o i l . I, 2, 199. Ill, 3, 71. R o m . I, 1, 46. T i m . II, 1, 12. V,

4, 73. Caes. I, 2, 179. to p. by sth.: Sonn. 70, 9 ( = to avoid). All's II, 3, 247. T r o i l . 111,3,39. 142. Caes. IV, 3, 68 to p. on: Mids. II, 1, 163. H 8 II, 4, 130. Caes. II, 4, 26. to p., alone, — to go o n : Caes. I, 2, 24. = to g o a w a y : letting her p. so, All's III, 4, 20. I have no power to let her p. H 6 A V, 3, 60. what ransom must I pay before I p. f 73. till thou speak, thou shalt not p. from hence, H 6 B I, 4, 30. 2) to go b y ; locally and temporally: scorning it (the tear) should p. Ven. 982. in rage sent out, recalled in rage, being —ed, Lncr. 1671. when thou shalt strangely p. and scarcely greet me, Sonn. 49, 5. till the dregs of the storm be —ed, T p . II, 2, 43. the best is —ed, III, 3, 51. kneel to the duke before he p. the abbey, Err. V, 129. till this company be —ed, L L L I, 2, 131. the troop is —ed. All's III, 5, 96. daffed the world aside and bid it p. H 4 A IV, 1, 97 (as not caring for i t ; see b e l o w ; and cf. Sly's let the world slide, Shr. Ind. 1, 6). let's stay till he be —ed, H 6 C 111, 1, 12. behold the Lady Anne pass from her coronation, H 8 IV, 1, 3. flung gloves... upon him as he —ed, Cor. II, 1, 281. ere three days p. Shr. IV, 2, 38. hath told the thievish minutes how they p. All's II, 1, 169. let never day nor night unhallowed p. H 6 B II, I, 85. ere half an hour p. T i t . Ill, 1, 192. to let p. = to disregard, to take no notice of: did I let p. the abuse done to my niece? H 6 C III, 3, 188. let former grudges p. 195. let it, or let that p. — make no m o r e words a b o u t it: Wiv. 1 , 4 , 15. L L L V, 1, 102. 106. 111. 115. R 3 IV, 2, 88 ( F f rest). P e r . II, 3, 35 (cf. H 4 A IV, 1, 97). see Past. Transitively, = to neglect, to disregard, to o m i t : he shall not p. you, Meas. IV, 6, 12. if you fondly p. our proffered o f f e r , J o h n II, 258. please you that I may p. this doing, Cor. II, 2, 143. and —ed him toielected, II, 3, 207. cf. top. by in All's II, 3, 247. 3) to go over, to go across, to go t h r o u g h : he should not p. those grounds, P i l g r . 124. the ways are dangerous to p. Gent. IV, 3, 24. the Vapians —ing the equinoctial, T w . II, 3, 24. —ing these flats, J o h n V, 6, 40. he hath —ed the river Somme, H 5 III, 5, 1. well have we —ed and now repassed the seas, H 6 C IV, 7, 5. curses never p. the lips of those that breathe them in the air, R 3 I, 3, 285. who —ed the melancholy flood, I, 4, 45. to see great Pompey pass the streets of Rome, Caes. I, 1, 47. Used of t i m e , = to spend, to live t h r o u g h : you have —ed a hell of time, Sonn. 120, 6. I have —ed a miserable night, R 3 I, 4, 2. p. the remainder of our hateful days, T i t . Ill, 1, 132. in our last conference, —ed in probation with you, how you were borne m hand, Mcb. Ill, 1, 80. J o i n e d with adverbs: years, —ed over to the end they were created, H6C II, 5, 39. have no delight to p. away the time, R 3 I, 1, 25. Figuratively, = to see, to experience, to suffer: were I alone to p. the difficulties, Troil. II, 2, 139. the battles, sieges, fortunes, that I have —ed, Oth. I, 3, 131. she loved me for the dangers I had—ed, 167. be quiet then as men should be, till he hath —ed necessity, P e r . II P r o l . 6. 4 ) to go beyond: —ing all conceit, P i l g r . 110. and so conclusions —ed the careires, Wiv. I, 1, 184, i. e. carried the j o k e too f a r ; cf. he —es some humours and careers, H 5 11, 1, 132. she —is praise, L L L IV, 3, 241 (exceeds), though it p. your patience and mine, Shr. I. 1, 130. as —es colouring, W i n t . II, 2, 20. who

p —ed that —ing fair, Rom. I, 1, 242 ( = surpassed). not a man shall p. hit quarter, T i m . V, 4, 60. I have that within which —eth show, Hml. I, 2, 85. to far he —ed my thought, IV, 7, 89 (Qq topt). Absolutely, =- to exceed b o u n d s , to beggar description : the women have to shrieked at it that it —ed, WIT. I, 1, 310. this —et, Master Ford, IV, 2, 127. 143. all the rest so laughed that it —ed, Troil. I, 2, 182. he —es, Tim. I, 1, 12. cf. Passing. 5) to h a r e the liberty of g o i n g and coming, to have free passage: you may not p., you must return, Cor. V, 2, 5. 23. 26. 34. my lord, you p. not here, T i t . I, 290. then thou canst not p. to Mantua, Rom. Ill, 3, 149. sweet marjoram. P. L r . IV, 6, 94. let him not p., but kill him rather, Oth. V, 2, 241. Transitively, = to allow to g o : I know not what 1 shall incur to p. it, W i n t . 11,2,57. = to come into, to enter: no villanous bounty yet hath —ed my heart, T i m . II, 2, 182 (?). Figuratively, = a ) to be goffered, to be borne w i t h : in the number let me p. untold, Sonn. 136, 9. will that humour pJ Wiv. I, 3, 57. that I may p. with a reproof the easier, sith you yourself know etc. Wiv. II, 2, 194. thou didst make tolerable vent of thy travel; it might p. All's II, 3, 213. let me p. the same I am, W i n t . IV, 1, 9. and so agree the play may p. H8 Prol. 11. Transitively, = to suffer, and to make to be suffered or acknowledged: p. good humours, Wiv. I, 1, 169. we must have cracked crowns, and p. them current too, H 4 A II, 3, 97. some strange indignity, which patience could not p. Oth. II, 3, 246. uses a known truth to p. a thousand nothings with, All's II, 5, 32. b) to be enacted, to receive the sanction of the legislature: that bill had indeed against us —ed, H 5 I. 1, 3. t f i t p. against us, 7. your request shall make me let it p. V, 2, 372. if your will p., I shall both find your lordship judge and juror, H 8 V, 3, 59. to yield what —es here, Cor. II, 2, 58. And transitively, = to receive the sanction o f : hath he not —ed the noble and the common f Cor. Ill, 1, 29. being —ed for consul with full voice, III, 3, 59. c) to be current, to be regarded or estimated: they may p. for excellent men, Mids. V, 219. let him p. for a man, Merch. I, 2, 61. p. for a wise man, Tw.1,5,38. to p. for honest, Wint.11,3,72. 6) to die: let him p. peaceably, H 6 B I I I , 3 , 2 5 . thus might he p. indeed, Lr. IV, 6, 47. let him p. V, 3,313. 7) to happen, to proceed, to be done: what hath —ed between me and Ford's w\fe, Wiv. Ill, 5, 63. Meas. Ill, 1, 161. A d o V, 2, 48. T w . V, 158. this practice hath most shrewdly —ed upon thee, 360. the injuries that have on both sides — ed, 376. thou seest what's —ed, H6C III, 3, 226. how —ed itf H8 II, 1, 10. nought hath —ed, but even with law. Tit. IV, 4, 7. to bring to p. = to effect: Wiv. IV, 2, 183. Merch. I, 3, 93. Shr. Ill, 2, 131. to come top. = to h a p p e n : Meas. II, 1, 256. Mids. Ill, 2, 33. IV, 1, 83. As II, 5, 52. All's IV, 3, 371. T w . Ill, 4, 196. H8 I, 2, 63. Hml. 11, 2, 437. Ant. IV, 14, 121. Transitively, = to p e r f o r m , to effect, to d o : to see thee p. thy punto, thy stock, thy reverse, Wiv. II, 3, 26. this swain shall p. Pompey the Great, L L L V, 1, 135. and p. my daughter a sufficient dower, Shr. IV, 4, 45. we 11 p. the business privately and well, 57. 8) to utter, to pronounce: —ed sentence may not be recalled, Err. I, 1, 148. your oaths are —ed, L L L I, 1, 19. 49. my doom which I have—ed upon her, As

841 I, 3, 86. to p. assurance of a dower, Shr. IV, 2, 117. I'll add three thousand crowns to what it —ed already, All's III, 7, 36. he will not p. hit word for two pence that you are no fool, T w . I, 5, 86. remember thy promise —ed, R2 V, 3, 51. we will p. our accept and peremptory answer, H 5 V, 2, 82. make thee beg pardon for thy —ed speech, H6B 111, 2, 221. that (voice) not —ed me but by learned approbation of the judges, H 8 I, 2, 70 (me dat. ethicus). I have —ed my word and promise to the emperor, T i t . I, 468. Absol., = to pass sentence, to give j u d g m e n t : the jury, —ing on the prisoner's life, Meas. II, 1, 19. thieves do p. on thieves, 23. we may not p. upon his life without the form of justice, L r . Ill, 7, 24. 9) to thrust, to make a push in f e n c i n g : I pray you, p. with your best violence, Hml. V, 2, 309. Figuratively : an thou p. upon me, I'll no more with thee, T w . Ill, 1, 48 (if thou makest sallies of wit on my score). 10) to care f o r : as for these riUcen-coated slaves, I p. not, H6B IV, 2, 136 ( C a d e ' s speech; the trans, use sub 2 misconceived). Passable, 1) having free passage: the virtue of your name is not here p. Cor. V, 2, 13. 2 ) affording free passage: his body's a p. carcass, if he be not hurt, Cymb. I, 2, 10. P a a a a d a , a motion forwards and thrust in fencing: the p. he (Cupid) respects not, L L L I, 2, 184. ah, the immortal p. Rom. II, 4, 26. come, sir, your p. HI, 1, 88. P i u t f e , 1) the act of passing or moving, motion, course, entrance or exit: the wind, imprisoned in the ground, struggling for p. Ven. 1047. to make more vent for p. of her breath, Lucr. 1040. my (time's) sw\ft p. Wint. IV, 1, 5. whose p., vexed with thy impediment, shall leave his native channel, J o h n II, 336. the mouth of p. (i. e. the gate) shall we fling wide ope, 449. the sullen p. of thy weary steps esteem as foil, R 2 1,3, 265. must I not serve a long apprenticehood to foreign —s, 272 ( = a pilgrimage in foreign countries), hit (the son's) bright p. to the Occident, III, 3 , 6 7 . to give tweet p. to my sinful soul, H6C II, 3, 41. and with bloody p. led your wars even to the gates of Rome, Cor. V, 6, 76. are my doors opposed against myp.t T i m . Ill, 4, 80. if such actions may have p. free, Oth. 1, 2, 98. 2) a going to and fro of people: if by strong hand you offer to break in now in the stirring p. of the day, E r r . HI, 1, 99. no watcht nop.f Oth. V, 1, 37. 3) access, entry, avenue, way leading to and ont of sth.: which to his speech did honey p. yield, Ven. 452. through the velvet leaves the wind gan p. find, Pilgr. 232 and L L L IV, 3 , 1 0 6 . Err. IV, 2 , 3 8 . T w . 1, 3, 41. R2 I, 1, 125. V, 3, 62. V, 5, 20. H 5 II, 2, 16. H 6 A III, 2, 22. V, 4, 121. H6C I, 3, 22. IV, 3, 20. Cor. IV, 6, 215. T i t . I, 12. Mcb. 1, 2, 19. I, 5, 45. Cymb. V, 3, 23. Figuratively: the several and unhidden —s of his true titles to some certain dukedoms, H 5 1,1, 86 ( = open, manifest traces?). 4) departure, death: would some part of my young years might but redeem the p. of your age, H 6 A II, 5, 108. when he is fit and seasoned for hit p. Hml. Ill, 3, 86. and, for his p., the soldiers' music and the rites of war speak loudly for him, V,2,409. cf. H6C 11,3,41. 5) occurrence, accident, incident: this young gentlewoman had a father — O, that had! how sad a p. 'tist All's I, 1, 20. I see, in —s of proof, time qualifies the spark and fire of it (love) Hml. IV, 7, 54*

842

P

113. it is no act of common p., but a strain of rareness, her p. ends the play, 321. it was a p. of earnest. As Cymb. Ill, 4,94. IV, 3, 172. it did relieve my p. much, Tw. II, 4, 4. 6) coarse, process: our justice, in whose easiest p. I must speak in p. H4AII, 4,425. not in pleasure, but look for no lets than death, Wint. HI, 2, 91. the fear- in p. 458. his p. mooes me so, H6CI, 4,150. that ful p. of their death-marked love, Rom. Prol. 9. as if makes me bridle p. IV, 4, 19. a mother's tears in p. for the p. and whole carriage of this action rode on his her son, Tit. I, 106. Ill, 2, 48. Hml. II, 2, 541. 578. 587. IV, 5,188. Lr. IV, 3,16. Oth. IV, 1, 268. Per. tide, Troil. II, 3, 140. 7) a single act tending to some purpose or ex- IV, 4, 24. Caes. Ill, 1, 283. pressive of sentiments: no Christian can ever believe 4) amorous desire: love's strong p. All's I, 3,139. such impossible —s of grossness, T w . Ill, 2, 77. thou unfold the p. of my love, Tw. I, 4, 24. the beating of dost in thy —s of life make me believe, H4A III, 2, 8. so strong a p. as love doth give my heart, II, 4, 97. there is gallant and most brave —s, H5 III, 6, 97 breed love's settled — » , H6A V, 5, 4. any p. of infla(Fluellen's speech), but oft have hindered the —s made ming love, 82. plead my —sfor Lavinia's love. Tit. II, toward it (this business), H8 II, 4, 165. I, 36. my true love's p. Bom. II, 2, 104. Absol., = Passant, a term of heraldry, - - walking: Wiv. ardent love: trembling in her p. Ven. 27. 218. smothering his —s jar the present, Lucr. Arg. 13. the 1, 1, 20 (Evans' speech). Passenger, a traveller on foot, a wayfarer: Ven. master-mistress of my p. Sonn. 20, 2. Ado I, 1, 221. 91. Gent. IV, 1, 1. 72. V, 4, 15. B2 V, 3, 9. H6B II,3,110. 112. Ill, 1,83. As II, 4, 41. 61. V, 2, 101. Shr. Ill, 1, 74. All's I, 3, 180. 196. Tw. II, 2, 23. Ill, III, 1, 129. 227. Passing, 1) adj. egregions, excessive: a p. shame, 1, 164. Ill, 4, 226. H6C III, 3, 62. Bom. II Prol. 13. Gent I, 2, 17. her p. deformity, II, 1, 81. Op. traitor, II, 1, 7. Tim. I, 1, 133. H6C V, 1, 106. 5) any disposition or affection ruling the mind: 2) adv. (used only before adjectives and adverbs) catching all —s in his craft of will, Compl. 126. they exceedingly:p. strong, Ven. 297. p. fair, Pilgr. 229 their —s likewise lent me of grief and blushes, 199. and L L L IV, 3, 103. Gent. IV, 4, 15a. p. shrewdly, more merry tears the p. of loud laughter never shed, Ado II, 1, 84. Mids. II, 1, 20. As III, 5, 138. Shr. Mids. V, 70. how all die other —s fleet to air, as doubtInd. 1, 67. II, 113. 244. Ill, 2, 24. IV, 1, 193. IV, 3, ful thoughts, and rash-embraced despair, and shudder18. Wint. IV, 4, 294. H4B IV, 2, 85. H5 IV, 2, 42. ing fear, and green-eyed jealousy, Merch. Ill, 2, 108. B3 I, 1, 94. Cor I, 1, 207. Tit. II, 3, 84. Bom. I, 1, break into some merry p. Shr. Ind. 1, 97. a notable p. 240. Hml. II, 2, 427. Oth. I, 3, 160. of wonder, Wint. V, 2, 17. (merriment) a p. hateful Passing-bell, the bell that rings at the hour of to my purposes, John III, 3, 47. free from gross p. or death: Ven. 702. of mirth or anger, H5 II, 2, 132. of all base —s fear P a s s i m , subst. 1) any suffering: any p. under is most accursed, H6A V, 2, 18. vexed I am with —s heaven that does afflict our natures, Hml. II, 1, 105. of some difference, Caes. I, 2,40. I have much mistook Emphatically, the last suffering of the Saviour; only your p. 48. two extremes of p., joy and grief, Lr. V, 3, in scurrilous exclamations: Cock's p. Shr. IV, 1, 121. 198. whose every p. fully strives to make itselffair and Cox my p. All's V, 2, 43. Evans says: Got's will, and admired, Ant. I, 1, 50. L L L IV, 3, 140. Merch. IV, 1, his p. of my heart, Wiv. Ill, 1, 62. 51. As I, 2, 269. HI, 2, 433. Tim. Ill, 5, 21. Oth. IV, 2) disorder, disease: till this afternoon his p. ne'er 1,41. Ant. I, 2, 151. IV, 15, 74. V, 1, 63. Per.1,2,II. brake into extremity of rage, Err. V, 47. our grandam Passian, vb. to feel pain and sorrow, to grieve: earth, having this distemperature, in p. shook, H4A dumbly she —s, Ven. 1059. shall not myself, that reIII, 1, 35. you shall offend him and extend his p. Mcb. lish all as sharply, p. as they, be kindlier moved than Ill, 4, 57. thou artt Tp.V, 24. Ariadne —ingfor Theseus' perjury, 3) any violent commotion of the mind: variable Gent. IV,4,172. I p. to say wherewith, L L L 1,1, 264. —s throng her constant woe, Ven. 967. 969. such p. Passienate, adj. 1) expressing great commotion her assails, Lucr. 1562. your father 's in some p. that of mind: Mids. Ill, 2, 220. H6B I, 1,104. Hml. II, works him strongly, Tp. IV, 143. what means this p. 2, 452. at his namet Gent. 1, 2, 16. each one with ireful p. 2) sorrowful: poor forlorn Proteus, p. Proteus, Err. V, 151. Ado V, 1, 23. L L L IV, 3, 202. Mids. Ill, Gent. I, 2, 124. warble, child; make p. my sense of 2, 74. Merch. II, 8, 12. Ill, 1, 63. Tw. Ill, 4, 407. IV, hearing, L L L III, 1 (Armado's speech; cf. Merch. V, I,56. Wint. II, 3, 28. IV, 4, 507. John III, 4, 39. IV, 69). she is sad and p. John II, 544. 2,79. 263. H4B 1,1,161. 165. IV, 4, 40. H5 I, 2, 3) Misapplied for compassionate: this p. humour 242. H6A IV, 1, 183. H8 I, 1, 149. Troil. II, 2, 169. of mine, B3 I, 4, 121 (Qq my holy humour). 111,2,37. V,2, 162. 181. Cor. IV, 4, 19. Tit. Ill, 1, Passianate, vb. to express sorrowfully: thy niece 218. Tim. Ill, I, 59. Mcb. IV, 3, 114. Hml. Ill, 2, 8. and I, poor creatures, want our hands and cannot p. I I . 77.204. 111,4, 107. V, 2, 80. Lr. 11, 2, 81. 11,4, our tenfold grief with folded arms, Tit. Ill, 2, 6. 237. Oth. II, 3, 206. 111,3,124.391. IV, 1, 78. 277. Passive, unresisting, yielding, obedient (?): such V, 2, 44. Ant. II, 2, 12.111, 10, 5. as may the p. drugs of it (the world) freely command, Especially, = violent sonrow: p. on p. deeply is Tim. IV, 3, 254. redoubled, Ven. 832. no object but her —'s strength Passpart, a written permission of passage: All's renews, Lucr. 1103. the life and feeling of her p. she III, 2, 58. H5 IV, 3, 36. Per. Ill, 2, 66. hoards, 1317. my woe too sensible thy p. maketh more Passy measure, corrupted from passamezzo, feeling-painful, 1678. his p. but an art of cra ft, Compl. the Italian name of a slow and stately dance: he's a 295. allaying both their fury and my p. with its sweetrogue and a —s panyn (later Ff pavin ) T w . V, 206 air, Tp. I, 2, 392. —'s solemn tears, L L L V, 2, 118. (Malone: "Sir Toby means that the surgeon is a grave this p., and the death of a dear friend, Mids. V, 293. solemn coxcomb").

p

843

P u t , adj. 1) gone by; done or accomplished in, Lr. II, 4, 124. thai small model of the barren earth and belonging to, a time previous to the present: all which serves asp. and cover to our bones, B2III, 2,154. Pastern, a horse's leg: any that treads but on sins p. Lncr. 923. what u p. 1685. things p. Sonn. 30, 2. Tp. II, 1, 253. U, 2, 43. Ill, 3, 51. Meas. IT, 2, four —s, H5 III, 7, 13 ( F l postures'). Pastime, amusement: Tp. V, 38. Gent II, 7, 35. 151. John IV, 3, 51. H6A 1, 2, 57. B3 IF, 4, 390. L L L IV, 3, 377. V, 2, 360. As V, 4, 201. Shr. Ind. Troil. Ill, 3, 177. Tim. II, 1, 21 etc. 2) former, done before a time mentioned or under- 1, 67. I, 1, 68. All's I, 2, 57. Tw. III, 4, 151. W i n t stood: my folly p. Gent. I, 2, 65. my riots p. Wiv. Ill, I, 2, 152. II, 3, 24 (make their p. at my sorrow). T i t 4, 8. my p. endeavours, All's I, 3, 5. may token to the II, 3, 26. Hml. Ill, 1,15. IV, 7, 33. Lr. II, 4, 6. Cymb. future our p. deeds, IV, 2, 63. our dear services p. and III, 1, 79 (makep. with us). to come, Wint. II, 3, 151. my p. life, III, 2, 34. my Paatsr, a minister of the gospel: Hml. I, 3, 47. service p. Oth. Ill, 4, 116. Pastoral, sabst. a play representing the life and 3) gone by, over, gone, existing no more, lost: manners of shepherds: methinks I play as I have seen my day's delight is p. Ven. 380. your cue is p. Mids. them do in Whittun —s, Wint. IV, 4, 134. the best III, 1, 103. IV, 1, 144. Merch. II, 6, 2. H6C IV, 6, actors in the world, either for tragedy, comedy, history, 98. R3 IV, 4, 364. H8 IV, 1, 95. Troil. V, 2, 97. p. Hml. 11,2,416. Paataral - e s m l e a l , combining the qualities of Tim. Ill, 2, 7. Oth. 1, 3, 204 etc. for doing I amp. All's II, 3, 246 ( = I can no more do), 'tis p., and so an idyl and of a comedy: Hml. II, 2, 416. Paat-prspsrtisn (not hyphened in O. Edd.) imam I, Lr. V, 3, 164. had he been where he thought, by this had thought been p. IV, 6, 45. when remedies are mensity: will you with counters sum the p. of his infip. Oth. I, 3, 202. until some half hour p. Lr. V, 3, 193 nitet Troil. II, 2, 29. (half an hoar ago). Pastry» a room in which pies and the like are Past, sabst. the time previous to the present: made: they call for dates and quinces in the p. Bom. Sonn. 123,10. H4B I, 3, 108. Troil. Ill, 3,164 (inp.). IV, 4, 2. Fast, prepos. 1) beyond; temporally: p. prime, Past-savins,abandoned, damned: what ap. slave Sonn. 12, 3. my days are p. the best, 138, 6. p. the is this I All's IV, 3, 158. mid season, Tp. I, 2, 239. Wiv. II, 3, 4. Ill, 5, 134. Pasture, 1) ground on which cattle or other Meas. Ill, 2, 193. V, 402. As IV, 3, 1. Shr. Ill, 1, 71. beasts feed: Gent I, 1, 105. L L L II, 221. As II, 4, Wint. V, 2, 137. H4B I, 2, 110. HI, 2, 269 etc. 'tis 88. HI, 2, 28. B2 111, 3, 100. H5 II Chor. 5. Ant. I, one o' clock and p. H4B III, 1, 34. 4, 65. Cymb. V, 4, 2. 2) beyond, farther than; locally: the enemy is p. 2) the food taken by grazing: As II, 1, 53. H5 the marsh, S3 V, 3, 345. I have tumbled p. the throw, 111, 1, 27. Tim. IV, 3, 12. Cor. V, 2, 21. P a s t y , a pie baked in a crust: Wiv. 1,1, 202. 3) more than: not p. three quarters of a mile, W i n t All's IV, 3, 140. Tit. V, 2, 190. IV, 3, 85. not p. three or four hairs, Troil. I, 2, 121. P a t , quite to the purpose, fitly, exactly: are toe six weeks and p. Tim. II, 2, 31. not p. a pint, Oth. all mett p.p. Mids. HI, 1, 2. it will fall p. as I told II, 3, 68. you, V, 188. nor could come p. betwixt too early and 4) beyond, oat of the reach of, not to be attained too late, H8 II, 3, 84. now might I do it p. Hml. Ill, by: p. the help of law, Lncr. 1022. p. reason's weak 3, 73. and p. he comes, Lr. I, 2, 146. removing, 243. a limit p. my praise, Sonn. 82,6. p. P a t a y , correction of M. Edd. in H6A IV, 1,19; cure, 147,9. Tp. V, 141. Meas. II, 1, 116. Shr. Ill, O. Edd. Poictiers. 2, 54. All's II, 1, 161. John IV, 2, 86. Bom. IV, 1, P a t c h , sabst 1) a piece sewed on to cover a 45. p. thought, Err. V, 189. Ado II, 3, 106. Oth. I, hole: — es set upon a little breach, John IV, 2, 32. 1, 167. p. the endurance of a block, Ado II, 1, 246. botch and bungle up damnation with —es, colours, H5 thou drivest me p. the bounds of maidens patience, II, 2, 116. a king of shreds and—es, Hml. Ill, 4, 102. Mids. Ill, 2, 65. H8 II, 4, 130. p. the wit of man, 2) a piece of silk or velvet used to cover a defect Mids. IV, 1, 211. Rom. IV, 1, 47. p. all saying nay, on the face: with a p. of velvet on'sface, All's IV, 5,100. Merch. Ill, 2, 232. p. all expressing, HI, 5, 78. our —es will I get unto these cudgelled scars, H5 V, 1, 93. weakness p. compare, Shr. V, 2, 174. p. question, Tw. 3) a plot of ground: to gain a little p. of ground, I, 3, 104. p. enduring, Wint. II, 1, 2. urged p. my Hml. IV, 4, 18. defence, John 1, 258. p. redress, p. care, B2 II, 3, 171. 4 ) a paltry fellow: what a pied ninny's this! thou that's p. praying for, H4A 11, 4, 211. p. recovery, scurvy p. Tp. Ill, 2, 71. coxcomb, idiot, p. Err. Ill, 1, B6B I, 1, 116. p. hiding, p. watching, Troil. I, 2, 294. 32. what p. is made our porter t 36. a p. set on learn295. a joy p. joy, Bom. Ill, 3, 173. p. hope, p. cure, ing, L L L IV, 2, 32. a crew of —es, rude mechanicals, p. help, IV, 1, 45. p. depth, Tim. III, 5, 12. a sight p. Mids. HI, 2, 9. the p. is kind enough, but a huge feeder, speaking of, Lr. IV, 6, 209. p. the size of dreaming, Merch. II, 5,46. what soldiers, p.f Mcb. V, 3, 15. Ant. V, 2, 97 etc. In the cited passages of Tp., Err. and Merch. the 5) without: p. reason hunted, Sonn. 129, 6. now word is by most commentators interpreted as meanreason is p. care, 147, 9. when help p. sense we deem,ing a domestic fool, supposed to be called so from All's II, 1, 127. my art is not p. power, 161. a wreck his parti - coloured dress. Douce proves that several p. hope he was, Tw. V, 82. that's p. doubt, W i n t I, 2, fools in the sixteenth century bore the nickname of 268. p. all shame, 111, 2, 85. p. all truth, 86. p. doubt, Patch. Cor. II, 3, 265. Patch, vb. 1) to mend with a piece sewed on: Pact-care, adj. incurable: our p. malady, All's Tw. I, 5, 52. John IV, 2, 34. Cor. Ill, 1, 252. —ed II, 1, 124. = paltry: a —edfool, Mids. IV, 1, 215 (according to P a s t e , the pie-crust: Tit. V, 2, 188. 189. 201. some, = parti-coloured).

844

P

2) to make up of pieces and shreds: if you U p. a quarrel, as matter whole you have not to make it with, Ant. II, 2, 52. you —ed up your excuses, 56. 3) to repair with pieces of any kind: that that earth, which kept the world ui awe, should p. a wall, Hml. V, 1, 239. 4) to mend or repair as well as may be: p. grief with proverbs, Ado V, 1, 17. virtue that transgresses is but —ed with sin, Tw. I, 5, 53. 54. begin to p. up thine old body for heaven, H4B II, 4, 252. cf. Cor. Ill, 1, 252. 5) to disfignre: —ed with foul moles, John HI, 1,47. P a t c h - b r e e c h , name in Per. II, 1, 14. P a t c h e i r , botchery intended to hide fanlts; gross and bungling hypocrisy: here is suc h p., such juggling and such knavery, Troil. II, 3, 77. you hear him cog, see him dissemble, know his gross p. Tim. V, 1, 99. P a t e , the head; used in contempt or in ridicule: T p . IV, 244. Wiv. II, 1, 197. Err. I, 2, 65. 82. II, 1, 78. II, 2, 71. 220. Ill, 1, 74. L L L I, 1, 26. Shr. I, 2, 12. II, 155. All's II, 1, 68. Wint. I, 2, 223. J o h n II, 568. H4A II, 1, 33. V, 3, 32. Ho IV, 1, 54. V, 1, 43. 62. V, 2, 169. H 6 A III, 1,82. H6B V, 1, 135. Cor. IV, 6, 82. Bom. IV, 5,120. Tim. IV, 3, 17. Hml. II, 2, 599. V, 1, 86. 116. 305. Oth. II, 1, 127. Cymb. 11,1,8. P a t e n t , subst. a privilege: Soon. 87, 8. Mids. 1, 1, 80. All's IV, 5, 69. Oth. IV, 1, 209. letters —s = writings by which some rights are granted: R2 II, 1, •202. II, 3, 130. H8 III, 2, 250. P a t e r n a l , fatherly: Lr. I, 1, 115. P a t h , subst. a track, a way for foot-passengers: Ven. 908. Wiv. IV, 4, 59. Mids. V, 389. As I, 3, 15. R2 I, 3, 143. H5 II, 4, 52. R3 I, 1, 117. Troil. Ill, 3, 155. Rom. II, 3, 4. Cymb. Ill, 6, 18. Figuratively: Ven. 788. Meas. IV, 3, 138. John III, 4, 129. R3 III, 7, 157. Tit. II, 1, 111. Hml. I, 3, 50. P a t h , vb. to walk, to go: if thou p., thy native semblance on, Caes. II, 1, 83 (Pope march, Dyce put, Grant White hadst, Anon, pass or pace). P a t h e t l c a l , a word used by the poet, as it seems, with intentional impropriety, in the sense of pleasing or displeasing in a high degree; striking, shocking: sweet invocation of a child; most pretty and p. LLL 1, 2, 103 (Armado's speech). i< is a most p. nit, IV, 1, 150 (Costard's speech), the most p. break-promise, As IV, 1, 196. P a t h w a y , path: R2 I, 2, 31. Rom. I, 1, 178. II, 3, 4 (reading of F l ; the rest of O. Edd. path). P a t i e n c e , name of a gentlewoman of Queen Katharine: HS IV, 2, 76. 82. 127. P a t i e n c e , 1) a calm temper in grief and suffering: p. tame to sufferance, Sonn. 58, 7. do not press my tongue-tied p. with too much disdain, 140,2. Tp. V, 140. Ado IV, 1, 256. V, 1, 10. 19. 27. L L L 1, 1, 197. Mids. I, 1, 152. Ill, 1, 197. As I, 3, 80. V, 2, 103. V, 4, 193. Shr. II, 297. Wint. Ill, 2, 33 etc. Personified as a fem.: Troil. I, 1, 28. Oth. IV, 2, 63. cf. Tp. V, 140. Err. II, 1, 32. As IV, 3, 13. Represented by statues placed on graves: she sat like P. on a monument, sailing at grief, Tw. II, 4, 117. yet thou dost look like 1'. gazing on kings' graves and smiling extremity out of act, Per. V, 1, 139. 2) quiet perseverance in waiting for sth.: O, p.! the statue is but newly fixed, Wint. V, 3, 46. linger

your p. OH, H 5 II Cbor. 31. H6B I, 4, 18. HS V, 2, 19. 3) calmness, composure; opposed to passionateness.- where thou with p. must my will abide, Lucr. 486. 1158. 1268. 1505. I'm out of p. Tp. I, 1, 58. have p. Gent. II, 2, 1. V, 4, 27. Wiv. HI, 1, 55. IV, 2, 28. Meas. IV, 3, 123. V, 116. 235. Err. II, 1, 32. 39. 41. 111, 1, 85. 94. IV, 2, 16. V, 174. L L L IV, 3, 165. Mids. III, 2, 66. 161. As IV, 3, 13. Shr. I, 2, 45. HI, 2, 21. All's III, 2, 50. T w . 11, 5, 83. Rom. I, 5, 91 (cf. Perforce). Hml. Ill, 4, 124. V, 1, 317. 322. Per. V, 1, 145 etc. take p. = have p. Lr. II, 4, 140. take your p. to you, Wint. Ill, 2, 232. you must take your p. to you, H8 V, 1, 106. we will not wake your p. Ado V, 1, 102; cf. to wake our peace, R2 I, 3, 132 (and the contrary: peace shall go sleep, IV, 139). lest thou move our p. R3 1, 3, 248; cf. Err. II, 1, 32; Meas. V, 235; Mids. Ill, 2, 161. 4) indulgence, forbearance, leniency: my p., more than thy desert, is privilege for thy departure hence, Gent. Ill, 1, 159. I do entreat your p. to hear me speak the message, IV, 4, 116. an old abusing of God's p. Wiv. 1, 4, 5. I know not how to pray your p. Ado V, 1, 280. begged my p. Mids. IV, 1, 6 i . your p. for my long abode, Merch. II, 6, 21. ours be your p. then, All's V, 3,339. your p. this allowing, I turn my glass, Wint. IV, 1, 15 etc. Hence = permission: but only, with your p., that we may taste of your wine, H6A 11, 3, 78. under your p. Tit. II, 3, 66. they stay upon your p. Hml. ill, 2, 112. by your p. = by your leave: Tp. III, 3, 3. As V, 4, 186. Tw. II, 1, 3. H5 III, 6, 31. R3 IV, 1, 15. Cor. I, 3, 81. I, 9, 55. Lr. V, 3, 59. by your gracious p. Oth. I, 3, 89. Misapplied by Costard: L L L I, 2, 170. P a t i e n t , adj. 1) bearing evils with calmness and fortitude: for your sake am I this p. log-man, Tp. III. 1, 67. a p. sufferance, Ado I, 3, 10. still have I borne it with a p. shrug, Merch. 1, 3, 110. R2 I, 4, 29. II, I, 163. 169. H4B I, 2, 145. H5 III, 7, 24. Troil. I, 3, 36. Hml. Ill, 1, 74. 2) quietly waiting: I'll be asp. as a gentle stream, Gent. II, 7, 34. be p., lords, and give them leave to speak, H6A IV, 1, 82. Caes. I, 1, 46. Ill, 2, 154. Lr. II, 4, 233. 3) calm, composed, not passionate: playing p. sports in unconstrained gyves, Compl. 242. I will be p. Wiv. II, 1, 130. a wise and p. churchman, 11, 3, 57. thou must be p. Meas. IV, 3,159. as p. as the midnight sleep, Cor. HI, 1, 85. as p. as the female dove, Hml. V, 1,309 etc. be p. = compose yourself: Tp. I, 1, 16. IV, 205. Gent. V, 3, 2. Err. II, 1, 9. IV, 4, 19. V, 102. As I, 1, 66. Shr. II, 304. Tw. II, 3, 142. Ho III, 5, 66. H6B I, 3, 68. II, 4, 26. Ill, 2, 36. H6C I, 1, 214. 215. R 3 I, 2, 82. I, 3, 157. Ill, 5, 21. IV, 4, 151. V, 1, 2 etc. 4) indulgent, conniving: the which if you with p. ears attend, what here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend, Rom. Prol. 13. P a t i e n t , subst. a person attended by a physician in illness: Lucr. 904. Sonn. I l l , 9. Wiv. II, 3, 97. Err. V, 294. All s II, 1, 207. 11, 3, 53. R2 II, 1, 97. H4B I, 2, 147. H8 III, 2, 41. Troil. II, 3, 224. V, 1, 12. Mcb. V, 3, 37. 45. Per. V, 1, 71. P a t i e n t , vb. refl. to compose one's self: p. yourself, Tit. 1, 121.

p

845

Patiently, 1) with calm endurance in suffering: let mine own judgment p. out my death, Meas. II, 1, 30. Lucr. 1641. Gent. V, 3, 4. Meas. II, 3, 20. Ill, 2, 79. which is more than history can p. Wint. Ill, 2, 37. —ed Err. 1, 2, 86. Ado V, 1, 36. Merch. II, 9, 78. H 4 A V, by thy fault, foul sin may say, Lucr. 629. such a place, 5, 12. H5 V, 2, 300. Cymb. Ill, 5, 118. —ed by that the poet here describes, Tit. IV, 1, 57. 2) calmly, tranquilly: Mids. II, 1, 140. As II, 7, P a u l , name of the thirteenth apostle: R3 I, 1, 61. H5 IV Chor. 24. B3 IV, 4, 156. Troil. V, 9, 7. 138 ( F f John). I, 2, 36. 41. I, 3, 45. Ill, 4, 78. V, Lr. IV, 6, 36. 3, 216. PauVs = Saint Paul's Church, the principal 3) with indulgence: we beg your hearing p. Hml. cathedral of London: H 4 A II, 4, 576. H4B I, 2, 58. 111,2, 161. good heavens, hear p. my purpose, Cymb. B2 I, 2, 30. Ill, 6, 3. H8 V, 4, 16 ( 0 . Edd. Powles V, 1, 22. or Poules). Nares: "St. Paul's church was a constant Patlnea ( F l Qq pattens, the later Ft patterns) place of resort for business and amusement." Our plates of metal: the floor of heaven is thick inlaid with poet mentions the custom of hiring servants there, p. of bright gold, Merch. V, 59. with allusion to the proverb: "who goes to Westminster Patrician, a nobleman in ancient Rome: Cor. for a wife, to St. Paul's for a man, and to Smithfield I, 1, 16. 68. 75. I, 9, 4. II, 1, 51. 212. Ill, 1, 91. for a horse, may meet with a whore, a knave, and a 186. IV, 3, 15. IV, 7, 30. V, 6, 82. Tit. I, 1. 204. jade." 231. 445. Panlina, the wife of Antigonus in Wint. Ill, 3, Patrick, name of a saint; Gent. IV, 3, 43. V, 1, 36. V, 1, 49 etc. 3. V, 2, 42. Hml. I, 5, 136. Paunch, subst the region of the guts, the belly: Patrlmany, heritage: Shr. IV, 4, 22. B2 II, 1, fat —es have lean pates, L L L I, 1, 26. Sir John P. 237. H6B V, 1, 187. L r . V, 3, 75. H 4 A II, 2, 69. ye fat p. II, 4, 159. Patreclna, name of the friend of Achilles: Troil. Panneh, vb. to rip the belly, to eviscerate: p. him I, 3, 146 etc. with a state, Tp. Ill, 2, 98. Patran, he on whom another depends, in whose Panae, subst. 1) a temporary stop, an intermission protection or dominion he lives: O thou clear god (the of acting or speaking: swelling passion doth provoke sun) and p. of all light, Ven. 860. twenty years have a p. Ven. 218. he rouseth up himself and makes a p. / ( t h e duke) been p. to Antipholus, Err. V, 327. my Lucr. 541. B3 I, 2, 162. Hml. II, 2, 509. Oth. V, body's fostering p. (the king) L L L I, I, 223. I'll plead 2, 82. for you as for my p. Shr. I, 2, 156. and will repute 2 ) a stop made and time taken for consideration: you the p. of my life and liberty, IV, 2, 113. call War- without any p. or staggering, Wiv. Ill, 3, 12. hadst thou wick p. H6C V, 1, 27. patricians, —s of my right, but shook thy head or made a p. John IV, 2, 231. a Tit. I, 1. Andronicus, p. of virtue, 65. the five best night is but small breath and little p. to answer matters senses acknowledge thee their p. Tim. I, 2, 130. my of this consequence, H511,4,145. give me some breath, great p. Lr. I, 1, 144. my worthy arch and p. II, 1,61. some little p. B3 IV, 2, 24. what dreams may come ... Patronage, vb. to maintain, to make good: as must give us p. Hml. Ill, 1, 68. steps in to Cassio and an outlaw in a castle keeps and useth it to p. his theft, entreats hi» p. Oth. II, 3, 229. he mocks the —s that H 6 A III, 1, 48. darest thou maintain the former words he makes, Ant. V, 1, 3. thou spakestt Yes, sir, as well as you dare p. the en3) consideration, reflexion: sad p. and deep revious barking of your saucy tongue, III, 4, 32. gard beseem the sage, Lucr. 277. too long a p. for that P a t r a n e u , protectress: the p. of heavenly har- which you find there, Merch. II, 9, 53. but yet I'U make mony, Shr. Ill, 1, 5. behold our p. Cor. V, 5, 1. Lu- a p. H6C III, 2, 10. justles roughly by all time of p. cina, divinestp. to those that cry by night, Per. Ill, 1,11. Troil. IV, 4, 37. like a man to double business bound, Pattern, subst. 1 ) a model proposed for imita- I stand in p. where I shall first begin, Hml. Ill, 3, 42. tion: figures of delight, drawn after you, you p. of all this sudden sending him away must seem deliberate p. those, Sonn. 98, 12. by the p. of mine own thoughts I IV, 3, 9. cut out the purity of his, Wint. IV, 4, 393. their mePause, vb. 1) to make a stop, to intermit or dismory shall as a p. or a measure live, by which his grace continue acting or speaking: p. a while, and let my must mete the lives of others, H4B IV, 4, 76. counsel sway you in this case, Ado IV, 1, 202. p. a Hence a precedent: so we could find some p. day or two before you hazard, Merch. Ill, 2, 1. while of our shame, John III, 4, 16. a p., precedent and I p., serve in your harmony, Shr. Ill, 1, 14. we coldly lively warrant for me to perform the like, Tit. V, 3, 44. p. for thee, John II, 53 (to hear thy message), p. or 2) something of supreme excellence, fit to serve be more temperate, 195. stay and p. a while, H 4 A I, as a model or exemplar: beauty's p. to succeeding men, 3, 129. there did he p. V, 2, 66. p. and take thy breath, Sonn. 19, 12. p. in himself to know, Meas. Ill, 2, 277. H 6 A IV, 6, 4. what seest thou in met why dost thou he is one of the —s of love, As IV, 1, 100. a p. to p.t H6B V, 2, 19. I'll never p. again, never stand all princes, H8 V, 5, 23. I will be the p. of all patience, still, H6C 11,3, 30. good fortune bids us p. II, 6, 31. I have seen thee p. and take thy breath, Troil IV, 5, Lr. Ill, 2, 37. 3) something made after a model, an example, an 192. I p. for a reply, Caes. Ill, 2,36. I must p. till instance: this p. of the worn-out age pawned honest it come back to me, 112. yet p. a while, Per. II, 3, 53. looks, Lucr. 1350. knew the —s of his foul beguiling, 2) to take time for consideration, to consider beCompl. 170. a p. of celestial peace, H 6 A V, 5, 65. the fore acting: —ing for means to mourn some newer —s that by God and by French fathers had twenty way, Lucr. 1365. patience unmoved, no marvel though years been made, H511,4,61. Emphatically, a master- she p. Err. II, 1, 32. take time top. Mids. I, 1, 83. p. piece: behold this p. of thy butcheries, B3 I, 2, 54. there, Morocco, Merch. II, 7, 24. but yet I'll p. B2 II, thou cunningest p. of excelling nature, Oth. V, 2, 11. 3, 168. other offenders we will p. upon, H 4 A V, 5, 15. Pattern, vb. to be an example or precedent for: 3) to hesitate, to hold back, to delay: were I hard-

846

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favoured then mightst thou p. Ven. 137. why doth the Jew p.1 take thy forfeiture, Merch. IT, 1, 335. p. not, J o h n V, 1, 14. do not p. E 3 I, 2, 180. p., if thou wilt, Troil. V, 6, 14. 4) Used reflexively, - to repose one's self: only we want a little personal strength, and p. us, till these rebels come underneath the yoke of government, II4B IV, 4, 9. P a t u e r , one who deliberates much: the p. reason, Mcb. II, 3,117. P i u i l i i | l y , deliberately: with demure confidence this p. ensued, H8 I, 2, 168. P a v e d , laid over and floored as with stones: his p. bed (the grave) Meas. V, 440. if the streets were p. with thine eyes, L L L IV, 3, 278. by p. fountain, Mids. II, 1, 84 ( = pebbly), my way shall be p. with English faces, H 5 III, 7, 87. when the way was made, and p. with gold, H8 I, 1, 188. P a v e m e n t , that which is laid over the way to make it passable: lie there for p. to the abject rear, Troil. Ill, 3, 162. the marble p. closes, Cymb. V, 4, 120, i. e. the sky, heaven; ct. floor in Merch. V, 58. P a v l l U n , a tent: L L L II, 250. V, 1,94. V, 2,660. H5 IV, 1, 27. Troil. Prol. 15. 1,3,305. Ant. II, 2,204. P a v l l l a n e d , tented, encamped: H5 I, 2, 129. P a v l a , a grave Spanish dance (French pavane : a pasty-measures p. Tw. V, 207. F l panyn. P a w , the foot of a beast of prey: Sonn. 19, 1. John III, 1, 259. R2 V, 1, 29. H6B V, 1, 153. H6C I, 3, 13. Tit. II, 3, 152. P a w n , snbst. 1) something given as a security, a pledge: Gent. I, 3, 47. II, 4, 91. Wint. IV, 4, 853. J o h n V, 2, 141. R2 I, 1, 74. IV, 55. 70. to lay to p.: Wiv. II, 2, 5. Ill, 1, 113. to have in p.: Wint. IV, 4, 839. 2) a stake hazarded in a wager: my life I held but as a p. to wage against thine enemies, Lr. I, 1, 157. 3) the state of being pledged: redeem from broking p. the blemished crown, R2 II, 1, 293. my honour is at p. H4B II, 3, 7. P a w n , vb. 1) to pledge: Lucr. 1351. Err. V, 389. H4B II, 1, 153. 167. 171. IV, 2, 112. H6C III, 3, 116. IV, 2, 9. R3 IV, 2, 92. Cor. V, 6, 21. Tim. 1,1, 147. Cymb. 1,6, 194. to p. down: Lr. I, 2 , 9 2 . With to: till he hath —ed his horses to mine host, Wiv. II, 1, 99. John III, 1, 98. H6C V, 7, 39. Tim. Ill, 5, 81. 2) to pnt to stake, to stake: —ing his honour to obtain his lust, Lucr. 156. something else —ed with the other, Merch. Ill, 5, 87. I'll p. the little blood which I have left to save the innocent, Wint. II, 3, 166. H6B V, 1, 113. Cor. Ill, 1, 15. Cymb. 1, 4, 118. Almost = to lose, to forfeit: the garter, blemished, —ed his knightly honour, R3 IV, 4, 370. p. their experience to their present pleasure, Ant. I, 4, 32. 3) to secure by a pledge: I'Up. this truth with my three drops of blood, Troil. I, 3, 301 (Q prove). P a x , the cover of the sacred chalice at mass: H5 III, 6, 42. 47. P a y , subst. payment, the giving something in compensation or recompense for a service done: when her lips were ready for his p. Ven. 89. such uncurrent p. (viz thanks) Tw. HI, 3, 16. a noble shalt thou have and present p. H5 II, 1,112. that you have ta'en these tenders for true p. Hml. I, 3, 106. thy sacred physic shall receive such p. Per. V, 1, 74. Particularly, wages given to soldiers: H4B IV, 2, 70. H6B 111, 1,62. 105.

108. H6C II, 1 , 1 3 4 . IV, 7, 88. V, 5, 88. to have in p. R2 III, 2, 60; cf. H 5 IV, 1, 315. to fight against me under Percy's p. H4A 111, 2, 126. P a y , vb. 1) to give as an equivalent or compensation or debt owed; without an object: he shall p. for him, Tp. 11, J, 81. I'll make them p. Wiv. IV, 3, I I . Meas. II, 1, 105. Ill, 2, 126. Tw. V, 40. Wint. I, 1, 18. H4A III, 3, 201 (—ing back). H5 II, 3, 51 (cf. Pitch) etc. With an accns.: p. slavish tribute, Lucr. 299. what he owes thee thou thyself dost p. Sonn. 79,14. Tp. II, 1,293. Merch. 111,2, 56. till some certain shot be paid, Gent. II, 5, 7. I paid nothing for it, Wiv. IV, 5, 62. V, 5, 118. Err. I, 2, 85. IV, 1, 72. 74. V, 131. 284. L L L V, 2, 334 (p. him the due). H 4 A II, 4, 599 and 111, 3, 200 (paid back again). H6A II, 2, 7 (I have paid my vow, i. e. done what I vowed). Cymb. V, 4, 165 etc. 2) to satisfy, to quit by giving an equivalent; a) the debt to be quitted being the object: one sweet kiss shall p. this countless debt, Ven. 84. pain —s the income of each precious thing, Lucr. 334. p. the willing loan, Sonn. 6, 6. Tp. Ill, 2, 140. Wiv. II, 2, 123. Err. IV, 4, 124. Tw. II, 4, 71. 72 etc. b) the person satisfied as object: so you're paid, Tp. II, 1, 36. I am paid, Gent. V, 4, 77. I was paid for my learning, Wiv. IV, 5, 63. top. the saddler, Err. I, 2, 56. Ado V, 1, 255. Merch. IV, 1, 415. Shr. IV, 3, 166. 168. H6B IV, 1, 30 etc. Dat. and accus.: till every minute —s the hour his debt, Lucr. 329. pay a daily debt to their sovereign, 649 etc. 3) to give, to offer, to render: to which love's eyes p. tributary gazes, Ven. 632. the sad account of forebemoaned moan, which I new p. as if not paid before, Sonn. 30, 12. no bed-right shall be paid, Tp. IV, 96. you have paid the heavens your function, Meas. Ill, 2, 263. not —ing me a welcome, Mids. V, 99. my honour's paid to him, All's V, 3, 143. to p. Bohemia the visitation which he justly owes him, Wint. I, 1, 7. paid down more penitence, V, 1, 3. top. that duty, J o h n II, 247. let us p. that mass of moan, Troil. II, 2, 106. I ll p. that doctrine, or else die in debt, Rom. I, 1, 244. —s homage to us, Hinl. IV, 3, 64. thy cheek —s shame, Ant. I, 1, 31. he could not but p. me terms of honour, III, 4, 7. death of one person can be paid but once, IV, 14, 27 etc. 4) absol., to have requital: he shall p. for this, Merch. II, 8, 26. if this prove true, they'll p. for it, Wint. II, 1, 146. they shall p. for their presumption, I16C IV, 1, 114. Trans, a) to suffer in requital, to fulfil as a punishment: make us p. down for our offence by weight the words of heaven, Meas. I, 2, 125. b) to give in requital: more nor less to others —ing than by self-offences weighing, III, 2, 279. c) to requite, to reward or punish: I will p. thy graces home both in word and deed, Tp. V, 70. haste still —s hatte, Meas. V, 415. p. with falsehood false exacting, III, ?, 295. here's that > rope) will p. them all, Err. IV, 4, 10. all my services you have paid home, Wint. V, 3, 4. you p. him then, H5 IV, 1, 209. the service —s itself, Mcb. 1, 4, 23. our duties did his welcome p. IV, 1, 132. he was paid for that, Cymb. IV, 2, 246. you are paid too much, V, 4, 166. 5) to give it soundly, to quit scores with a person, to hit or kill in fighting: on the answer he —s you as surely as your feet hit the ground, Tw. Ill, 4, 305. two I am sure I have paid, H4A II, 4, 213. with a

p

847

man that dares not fight, L L L I, 1, 228. encounters thought seven of the eleven I paid, 242. V, 3, 48. Payment, 1) the act of paying, of giving in com- mounted are against your p. V, 2, 83. this uncivil and pensation : reward not hospitality with such black p. unjust extent against your p. Tw. IV, 1, 58. p. in this Lucr. 576. the p. of a hundred thousand crowns, L L L prison.' IV, 2, 21. p. be with us, II4B V, 2, 26. nor II, 130. 145. H4A 1, 3, 186. H6C 1, 4, 32. Tim. II, heaven nor earth have been at p. Caes. 11, 2, 1. the tyrant has not battered at their p. Mcb. IV, 3, 178. to 2, 28. Cymb. V, 4, 161. 2) that which is given in compensation: fair p. put up in p. what I have suffered, Oth. IV, 2, 181 etc. for foul words, L L L IT, 1,19. too little p. for so great p. be with you, a kind wish at parting: Wiv. HI, 5, a debt, Shr. V, 2, 154. Tw. IV, 1, 21. H4B V, 5, 135. 57. Meas. Ill, 2, 274. Ado V, 1, 196. Merch. IV, 1, 448. Rom. Ill, 1, 59. Lr. I, 1, 250. H8 V, I, 174. Tim. V, 1, 116. 3) requital: if he come to-morrow, I'll give him his Particularly denoting the internal quiet of the p. As 1,1,166. H5 IV, 8,15. Mcb. 1,4,19. mind: we wish your p. Tp. IV, 163. bless with sweet P e a , only in the plor. pease, the fruit of Pisum p. Mids. V, 425. that my soul may live at p. Tw. IV, sativum used as food: Tp. IV, 1,61. L L L V, 2,315. 3, 28. put rancours in the vessel of my p. Mcb. Ill, 1, Mids. IV, 1,42. H4A II, 1, 9. 67. to gain our p. Ill, 2, 20 etc. Found in death: P e a c e , 1) freedom from war with a foreign Meas. V, 401. B4B V, 2, 25. R3 II, 1, 5. H8 IV, 2, nation, cessation of hostilities: Lucr. 831. Gent. V, 156. Mcb. Ill, 2,20. IV, 3, 179 etc. 2, 17. Meas. I, 2 , 1 7 . John II, 84. 586. Ill, 1,1. 105. 5) silence: to hold one's p. = to be silent: Gent. 110. 113. V, 7, 84. R 2 I I , 1,174. H5 V, 2, 34. H6A V, 2, 18. Meas. V, 79. Tw. II, 3, 68. 74. Wint. I, 2, I, 1, 77. Cymb. V, 1, 20 etc. etc. to make p. = a) to 28. R2 III, 4, 47. H6A III, 2, 58. H6B I, 3, 179. enish war: John V, 1, 63. Cor. V, 6, 79 etc. b) to Rom. I, 3, 49. Hml. I, 2, 246. Lr. I, 4, 202. Oth. V, effect a p.: all the swords in Italy could not have made 2, 219 etc. hold your —s, Wint. 11, 1, 139. p., alone, this p. Cor. V, 3, 209 (cf. Make), the cardinal cannot = be silent: Lucr. 1284. Tp. II, 1, 9. 127. Gent. II, make your p. John V, 1, 74. to make up a p. Cor. V, 1, 99. IV, 1, 9. 41. IV, 2, 38. Wiv. I, 1, 138. Err. IV, 3, 140. to conclude p. H6A V, 4, 107. to contract a 4, 61. V, 178. Ado IV, 2, 46. L L L 1, 1, 228. V, 2, p. H 6 B I , 1,40. 483. Merch. V, 109. R2 V, 2, 80. H6A I, 3, 59. H6B 2) public tranquillity, quiet and order: to wake 1, 3, 178 etc. etc. p. your tongue, Wiv. I, 4, 85 (Dr. our p., which in our country's cradle draws the sweet Caius' speech), p. your tattlings, IV, 1, 26 (Evans* infant breath of gentle sleep, R2 1, 3, 132; cf. p. shall speech), p., foolish woman. I will not p. R2 V, 2, 81. go sleep with Turks and infidels, IV, 139 (i. e. Turks p. thou! H6C I, 1, 120. when the thunder would not etc. shall live in peace); and there awake God's gentle p. at my bidding, Lr. IV, 6, 104. hold your p. I p. I sleeping p. R3 I, 3, 288. I am not here against your Oth. V, 2, 219 (Qq I hold my p.). fathers p. H4B IV, 2, 3 1 ; cf. the king's p. H6A 1, 3, Personified as a fem.: H4B I, 2,233. H5 V, 2, 34. 75. the rod, and bird of p. (the dove) H8 IV, 1, 89. Peaceable, peaceful, quiet: Ado III, 3, 61. Per. trouble not the p. Cor. V, 6, 129; cf. 125. uproar the II, 1, 108. universal p. Mcb. IV, 3, 99 etc. etc. to break the p. Peaceably, quietly, in peace: Ado V, 2, 73. H6B B6A I, 3, 58. to break p. H4B IV, 1, 85. to keep ths III, 3, 25. p. John IV, 3,93. H4B II, 1,67. H6A III, 1, 87. Tit. Peaceful, free from the excitement of war, quiet, II, 1, 37. Rom. I, 1, 75. I, 2, 3. a justice of p. Wiv. nndisturbed: Ven. 652. John II, 340. R2 II, 3, 93. I, 1, 6. 226. H4B III, 2, 65. H6B IV, 7, 45. now a Ill, 2,125. H5IV, 3, 86. V Chor. 33. H6A II, 2, 45. man of p. Wiv. II, 3, 45. though I now be old and of V, 4, 117. H6B I, 1, 122. H6C II, 6, 32. IV, 6, 71. the p. 47 (i. e. an officer of the public peace); cf. I Troil. I, 3, 105. Per. I, 2, 4. 35. am sworn of the p. 55; it well befits you should be of\ Peace-maker, one who composes differences: the p. H4B 111, 2, 99. lads of p. Wiv. HI, 1,113. men As V, 4,108. H6B II, 1, 35. H8 III, 1, 167. of p. L L L V, 1, 37. Represented as being under the Peace-parted, having died in peace: p. souls, protection of God: Meas. I, 2, 4. John II, 35. 88. Hml. V, 1, 261. H4B IV, 2, 29. H5 IV, 3, 31. H6A 1, 3, 75. R3 I, Peach, vb. to impeach, to accuse, to denounce: 3, 288 etc. some four suits of peach-coloured satin, which now —es 3) a state of concord or reconciliation between him a beggar, Meas. IV, 3,12. if I be ta'en, I'U p. for persons or parties: for the p. of you I hold such strife, this, H4A II, 2, 47. Sonn. 75, 3. a' must keep p. Ado II, 3, 202. break the Peach-eelenre4, of the colour of a peach blosp. ib. the treason and you go in p. away together, LLL som: Meas. IV, 3, 12. H4B II, 2, 19. IV, 3, 192. p. and gentle visitation, V, 2, 181. all things Peaceck, the bird Pavo: Tp. IV, 74. Err. IV, 3, shall be p. Mids. Ill, 2, 377. Tw. I, 5, 227. V, 389. 81. H5 IV, 1, 213. H6A III, 3, 6. Troil. Ill, 3, 252. John IV, 2, 250. R2 III, 2, 127. H4A IV, 3, 62. H5 P e a k , vb. 1) to grow lean, to fall away: shall V, 2,1. Mcb. 1,5,47 (keep p. between the effect and it — he dwindle, p. and pine, Mcb. 1, 3, 23. prevent its execution) etc. to be at p. H6A III, 1, 117. 2) to sneak, to play a contemptible part: the —ing IV, 1, 115. 1. 69. how proud, how p. and unlike himself, HI, 1, 8. where 3) to instruct fully: being once —ed how to gram p. Warwick now remains, H6C IV, 8, 59. suits, Tp, 1, 2, 79. her cause and yours I'll p. him P e r f e c t , adj. (comp —er: Cor. II, 1, 91. snperl. withal, Meas. IV, 3,146. Apollo, p. me in the characters, —est: Sonn. 51, 10. Ado II, 1, 317. Mcb. I, 5, 2) 1) Per. Ill, 2, 67. faultless, fully accomplished, not to be surpassed: P e r f e c t i o n , 1) the state of being perfect, supreme whose p. white, Lucr 394. creating every bad a p. best, degree of development and excellcnce: whose full p. Sonn. 114, 7. so p. and so peerless, Tp. Ill, 1,47. all the world amazes, Ven. 634.736. nop. is so absolute, Gent. IV, 2, 124. V, 4, 111. Mids. Ill, 2, 137. Wint. Lucr. 853. every thing holds in p. but a little moment, V, 1, 15. H8 V, 5, 38. Oth. V, 2, 145. Cymb. I, 6, 158. Sonn. 15, 2. Gent. II, 4, 66. 197. II, 7, 13. Ill, 1, 177. III,3,67. IV, 1, 57. Merch. V, 108. All's V, 3, 18. Tw. 11. 4, 42. 2) complete, entire, unqualified: forget to say the John II, 440. R31V,4, 66. Rom. 11,2, 46. Abstr. for p. ceremony of love's rite, Sonn. 23, 6. desire, of—est the concr.: right p. wrongfully disgraced, Sonn. 66, love being made, 51, 10. his complexion is p. gallows, 7. divine p. of a woman, R3 I, 2, 75. p. so could err, Tp. I, 1, 32. he cannot be a p. man, not being tried and Oth. I, 3, 100. she is indeed p. II, 3, 28. tutored in the world, Gent. 1,3,20 (German: ein ganzer 2) an excellent quality or endowment: to put a Mann), her hair is auburn, mine is p. yellow, IV,4,194. strange face on his own p. Ado II, 3, 49. would silence is the —est herald of joy, Ado II, 1, 317. your turn their own p. to abuse, H4B II, 3, 27. which p. yellow, Mids. I, 2, 98 (Qq perfit). so holy and so p. (bearing well) is the prescript praise and p. of a is my love, As III, 5, 99; cf. Shr. IV, 3, 12; H6A V, good and particular mistress, H5 III, 7, 50. she did 5, 50; R3 II, 1, 16; 111, 7, 90. I will return p. cour- make defect p. Ant. II, 2, 236. Plur. — s: Gent. II, 4, tier, All's I, 1, 219. finds them p. Richard, John 1,90. 211. L L L II, 6. Tw. I, 1, 39. I, 5, 315. H 6 A V, 5, law itself is p. wrong. III, 1, 189. the true and p. image 12. H6C 111, 2, 86. Hml. IV, 7, 29. Per. 1, 1, 11. 79. of life, H4A V, 4, 120. three glorious suns, each one 3) excellent manner, exemplariness: I would with a p. sun, H6C II, 1, 26. can neither call it p. day nor such p. govern, Tp. II, 1,167. night, II, 5, 4. to make the p.period of this peace, R3 4) execution, performance: my honey lost, and I, II, 1, 44. the grief is fine, full, p., that 1 taste, Troil. a drone-like bee, have nop. of my summer left, Lucr. IV, 4, 3. which (health) in his death were p. Mcb. III, 837. it will grow to a most prosperous p. Meas. Ill, 1,

p 272. vowing more than the p. of ten and discharging lest than the tenth part of one, Troil. Ill, 2, 94. no p. in reversion shall have a praise in present, 99. you knot of mouth-friends! smoke and lukewarm water is your p. Tim. Ill, 6 , 1 0 0 (cf. Troil. V, 1, 98. Tim. IV, 3, 72. V, 1, 24). Perfectly, absolutely, completely: WintV, 2,108. H5 111,6,79 (Ff perfidy)- v> 2, 310. Troil. Ill, 3, 206. Perfoetneaa, 1) acquired skill and dexterity: is this your p. t be gone, you rogue, L L L V, 2, 173. 2) ripeness: the prince will in the p. of time cast of his followers, H4B IV, 4, 74. Perttdleua, faithless, treacherous: Tp. I, 2, 68. II, 2, 154. All's V, 3, 205. H8 1, 2, 156.

P«rUl«Dilr, treacherously: Cor. V, 6, 91.

PerDt, - perfect, reading of Qq in Mids. I, 2, 98.112. L r . 1 , 2 , 7 7 ; of F f H 5 111,6,73. R3 III, 7,90. Perfltlj, perfectly: Ho III, 6,79 (the surreptitious Qq perfectly). Perforce, 1) by force, by violence: he rushed into my house and took p. my ring away, Err. IV, 3, 95. and take p. my husband from the abbess, V, 117. what he hath taken away from thy father p., I will render thee again in affection, As 1,2, 21. John I, 268. R2 II, 3, 121. H6C I, 1, 34. 142. V, 5, 68. E 3 III, 1, 30. 36. Tit. II, 3, 134. Rom. V, 3, 238. Lr. 1, 4, 320. I, 5, 43. Cymb. Ill, 1, 72. force p., in the same sense: and force p. keep Stephen Langton from that holy see, John III, 1, 142. the king was force p. compelled to banish him, H4B IV, 1, 116. and force p. I'll make him yield the crown, H6B I, 1, 258. 2) necessarily (joined to must): of thy misprision must p. ensue some true love turned, Mids. Ill, 2, 90. which (your health) must p. decay, H4B I, 1, 165. these unseasoned hours p. must add unto your sickness, III, 1, 105. that light and weightless down p. must move, IV, 5, 34. H5 V, 2, 161. Troil. I, 3, 123. Lr. IV, 2, 35. 49. p. and needs joined: p. you must needs stay a lime, Tit. IV, 3,41. 3) of necessity, yielding to necessity (German: notbgedrungen): I, being pent in thee, p. am thine, Sonn. 133, 14. patience p. Rom. I, 5, 91 (cf. R3 i, 1, 116. Proverb: patience perforce is a medicine for a mad dog), when p. he could not but pay me terms of honour, Ant. Ill, 4, 6. Joined to must: wtth foul offenders thou p. must bear, Lucr. 612. which p. thou must restore, Tp. V, 133. p. I must confess I thought you lord of more true gentleness, Mids. II, 2,131. p. a third must take up us, H4B I, 3, 72. I must p. compound with mistful eyes, H5 IV, 6, 33. how I am braved and must p. endure it, H6A II, 4, 115. R3 I, 1, 116. H8 1, 2, 47. HI, 2, 147. Tit. II, 1, 107. 0th. V, 2, 256. Ant. V, 1, 37. 4) at any rate (German: dnrchans): rain added to a river that is rank p. will force it overflow the bank, Ven. 72. p. against all checks I must advance the colours of my love, Wiv. Ill, 4, 84. but she p. withholds the boy, Mids. II, 1, 26. thy fair virtue's force p. doth move me to swear, I love thee, III, 1, 143. they must p. have melted, R2 V, 2, 35. this weaves itself p. into my business, Lr.il, 1,17. force p., in the same sense: venom of suggestion, as force p. the age will pour it in, H4B IV, 4, 46. Perform, 1) to execute, to act, to do, to accomplish, to effect; absol.: they did p. beyond thought's compass, H8 I, 1, 35. though he p. to the utmost of a

853

man. Cor. I, 1, 271. to act, to do, top. Hml. V, 1, 13. Trans.: hast thou —ed the tempestf Tp. I, 2, 194. to p. an act, II, 1, 252. top. it first, Wint. Ill, 2, 58. V, 1, 130. a piece —ed by Julio Romano, V, 2, 105. what good love may I p. for youl John IV, 1, 49. H8 I, 1, 161. Cor. II, 2,49. Tit. V, 1, 66. V, 3 , 4 5 . 188. Mcb. I, 7, 69. Ill, 4, 77. IV, 1, 130. Hml. I, 4. 21. Lr. IV, 2, 40. Ant. V, 2, 334. Cymb. V, 4, 76. Per. IV, 3, 39. 2) to carry into execution,to discharge: thy charge exactly is —ed, Tp. 1, 2, 238. must I p. much business, III, 1, 95. your last service you did worthily p. IV, 36. let this be duly —ed, Meas. IV,2,127. our observation is —ed, Mids. IV, 1, 109. top. it (the wrestling) As 1, 2, 122. 155. Shr. Ill, 2, 143. All's II, 3, 187. Wint. II, 1,115. 196. II, 3,169. IV, 4,852. V, 1, 1. B2 II, 2,138. IV, 4. H6B I, 1, 9. 74. II, 2, 67. Ill, 1, 321. H6C III, 1, 100. Ill, 2, 54. R3 I, 1, 110. IV, 2, 19. H8 IV, 1, 90. Troil. Ill, 2, 93. T i t I, 143. II, 1, 59. Rom. II, 2, 146. Tim. IV, 3, 72. Caes. I, 2, 10. Mcb. III, 1, 127. V, 8, 73. Hml. V, 2, 404. Oth. Ill, 3, 21. Ant. I, 1, 24. Ill, 12, 23. Ill, 13, 86. V, 2, 203. Cymb. Ill, 5, 113. IV, 3, 18. V, 4, 122. Per. II, 2, 16. 11,3, 99. V, 1, 248. V, 3, 1. = to act, to play, to represent: bravely the figure of this harpy hast thou —ed, Tj>.III,3,84. that will ask some tears in the true —ing of it, Mids. I, 2, 27. Shr. Ind. 1, 87. Wint. V, 3, 154. Cor. 111. 2, 109. Per. Ill Prol. 54. 3) to fulfil, to act up to: (a promise) which is not yet -ed me, Tp. I, 2, 244. H4A III, 2, 154. H4B IV, 2, 115. p. an old contracting, Meas. Ill, 2, 296. top. your father's will, Merch. I, 2, 100. a vow, John 111, 1, 266. 269. H4A IV, 3, 65. H6C I, 1, 201. hath —ed her word, H6A I, 6, 3. Absol.: when he —s, astronomers foretell it, Troil. V, 1, 99. if thou dost p., confound thee, Tim. IV, 3, 74. Performance, 1) execution: All's II, 1, 205. H4B II, 4, 284. H6B I, 4, 2. H8 I, 2, 208. IV, 2,42. Troil. II, 2,196. Ill, 2, 91. V, 10, 39. Tim. V, 1, 26. 29. Caes. II, 1, 135. Mcb. II, 3, 33. Hml. IV, 7,152. Oth. IV, 2, 185. Per. IV, 2, 67. 2) acting, exhibition: eke out our p. with your mind, H5 HI Chor. 35. a piece of your p. Troil. III, I, 55. 3) action: besides her walking and other actual —s, Mcb. V, 1, 13. in his offence should my p. perish, Ant. III, 1, 27. Performer, doer: the merit of service is seldom attributed to the true and exact p. All's HI, 6, 65. —s oj this deed, T i t IV, 1, 80. three —s are the file when all the rest do nothing, Cymb. V, 3, 30. PArfume or PerfUme, subst. 1) sweet odour, fragrance: Sonn. 104,7. Ado III, 4, 63. Shr. I, 2, 153. Tim. IV, 3, 302. Hml. I, 3, 9. Ill, 1, 99. Ant. II, 2, 217. 2) a substance emitting sweet odour: Sonn. 130, 7. Wint. IV, 4,225. John IV, 2, 12. Mcb. V, 1, 57. Lr. Ill, 4, 110. Cymb. I, 6, 13. their diseased —s, Tim. IV, 3, 207, -= perfumed mistresses. Perfume (perfumed in H4B III, 1, 12) vb. to scent, to impregnate with sweet odour: Ven. 444. Sonn. 54, 6. Tp. II, 1, 48. As 111, 2, 65. Shr. I, 1, 180. 1, 2, 152. H4A I, 3, 36. H4B III, 1, 12. H6B I, 1, 255. Tit. 1,145. Oth. IV, 1, 150. Ant. II, 2, 198. Cymb. II, 2, 19. Misapplied t y Mrs Quickly in H4B II, 4, 30.

854

P

P e r f u m e r , one whose office is to perfume the broils, H6C V, 5,1. let me make the p. to my curse, R3 chambers: Ado I, 3, 60. I,3,238. O bloody p. Oth.Y,2,357. may be itisthep. Perhapa, maybe: Sonn. 71,10. Gent I, 1, 32. of your duty, Ant IV, 2,25. time is at his p. IT, 14,107. Meas. I, 2, 160. En. II, 1, 4. V, 321. Ado IV, 1, 256. 3) a sentence, in a grammatical sense: she puts L L L T, 2, 279. Mids. Ill, 1, 82. Ill, 2, 303. Merch. the p. often from his place, Lucr. 565. a pretty p. Gent II, 5, 52. Shr. I, 1, 171. I, 2, 110. Tw, II, 1, 5. II, II, 1,122. In both passages it may be — stop, end. 4, 92. Ill, 1, 175. John IV, 2, 178. B2 II, 1, 289. H5 Perlad, vb. to pnt an end to: which fatting, —s III, 7, 53. H6A II, 4, 16. 111. 2, 48. V, 3, 104. H6C his comfort, Tim. I, 1, 99. Perish, V intr. to come to nothing, to die, to II, 6, 64. V, 1, 89. R3 I, 3, 348. IV, 2, 101. Troil. III, 3, 226. Cor. V, 3, 157. T i t IV, 1, 26. Bom. I, 2, be destroyed: Lucr. 1547. Sonn. 11, 10. Tp. I, 2, 9. 217. 237. Gent. I, 1, 157. Meas. Ill, 1, 225. V, 458. 61. Caes. I, 2, 42. Hml. I, 3,14. IV, 7,10 etc. L L L V, 2, 521. Mids. II, 2, 107. V, 86. As V, 1, 56. Periapt*, amulets: H6A V, 3, 2. Ptricle* (Pericles in Per. II, 3, 81) name in Per. Shr. I, 1, 160. II, 331. W i n t V, 1,44. R2 II, 1,266. H5 IV, 1, 182. H6A IV, 4, 28. H6B IV, 4, 11. B3 I,1,25 etc. Perlgenia (some M. Edd. Perigune), daughter IV, 4, 185. H8 I, 1, 203. Ill, 1, 153. Ill, 2, 420. Troil. V, 5, 16. Cor. Ill, 2, 28. IV, 6, 105. Oth. IV, 1, 191. of Sinnis, ravished by Theseus: Mids. II, 1, 78. Ant. II, 6, 8. Ill, 1, 27. Cjinb. Ill, 5, 101. IV, 2, 60. Pertgart, name in L L L II, 41. Peril, danger: Compl. 158. Meas. II, 4, 65. As Per. I, 3, 29. Used as an imprecation: Meas. Ill, 1, II, 1, 4. Shr. V, 2, 3. All's IV, 1, 47. Tw. I, 2, 12. 144. H5IV, 3, 72. H6A III, 1, 175. 178. 111,2,57. H4A I. 3, 191. H4B I, 1, 170. 184. Ill, 1, 55. IV, 4, IV, 1,124. Cor. IV, 1, 14. 2) to cause to perish, to destroy: thy flinty heart 66. IV, 5,197. H6B 111, 1, 152. H6C II, 1, 191. B3 III, 5, 44. V, 3, 39. H8 III, 2, 194. Bom. II, 2, 71. might in thy palace p. Margaret, H6B III, 2, 100. Caes. IV, 1, 47. V, 1, 92. Oth. V, 1, 21. Ant. IV, 8, Perlahen, vb. to perish: Per. II Prol.35 (Gower's 35. Cymb. 1,1,80. 111,4,155. V, 1,28. p. o / = danger speech). cansed by: without the p. of the Athenian law, Mids. Periwig, false hair worn: Gent. IV, 4, 196. Err. IV, 1, 158. the p. of waters, Merch. 1, 3, 25. the p. of II, 2, 76. our curses light on thee, John III, 1, 295. = danger Periwig-pated, wearing a periwig (probably = cansed to: to be in p. of my life, Merch. II, 2, 173; cf. having much hair on the head): a robustious p. fellow, Meas. II, 4, 67. My p. = the danger in which I am: Hml. Ill, 2, 10. Wiv. Ill, 3, 130. As I, 2,159. All's II, 1, 136. Troil. Perjure, subst. a perjured person, perjurer: he I, 3, 267. Tim. V, 1, 231. Preceded by at, in, on, comes in like a p., wearing papers, L L L IV, 3, 47 and to, = at the hazard: to do't at p. of your soul, ("convicted perjurers, while undergoing punishment, Meas. II, 4, 67. you will answer it at your p. IV, 2, wore a paper expressing their offence." Dyce. It was, 130. to be so taken at thy p. Merch. IV, 1, 344. Lr. indeed, a custom observed in all criminals exposed to Ill, 7, 52. Oth. I, 2, 81. your physicians have ex- public view). pressly charged, in p. to incur your former malady, that Perjure, vb. to make perjured, to corrupt; want I... Shr. Ind. 2, 124. banish him our city, in p. of will p. the ne'er-touched vestal, Ant. Ill, 12, 30. precipitation from off the rock Tarpeian never more Perjured, having sworn falsely, forsworn: Lucr. to enter our Rome gates, Cor. HI, 3, 102. stay, on thy 1521. Sonn. 129, 3. 152, 6. 13. Gent. IV, 2, 95. V, p. Mids. II, 2, 87. on your displeasure's p. and on 4,39.68. Err. V, 212. 227. L L L II, 113. 111,196. mine, Wint. II, 3, 45. 181. on p. of a curse, let go the IV, 3, 51. 125 (a p. note = a note of peijury). 157. hand, John III, 1, 191. on my p. B3 IV, 1, 26. Ant. V, 2, 346. 800. Mids. I, 1, 241. John HI, 1, 107. 120. V, 2, 143. Cymb. V, 4, 189. lest to thy p. thou aby it H5 IV, 7, 147. H6C II, 2, 81. V, 1, 106. V, 5, 34. B3 dear, Mids. Ill, 2, 175. Cor.Ill, 1,326. Ant. V, 2, 146. 1, 4, 55. H8 V, 1, 137. Bom. Ill, 2, 86. Lr. Ill, 2, 54. Perllaus, dangerous: Meas. 11,4, 172. John IV, Oth. V, 2, 63. Cymb. Ill, 4, 65. 3, 13. H4A IV, 1, 43. V, 2, 96. H5 Prol. 22. IV, 1, Perjury, false oath, the crime of being forsworn: 209. B3 111, 1, 154 (Q7. 8 and mnny M.Edd.jxxr/ous). Lucr. 919. 1517. Pilgr. 31 and L L L IV, 3, 62. Gent. Troil. II, 2, 40. Rom. I, 3, 54 (most M. Edd. par- 1!, C, 5. IV, 4, 173. V, 4, 49. 10C. Ado IV, 1, 175. IV, lous). Caes. I, 3, 47. Mcb. V, 3, 44. Hml. I, 3, 102. 2, 44. L L L IV, 3, 289. V, 2, 394. 470. 829. Merch. Cymb. IV, 2, 145. IV, 1,229. John 111, 1, 88. H5 IV, 1, 172. H6C V, Perlad, subst. 1) limit, term, end to be attained: 5, 40. B3 I, 4, 50. V, 3, 196. Bom. H, 2, 92 (—es). this is the p. of my ambition, Wiv. Ill, 3, 47. there III, 3, 128. Oth. V, 2, 51. would be no p. to the jest, should he not be publicly Perked, with up, = dressed up, adorned) to be shamed, IV, 2, 237 (German: kein rechter Abschluss). p. up in a glistering grief, H8 II, 3, 21. to make the perfect p. of this peace, B3 II, 1, 44 (GerPerkes, name in H4B V, 1, 42. man: den Frieden zum vollstandigen Abschluss zu Permanent, durable, lasting: Hml. 1, 3, 8. bringen;. there's his p., to sheathe his knife in us, H8 Permisaian, allowance, liberty granted: Caes. I, 2, 209. my point and p. will be throughly wrought, Ill, 1, 239. 247. Ill, 2, 64. Oth. I, 3, 340. Lr. IV, 7, 97. this would have seemed a p. to such as Permissive, granted, permitted: when evil deeds love not sorrow, V, 3, 204. have their p. pass, Meas. I, 3, 38. 2) conclusion, end: then had they seen the p. of Permit, to grant leave, to allow, to suffer: Lucr. their ill, Lucr. 380. make —s in the midst of sentences, 775. Sonn. 33, 5. Meas. V, 121. John II, 84. B2 I, Mids. V, 96 ( = stop, make full stops), my worldly 3, 194. II, 2, 121. II, 3, 119. H4A I, 2, 222. H6A business makes a p. H4B IV, 5, 231. the p. of thy II, 5, 61. H8 I, 2, 161 (to p. my chaplain a choice tyranny approacheth, H6A IV, 2, 17. the p. of their hour). Cor. II, 3, 177. IV, 5, 81. Tit. II, 3, 218. Lr. tyranny, H6B III, 1, 149. now here a p. of tumultuous I, 2,3. Ant. Ill, 1, 36. Cymb. V, 1,13.

p

855

P e r n i c i o u s , mischievous, malicious, wicked : most Perseverance, persistency, constancy: Troil. Ill, p. purpose, Meas. II, 4, 150. this p. caitiff deputy, V, 3 , 1 5 0 . Mcb. IV, 3 , 9 3 . 88. thou p. woman, 241. this p. slave, Err. V, 241. P e r s e v e r e , spelling of Qq in Lr. Ill, 5, 23; Ff troubled with a p. suitor, Ado I, 1, 130. the p. and in- persever, q. v. dubitate beggar Zenelophon, L L L IT, 1, 66 (Armado'a Persia, country in Asia: Err. IV, 1, 4. l e t t e r ) . thy adverse p. enemy, R2 1, 3, 82. your p. P e r s i a n , pertaining to Persia: Merch. II, 1,25. lives, III, 1, 4. to rid the realm of this p. blot, IV, 325. Lr. Ill, 6, 85. you p• ass, B4B II, 2, 80 (Q virtuout). a most p. usuP e r s i s t , to continue steadily in an evil course: rer, H 6 A III, 1, \iryour p. faction, IV, 1, 59. p.pro- All's III, 7, 42. With in: Troil. II, 2, 186. In omitted: tector, H6B II, 1, 21. p. bloodsucker, III, 2, 226. may to lament our most —ed deeds, Ant. V, 1, 30, = our prove p. H8 V, 3, 19. your p. rage, Rom. I, 1, 91. this deeds most persisted in. p. hour, Mcb. IV, 1, 133. with more p. root, IV, 3, 85. P e r s i s t e n c y , steady pursuit of an evil course: 0 most p. womanI Hml. I, 5, 105. tvo p. daughters, as far in the devits book as thou and Falstaff for obLr. Ill, 2, 22. his p. soul, Oth. V, 2, 155. 0 the p. duracy and p. H4B II, 2, 50. caitiff, 318. Perslstlve, steady in pursuit, persevering: to find P e r n l e l e u s l y , maliciously: all the commons hate p. constancy in men, Troil. I, 3, 21. him p. H8 II, 1, 50. P e r s e n , 1) human being, individual: by any other P e r o r a t i o n , harangue: what means this p. with house or p. Tp. I, 2, 42. that very p. Wiv. I, 1, 50. such circumstanced H 6 B I, 1, 105. some p. Ill, 1, 53. Meas. II, 1, 173. II, 4, 91. V, 262. P a r p e n * (a word used only by Pistol, Polonius, Ado III, 5, 50. L L L IV, 2, 139. As HI, 2, 327. All's and the clowns) to consider, to look to it: Wiv. II, II, 3, 2. Tw. II, 3, 99. Ill, 1, 70. V, 223. R2 V, 5, 1, 119. As III, 2, 69. Tw. V, 307. Hml. II, 2, 105. 31. H6B II, 1, 167. H8 Prol. 26 etc. Trans.: p. my Words, B 5 IV, 4, 8. 2) the particular state and existence of a human Perpendicular, vertical, forming a right angle being; used in a periphrastical way: health to thy p. with the ground: runs up a kill p. H4A II, 4, 378. = to thee, Lucr. 1305. set thy p. forth to sell, Pilgr. Perpendicularly, vertically, in a straight line 310. they saw the king's ship wrecked and his great down: Lr. IV, 6, 54. p. perish, Tp. I, 2, 237. we will guard your p. II, 1, P e r p e t u a l , never ceasing, everlasting, endless: 197. do no stain to your own gracious p. Meas. Ill, 1, Lucr. 726. 784.1638. Bonn. 56, 8. 154, 10. Tp. II, 208. you must change — s with me, V, 339. authentic 1, 285. Wiv. V, 5, 62. Meas. Ill, 1, 67. 77. All's IV, in your place and p. Wiv. II, 2, 236. puts the world 3, 313. Wint. Ill, 2, 214. 239. J o h n V, 7, 77. H4A into her p. Ado II, 1, 216. to present the prince's own III, 3, 46. H4B I, 2, 246. H6C V, 4, 51. R 3 I, 4, 47. p. Ill, 3, 79. which is the duke's ownp.f L L L 1,1, 182. II, 2, 46 (Ff ne'er changing night). IV, 4, 12. V, 2, 15. 184. Ill, 125. to present the p. of Moonshine, Mids. Cor. II, 2, 124. Lr. Ill, 3, 5. Ant. II, 2, 127. III, 1, 62. my purse, my p. Merch. I, 1, 138; cf. both Adverbially: you p. sober gods, Tim. IV, 3, 503 in purse ami p. H4B II, 1,127. as his p. is mighty, (M. Edd. perpetual-sober), to thine and Albany's issue Wint. I, 2, 453. II, 1, 194. Ill, 3, 29. IV, 4, 826. V, be this p. Lr. I, 1, 68. I, 156. 171. John II, 189. 366. Ill, 1, 224. R2 III, Perpetually, continually: Lucr.686. Shr.II, 142. 3, 38. V, 5, 110. H4B V, 2, 73. Mcb. Ill, 4, 41. 128 All's IV, 3, 314. Per. I, 1, 74. etc. in the p. of — in the place of, acting for: did Perpetual-sefcer i Tim. IV, 3 , 5 0 3 ; see Perpetual. supply thee at thy garden-house in her imagined p. Perpetuity, endless time: W i n t I, 2, 5. H6A IV, Meas. V, 213. in her p. I say I will not have you, As 7, 20. Cymb. V, 4, 6. IV, 1, 92. as 'twere i the father's p. Wint. IV, 4, 561. Perplex, to confound, to bewilder: will p. thee tn mine own p. = I myself : As IV, 1, 93. 97. H6B more, Johnlll, 1,222. —ed = bewildered: Ven. 1043. II, 1, 41. in p. — with bodily presence, not by repreLocr. 733. John III, 1, 221. H6A V, 5, 95. Oth. V, sentative: Err. V, 116. 119. 234. Wint. Ill, 2, 10. 2, 346. Cymb. Ill, 4, 7. IV, 3, 41. V, 5, 108. R2 I, 4, 42. II, 3, 82. H4A IV, 1, 91. H6C IV, 1, P e r p l e x i t y , bewilderment: Gent. II, 3, 9. Wiv. 133. H8 I, 1, 117. I, 2, 5. Troil. HI, 1, 33. IV, 1, 2. IV, 5, 86. L L L V, 2 , 2 9 8 (avaunt,p. = cease to speak Ant. Ill, 1, 17. Ill, 7, 6. 57 etc. riddles). 3) external appearance: thou mightst call him a Persecute, to afflict, to harass; not very intel- goodly p. Tp. I, 2, 416; cf. Tw. I, 5, 281 and Per. V, ligibly used: he hath abandoned his physicians, under 1, 36. she takes exceptions at your p. Gent. V, 2, 3. whose practices he hath —d time with hope, and finds how I may formally in p. bear me like a true friar, no other advantage in the process but only the losing of Meas. I, 3, 47. he hath the best p. too, Mids. IV, 2 , 1 1 . hope by time, All's I, 1, 16; i. e. perhaps: he has, by such as are of better p. than myself, H6C III, 2, 167. the advice ofhis physicians, maltreated the presenttime by his p. more worthy this place, H8 I, 4, 78. the (cf. Time) for the sake of hope, inflicted upon himself beauty of her p. IV, 1, 68. o proper man of p. Troil. much pain as a cure for his disorder. I, 2, 209. how novelty may move, and parts with p. IV, Persecution, ill treatment, hostility: Lr. 11,3,12. 4,81. honour would become such a p. Cor. 1,3, 11. Ill, Persecutor, one who harasses and afflicts others: 2,86. if it assume my noble father's p. Hml. 1,2,244. he H6C V, 6, 31. hath a p. to be suspected, Oth. I, 3, 403. for her own Peraeuo, the ancient hero who rode the winged p. Ant. 11,2,202. some marks of secret on her p. Cymb. horse Pegasus: H5III,7,22. Troil.1,3,42. IV, 5, 186. V, 5, 206. P e r s t v e r , to persevere, to persist in what is be4) = parson (which is derived from persona): LLL gun: Gent. Ill, 2, 28. Err. II, 2, 217. Mids. Ill, 2, 237. IV,2,85. 3,194. Q2in Rom. I, 4,80. (M. Edd. parson). AsV,2,4. AH'slll,7,37. IV,2,37. John 11, 421. Hml. Personage, 1) person, man: saucy with lords and 1, 2, 92. Lr. Ill, 5, 23 (Qq persevere). Per. IV, 6, 113. honourable —s, All's II, 3, 278. Schmidt, 8hak»|»ar« Lcxlcon. 2. Ed. T. IT. 55

856

P

2) appearance, figtire: tith her p., her tall p. Mids. other trust, Tw. IV, 3, 14. With a clause: my glass Ill, 2, 292. of what p. and year* ishetTw. I, 5, 1G4. shall not p. me I am old, Sonn. 22, 1. hath almost —d P e r s o n a l , 1) done or experienced in one's own the king his son's alive, Tp. II, 1, 234. Gent. V, 4. 65. person, not by a representative or other indirect Wiv. Ill, 3, 74. As II, 1, 11. Shr. Ind. 1, 63. Tw. means: to remain in p. duty, following where he haunt- Ill, 4, 321. R2 II, 2, 29. V, 5, 35. H6B III, 2, 137. ed. Compl. 130. importunes p. conference with his Lr. II, 4, 114. to p. one's self = to be of opinion: grace, L L L II, 32. their encounters, though not p. Wint. do you p. yourself that I respect yout Meas. IV, 1, 53. 1,1,20. when he was p. in tht Irish war, II4A IV, 3, 88. I p. me, from her will fall some blessing to this land, thy p. venture in the rebels' fight, Mcb. I, 3, 91. his p. H8 III, 2, 50. I p. myself, to speal^ the truth shall noreturn was most required, Lr. IV, 3, 6. in p. suit, Oth. thing wrong him, Oth. II, 3, 223. —d = of opinion, 1, 1, 9. with my p. eye will I look to't, II, 3, 5. dares convinced, confident: we are well —d we carry not me to p. combat, Ant. IV, 1, 3. «our p. pain, Per. Ill, a heart with us ..., B 5 II, 2, 20. are you now — d that Talbot is but shadow of himself 1 II6A II, 3, 61. 2, 46. 2) appertaining to an individual: we want a little I should be false —d I had daughters, Lr. I, 4, 254. p. strength, H4B IV, 4, 8. no mightier than thyself or she is —d I will marry her, Oth.'lV, 1, 132. With of : me in p. action, Caes. I, 3, 77. 1 know no p. cause to one well —d of —, Cymb. II, 4, 132. the best —d of spurn at him, II, 1,11. giving to you no further p. power, himself, Tw. II, 3, 162 (having the best opinion of himself). Hml. I, 2, 36. Personally, in person, not by a substitute, di3) to advise, to counsel, to try to prevail o n , to rectly: so vulgarly and p. accused, Meas.V, 160. there- exhort: absol.: cease to p. Gent. I, 1, 1. With an fore p. I lay my claim, R2 II, 3, 135. I could not p. accus. designating the person advised: p. me not, Wiv. deliver to her what you commanded me, H8 V, 1, 62. 1, 1, 1. it —s him and disheartens him, Mcb. II, 3, 37. Personate, vb. to represent, to depaint: he shall Accus. and to: weak-built hopes p. him to abstaining, find himself most feelingly —d, Tw. II, 3, 173. one do Lncr. 130. by —ing me to it, Tim. IV, 3, 455. Accus. I p. of Lord Timon's frame, Tim. I, 1, 69. it must be and inf.: rather p. him to hold his hands, Err. IV, 4, a —ing of himtelf, V, 1, 35. the lofty cedar —» thee, 23. —ing me not to kill the duke, R 3 I, 4, 150. Lr. Cymb. V, 5, 454. II, 4, 219. With from ( = to dissuade from): that have Perspective, a glass cut in such a manner as to so mightily —d him from a first, As I, 2, 219. — d produce an-optical deception, when looked through: him from any further act, H6B V, 3, 10. With an mine eye hath played the painter and hath stelled thy accus. denoting that which a person is exhorted to beauty's form in table of my heart; my body is the frame do: hadst thou thy wits and didst p. revenge, Hml. IV, wherein 'tis held, and p. it is best painter's art, Sonn. 5, 163. Dat. and accus.: sends me a paper top. me 2 4 , 4 (the painter himself, i . e . the eye, being the patience, H6C III, 3, 176. glass through which the form must be seen), contempt 4) to do one's endeavour to influence or win the his scornful p. did lend me, which warped the line of opinion of a person; absol.: how I—d, how 1 prayed every other favour, All's V, 3, 48. a natural p, that is and kneeled, Meas. V, 93. the duke himself and the and is not, Tw. V, 224 (simply = deception), like magnificoes of greatest port have all —d with him, —s, which rightly gazed upon show nothing but con- Merch. Ill, 2, 283. Trans. = to win, to reconcile: fusion, eyed awry distinguish form, R2 II, 2, 18. he ran upon the boar with his sharp spear, who did Perapectlvely, as through a perspective: you see not whet his teeth at him again, but by a kiss thought them p., the cities turned into a maid, H5 V, 2, 347. to p. him there, Ven. 1114. beauty itself doth of itself Perspicuous, apparent, manifest: the purpose is p. the eyes of men, Lucr. 29. nor am I yet —d to put p. Troil. I, 3, 324. up in peace what already / have foolishly suffered, Persuade, 1) to prevail on by argument or en- Oth. IV, 2, 180. treaty; absol.: well she can p. Mens. I, 2, 191. the Persnaslen, 1) the act or art of influencing the silence often of pure innocence — s , Wint. II, 2, 42. mind of another by arguments: he's a spirit of p. Tp. fair-spoken and —ing, H8 IV, 2, 52. call my father II, 1, 235. with what p. did he tempt thy love? Err. IV, to p. Troil. V, 3, 30. With an accus.: they should 2, 13. Ado V, 4, 95. Tw. Ill, 4, 383. H4A I, 2, 170. sooner p. Harry, H5 V, 2, 304. H6A 111, 2, 93. —d, III, 1, 199. V, 2, 79. H6A III, 3, 18. H8 V, 1, 148. H6C IV, 7, 30. Cor. I, 1, 205. 0 be —d, Troil. V, 3, Troil. Ill, 2, 171. With a subjective genitive: I will 19. Accus. and to: p. my heart to this false perjury, not die to-day for any man's p. Meas. IV, 3, G3. it Pilgr. 31 and LLL IV, 3, 62. we shall soon p. him should not be, by the p. of his new feasting, Tim. Ill, unto reason, H6C IV, 7, 3il. p. me to the murder of 6, 8 (as his new feasting induces us to believe), the your lordship, Lr. II, 1, 46. With an inf. preceded p. of his augurers, Caes. II, 1, 200. With a possessive by to: whiles I p. this rude wretch willingly to die, pronoun in a subjective sense: cross him with their Meas. IV, 3, 85. I —d them to wish him wrestle with opposite p. Lucr. 286. where you may temper her by affection, Ado III, 1, 41. if your love do not p. you to your p. Gent. Ill, 2, 64. Meas. IV, 2, 205. Sbr. V, 2, cdme, Merch. Ill, 2, 324. Shr. Ill, 2, 127. H4A II, 120. John V, 5, 11. 4, 339. H4B II, 3, 15. H6A 111, 1, 105. R3 III, I, 2) opinion, belief: whose p. is I come about my 33. Cor. V, 3, 120. Oth. V, 2, 16. Ant. IV, 6, 13. brother, Meas. IV, 1, 47. a good p. Mids. I, 1, 156. Inf. without to: let me p. you take a belter course, H6A you are a great deal abused in too bold a p. Cymb. I, IV, 1, 132. 4, 125. 2) to convince, to bring to an opinion; absol.: P e r t , lively, alert: this p. Berowne was out of only professes to p. Tp. II, 1, 236. your discretions countenance quite, L L L V, 2, 272. awake the p. and better can p. than lam able to instruct, H6A IV, 1,158. nimble spirit of mirth, Mids. I, 1, 13. With an accus. and to: my reason that —s me to any Pertain, 1) to belong, to appertain: intermission

p

857

no more —s to me than you, Merch. Ill, 2, 202 (does ' order, if I p. your course, Meas. IV, 3, 153. he hath not become me more than yon. 0 . Edd. intermission. —ed a young gentlewoman, All's IV, 3, 17. No etc.). if she p. to life let her speak too, Wint. V, Pester, to annoy, to harass, to infest: to be so 3, 113 (if she lives), all honours that p. unto the crown —ed with a popinjay, H4A I, 3, 50. how the poor of France, H5 II, 4, 82. all their honorable points of world is —ed with such vaterflies, Troil. V, 1, 38. who rather had dissentious numbers —ing streets than ignorance —-ing thereunto, H8 I, 3, 27. 2) to relate, to concern: in aught —s to the state, see our tradesmen singing in their shops, Cor. IV, 6, 7 H8 I, 2, 42. the main part - s to you alone, Mcb.1V, ( = infesting), who shall blame his —ed senses to recoil, 3, 199. more than —s to feats of broil and battle, Oth. Mcb. V, 2, 23. to p. us with message, Hml. I, 2, 22. Pestlferaus, venomous, malignant: such p. re1, 3, 87. P e r t a u t - l l k e (Ff Q?) or P e r t t a n a t - I l k e (Ql) ports, All's IV, 3, 340. thy lewd, p. and dissentious a word not yet explained nor satisfactorily amended pranks, H6A III, 1, 15. Pestilence, plague, contagious disease: Ven. in LLL V, 2, 67: so p. would I o'ersway his state that he should be my fool and J his fate. Theobald pedant- 740. Ado 1,1,87. Tw. 1,1, 20. B2 I, 3, 284. Ill, 3, like, Hanmer portent-like. Singer potent - like, Collier 87. H8 V, 1,45. Bom. V, 2,10. Oth. II, 3, 362. Ant. III, 10, 9. to have the p. Gent II, 1, 22. a p. on html M. C. potently, Grant White persaunt-like. P e r t i n e n t , apposite, to the purpose: 'good'should Troil. IV, 2, 21. Hml. V, 1, 196. the red p. strike all be p., but it is not, Wint. I, 2, 221. my caution was trades in Rome, Cor. IV, 1, 13. the most infectious p. upon thee! Ant. II, 5, 61. more p. than the rebuke you give it, Cor. II, 2, 67. Pertly, promptly, on die alert: appear, and p. Pestilent, 1) producing, or relating to, the Tp. IT, 58. yonder walls that p. front your town, Troil. plague: a foul and p. congregation of vapours, Hml. II, IV, 5, 219. 2, 315. I'll make death love me, for I will contend even Perturbation, disturbance, disorder, disqniet: with his p. scythe, Ant. Ill, 13, 194 ( = the scythe of horror and p. follows her, Ado II, I, 268. p. of the pestilence, the deaths occasioned by pestilence). brain, H4B I, 2, 132. 0 polished p., golden care, IV, 2) very disagreeable: most p. to the hearing, H8 5, 23. fills thy sleep with —s, R3 V, 3, 161. a great 1, 2, 49. a p. knave, Rom. IV, 5, 147. to infect his p. in nature, Mcb. V, 1, 10. ear with p. speeches of his father'a death, Hml. IV, Perturbed, disquieted: rest, p. spirit, Hml. I, 5, 5, 91. a p. gall to me, Lr. I, 4, 127. a p. complete 183. the p. court for my being absent, Cymb.111,4,108. knave, Oth. II, 1, 252. Peruaal, 1) carefnl examination: he falls to such Peter, a case filled with explosive materials: to p. of my face as he would draw it, Hml. II, 1, 90. have the enginer hoist with his own p. Hml. Ill, 4, 207. 2) the act of reading: Sonn. 38, 6. Peter, name of 1) the apostle P.: Ado II, 1,50. Peruse, 1) to survey, to examine: this picture Rom. Ill, 5, 115. 117. Oth. IV, 2, 91. 2) the prince she advisedly — d , Lucr. 1527. I'll view the manners of Arragon in Ado I, 1, 1. 10. 3) P. Simple in Wiv. of the town, p. the traders, Err. I, 2, 13. p. them weU; I,4, 15. 4) Friar P. in M«as. IV, 3, 142. IV, 6, 9. 5) not one of those but had a noble father, All's II, 3, 67. P. Quince in Mids. I, 2, 9. 15. 45. 61. 64. Ill, 1, 7. that from this castle's tattered battlements our fair ap- IV, 1, 207. 6) P. BuUcalf in H4B III, 2, 183. 7) sepointments may be weU — d , R2 III, 3, 53. that we veral servants and mean persons in Shr. Ind. 2, 96. may p. the men we should have coped withal, H4B IV, IV, 1, 137. 182. John 1,186. H6BII, 3, 67 etc. Bom. 2, 9 4 . p . their wings, H6A IV, 2, 43. I have —d her II, 4, 110 etc. II, 5, 20. IV, 4,16. 18. well, H8 II, 3, 75. I have with exact view —d thee, P e t l t i a n , subst. 1) request, entreaty: Meas. 1,4, Troil. IV, 5, 232. let me p. this face, Rom. V, 3, 74. 82. IV, 4,11. Wint. V, 1, 228. John II, 478. H5 V, will not p. the foil», Hml. IV, 7, 137. to p. him by 2,305. H6A IV, 1,101. H8 1, 2,17. IV, 2,138. Troil. items, Cymb. I, 4, 7. V, 3,9. Cor. 1,1,214. V, 3, 176. Caes. II, 1, 58. Ill, 1, 2) to read; trans.: Compl. 44. Gent. I, 2,34. IV, I I , Hml. I, 2, 59. With to: my p. to thee, Troil. IV, 4,126. Merch. II, 4, 39. Shr. I, 2, 145. Tw. V, 338. 4. 124. Cor. V, 1, 20. at your —s, Wint. I, 2, 215. R2 V, 3, 49. H6A V, 1, 1. H8 III, 2, 121. Cor. V, 6, III, 2, 225. H5 V, 1, 25. 62. Lr. I, 2, 39. II, 2, 172. Per. II, 5, 41. With over: 2) a single article of a prayer at church: the p. —ing o'er these notes, John V, 2, 5. that prays for peace, Meas. I, 2, 16. Perverse, 1) uncharitable, unkind, litigious: if 3) a written request from an inferior to a supe1 were covetous, ambitious or p., how am I so poort rior: All's V, 1, 19. V, 3,130. H8 V, 1,119. Tit. IV, H6A III, 1, 29. you do not well to bear with their p. 3, 14. objections, IV, 1, 129. Petltlen, vb. 1) to pray, to supplicate: you have 2) averse to love, cold: p. it (love) shall be where —ed all the gods for my prosperity, Cor. II, 1, 187. it shows most toward, Ven. 1157. if thou thinkest lam 2) to request, to demand: the letters of our friends too quickly won, I'll frown and be p. and say thee nay, in Rome p. us at home, Ant. I, 2, 190 (wish us at Rom. II, 2, 96. home, request us to come home). Perversely, unkindly, coldly: p. she persevers Petitionary, supplicatory: I prithee with most p so (not to love Thurio) Gent. Ill, 2, 28. vehemence, As III, 2, 199. thy p. countrymen, Cor V Perverseness, nnkindness, coldness: still so con- 2, 82. stant, lord. What, to p.t Tw. V, 115. Petitioner, supplicant: Ven. 356. LLL V, 2 Pervert, 1) to turn another way, to avert: let's 207. Shr. II, 72. H6B I, 3, 26. H6C V, 5, 80. R3 III, follow him and p. the present wrath he hath against 7, 183. himself, Cymb. II, 4, 151. Peta, name: H4A I, 2, 182 (O. Edd. RossiU). 2) to lead astray, to corrupt, to seduce: and new II, 2, 22. II, 4, 330. 521. 601 (most M. Edd. Poins) p. a reconciled maid, Compl. 329. trust not my holy IV, 2, 9. H4B II, 4, 383. 56*

858 P e t r a r c h , tbe famous Italian poet: Rom. II, 4,41. P e t r u c h i « , name: Sbr. I, 2, 21 etc. Rom. I, 5, 133. P e t t i e e a t , an tinder garment worn by women: As I, 3, 15. II, 4, 7. Ill, 2, 354. Shi II, 5. H4B II, 2, 89. Ill, 2 , 1 6 6 . H6C V, 5, 23. Otb. IV, 3, 74. Ant. 1, 2, 176. P e t t l n e u , littleness, inconsiderableness: which in weight to re-answer, hit p. would bote under, H5 III, 6, 136. P e t t i s h , capricious: his p. lines, Troil. II, 3, 139. P e t t l t a e a , feet; in contempt: Wint. IV, 4, 619 (originally tbe feet of pigs as food). P e t t y , little, small, inconsiderable, trifling: Ven. 394. Lucr. 649. 656. Sonn. 41, 1. 90, 10. Gent. IV, 1, 52. Meas. II, 2, 112. Merch. I, 1, 12. Ill, 2, 309. Wint. II, 1,71. IV. 4 , 4 (as a meeting of the p. gods). H 4 B IV, 3, 119. Ho I, 2, 177. Ill Chor. 31. H6A I, 1, 91. H6B III, 1, 64. IV, 1, 22. V, 2 , 4 4 . R3 IV, 4, 332. Cor. I, 1, 122. II, 3, 186. Tit. II, 1, 62. Caes. 1, 2, 136. Mcb. V, 5, 20. Hml. I, 4, 82. Ill, 3, 21. Oth. IV, 3, 74. Ant. I, 5, 45. II, 1, 34. 49. Ill, 12, 8. V, 2, 140. Cymb. I, 1, 111 (such parting were too p.). V, 4, 93. Per. IV, 3, 22. P e w , a seat (in a church?}: that hath laid knives under his pillow, and halters in his p. Lr. Ill, 4, 55. P e w f e l l e w , companion: makes her p. with others' moan, R3 IV, 4, 58. P e w t e r , an artificial metal, consisting mainlv of tin and lead: Shr. II, 357. H4A II, 4, 51. P e w t e r e r , one who works in pewter: H 4 B III, 2, 281. P h a e t h e n ( 0 . Edd. Phaeton) the son of Helios who tried to drive the chariot of his father: Gent. Ill, I, 153 (Merops' son). R2 III, 3, 178. H6C I, 4, 33. II, 6, 12. Rom. Ill, 2, 3. P h a n t a a l m e or P h a n t a s l m (the later Ff and some M. Edd. phantasm), a fantastic: a p., a Monarcho, L L L IV, 1, 101. 1 abhor such fanatical — s. V, 1, 20.

P h u t a i m i , a vision, a day-dream: all the interim is like a p., or a hideous dream, Caes. II, 1, 65. P h a r a m e n d , a king of the Franks: H5 I, 2, 37. 41. 58. P h a r a e h , the title of the ancient kings of Egypt: Ado 111, 3, 142. H4A II, 4, 520. P h a r a a l l a , Pharsalus, place in Thessaly, where Caesar conquered Pompey: Ant. Ill, 7, 32. P h e a a a n t , the bird Pbasianus: Wint. IV, 4, 768. 770. P h e b e (cf. Phoebe) name of tbe crnel shepherdess in As II, 4, 43. Ill, 5, 1. 27. IV, 3, 7 etc. P h e b e , vb. to treat in the manner of Phebe, viz cruelly: she —s me, As IV, 3, 39. P h e e r e , see Fere. P h e e s a r , a word of the mad host's making, derived frompheeze and rhyming to Caesar: thou'rt an emperor, Caesar, Keisar, and P. Wiv. I, 3, 10. P h e e s e , according to some commentators = to beat, to others = to drive; probably a verb signifying any kind of teazing and annoying: I'll p. you, in faith, Shr. Ind. 1, 1 (Sly's speech), an a' be proud with me, I'll p. his pride, Troil. II, 3, 215. P h i a l , see Vial. P h i b h n a , corrupted from Phoebus by Bottom: Mid». I, 2, 37.

P h i l a d e l p h i a , king of Paphlagonia: Ant. Ill, 6, 70. P h l l a r l e (O. Edd. Filorio or Florio), name in Cymb. I, 1, 97. P U l a r m e n a s , name of the soothsayer in Cymb. V, 5 , 4 3 3 . P h i l e m e n , 1) the kind and conteoted peasant who entertained Jove and Mercury: Ado II, 1, 99. 2) name of a servant in Per. Ill, 2, 1. P h i l i p , name of 1) the father of Alexander the Great: H5 IV, 7, 21. 2) King P-. Augustus of France: J o h n I, 7. II, 531. Ill, 1, 191. 3) the apostle, who has his feast with James on the first of May: come P. and Jacob, Meas. Ill, 2, 214. nor yet Saint —'s daughters were like thee, II6A I, 2, 143 (cf. the Acts of the Apostles X X I , 9: "and the same man had four daughters, virgins, which did prophesy"). 4) P. the Bastard in J o h n I, 158. 161. 231. Ill, 2, 4. 5) a servant in Shr. IV, 1, 92. 125. 6) a familiar appellation for a sparrow: P.! sparrow! John I, 231. P h i l i p p a n , used in the battle of Philippi: his sword P. Ant. II, 5, 23. P h i l i p p e (O. Edd. Phillip or Philip) daughter of Lionel of Clarence: H6B II, 2, 35. 49. P h i l i p p i , the last battle-field of the Roman republicans: Caes. IV, 3, 170. 197 ctc. Ant. II, 6, 13. HI, 2, 56. Ill, 11,35. P h i l l l d a , name of a shepherdess: Mids. II, 1, 68. P h i l e m e l , 1) the nightingale: Lucr. 1079. 1128. Sonn. 102, 7. Mids. II, 2, 13. 2) the daughter of Pandion, ravished by Tereus, who cut her tongue afterwards, to conceal his crime: Lucr. 1128. Tit. II, 3, 43. II, 4, 43. IV, 1, 47. V, 2. 195. Cymb. II, 2, 46. P h l l e m e l a , 1) the nightingale: Pilgr. 197. 2) the daughter of Pandion: Tit. II, 4, 38. IV, 1, 53. P h l l e s e p h e r , one versed in moral and intellectual science: Wiv. I, 1, 236. Ado V, 1, 35. Merch. I, 2, 53 (the weeping p.; so Heraclitus of Ephesus was called, in opposition to the laugher Democritus). As 111, 2, 33. V, 1, 36. Tim. I, 1, 221. II, 2, 131. Lr. Ill, 4, 159. 177. 181. The — s stone, a preparation supposed to have the power of converting any metal into gold, mentioned in a quibbling manner (cf. Stone): I will make him a —'s two stones to me, H4B III, 2, 355. sometime like a p., with two stones moe than's artificial one, Tim. II, 2, 117. P h l l e r a p h i e a l , skilled in philosophy: we have our p. persons, All's II, 3, 2. P h i l e a e p h y , the science of intellectual and moral truth: L L L I, 1, 32. As III, 2, 22. Shr. I, 1, 18. 28. Ill, 1, 13. J o h n 111, 4, 51. Troil. II, 2, 167. Rom. Ill, 3, 55. 57. Caes. IV, 3, 145. V, 1, 101. Hml. I, 5, 1C7. II, 2, 385. P h i l a a t r a t e , name in Mids. I, 1, 11. V, 38. P h i l o t e n , the daughter of Cleon in Per. IV Prol. 18. 30. 36. P h l l e t u s , name in Tim. Ill, 4, 6. P h i s n e m y , see Fisnomy. P h l e g m a t i c , a word misapplied by Mrs Quickly in Wiv. I, 4, 79. P h a e b e (cf. Phebe) Diana as the goddess of the moon: L L L IV, 2, 39. Mids. I, 1, 209. Tit. I, 316. P h e e b o * , Apollo: the sweet melodious sound that —' lute, the queen of music, makes, Pilgr. 112. P a r ticularly as the god of the sun: Tp. IV, 30. Ado V,

p

659

3, 26. Mids. I, 2, 37 (corrupted to Phibbus). Mercli. died p. Ill, 2, 32. Abstr. pro concr., = physicians: II, 1, 5. Wint. IV, 4, 124. H4A I, 2, 16. H5 111 Chor. the sceptre, learning, p., must all follow this and come 6. IV, 1, 290. H6C II, 6, 11. Troil. I, 3, 230. Cor. to dust, Cymb. IV, 2, 268. Physic, vb. to work on as a remedy, to heal, to II, 1, 234. Bom. Ill, 2, 2. Hml. Ill, 2, 165. Lr. II, 2, 114. A n t I, 5, 28. IV, 8, 29. V, 2, 320. Cymb. II, 3, cure: to p. your cold breast, Compl. 259. I will p. your rankness, As I, 1, 92. one that indeed —s the 22. V, 5, 190. subject, makes old hearts fresh, Wint. 1, 1, 43. that Phoenicia, country in Asia: Ant. Ill, 6, 16. Phoenician, a native of Phoenicia: Ant. Ill, 7,65. will p. the great Myrmidon, Troil. I, 3, 378. the labour Phaenlx, the fabulous Arabian bird which exist- we delight in —s pain, Mcb. II, 3, 55. some griefs are ed single and rose again from its own ashes (used as med'tinable; that is one of them, for it doth p. love, a fem.: Phoen. 31. Sonn. 19, 4. H8 V, 5,41): Sonn. Cymb. Ill, 2, 34 (preserves its health). 19,4. Phoen. 23.31. Tp. Ill, 3,23. As IV, 3,17. H6A Physical, medicinal, wholesome: the blood 1 drop IV, 7, 93. H6C I, 4, 35. H8 V, 5, 41. Tim. II, 1, 32. is rather p. than dangerous to me, Cor. I, 5, 19. is it Not named, but alluded to in B3 IV, 4, 424. Deno- p. to walk unbraced and suck up the humours of the ting any thing rare and matchless: All's 1,1, 182. his dank morning f Caes. II, 1, 261. p. down, Compl. 93 ( = matchless). Physician, one whose profession is to heal disName of a house: Err. I, 2, 75. 88. II, 2, 11. Of eases: Lucr. 904. Sonn. 140, 8. 147, 5. Gent. II, a ship: T w . V, 64. 1, 42. Wiv. II, 3, 56. HI, 1, 61. Ill, 4, 101. Shr. Ind. Phttlnas, name in Ant. Ill, 7,15. 2, 123. All's I, 1, 15. I, 2, 70. I, 3, 243. II, 3, 122. Phraae, subst. 1) an expression, a term: Wiv. I, Wint. II, 3, 54. B2 I, 1, 154. 1, 4, 59. II, 1, 99. H4A 1, 151. I, 3, 33. II, 1,13. II, 2, 28. Meas. V, 90. L L L IV, 1, 24. H4B I, 2, 143. II, 2, 112. IV, 1, 60. B3 I, 1, 166. V, 2, 406. All's IV, 3, 162. T w . II. 5. 102. I, 1, 137. H8 V, 2, 11. Troil. II, 3, 223. Cor. II, 1, H4B III, 2, 76. 79. 81 82 mot understood by Bar- 127. Tim. Ill, 3, 11. IV, 3, 434. Mcb. V, 1, 82. Lr. dolph). H5 IV, 7, 19. Troil. Ill, 1, 45. Bom. 1, 4, 37. 1, 1, 166. Oth. I, 3, 311. Ant. V, 2, 357. Cymb. V, Hml. 1, 3, 108. I, 4, 19. I, 5, 175. II, 1, 47. II, 2, 4, 7. V, 5, 27. Per. 1, 2, 67. I I I , 112. V, 2, 165. Physlagnamy (cf. Fisnomy) the art of discerning 2) style, manner of language: precious p. by all the temper from the features of the face: in Ajax the Muses filed, Sonn. 85, 4. write from it in hand and Ulysses, O, what art of p. might one behold, Luc.r. or p. Tw. V, 340. this they con perfectly in the p. of 1395. war, Ho III, 6, 79. no toilets in the lines to make the Pia mater, the membrane which covers the brain; matter savoury, nor no matter in the p. that might in- used for the brain itself: nourished in the womb of p. dict the author of affectation, Hml. II, 2, 463. whose L L L IV, 2, 71 (O. Edd. primater). one of thy kin has p. of sorrow conjures the wandering start, V, 1, 278. a most weak p. Tw. I, 5, 123. his p. is not worth the thou speakest in better p. and matter, Lr. IV, 6, 8. ninth part of a sparrow, Troil. II, 1, 77. little blessed with the soft p. of peace, Oth. I, 3, 82. Plbblea, pebbles (M. Edd. pebbUs): such a shower rail thou in Fulvia'sp. Ant. I, 2, 111. of p. H8 V, 4, 60. Cor. V, 3, 58. Phraae, vb. to style, to call: these suns, for so Plcarty, French province: H6A II, 1, 10. H6B they p. 'em, H8 I, 1, 34. IV, 1, 88. P h r u e l e n , probably = indescribable, beggarPick (cf. Peek), 1) to prick, to stick, to strike ing description: advance of yours that p. hand, Compl. with a pointed instrument: p. out mine eyes with a 225 (see Termless). But cf. his speechless hand in ballad-maker's pen, Ado I, 1, 254. to p. one's teeth Cor. V, 1, 67. to cleanse them by means of a toothpick: All's III, Phrygla, country in Asia Minor: T w . Ill, 1, 58. 2, 8. Wint. IV, 4, 780. I'll p. your teeth = I'll enrry Troil. Prol. 7. I, 2, 136 (supposed to be the country you, Lr. IV, 6, 250. of the Trojans). 2) to pluck, to gather, to take up: w« may p. a Phrygian, pertaining to Phrygia: Lucr. 1502. thousand salads, All's IV, 5, 15. p. a sallet, H6B IV, Wiv. I, 3, 97. Troil. IV, 5, 186. 223. V, 10, 24. 10, 9. he could not stay to p. them tn a pile of musty Phrynla (O. Edd. Phrinica or Phrinia) Phryne, stuff, Cor. V, 1, 25. Figuratively, = to cull, to gather, a celebrated courtesan of ancient Athens: Tim. to find out: could p. no meaning from their parting looks, Lucr. 100. at —ed leisure, which shall be shortly, V, 1, 5. single I'll resolve you, Tp. V, 247. what an unweighed Phthlaick, see 1'isick. Phytic, subst. 1) a remedy for a disease: Lucr. behaviour hath this Flemish drunkard —ed out of my 901. Sonn. 34, 9. 147, 8. Pilgr. 180. Meas. IV, 6, conversation, Wiv. II, 1, 24. out of this silence yet 1 7. L L L I, 1, 235. As III, 2, 376. All's II, 1, 188. Ill, —ed a welcome, Mids. V, 100. how much honour would 1, 19. Tw. II, 3, 188. Wint. 1, 2, 200. John V, 2, 21 be —ed from the chaff and ruin of the times, Merch. (for the health and p. of our right). H4B I, 1, 137. 11, 9, 48. and p. strong matter of revolt and wrath out IV, 5, 14. H6A III, 1, 147. H8 I, 3, 36. Ill, 2, 40. of the bloody fingers' ends of John, John III, 4, 167. IV, 2, 122. V, 3, 27. Cor. Ill, 1, 154. Ill, 2, 33. Tit. now you p. a quarrel, H4A 111, 3, 76 ( = seek; Mrs. IV, 2, 162. Tim. Ill, 6, 110. Mcb. V, 3, 47. Hml. Quickly's speech). —ed from the wormholes of longIll, 3, 96. Lr. Ill, 4, 33 (take p.). Per. I, 1, 72. IV, vanished days, H5II, 4,86. as I may p. occasion, 111, 2, 6, 105. 111 (Captain Jamy's speech), to be honest is to be one 2) the art of healing diseases: doctor of p. Wiv. man —ed out of ten thousand, Hml. II, 2, 179. not to p. Ill, 1, 4 Evans' speech), would that do it goodt My bad from bad, Oth. IV, 3, 106. top. out = to find out: p. says Ay, L L L II, 188. both our remedies within thy hath —ed out an act, Meas. I, 4, 64. —edout the dullhelp and holy p. lies, Rom. II, 3, 52. thy sacred p. est scent, Shr. Ind. 1, 24. the whole world again canshall receive such pay, Per. V, 1, 74. I ever have stu- not p. out five such, L L L V, 2, 548 (Ff Q> prick).

860

P

could the world p. thee out three such enemies, H4A II, 4, 403. what hotter hours you have luxuriously —ed out, A n t HI, 13, 120. to p. up = to gather, to acquire, to make: if in our youtht we could p. up tome pretty estate, Per. IV, 2, 36. Partic. —ed, adjectively, = refined: he it too—ed, loo tpruce, too affected, L L L V, 1, 14. my —ed man of countriet, John I, 193. the age it grown to —ed, Hml. V, 1, 151. The gerund — i n g , adjectively, = sought industriously: the king it weary of dainty and tuch —ing grievancet, H4B IV, 1, 198 (German: getucht). 3) to open (originally by a pointed instrument), and hence to steal from, to steal: were beauty under twenty locks kept fast, yet love breaks through and —s them all at latt, Yen. 576. Cymb. II, 2, 41. the penitent instrument to p. that bolt, V, 4, 10. —ing a kernel out of a pomegranate, All's II, 3, 276. to p. a purse, Wiv. I, 1, 154. W i n t IV, 4, 627. H4A II, 1, 56. Tim. IV, 2, 12. —edmypocket, H4A III, 3, 61. 70. 94. 113. 114. 176. 190. 4) to pitch, to throw: as high as I could p. my lance, Cor. I, 1, 204. In H8 V, 4, 94 0 . Edd. peck. P l c k - u e , an axe not with an edge, but with a sharp point: Hml. V, 1, 102. Cymb. IV, 2, 389 (these poor — s , i. e. my hafida). P l c k k e n e , name in H4B III, 2, 23. P i c k e r « , thieves: so I do still, by these p. and stealers, Hml. Ill, 2, 348 (i. e. my hands. " T h e phrase is taken from our church catechism, where the catechumen, in his duty to his neighbour, is taught to keep his hands from picking and stealing." Whalley). P i c k l e , subst. a lye of salt liquor: stewed in brine, smarting in lingering p. Ant. II, 5, 66. Used jocularly of sad circumstances: how earnest thou in this p. f (i. e. drunkenness). I have been in such a p. since I saw you last that, I fear me, will never out of my bones: I shall not fear fly-blowing, Tp. V, 281. 282 (Trinculo is speaking of his having been drenched in the pool). P i c k l e - h e r r i n g , a herring preserved in salt liquor: Tw. I, 5, 129 (Sir Toby seems to suffer from heart-burning). P i c k - l a c k , an instrument by which locks are opened without the key: we have found upon him a strange p. Meas. Ill, 2, 18 (probably one for Spanish padlocks). P i c k - p a n e , one that steals purses or from purses: Wiv. I, 1, 163. L L L IV, 3, 208. As HI, 4, 24. 114 A II, 1, 53 (at hand, quoth p., a proverbial phrase). P i c k - t h a n k i , persons studious to obtain thanks and gain favour, officious fellows: H4A III, 2, 25. P l e k t - h a t e h , a quarter of London celebrated as a retreat of prostitutes and thieves: Wiv. II, 2, 19. P i c t u r e , subst. 1) a piece of painting: Ven. 211 (cf. Hml. IV, 6, 86). Lucr. 1527. Wiv. II, 2, 90. As III, 2, 97. Shr. Ind. 1, 47. 2, 51. Tw. I, 5, 252; cf. Troil. Ill, 2, 50. Tim. I, 1, 26. 197. Mcb. II, 2, 54. Hml. Ill, 4, 53. IV, 5, 86 (cf. Ven. 211). Oth. II, 1, 110. Cymb. II, 2, 25. V, 5, 204. the p. of We three, Tw. II, 3, 17 (i. e. the heads of two fools with the inscription ' We three loggerheads be'; the spectator making the third). 2) a portrait, likeness: Compl. 134. Sonn. 46, 3. 47, 5. 9. 13. Tp. Ill, 2, 136. G e n t II, 4, 209. IV, 2, 121. 122. IV, 4, 92. 120. 122. 189. Err. IV, 3, 13.

Ado II, 3, 273. L L L V, 2, 38. Merch. II, 7, 11. 48. Tw. I, 3, 136. Ill, 4, 228. W i n t V, 1, 74. V, 2, 187. H4B IV, 3, 53. H 6 A II, 3, 37. IV, 7, 83. Tit. Ill, 1, 103. Hml. II, 2, 383. Lr. II, 1, 83. Per. IV, 2, 101. 3) image: presenteth to mine eye the p. of an angry chqfing boar, Yen. 662. the, the p. of pure piety, Lucr. 542. I profane mine eyes on thy p. L L L IV, 1, 87. he it a proper man't p. Merch. I, 2, 78. I taw whose purse wat best in p. Wint. IV, 4, 615 (Autolycus is playing the amateur), thou p. of what thou seemest, Troil. V, 1, 6. the p. of my youth, Tit. IV, 2, 108. hath altered that good p. Cymb. IV, 2, 365. he began his mistress' p. V, 5, 175. P i c t u r e * , painted, represented: where your true image p. lies, Sonn. 24, 6. I have not seen him (death) sop. (with eyes) Cymb. V, 4, 185. P i c t u r e - l i k e , like a painting: Cor. I, 3, 12. Pie, 1) the bird Pica, magpie: chattering —s in dismal discords sung, H6C V, 6, 48. 2) paste baked with something in it: Shr. IV, 3, 82. All's 1,1, 173. Wint. IV, 3, 49. Troil. I, 2, 280. Tit. V, 3, 60. Bom. II, 4, 139. Proverbial expression: no man't p. it freed from hit ambitious finger, H8 I, 1, 52. 3) the service-book of the Romish church, supposed to be meant in the oath by cock and pie: Wiv. I, 1, 316. H4B V, 1, 1. Piece, subst. 1) a part, a fragment: eat a p. of my sword, H4A V, 4, 156. on the —s of the broken wand, H6B I, 2, 28. a p. of him, Hml. I, 1, 19. this p. of your dead queen (i. e. her new-born child) Per. III, 1,17. in —s and to —s = asunder, into fragments, in two: spurn in —s posts of adamant, H6A I, 4, 52. break thou in —t, V, 4, 92. B3 II, 2, 52. Bom. II, 5, 50. Lr. I, 2, 92. dashed aU to —s, Tp. I, 2, 8. Wiv. II, 1, 22. L L L V, 2, 399. Shr. IV, 3, 129. All's IV, 3, 193. W i n t V, 2, 68. John IV, 3, 93. R2 II, 2, 139. H4B IV, 1, 18. H5 1, 2, 225. H6A IV, 7,47. R3 I, 3, 260. IV, 4, 234. Cor. V, 6, 112. 121. Caes. Ill, 3, 30. IV, 3, 82. Mcb. Ill, 2, 49. Lr. Ill, 2, 55. Oth. Ill, 3, 431. Cymb. Ill, 4, 55. IV, 1, 19. Per. IV, 2, 20. torn a —s, H8 V, 4, 80. 2)a part considered by itself and takeq as a whole: a p. of cheese, Wiv. V, 5, 86. 147. a three piled p. (of velvet) Meas. I, 2, 33. overmastered with a valiant p. of dust, Ado II, 1, 64. as pretty a p. of flesh as any, IV, 2, 85. As 111, 2, 68. Tw. I, 5, 30. a p. of ice, Shr. IV, 1, 14. of beef, IV, 3, 23. the most peerless p. of earth, Wint. V, 1, 94. cf. H5 V, 1, 14. B3 1, 3, 334. H8 III, 2, 280. IV, 1, 81. Bom. I, 1, 34. I, 5, 9. Caes. Ill, 1, 254. Lr. IV, 6, 90. Cymb. IV, 2, 127. V, 4, 140. V, 5, 437. Per. IV, 6, 153. Of the same p. = of the same kind: just of the same p. is every flatterer's spirit, Tim. Ill, 2, 71. p. by p. = one after another: 111 murder all his wardrobe, p. by p. H4A V, 3, 27. Very often used in a periphrastical way: a p. of skilful painting, Lucr. 1366. the most dangerous p. of lechery, Ado III, 3, 180. it this such a p. of studyf LLL I, 2, 53. a very good p. of work, Mids. 1, 2, 14. Shr. I, 1, 258. that p. of song, Tw. II, 4, 2. the prince is about a p. of iniquity, Wint. IV, 4, 693. it were a p. of honesty, 695. I knew by that p. of service, H5 III, 2, 49. there's not a p. of feather in our host, IV, 3, 112. a p. of knavery, IV, 7, 3. cf. H6B I, 4, 47. V, 1, 155. B 3 IV, 3, 5. H8 V, 2, 8. Tit. 11, 3 , 7 . Tim. 1, 1,155. 202.

p

861

P i e r , a mole projecting into the sea: Merch. I, Caes. II, 1, 327. Mcb. II, 3, 134. Hml. II, 2, 315. Ill, 2, 51. 251. Oth. IV, 1, 156. Ant. I, 2, 160. Cymb. II, 1, 19. H 5 III Chor. 4. Pierce (rhyming to rehearse in R2 V, 3, 127, and 4, 72. Per. IV, 3, 2. Applied to persons, sometimes in contempt: thou used in playing on the words person and Percy: L L L fresh p. of excellent witchcraft, Wint. IV, 4, 433. drink IV, 2. 86. H4A V, 3, 59) 1) to penetrate, to force a up the lees and dregs of a flat tamed p. Troil. IV, 1, way into, to thrust into with a pointed instrument: 62. give that changing p. to him, Tit. I, 309. Oftener that the dribbling dart of love can p. a complete bosom, to denote a person of supreme excellence: thy mother Meas. I, 3, 3. the princess —d a pricket, LLL IV, 2, was a p. of virtue, T p . I, 2, 56. the p. of virtue, which 58. Mids. II, 1, 160. Ill, 2, 59. R2 I, 1, 171. H4A is set betwixt us as the cement of our love, Ant. HI, 2, V, 3, 59. H6C II, 1, 203. Cor. V, 4, 21 Tit. IV, 3, 12. 28. thou art a p. of virtue, Per. IV, 6, 118. their trans- Lr. IV, 6, 171. Ant. II, 5, 12. Absol.: the air that sings formations were never for a p. of beauty rarer, Wint. with —ing, All's III, 2, 114 (when pierced by bnllets). IV, 4, 32. 0 ruined p. of nature, Lr. IV, 6, 137. na- a thorn sharp and —ing, H6A II, 4, 70. H6C I, 4, 41. ture's p. 'gainst fancy, Ant. V, 2, 99. I have gone Rom. Ill, 1, 164. Caes. V,3, 76. 2) to broach: an if one should be —d, which is the through for this p. Per. IV, 2 , 4 8 . when nature framed this p. 151. Difficult passage: all princely graces, onet He that is litest to a hogshead, L L L IV, 2, 86 that mould up such a mighty p. as this is, shall still be (O. VAA.persi). doubled on her, H8 V, 5, 27 (young Esizabeth cannot 3) to penetrate, to enter in any manner; trans.: be meant by the mighty p., but what person else? a closet never —d with crystal eyes, Sonn. 46, 6. King Henry VIII?). with sweetest touches p. your mistress' ear, Merch. V, 3) a work of a r t , a painting or statue: this well- 67. in high and boastful neighs —ing the night's dull painted p. Lucr. 1443. a p. many years in doing, Wint. ear, H5 IV Chor. 11. can curses p. the clouds and enter V, 2, 104. V, 3, 38. Tim. I, 1, 28. 255. V, 1, 21. = heaven f R 3 I, 3, 195. that the appalled air may p. the head ( = the ear) of the great combatant, Troil. IV, 5, a song: Troil. Ill, 1, 55. 4) a coin: a p. of silver, Tp. II, 2, 31. some p. of 5. there is Aufidius, —ing our Romans, Cor. I, 5, 12 money, Meas. II, 1, 284. a p. of gold, H4A 11,4, 540. (breaking through), the din of war gan p. his ready Hml. II, 2, 447. Oth. Ill, 1, 26. Cymb. V, 5, 183. sense, II, 2, 119. it was the nightingale that —d the that for the poorest p. will bear the knave by the volume, fearful hollow of thine ear, Rom. Ill, 5, 3. whose proof Cor. Ill, 3, 32. a thousand —s, Tim. Ill, 6, 23. Per. nor yells of mothers nor sight of priests shall p. Tim. IV, 2, 56. IV, 6, 124. take —s for the figures sake, IV, 3, 126. the woundings of a father's curse p. every sense about thee, Lr. 1, 4, 323. that the bruised heart Cymb. V, 4, 25. 5) a weapon, offensive or defensive: a' would was —d through the ear, Oth. I, 3, 219. whose solid manage you his p. thus, H4B III, 2, 301 ( = musket). virtue the shot of accident could neither graze nor p. a p. of ordnance, H6A I, 4, 15. bruised —s, go, Ant. IV, 1, 279. Absol.: brand not my forehead with thy —ing light, Lucr. 1091. ambition cannot p. a wink IV, 14, 42. cf. Murdering-piece. P i e c e , vb. 1) to make whole or mend by pieces beyond, T p . II, 1, 242. thus most invectively he —th joined together, to patch: one girth six times - d, through the body of the country, As II, 1, 58. eyes as Shr. Ill, 2, 61. here and there —d with packthread, 63. —ing as the midday sun, to search the secret treasons 2) to make full, to make up, to complete, to sup- of the world, H6C V, 2, 17. let some graver eye p. into ply : shall we thither and with our company p. the re- that, H8 1,1, 68. it shall as level to your judgment p. as joicing 1 Wint. V, 2, 117. With out: p. out our imper- day does to your eye, Hml. IV, 5, 151 (Qq pear), how fections with your thoughts, H5 Prol. 23. you shall p. far your eyes may p. I cannot tell, Lr. I, 4, 368. the it out with a piece of your performance, Troil. Ill, 1, air is quick, and it —s and sharpens the stomach, Per. 55. thus must I p. it out, Caes. II, 1, 51. With up: to IV, 1, 29. take off so much grief from you as he will p. up in him4) to affect, to touch, to more deeply; trans.: self, Wint. V, 3, 56 (hoard up, so as to have his fill). plain words best p. the ear of grief, L L L V, 2, 763. 3) to enlarge, to increase, to add to: their pur- can no prayers p. theet Merch. IV, 1, 126. whose loss posed trim —d not his grace, but were all graced by hath —d him deep, T i t . IV, 4, 31. did your letters p. him, Compl. 1 1 9 . 1 twice five hundred and their friends the queen to any demonstration of grieft Lr. IV, 3, 11. to p. 'em, Cor. II, 3, 220. all of it, with our displea- it —d me thorough, Per. IV, 3, 35. Absol.: prayer, sure — d , Lr. I, 1, 202. I will p. her opulent throne which —s so that it assaults mercy itself, Tp. Epil. 17. with kingdoms. Ant. I, 5, 45. With out: he —s out his she uttereth —ing eloquence, Sbr. II, 177. as it is now wife's inclination; he gives her folly motion and advan- —ing to my ioul, Wint. V, 3, 34. hearing how our tage, W i r . Ill, 2, 34. and p. the way out with a heavy plaints and prayers do p. R2 V, 3, 127. her tears heart, R2 V, 1, 92. I will p. out the comfort with what will p. into a marble heart, H6C III, 1, 38. thy woes addition lean, Lr. Ill, 6, 2. will make them (thy words) p. like mine, R3 IV, 4, Pie-earner, a street-corner or place in London: 125. provide more —ing statutes daily, to chain up a' comes continuantly to P. — saving your manhoods and restrain the poor, Cor. I, 1, 86 (mortifying, re— to buy a saddle, H4B II, 1, 28 (Mrs. Qnickly's volting the feelings? or = sweeping; entering and speech). affecting all the interests of the people?). Pied, variegated, particoloured: a p. ninny, Tp. Pierce, name: Sir P. of Exton, R2 V, 5,100. Ill, 2, 71 (on account of his motley coat), daisies p. P i e t y , duty and reverence to those who are enL L L V, 2, 904. eanlings streaked and p. Merch. I, 3, titled to i t : if to fight for king and commonweal were 80. cf. Proud-pied. piety in thine, it is in these, Tit. I, 115. 0 cruel, irreliP l e d n e u , variegation: Wint. IV, 4, 87. gious p. 130. p. and fear, religion to the gods, Tim. P l e l e d , see PeeL IV, 1, 15. Used with some latitude, = virtue in ge-

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neral: while she, the picture of pure p., like a white hind under the gripe's sharp clams, Lucr. 542. how his p. does my deeds make the blacker, Wint. Ill, 2, 17*2. bungle up damnation with forms being fetched from glistering semblances of p. H5 II, 2, 117. Misapplied by Dogberry in Ado IV, 2, 81. P i ( , a young swine: Err. I, 2, 44. II, 1,66. Merch. IV, 1, 47. 54. Tit. IV, 2, 146. Plgeen, the bird Columba: LLLV,2,315. Merch. II, 6, 5 C Venus' — s). As 1, 2, 99. Ill, 3, 82. H4B V, 1, 18. 27. Tit. IV, 3, 87. 92. 97. 103. IV, 4, 44. Pigeon-egg, used by Costard to denote smallness: thou p. of discretion, L L L V, 1, 77. Plgeon-llTered, of too mild a temper: l a m p , and lack gall, Hml. II, 2, 605. F i g h t , pitched, fixed: tents this proudly p. upon our Phrygian plains, Troil. V, 10, 24 (Q pitcht). = settled, firmly resolved: found him p. to do it, Lr. II, 1, 67. cf. Straight-pight. P i g m y , a dwarf, and adj. dwarfish: these p. arms, John V, 2, 135. a —'s straw, Lr. IV, 6, 171. The —es, a fabulous nation of antiquity: any embassage to the —es, Ado II, 1, 278. Plg-nnto, earth-nuts: Tp. II, 2, 172. Plgregromttes, a name known only to Sir Andrew: Tw. II, 3, 23. P i k e , a sort of lance: Ven. 620. Tp. 11, 1, 161. H4B 11, 4, 55. H5 111, 3, 38. IV, 1, 40. H6A 1, 1, 116. H6C I, 1, 244. Cor. I, 1, 23. V, 6, 152. Cymb. IV, 2, 399. V, 3, 39. you must put in the —s with a vice, Ado V, 2, 21, i. e. central spikes sometimes used in targets, to which they were affixed by means of a screw. Pike, the fish Esox lucius: H4B III, 2, 356. Pilate, the governor who washed his hands to show that he was innocent of the blood of Christ: R2 IV, 239. 240. R3 I, 4, 279. Plleh.name in Per. 11,1,12. O-Udd.what,topelcht Pllcher, a fish of the genus Clupea, much resembling the herring: Tw. Ill, 1, 39 (most M. Edd. pilchards). Pllcher, a scabbard; in contempt: Bom.Ill, 1,84. Pile, subst. things heaped high together: what —s of wealth hath he accumulated, H8 III, 2, 107. in heaps and —s of ruin, Cor. Ill, 1, 207. to pick them in a p. of musty chaff, V, 1, 25. Particularly used of wood: Tp. Ill, 1,25. Tit. 1,97. 128. Pile, subst. a hair, a fiber of wool: his left cheek is a cheek of two p. and a half, All's IV, 5, 103, i. e covered with a patch of velvet; cf. Three-piled. Pile, to heap up high: Tp. Ill, 1, 17. Wint. I, 2, 430. Cor. Ill, 2, 3. Hml. V, 1, 274. With up: Tp. Ill, I, 10. H4B IV, 5, 71. Piled, "a quibble between piled — peeled, stripped of hair, bald (from the French disease), and piled as applied to velvet, three-piled velvet meaning the finest and costliest kind of velvet" Dyce): I had as lief be a list of an English kersey as be p., as thou art p., for a French velvet, Meas. 1, 2, 35. Pilfer, to steal: H5 I, 2, 142. Pilfering*, thefts: Lr. II, 2, 151. Pilgrim, one who travels to a holy place: Gent. II, 7, 9. All's 111, 4, 4. Ill, 5, 33. 35. 42. 47. 96. H4A 1, 2, 140. Rom. 1,5,97. 99. 101. 104. Pilgrimage, 1) a travel undertaken for purposes of devotion: Lucr. 791. All's IV, 3, 57. R2 I, 3, 49.

2) nnv long and weary jonrney: Lucr. 960. Sonn. 7, 8. 27,"6. Gent. II, 7, 30. Merch. I, 1, 120. R2 I, 3, 230. 264. Rom. IV, 5, 45. Used of human life: Meas. II, 1, 36. Mids. I, 1, 75. As 111, 2, 138. R2 II, I, 154. H6A II, 5, 116. Lr. V, 3, 196. Oth. I, 3, 153. Pill, subst. a medicine in the form of a small ball: Gent. 11,4, 149. Wiv. Ill, 5,24. Pill, vb. to pillage, to rob, to plunder: the commons hath he —ed with grievous taxes, R2 II, 1, 246. that which you have —ed from me, R3 I, 3, 159. p. by law, Tim. IV, 1, 12. Pillage, subst. 1) spoil, plunder, booty: slaves for p. fighting, Lucr. 428. which p. they with merry march bring home, H5 I, 2, 195. to be the p. of a giglot wench, H6A IV, 7, 41. make cheap pennyworths of their p. H6B 1, 1,222. 2)the act of spoiling orplundering: p.androbbery, H5 IV, 1, 174. thy sons make p. of her chastity, Tit. II, 3, 44. Pillar, a column, a supporter: Tp.V, 208. Merch. IV, 1, 239. H6B I, 1, 75. H6C II, 3, 51. H8 111, 2, 382. Troil. IV, 5. 212. A n t I, 1, 12. Pillicock (Qq Pelicock) a term of endearment, with a lascivious double-meaning: Lr. Ill, 4, 78 (allnding to an old rhyme: Pillicock, Pillicock sat on a hill: if he's not gone, he sits there still). Pillory, a frame of wood with movable boards and holes, through which were put the head and hands of a criminal for punishment: 1 have stood on the p. Gent. IV, 4, 35. there I stood as on a p., looking through the lute, Shr. II, 157. Pillow, a cushion laid under the head to sleep on: Lucr. 387. 1620. Mids. II, 2, 41. As II, 4, 27. Shr. IV, 1, 204. H4B IV, 5, 5. 21. 58. H5 IV, 1, 14. H6B III, 2, 375. R3 IV, 3, 14. Troil. Ill, 1, 49. Tit. II, 3, 130. V, 3, 163. Tim. IV, 3, 32. Mcb. II, 3, 109. V, 1, 81. Lr. Ill, 4 , 5 5 . Ant. Ill, 13, 106. Cymb. Ill, 6, 35. IV, 2, 363. Per. Ill, 1, 69. V, 1, 237. Pilot, one who steers a ship: Lucr. 279. All's II, 1, 168. Wint. I, 2, 448. H6C V, 4, 6. 20. Troil. II, 2, 64. Rom. II, 2, 82. V, 3, 117. Mcb. I, 3, 28. Oth. II, 1,48. Ill, 2, 1. Per. IV, 4, 18. Plmpernell, name in Shr. Ind 2, 96. Pin, subst 1) a small pointed instrument chiefly used to fasten clothes: Gent. II, 7, 56. As III. 5, 21. Wint. IV, 4, 228. R2 III, 2, 169. II4B 111, 2, 156. H6B IV, 10,32. Lr. II, 3, 16. IV, 7, 56. — s' heads: H4A IV, 2, 24. H4B IV, 3, 58. Used to denote an insignificant trifle: Gent. I, 1, 115. II, 7, 55. Meas. II, 1, 99. II, 2, 45. Ill, 1, 106. Err. IV, 3, 73. L L L IV, 3, 19. H4B II, 4, 189. Hml. 1, 4, 65. my wretchedness unto a row of — s , R2 111, 4, 26. Sometimes used to cut short any futile evasion: you have beaten my men, killed my deer, and broke open my lodge. But not kissed your keeper's daughterf Tut a p.! this shall be answered, Wiv. I, 1, 117. I'll tell you what, — Foh, foh! come, tell a p., you are forsworn, Troil. V, 2, 22. 2) the middle point of the butt, the centre: then will she get the upshoot by cleaving the p. L L L IV, 1, 138. the very p. of his heart cleft with the blind bourboy's buttshaft, Rom. II, 4, 15. 3) an induration of the membranes of the eye. cataract: all eyes blind with the p. and web, Wint. I, 2, 291. he gives the web and the p. Lr. Ill, 4, 122.

p P i n , vb. 1) to fasten with pins: L L L V, 2, 321. Cor. II, 1, 225. 2) to fasten, to fix in general: and so lock* her in embracing, as if she would p. her to her heart, Wint. V, 2, 84. our gates we have but — ed with rushes, Cor. 1,4, 18. P i B ' h n t U e k , a buttock thin and pointed like a pin: All's II, 2, 18. P i n c h , subst. 1) a squeeze with the fingers: Tp. I, 2, 329. IV, 233. Ant. I, 5, 28. V, 2, 298. 2) seizure with the teeth, bite: not rascal-like to Sail down with a p. H6A IV, 2, 49 (cf. the verb in H6C II, 1, 16). 3) pain, pang: inward —es, Tp. V, 77 (remorse). necessity's sharp p. Lr. II, 4, 214 (cf. belly-pinched), there cannot be a p. in death more sharp than this is, Cymb. I, 1, 130. P i n c h , name in Err. IV, 4, 50. V, 237. 294. P i n c h , vb. 1) to squeeze with the fingers: Tp. 1, 2, 328.11, 2, 4. V, 276. Wiv. IV, 4, 57. 61. IV, 6, 41. V, 5, 49. 58. 96. 103 — 105. Err 11, 2, 194. All's IV, 3, 140. Wint 1,2,115. IV,4,622. Strange expression: let the bloat king tempt you again to bed, p. wanton on your cheek, call you his mouse, Hml. Ill, 4, 183. Should it be pinch-wanton (dally with pinches)? or pinch, wanton on your cheek f 2) to gripe and bite: as a bear, encompassed round with dogs, who having —ed a few and made them cry, H6C 11, 1, 16 (cf. the subst. in H6A IV, 2, 49). 3) to discolour as by squeezing: the air hath —ed the lily tincture of her face, Gent. IV, 4, 160 (cf with Phoebus' amorous — es black, Ant. I, 5, 28 . 4) to pain, to afflict: the earth is with a kind of colic —ed and vexed, H4A III, 1, 29. Cor. 11, 1, 82. the pox — es the other, I14B I, 2, 2o8. in this our—ing cave, Cymb. Ill, 3, 38 (very cold). 0 majesty! when thou dost p. thy bearer, H4B IV, 5, 29 (meaning the crown pressing the head), here's the pang that —es, H8 II, 3, 1. to gall and p. this Bolingbroke, H4A I, 3, 229. thou art —ed for it now, Tp. V, 74. 5) to make ridiculous, to serve a trick: have I —ed you, Signior Oremiof Shr. II, 373. I remain a —ed thing, Wint. II, 1, 51. as they p. one another by the disposition, Ant. II, 7, 7. P l n c h - s p e t t e « , spotted by pinches: Tp. IV, 261. P i n d a r a « , name in Caes. IV, 2, 4. V, 3, 20 etc. P i n e , subst the tree Pinus: Lucr. 1167. Tp. I, 2, 277. 293. V, 48. Merch. IV, 1, 75. Wint. II, 1, 34. R2 111, 2, 42. H6B II, 3, 45. Troil. I, 3,. 8. Ant. IV, 12, 1. 23. Cymb. IV, 2, 175 fmasc.). P i n e , vb. 1) intr. a) to want food, to starve: the orphan —s while the oppressor feeds, Lucr. 905. Wee still —ing Tantalus he sits, 858. he ten times —s that —s beholding food, 1115. thus do I p. and surfeit day by day, Sonn. 75, 13. why doest thou p. within and suffer dearth, 146, 3. 10. the dearth that I have —d in, Gent. II, 7, 16. the mind shall banquet, though the body p. LLL 1, 1, 25. to love, to wealth, to pomp, I p. and die, 31. With for, = to hunger for: cloyed with much, he —th still for more, Lucr. 98. b) to wear away, to languish: I alone must sit and p. Lucr. 795. hanging her pale and - d cheek beside, Compl. 32. now all these hearts... with bleeding groans they p. 275. Shr. I, 1, 160. Tw. 11,4, 115. H5 II, 4, 107. IV Chor. 41. H6A II, 5, 57. Ill, 3, 49. Mcb. I, 3, 23. Per. I, 2, 31. to p. away: R2 111, 2, 209. Lr.

863 1, 4, 80. With for, = to languish for: for whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet —d, Bom. V, 3, 236. all which we p. for now, Mcb. Ill, 6, 37. 2) trans, a) to starve: poor birds. deceived with painted grapes, do surfeit by the eye and p. the maw, Ven. 602. b) to wear out, to afflict: where shivering cold and sickness —s the clime, R2 V, 1, 77. P l n f e l d , a place in which beasts are confined, a pound: Gent. I, 1, 114. Lr. II, 2, 9. P l n l e n , subst. a feather: so poor a p. of his wing, Ant. Ill, 12, 4. P l n l e n , vb. to make defenceless by binding the elbow» behind together: Wiv. IV, 2, 129. Ado IV, 2, 69 (Dogberry says opinioned). Lr. Ill, 7, 23. Ant. V, 2, 53. P l n l e n e d , winged, in Nimble-pinioned, q. v. P i n k , subst. 1) a nonpareil, a nonesuch: I am the very p. of courtesy, Bom. II, 4, 61. 2) the flower Dianthus: p. for flower, Bom. II, 4, 62. P i n k , adj. winking, half-shut: plumpy Bacchus with p. eyne, Ant. II, 7, 121. P i n k e d , pierced in small holes, reticulated: railed upon me till her p. porringer fell off her head, H8 V, 4, 50. cf. XJnpinked in Shr. IV, 1, 136. P i n n a c e , a kind of small and light vessel: Wiv. 1, 3, 89. H6B IV, 1, 9. 107. P i n t , half a quart: H4A II, 4, 29. Oth. II, 3, 68. cf. Half-pint. P i n t - p e t , a pot containing a pint: H4AI1,4,438. P l a n e d , overgrown with marsh-marigold: thy banks with p. and twilled brims, Tp. IV, 64 ("the marshmarigold is even at present called peony in the neighbourhood of Stratford.". Edinb. Bev. 1872, Oct. p. 363). P l a n e r , pioneer, one whose business is to level the roads, throw up works, or form mines: Lucr. 1380 (rhyming to appear). H5 III, 2, 92. Hml. I, 5, 163. Oth. Ill, 3, 346 (the later Ff pioneers). P l e n a , godly, religious: Meas. I, 3 , 1 6 . H8 II, 2, 37. 11,4,140. Tim. IV, 3, 140. Mcb. Ill, 6, 12. 27. Hml. I, 3, 130. II, 2, 438. Ill, 1, 48. Cymb. Ill, 3, 72. Per. IV, 3, 17 (Qq impious). P i p , a spot on cards: being, perhaps, for aught I see, two and thirty, a p. out, Shr. I, 2, 33 (the earlier Ff and Q peep. " A n expression derived from the game of Bone-ace or One-and-thirty: to be two and thirty, a p. out, was an old cant phrase applied to a person who was intoxicated." Halliwell). P i p e , subst. 1) a tube: your statue spouting blood in many — s, Caes. II, 2, 85. Applied to the veins of the body: Lucr. 1455. Cor. V, 1, 54. 2) throat, windpipe: Philomel stops her p. Sonn. 102, 8 (ceases to sing). Hence = voice: thy small pipe is as the maiden's organ, Tw. I, 4, 32. Cor. Ill, 2, 113. 3) a tubular wind instrument: rumour is a p. blown by surmises, H4B Ind. 15. the p. of Hermes, H5 III, 7, 18. split thy brazen p. ( = trumpet) Troil. IV, 5, 7. they are not a p. for fortune's finger, Hml. Ill, 2, 75. will you play upon this p.f (a recorder) 366. 387. Especially used by shepherds and other peaceful musicians: Pilgr. 271. Mids. II, 1, 67. Bom. IV, 5, 96. Oth. Ill, 1, 20. the tabor and the p. (opposed to the drum and the file) Ado II, 3, 15. Wint. IV, 4, 183. cf. Piping in R3 I, 1, 24.

864

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Pipe, vb. 1) to play on a pipe: when shepherd» p. on oaten straws, L L L V, 2, 913. in this weak —ing time of peace, R3 I, 1, 24 (when the pipe is sounding instead of the fife; or, perhaps, when no manly martial voice is heard, bnt only that of women and children). 2) to whistle, to have a shrill sound: the wind*, —ing to us in vain, Mids. II, 1, 88. hit big manly voice, turning again toward childish treble, —s and whistles in his sound. As II, 7, 162. to p./or = to whistle for, to give np for lost (German: nachp/ei/en): and then we may go p. for justice, Tit. IV, 3, 24. Piper, one who plays on a pipe: Ado V, 4, 131. Plpe-wlne, wine not from the bottle, bnt from the pipe or cask: I shall drink in p. first with him; I'll make him dance, Wiv. Ill, 2, 90. The jest consists in the double sense of pipe as the instrument after which peogje used to dance, cf. the preceding canary. Pippin, a kind of apple: Wiv. I, 2, 13. H4B V, 3, 2. Pirate, a sea-robber: Lucr. 335. Meas. I, 2, 8. IV, 3, 75. Merch. I, 3, 25. Tw. V, 72. 77. H6B I, 1, 222. IV, 1, 108. 138. IV, 9, 33. E3 I, 3, 158. Hml. IV, 6, 15. Ant. I, 4, 48. II, 6, 36. Per. IV, 1, 97. IV, 2, 69. V, 1, 176. Pisa, town in Italy: Shr.1,1,10. 21. 210. 11,104. Ill, 1, 33. IV, 2, 93. 94. IV, 4, 71. IV, 5, 55. V, 1, 2!). Adjectively: within rich P. walls, 11,369. Plsamle, name in Cymb. 1, 3, 22 and passim. Plah, an interjection expressing contempt or even disgust: H5 II, 1, 43. 44. Oth. II, 1, 270. IV, 1, 42. Pismire, the ant, emmet: nettled and stung with - s, H4A I, 3, 240. Piss, subst. urine, in Horse-piss, q. v. Piss, vb. to eject as urine: to p. my tallow, Wiv. V, 5, 16 (a hunters' term, used of deer becoming lean in rut-time), a —ing while = a short time, such as is sufficient to make water: Gent. IV, 4, 21. the —ing conduit, a conduit near the Royal Exchange ("so called from its running with a small stream," Nares H6B IV, 6, 3. Plstel, subst. a small fire-arm: Wiv. IV, 2, 53. H4A II, 4, 380. V, 3, 53. Per. I, 1, 168. Quibbling: H4B II, 4,120. H5 II, 1, 55. Plstel, name in Wiv. I, 1, 129. 149 etc. H4B II, 4, 74 etc. H51I, 1 , 3 etc. Plstel, vb. to shoot with a pistol: Tw. II, 5, 42. Plstel-preef, impenetrable to a pistol-shot: H4B II, 4, 125. Pit, a cavity, a hole: these round enchanting —s (i. e. dimples) Ven. 247. brine —s (salt springs) Tp I, 2, 338. a saw-p. Wiv. IV, 4, 53. V, 3, 14. V, 4, 3. fallen into a p. of ink, Ado IV, 1, 142. an earthy p. (a grave) R2 IV, 219. they'll fill a p. H4A IV, 2, 72. this abhorred p. Tit. II, 3, 98. 176. 193. 224. 230. 240. 273. 277. 283. 286. our enemies have beat us to the p. Caes. V, 5, 23 (like beasts of the chase), at the pit of Acheron, Mcb. Ill, 5, 15. conscience and grace, to the profoundest p. Hml. IV, 5, 132. a p. of clay (a grave) V, 1, 104. the sulphurous p. (hell) Lr. IV, 6, 130. Pitch, subst. a thick black substance obtained by boiling down tar: Tp. I, 2, 3. II, 2, 54. H6A V, 4, 57. Proverbially defiling: Ado III, 3, 60. L L L IV, 3, 3. H4A II, 4, 455. H6B II, 1, 196. Emblem of moral pollution: so will I turn her virtue into p. Oth. II, 3, 366. Pitch« subst. height: when from highmost p. he

(the snn) reeleth, Sonn. 7, 9. to write above a mortal p. 86, 6. of what validity and p. soe'er, Tw. 1,1, 12. it (the frame) is of such a spacious lofty p. H6AII, 3, 55. the p. and height of all his thoughts, R3 III, 7, 188. and mount her p. Tit. II, 1, 14. I cannot bound a p. above dull woe, Rom. 1,4,21. enterprises of great p. and moment, Hml. Ill, 1, 86 (Ff pith). Dsed of the height to which a falcon soars: which flies the higher p. H6A II, 4, 11. what a p. she flew, H6B II, 1, 6. bears his thoughts above his falcon's p. 12. Figuratively : how high a p. his resolution soars, R2 I, 1, 109. fly an ordinary p. Caes. I, 1, 78. Uncertain which of the two homonyms is meant: this imperious man will work us all from princes into pages: all mens honours lie like one lump before him, to be fashioned into what p. he please, 118 II, 2, 50 (height? or baseness? Hanmer pinch, Theobald batch). Pitch, vb. 1) to throw, to thrust: p. me i' the mire, Tp. II, 2, 5. p. and pay — pay down at once, pay ready money: the word is P. and pay, H5 II, 3, 51 (Pistol's speech. Perhaps = throw down your money and pay; or derived from the custom of pitching goods at markets). 2) to plant, to set: shall we desire to raze the sanctuary and p. our evils there? Meas. II, 2, 172. they have —ed a toil, L L L IV, 3, 2. here p. our tents, R3 V, 3, 1. the Greeks do p. their brave pavilions, Troil. Prol. 14. V, 10, 24 (Ff pight). sharp stakes they —ed in the ground, H6A I, 1, 118. From the custom of planting sharp stakes in the ground against the hostile horse came the signification of marshalling, arranging in a military sense: a —ed battle, Shr. I, 2, 206. H6C IV, 4, 4. here p. our battle, V, 4, 66. the very parings of our nails shall p. a field, H6A III, 1, 103. all the land thou hast lie in a —ed field, Tim. I, 2, 231. on either hand thee there are squadrons —ed, H6A IV, 2, 23. 3) to fix: whose vulture thought doth p. the price so high, Ven. 551 (or = raise? cf. High-pitched). Pitch-balls, balls of pitch: LLL III, 199. Pitcher, a jug; used only in the proverbial phrase —s have ears = there may be listeners overhearing us: Shr. IV, 4, 52. R3 II, 4, 37. Pitchy, very dark: p. night, Ven. 821. All's IV, 4, 24. H6A II, 2, 2. p. vapours, Lucr. 550. a p. day, H6C V, 6, 85. Plteens, 1) compassionate: these eyes, but for thy p. lips, no more had seen, Ven. 504. a wretched image, that p. looks to Phrygian shepherds lent, Lucr. 1502. tell your p. heart, Tp. I, 2, 14. in thy p. heart plant thou thine ear, R2 V, 3, 126. 2) exciting compassion: he pens her p. clamours in her head, Lucr. 681. js. plainings of the pretty babrs, Err. I, 1, 73. As II, 1, 40. Wint. Ill, 3, 91. H6C 1, 4, 163. 11,5,73. R3I, 2, 158. IV, 3, 2. Rom. I Choi. 7. Ill, 2, 54. Ill, 3, 86. V, 3, 180. Caes. Ill, 2, 202. Hml. 11,1, 82. 94. 111,4,128. Lr. V, 3, 214. 3) miserable, wretched, pitiful: in an act of this importance 'twere most p. to be wild, Wint. II, 1, 182. or p. they will look, like drowned mice, H6A I, 2, 12. his p. and unpitied end, R3 IV, 4, 74. Plteensly, so as to excite compassion: villanies ruthful to hear, yet p. performed, Tit. V, ], 66 (cf. pitifully in Wiv. IV, 2, 212). say that the last I spoke was 'Antony', and word it,prithee, p. Ant. IV, 13, 9. Pitfall, a pit intended to catch beasts: poor bird,

p

865

thou'ldst never fear the net nor lime, the p. nor the gin, Tim. V, 1, 179. Lr. IV, 5, 12. out of p. H8111,2,382. Mcb. IV, 2, 35. to give p. All's I, 3, 219. to have p. Compl. 178. T p . Pith, 1) marrow: let it feed even on the p. of life, 1, 2, 474. Mids. Ill, 2, 241. All's 11, 3, 254. H8 IV, Hml. IV, 1, 23. 2, 139. to take p. Pilgr. 392. Meas. I, 2, 112. Err. 2) strength, force: the precedent of p. and liveli- IV, 3, 26. Ado II, 3, 271. H5 III, 3, 28. With of: hood, Yen. 26. not arrived to p. and puissance, H5 III Ven. 1091. Compl. 178. Ado 11, 3, 271. As I, 2, 170. Chor. 21. since these arms of mine had seven years' p. All's II, 3, 254. H5 111, 3, 28. H6A II, 5, 87. H6C Oth. I, 3, 83. enterprises of great p. and moment, II, 2, 161. Tit. Ill, 1, 2. Lr. IV, 5, 12. Per. I, 2, Hml. Ill, 1, 86 (at first undertaken with great energy. 29. With on; Pilgr. 392. Meas. I, 2, 112. Err. IV, Qq pitch). 3, 26 (in these three passages to take p. on), have 3) chief part, quintessence: that's my p. of business, some p. upon my women, H8 IV, 2, 139. With to: I Meas. 1,4, 70. you marked not what's the p. of all, myself find in myself no p. to myself, R3 V, 3, 203. Shr. 1,1, 171. it takes from our achievements the p. out of our easiness and childish p. to one man's honour, and marrow of our attribute, Hml. 1,4, 22. H8 V, 3, 25. p. to the general wrong of Ropte, Caes. Pithless, strengthless: p. arms, H6A II, 5, 11. III, 1, 170. P i t h y , forcible, impressive: to teach you gamut in For p., an exclamation not only of distress, bnt of a briefer sort, more pleasant, p. and effectual, Sbr. Ill, regretful surprise (cf. the German dass sick Gott er1, 68. barm' f): alack, for p.! I, not remembering how I cried P i t i f u l , 1) compassionate: that p. rumour may out then, will cry it o'er again, Tp. I,'?, 132. ay me, report my flight, All's III, 2,130. good ground, be p. for p.t Mids. II, 2,147. where — 0 for p.! — we and hurt me not, John IV, 3, 2. R2 V, 2,103. H6A shall much disgrace the name of Agincourt, H5IV Chor. III, 1,109. H6C 1,4,141. Ill, 2,32. R3 I, 3, 141. H8 49. Op., sir, where is the patience now, Lr. Ill, 6, 61. IV, 2, 40. Tit. II, 3, 156. Caes. Ill, 1, 169. With to: 2) a ground or snbject of compassion: and there be p. to my sons, Tit. Ill, 1, 8. sung the dolefullest ditty, that to hear it was great p. 2) moving compassion; p. mischances, Lucr. 976. Pilgr. 384. it were p. you should get your living by such p. dole, As I, 2, 139. the ballad is very p. Wint. reckoning, L L L V, 2, 497. though it be p. so see such IV, 4, 286. 845. H6A IV, 1, 57. Rom. IV, 5, 99. V, 3, a sight, it well becomes the ground, As HI, 2, 255. 174. Mcb. Ill, 2,47. Lr. IV, 6, 208. Oth. I, 3, 161. V, which though it be great p., yet it is necessary, Wint. 2, 210. Per. II, 1, 22. With to: p. to the eye, Mcb. IV, IV, 4, 804. were it not p. that this goodly boy should 3, 151. lose his birthrightt H6C II, 2, 34. Ill, 2, 31. it is a 3) miserable, wretched, contemptible: p. thrivers, p. would move a monster, H8 II, 3, 10. their story is in their gazing spent, Sonn. 125, 8. I should be a p. no less in p. than his glory, A n t V, 2, 365. it is p. — lady, W i r . Ill, 3, 56. a p. bald crown, H4A II, 4, 420. it is to be regretted: that were p. Merch. II, 2, 209. IV, 2, 70. Troil. Ill, 2, 208. Hml. Ill, 2, 49. followed by an indicative: 'tis p. he is not honest, All's Adverbially: how p. I deserve, Ado V, 2, 29. III, 5, 85. Wint. II, 1, 68. 'tis p. that thou livest to Pitiful-hearted, compassionate: H4A 11,4, 134. walk, Err. V, 27. 'tis p. she lacks instructions, Wint. P i t i f u l l y , 1) compassionately: be p. good, Tim. IV, 4, 592. by the impf. subj.: 'tis p. — What's p.t III, 5, 52. That wishing well had not a body in't, All's I, 1, 193. 2) so as to excite compassion: he beat him most what p. is it that he had not so dressed his land, R2 p. Wiv. IV, 2, 212. III, 4, 55. by should: 'tis p. love should be so contrary, 3) wretchedly, contemptibly: which p. disaster Gent IV, 4, 88. 'twere p. two such friends should be the cheeks, Ant. II, 7, 18. they are so p. sodden, Per. long foes, V, 4, 118. John II, 507. H4A I, 3, 59 (great IV, 2,21. p.). R3 I, 1, 132. T i t II, 3, 71. Oth. II, 3, 143 (great Pitiless, destitute of compassion: Err. IV, 2, 35. p.). Cymb. 1, 4, 43 etc. by but, = that not: p. but As 111, 5,40. Tit. II, 3,162. Lr. Ill, 4, 29. he were a king, Pilgr. 414; cf. Verges' confused speech P i t t a n c e , portion of food, diet: at so slender in Ado 111, 3, 2. by an inf.: 'twere p. to sunder them, warning, you are like to have a thin and slender p. Shr. H6C IV, 1, 22. Ant. I, 2, 142. bv of: it is p. of her IV, 4, 61 (cf. 70). life, Meas. II, 1, 77. II, 3, 42. Mids. Ill, 1, 44. V, 229 Plttle-ward, towards Pitty, which seems to hare (on = of . Tw. II, 5, 14. Oth. II, 3, 130. A n t I, 4, been the name of some place at Windsor: Wiv. Ill, 1,5. 71. and yet the p. of it, Oth. IV, 1, 206. the more p. Plttlkinsi 'odsp., an exclamation corrupted from As I, 2, 92. the more the p. Mids. Ill, 1, 148. H4A II, 4, 514. God's pity: Cyrnb. IV, 2, 293. P i t y , subst. 1) compassion: Ven. 95. 257. 1000. P i t y , vb. to feel sympathy, to compassionate; Lucr. 468. 595. 1553. Sonn. I l l , 14. 112, 1. 142, absol.: what 'tis to p. As II, 7, 117. H6C II, 6, 25. 11. Tp. 1,2, 150. 446. Gent. 11,3, 12. Meas. II, 2, H8 Prol. 5. Troil. IV, 3,11. Trans.: Lucr. 977. 1747. 99. Ill, 2, 223. Err. I, 1,10. Merch. IV, 1, 5. As II, Sonn. I, 13. I l l , 8. 132, 1. 142,12. Pilgr. 400. Tp. 7, 123. H6B III, 1, 125. 225. V, 2, 56. H6C II, 6, 26. I, 2, 353. Gent. II, 7, 16. IV, 3, 37. IV, 4, 83. 98. Caes. Ill, 1, 171 etc. Plur. — es: W i n t II, 1, 110. the V, 2, 26. Wiv. II, 1, 13. Meas. II, 2, 101. Err. I, 1, one has my p. ( = I pity him) Meas. IV, 2, 64. this is 98. Ado II, 3, 231. Mids. Ill, 2, 235. IV, 1, 52. V, full of p. H8 II, 1, 137 ( = moves compassion), an 295. As I, 2, 293. I, 3, 81. II, 4, 75. II, 7, 117. Ill, eye of p. = a compassionate eye, Merch. IV, 1, 27. 5, 33. All's V, 3, 161. U6A 111, 1, 77. H6B 1,3, 218. Wint. Ill, 2, 124. a thing of p. = to be pitied, Cymb. H6C1I, 5, 88. 11,6,74. 111, 1,36. R3 1, 3, 274. IV, V, 4, VI. for p. — out of compassion: Ven. 577. Ado 1, 88. Hml. IV, 5, 3 etc. After the passive the agent V, 4, 93. Wint. Ill, 3, 78. Cor. I, 3, 96. Tit. Ill, 1, preceded by of, not by by: Ado IV, 1, 218. Wint. 2. in p., in the same sense: R2 V, 1, 9. in p. of: Ven. HI, 2, 235. Mcb. Ill, 6, 4. A n t V, 2, 33. 1091. As I, 2, 170. H6A II, 5, 87. H6C II, 2, 161. Pity-pleading, imploring compassion: Lucr. 561.

866

P

P i t y - w a n t i n g , unpitied: Sonn 1-10,4. Psalm to the tune of Green Sleeves, Wiv. II, 1, 63; Pins, sámame of Andronicus: Tit. I, 23. cf. keeps p. with thought, Troll. Ill, 3, 199. to take Plx, needless emendation of some M. Edd. in H5 one's p. = to sit down, or to take one's ttand: Mids. V, 84. Merch. IV, 1, 170. H6A II, 1, 1. H6B 111, 2, 111,6, 42; O. Edd. pax, q. v. P í s a l e , the part in beasts official to the discharge 19. Tit. V, 3, 24. Lr. IU, 6, 38. take p. by us, H8 I, 2, 10 ( = sit down at onr side), to take p. = to come of urine: you bulls p. H4A II, 4, 271. P l a c e , snbst. 1) a portion of space occupied or to pass: H8 III, 2, 34. to be occupied: the most opportune p. Tp. IY, 26. 3) station in life, position in society: authentic in makes Ms p. Paradise, 124. never welcome to a p. your p. and person, Wiv. II, 2, 236. Tw. II, 5, CO. a Gent. II, 5, 6. hath appointed them contrary —s, Wiv. man of his p., gravity and learning, so wit e of his own II, 1, 217. in other —s she enlargeth her mirth, II, 2, respect, III, 1, 57. whose own great p. Meas. II, 4, 92. 231. though you change your p., you need not change many fools that stand in better p. Merch. Ill, 5, 73. your trade, Meas. I, 2, 110. peace be in this p. I, 4, 6. who were below him he used as creatures of another p. a novice of this p. 19. had time cohered with p. or p. All's I, 2, 42 ( = of another sphere), from lowest p. with wishing, II, 1, 11. at that p. call upon me, III, 1, when virtuous things proceed, II, 3, 132. the plant Fapaver somniferum: Oth. Ill, 3, 330. P a p r l n , a kind of pear: 0, that she were an open et caetera, thou a p. pear, Bom. II, 1, 38. P a p a l a r , vulgar, plebeian: that which, but by being so retired, o'erprized all p. rate, Tp. I, 2, 92. art thou officer? or art thou base, common andp.t H5 IV, 1, 38. seld-shown flamens do press among the p. throngs and puff to win a vulgar station, Cor. II, 1,230. I will counterfeit the bewitchment of some p. man and give it bountiful to the desirers, II, 3, 109. who puts his Shall, his p. Shall, against a graver bench than ever froxned in Greece, 111, 1,106. and in a violent p. ignorance, given your enemy your shield, V, 2, 43.

882

P

P i p a l a r l t y , vulgarity: grew a companion to the P a r t a l , door, gate: Ven. 451. Lucr. 309 R2 common streets, enfeoffed himself to p. H4A III, 2, 69. III, 3, 64. Hml. Ill, 4, 136. any retirement, any sequestration from open haunts and ParteBee, conduct, deportment: your loves took p. H5 I, 1, 50. from you the apprehension of his present p. Cor. II, 3, P e p a l e a i , well peopled: R2 V, 5, 3. H6B 111, 2, 232. of my redemption thence and p. in my travels' 360. Oth. I, 1, 77. IV, 1, 64. Per. IV, 6,197. = com- history, Oth. I, 3, 139. posed of many people, numerous: the dust... raised Partenlliaed, shnt up as with a portcullis: R2 by your p. troops, Ant. Ill, 6, 50. 1, 3, 167. P a r c h , a vestibule, entrance: Wiv. 1,4, 63 Cor. P a r t e a d , 1) to signify: what should that alphaIII, 1, 240. Figuratively: in the —ts of my ears, Hml. betical position p.t Tw. II, 5, 130. 1, 5, 63. = portico: in Pompey'sp. Caes. I, 3, 126. 2) to foreshow; as a bad omen: H4A II, 4, 354. Perenplne, see Porpentine. Lr. I, 2, 113. 149. Ant. Ill, 13, 154. Cymb. IV, 2, P a r e , to look intently and closely: painfully to 182. As a good omen: Cymb. IV, 2, 350. p. upon a book, LLL 1, 1, 74. dream and p. and thereP e r t e n t , omen of ill: H4A II, 3, 65. V, 1, 20. on loolc, IV, 3, 298. creeping murmur and the —ing Troil. I, 3, 96. Caes. II, 2, 80. Oth. V, 2, 45. dark fills the wide vessel of the universe, H5 IV Chor. P e r t e n t e u a , ominous: Rom. 1, 1,147. Caes. I, 2, i. e. straining its eyes and yet seeing only the near- 3,31. Hml. 1,1, 109. est things, purblind (i. e. pore-blind). P e r t e r , 1) one that carries bnrdens: Wiv. II, 2, P a r k , flesh of swine used for food: Merch. I, 3, 181. LLL I, 2, 75. H5 I, 2, 200. Troil. I, 2, 270. cf. 34. Ill, 5, 39. the name Tale -porter (i. e. talebearer) in Wint. IV, P a r k - e a t e r , one who feeds on swine's flesh: 4, 273. Merch. HI, 5, 27. 2) a doorkeeper: Err. II, 2, 213. 219. 111,1,36. P e r p e n t l n e (most M.Edd. jwrcuptne), the animal 43. H6A II, 3, 1. H8 V, 4, 4. 73. Cor. IV, 5, 13. 213. Hystrix cristata, now called porcupine: H6B III, 1, Rom. I, 5, 10. Tim. II, 1, 10. Mcb. II, 3, 2. 23. Lr. 363. Troil. II, 1, 27 (applied to Thersites as a term III, 7, 64. of reproach, probably on account of the prevailing P e r t l a , 1) the wife of Bratus: Merch. I, 1, 166. opinion that the porcupine could dart its quills). Hml. Caes. II, 1, 234 and passim. I, 5, 20. Name of an inn: Err. Ill, 1, 116. Ill, 2. 172. 2) name in Merch. I, 1, 165 and passim. IV, 1, 49. V, 222. 275. P e r t i e n , 1) a part assigned, a share: and have P e r p i u , the animal Delphinus phocaena: Per. no p. in the choice myself, H6A V, 3, 125. what piles II, 1, 26. of wealth hath he accumulated to his own p. H8 III, Perrldge, broth, soup: Tp. II, 1, 10. Wiv. Ill, 1, 2, 108. 64. Err. II, 2, 100. LLL I, 1, 305. All's I, 1, 173. 2) inheritance settled on a person: the p. and H6A I, 2, 9. Troil. I, 2, 263. Lr. Ill, 4, 56. sinew of her fortune, her marriage - dowry, Meas. Ill, Perrlnger, a vessel in which broth is eaten: this 1, 230. what prodigal p. have I spent, As I, 1,41. (cap) was moulded on a p. Shr. IV, 3, 64. till her pink- make her p. equal his, Wint. IV, 4, 397. give but that ed p. fell off her head, H8 V, 4, 50; i. e. a cap looking p. which yourself proposed, Lr. I, 1, 245. Hence like a porringer. p o s s e s s i o n , estate in general: I have a hundred milchPart, 1) a safe station for ships, a harbour: Merch. kine to the pail, sixscore fat oxen standing in my stalls, I, 1, 19. R2 1, 3, 276. Troil. Prol. 3. II, 2, 76. Tit. and all things answerable to this p. Shr. II, 361. IV, 4, 38. Mcb. I, 3, 15. Lr. II, 1, 82. II, 3, 3. Ill, P a r t le Blanc, port in Britany: R2 II, 1, 277. 1, 33. Ant. I, 3, 46. I, 4, 38. P a r t l y , 1) good-looking, of a stately appearance, 2) a gate: All's 111, 5, 39. Troil. IV, 4, 113. 138. imposing: my p. belly, Wiv. I, 3, 69. with p. sail, Cor. I. 7, 1. V, 6, 6. Tim. V, 4, 55. Ant. IV, 4, 23. Merch. 1,1,9. that same greatness which our own hands Metaphorically: golden care that keepest the —* of have holp to make sop. H4A I, 3, 13. a goodly p. man, slumber open wide, H4B IV, 5, 24. and a corpulent, 11,4,464. his large andp. size, Troil. 3) carriage, bearing, deportment; used only of a IV, 5, 162. a p. sail of ships, Per. I, 4, 61. stately, portly appearance: assume the p. of Mars, 2) of a good deportment, well-behaved, well-bred: H5 Prol. 6. bear the name and p. of gentlemen, H6B he bears him like a p. gentleman, Rom. I, 5, 68. IV, 1, 19. and with our sprightly p. make the ghosts P a r t r a l t , picture of a person: the p. of a blinking gaze, Ant. IV, 14, 52. Hence = state, splendid man- idiot, Merch. II, 9, 54. ner of living: a more swelling p. than my faint means P e r t r a i t u r e , image: by the image of my cause 1 would grant continuance, Merch. I, 1, 124. the magni- see the p. of his, Hml. V, 2, 78. ficoes of greatest p. Ill, 2, 283. keep house and p. and P e r t n f a l , country in Europe: my affection hath servants, as I should, Shr. I, 1, 208. my man Tranio, an unknown bottom, like the bay cf P. As IV, 1, 213. bearing my p. Ill, 1, 36. Paae, to puzzle, to gravel, to set by questions: Pertafcle, 1 such as may be carried from place say you so f then I shall p. you quickly, Meas. II, 4, 51. to place: like an engine not p. Troil. II, 3, 144. Pealed, bearing an inscription: cracked many a 2) sufferable: all these are p., with other graces ring of p. gold and bone, Compl. 45. weighed, Mcb. IV, 3, 89. how light and p. my pain Pealtlen, 1) manner of being placed : what should seems now, Lr. Ill, 6, 115. that alphabetical p. portendt Tw. II, 5, 130. Pertage, 1) port-hole: let it (the eye)pry through 2) advanced opinion, assertion : I do not strain at the p. of the head like the brass cannon, H5 III, 1, 10. the p. Troil. Ill, 3, 112. it is a most pregnant and un2) arrival in port(?): thy loss is more than can forced p. Oth. II, 1, 240. I do not in p. distinctly speak thy p. quit, with all thou canst find here, Per. Ill, of her, III, 3, 234. 1, 35. PaaltlTe f certain, unquestionable: it is as p. as

p the earth it firm, Wiv. Ill, 2, 49. 'tap. 'gainst all exceptions, H5 IV, 2, 25. Patroclus is a fool p. Troil. II, 3, 70 ( = unconditional). P o s i t i v e l y , without dnbitation: before I p. speak herein, R 3 IV, 2, 25. that I have p. said: 'tis so, Hml. II, 2, 154. P m m i i , 1) to hold, to have, to enjoy: happiness if—ed, as soon decayed, Lucr. 23. that which they p. they scatter, 135. till manly shame bids him p. his breath and live, 1777. neither may p. the claim they lay, 1794. —ing or pursuing no delight, Sonn. 75, 11. thou art too dear for my —ing, 87, 1. if aught p. thee from me, it is dross, Err. II, 2, 179 (i. e. so as to deprive me of thee; cf. From), still her cheeks p. the same, L L L I, 2, 110. I am yours, and all that I p. V, 2, 383. 'tis in reversion that I do p. R 2 II, 2, 38. the present benefit which I p. II, 3, 14. and that we now —ed the utmost man of expectation, H 4 B 1,3, 64. nor did the French p. the Salique land, H 5 I, 2, 56. certain and —ed conveniences, Troil. Ill, 3, 7. so shall you share all that he doth p. Bom. I, 3, 93. how sweet is love itself —ed, V, 1, 10. all other joys, which the most precious square of sense —es, Lr. 1, 1, 76 (FI professes), be a child o' the time. P. it, I'll make answer, Ant. II, 7, 107 ( = be master of it). 2) to become master of, to take possession of, to gain, to occupy, to get: the old bees die, the young p. their hive, Lucr. 1769. remember first to p. his books, T p . Ill, 2, 100. now tell me how long you would have her after you have —ed her, As IV, 1, 144. would make her sainted spirit again p. her corpse, W i n t . V, 1, 58. this the regal seat: p. it, York, H 6 C I, 1, 26. the which you promised I should p. R3 IV, 2, 94. away, my disposition, and p. me some harlot's spirit, Cor. Ill, 2, 111. we may, our pastimes done, p a golden slumber, Tit. II, 3, 26 ( = begin to enjoy). I have bought the mansion of a love, but not —ed it, Rom. Ill, 2, 27. 3) to fill, to take np entirely: »in of self-love —eth all mine eye, Sonn. 62, 1. what a strange drowsiness —es them, T p . II, 1, 199. my ears are stopt and cannot hear good news, so much of bad already hath —ed them, G e n t 111, 1 , 206. weakness —eth me, J o h n V, 3, 17. good thoughts p. thee, K 3 IV, 1, 94. I am most joyful, such good dreams p. your fancy, H8 IV, 2, 94. things rank and gross in nature p. it (the world) merely, Hml. I, 2, 137. with a sudden vigour it doth p. and curd the thin and wholesome blood, Hml. I, 5, 68 (Ff and M. Edd.po»«ee lose the better half of our p. H5 I, 1, 8. it outspeaks p. of a subject, H8 III, 2, 128. 1 have abandoned Troy, left my p. Troil. Ill, 3, 5. Plnr. — s: Gent. II, 4, 175. Ill, 1, 79. V, 2, 25. Meas. V, 427. Shr. Ind. 2, 16. 3) frenzy, madness: how long hath this p. held the man? Err. V, 44. cf. IV, 4, 58. P a u e i H r , occupant, owner: Merch.I, 3,75. H6C III, 3, 24. P a s s e t , subst. a drink composed of hot milk, curdled by some strong infusion, and used to be taken before going to bed: Wiv. I, 4, 8. V, 5, 180 (eat a p.). Mcb. II, 2, 6.

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Paaaet, vb. to curdle: it doth p. and curd, like eager droppings into milk, the thin and wholesome blood, Hml. I, 5, 68 (Qq possess). P o s s i b i l i t y , that which may be done or happen: seven hundred pounds and —es, Wiv. I, 1, 65 (i. e. prospects of inheritance; Evans' speech). I know thourt valiant, and, to the p. of thy soldiership, will subscribe for thee, All's III, 6, 88 (i. e. as far as the matter depends on what thy soldiership may possibly accomplish). I have speeded hither with the very extremist inch of p. H4B IV, 3, 39. I'll rather keep that which J have than, coveting for more, be cast from p. of all, H6A V, 4, 146 (perhaps with intended ambiguity. Charles was evidently going to say: than, by seeking to have the possibility or chance of gaining all, possibly lose all). 0 brother, speak with —es, Tit. Ill, 1, 215. P a s s i b l e , snch as may be done or happen: Gent. 1, 2, 82. Meas. Ill, 2, 132. A d o I, 1, 74. II, 3, 102. 186. IV, 1, 272. Mids. IV, 2, 7. Merch. I, 3, 122. As III, 2, 198. Shr. I, 1, 154. 199. Ill, 2, 191. IV, 2, 1. All's IV, 3, 203. T w . Ill, 4, 139. W i n t . I, 2, 139. II, 3, 167. J o h n V, 4, 21. H 4 B V, 5, 136. H6A I, 2, 87. R 3 V, 3, 39. H8 I, 1, 37. Troil. IV, 2, 76. IV, 4, 34. Cor. IV, 6, 56. V, 4, 4. 9. Caes. IV, 3, 38. Hml. II, 2, 374. V, 2, 25. 131. Oth. I, 3, 9. II, 1, 222. II, 3, 288. Ill, 3, 358. Ill, 4, 68. IV, 1, 43. IV, 2, 87. Cymb. IV, 2, 160. can it be p. As II, 2, 1. may it be p. H5 II, 2, 100. be it p. = if it is p. Shr. Ill, 2, 127. it is not p , followed by should: H4A V, 2, 4. Likewise is it p.: Ado I, 1, 121. Ill, 3, 117. As I, 3, 27. V, 2, 1. Shr. I, I, 151. All's IV, 1, 48. H5 V, 2, 178. H8 1, 3, 1. Tim. Ill, 1 , 4 9 . Hml. IV, 5, 159. P m l M y , in any way that may be granted: Gent. II, 2, 3. L L L I, 1, 133. T w . Ill, 4, 294. Per. V, 3, 57. Passltafale, Evans' blunder for positively: Wiv. I, 1, 244. P a s t , subst. 1) a piece of timber set upright: Ado II, 1, 207 (quibbling). As IV, 1, 9. H 5 111, 2, 44. H6A I, 4, 52. Used to keep the score by chalk or notches: I shall be p. indeed, for she will score your fault upon my pate, Err. I, 2, 64 (quibbling). And to fix proclamations on: myself on every p. proclaimed a strumpet, W i n t . Ill, 2, 102. he'll stand at your door like a sheriff's p. Tw. I, 5, 157 (cf. Sheriff). 2) a messenger: Lucr. 926. 1333. T p . II, 1, 248. Merch. II, 9, 100. V, 46 (with a horn). Tw. I, 5, 303. W i n t . II, 3, 193. R2 II, 2, 103. H4A I, 1, 37. H4B Ind. 37. I, 1, 214. II, 4, 385. H6B I, 4, 81. H6C II, 1, 109. Ill, 3, 162. V, 1, 1. 5. H8 V, 2, 32. Cor. V, 6, 50. T i t IV, 3, 77. Mcb. I, 3, 98. Lr. II, 4, 30. Ill, 7, 11. IV, 6, 281. Ant. I, 5, 61. Gent. I, 1, 161. 3) a post-horse, relay-horse: I have foundered nine score and odd —s, H4B IV, 3, 40. and presently took p. to tell you, Rom. V, 1, 21. 4) in p. = in haste: Err. I, 2, 63. Wint. II, 1, 182. R2 II, 1, 296. H6C III, 3, 222. Rom. V, 3, 273. all in p. Lncr. 1. H 6 C V, 5, 84. in all p. R 3 111, 5, 73. in such p. H6C I, 2, 48. P. alone, adverbially, in the same sense: All's IV, 5, 85. R 2 V, 2, 112. H4B II, 4, 408. Per. IV Prol. 48. P a s t , vb. 1) intr. to go with speed, to hasten: Lucr. A r g 8. Lucr. 220. Sonn. 51, 4. Pilgr. 201. 205. G e n t II, 3, 37. Err. Ill, 2, 152. L L L IV, 3, 188. All's V, 1, 1. J o h n V, 7, 94. R2 I, 1, 56. Ill, 4, 90. V, 5, 59. H4A V, 1, 35. H 6 A V, 5, 87. H6C I, 2, 55.

II, 5 , 1 2 8 . R 3 II, 2, 142. Ill, 2, 17. IV, 4, 440. 443. 455. Troil. I, 3, 93. Caes. Ill, 1, 287. Hml. I, 2, 156. L r . Ill, 7, 1. Oth. I, 3, 46 (Ql wish him p. post-haste; the rest of O. Edd. post post haste dispatch). Cymb. III, 4, 38. V, 5, 192. 283. Conjugated with to be: and is —ed, H8 III, 2, 59. L r . IV, 5, 8. 2) trans, a) to convey rapidly: the swiftest harts have —ed you by land, Cymb. 11,4, 27. b) with over, = to hurry o v e r , to get over with too much ease and negligence: his guilt should be but idly —ed Mr, H6B III, 1, 255 (cf. Oerpost). With o f f , = to put off carelessly: nor —ed off their suits with slow delays, H6C IV, 8, 40. P a s t e r , speedy traveller: — s of the sea and land, Mcb. 1, 3, 33. Paaterlar, latter part; an expression used by Arm a d o , admired and adopted by H o l o f e m e s : in the —s of this day, L L L V, 1, 94. the p. of the day, 96. 126. P a s t e r t t y , 1) descendants: V e n . 758. Lncr. 208. Sonn. 3, 8. 6 , 1 2 . Phoen. 59. Mids. IV, 1, 95 (Q2 Ff prosperity). Wint. IV, 4, 420. J o h n II, 6. 96. Cor. IV, 2, 26. Mcb. HI, 1 , 4 . 2) succeeding generations, f u t u r e times: Sonn. 55, I I . H 6 A I, 1, 48. R 3 III, 1, 77. Rom. 1, 1, 226. P a s t e r n , a small g a t e : Gent. V, 1, 9. Meas. IV, 2, 92. Wint. I, 2, 438. 464. II, 1, 52. R2 V, 5, 17 (to thread the p. of a needle's eye). P a s t - h a s t e , very great haste: Norfolk and myself in haste, p., are come, H 6 C II, 1, 139. the chief head of this p. and romage in the land, Hml. I, 1, 107. Adjectively: requires your haste, p. appearance, Oth. I, 2, 37 (M. Edd. haste-post-haste). Adverbially, = very hastily: and hath sent p. to entreat your majesty, R2 I, 4, 55. write from us to him, wish him post p. Oth. I, 3, 46 (Q2 F f post post haste dispatch). P a s t - h a r s e , a horse stationed for the rapid conveyance of persons; emblem of swiftness: making the wind my p. H4B Ind. 4. till George be packed with p. up to heaven, R3 I, 1, 146. hire —s, Rom. V, 1, 26. P n t h n i i r a i (accented on the second syllable), name in Cymb. 1, 1, 41. 74. 144. Ill, 4, 4. 90, III, 5, 56. 62. IV, 2, 308. V, 4 , 4 5 etc. P a s t m a s t e r , one who has the direction of a postoffice: Wiv. V, 5, 199. 211. P a s t - p a s t - h a s t e , superlative haste; adjectively : p. dispatch, Oth. I, 3, 46 (Ql wish him post post-haste). P o s t s c r i p t , a paragraph added to the end of a letter: T w . II, 5, 187. Hml. IV, 7, 53. P a s t u r e , attitude: her natural p. Wint. V. 3, 23. in most strange —s we have seen him set himself, H8 III, 2, 118. gave him graceful p. Cor. II, 1, 237. i' the p. of a whore, Ant. V, 2, 221. puts himself in p. that acts my words, Cymb. Ill, 3, 94. Almost = appearance, shape, form: laming the shrine of Venus or straight-pight Minerva, —s beyond brief nature, Cymb. V, 5, 165. Very stTange use: Antony, the p. of your blows are. yet unknown, Caes. V, 1, 33 (Singer puncture, a word unknown to Sh.). P a s y , 1) a motto inscribed on a r i n g : a ring whose p. was like cutler's poetry, Merch. V, 148. 151. the p. of a ring, Hml. Ill, 2, 162. 2) a nosegay: a thousand fragrant —es, Pilgr 362 and Wiv. Ill, 1, 20 (not Shakespearian).

p P e t , a vessel more deep than broad, nsed for sereral purposes: L L L V, 2, 930. 939. Shr. Ind. 2, 1. 77. IV, 1, 6 (a little p. and soon hot). H 4 A I, 3, 233. H 5 111, 2, 13. H 6 B II, 3, 64. IV, 2, 72. IV, 10, 16. Troil. I, 2, 161. Bom. V, 1, 46. Mcb. IV, 1, 9. they have shut him in. To the p., I warrant him, Cor. 1,4, 47 (,i. e. to destruction, to certain d e a t h ; cf. the German : in die Jeanne gehauen werden). P e t a h l e , drinkable: H4B IV, 5, 163. P t U t l f B , 1) d r i n k , beverage: to forswear thin —s, H 4 B IV, 3, 135. 2) a draught: caroused —s pottle-deep, Oth. II, 3, 56. P e t a t e , the root of Solannm tuberosum; regarded as a strong provocative: let the sky rain — « , Wiv. V, 5, 21. how the devil Luxury, with his fat rump and p. finger, tickles these together, Troil. V, 2, 56. Patch (some M. Edd. poach) to thrust: I'Up. at him some way, Cor. I, 10, 15. P a t e n c y , power: I would to heaven I had your p. Mean. II, 2, 67. read the cardinal's malice and his p. together, H8 I, 1, 105. when we will tempt the frailly of our powers, presuming on their changeful p. Troil. IV, 4, 99. arriving at place of p. and sway o' the state, Cor. II, 3, 190. or throw him (the devil) out with wondrous p. Hml. Ill, 4, 170. our p. made good, take thy reward, Lr. I, 1, 175. P a t e n t , powerful; used of things as well as of persons: T p . I, 2, 275. IV, 1, 34. V, 50. Wiv. IV, 4, 89. As V, 4, 175. Tw. HI, 4, 224 (a headstrong p. fault). W i n t . I, 2, 51. H4A IV, 1, 11. H8 II, 4, 76. Troil. Ill, 2, 25. Ill, 3, 192. Tim. IV, 1, 22. Mcb. IV, 1, 76. Hml. II, 2, 631. V, 2, 364. Oth. 1, 3, 76. II, 3, 79 (most p. in potting). Ant. Ill, 6, 95. Cymb. V, 4, 84. Per. Ill, 2, 63. Substantively, = one powerful: back to the stained field, you equal — s , J o h n II, 358. P a t e n t a t e , a person of high r a n k : this gentleman is come to me, with commendation from great —s, Gent. II, 4, 79. dost thou infamonize me among —s, L L L V, 2, 684. kings and mightiest —s must die, H6A III, 2, 136. P o t e n t i a l , powerful: Compl. 264. Lr. II, 1, 78. Oth. I, 2, 13. P a t e n t l y , powerfully: you are p. opposed, H8 V, 1, 135. all which though I most powerjuUy and p. believe, Hml. II, 2, 204. P e t h e c a r y , apothecary: Rom. V, 3, 289. Per. Ill, 2, 9. P a t t e r , turmoil: such a p., as if that whatsoever god who leads him were slily crept into his human powers, Cor. II, 1,234 ^O.Edd poother). the great gods, that keep this dreadful p. o'er our heads, Lr. Ill, 2, 50 (Ff pudder, Q l .3 thundring, Q 2 powther). P a t l a n , a drink administered, either medicinal or poisonous: Sonn. I l l , 10. 119, 1. Wiv. Ill, I, 105. Mids. Ill, 2, 264 ( P f Q«poison). Wint. I, 2, 319. H4A V, 4, 56. H4B 1, 1, 197. I, 2, 145. Rom. V, 3, 244. 249. Hml. V, 2, 337. P e r . I, 2, 68. P a t p a n , name in Rom. I, 5, 1. 11. P a t a , name in Meas. IV, 3 , 1 9 . P a t t e r , one who makes earthen vessels: my thoughts are whirled like a —'s wheel, H 6 A I, 5, 19. P a t t i n g , drinking: most potent in p. Oth. II, 3, 79. P e t t l e , a large tankard (originally a measure of two quarts): Wiv. II, 1, 223. Ill, 5, 30 Oth. II, 3, 87.

885 P e t t l e » 4 e e p , to the bottom of the tankard: potations p. Oth. II, 3, 56. P e t t l e - p e t , a tankard containing two quarts: H 4 B II, 2, 83. V, 3, 68. P e a c h , a bag, a purse: tester I'll have in p. when thou shalt lack, Wiv. I, 3, 96. the lean and slippered pantaloon, with spectacles on nose and p. on side, As II, 7, 159. P e n l t e r , poulterer, one who deals in game and fowls: H 4 A 11,4,480. P e n l t i c e , a cataplasm: Rom. II, 5, 65. P e n l t n e y : the parish Saint Lawrence P. H8 I, 2, 153. P e a n e e t - f c e x , a b o x perforated with small holes, for carrying perfumes: H 4 A I, 3 , 3 8 . P e u n 4 , subst. 1) a weight of sixteen ounces: Merch. 1, 3, 150. 166. Ill, 3, 33. IV, 1, 23. 99. 326. will too late tie leaden —s to's heels, Cor. Ill, 1, 314. W i t h a numeral, plur. p.: Wint. IT, 3, 40. 51. Troil. I, 2, 126. 2) the sum of twenty shillings: G e n t I, 1, 111. 115. W i n t . IV, 3, 34 (p. and odd shilling). H6B III, 1, 115. IV, 7, 25. for any suit of - s , H8 II, 3, 85. With a numeral, plur. a) p.: Wiv. I, 1, 60. Ill, 3 , 1 3 1 . IV, 6, 5. Meas. II, 1, 127. E r r . IV, 1, 21. Ado I, 1, 90. Ill, 5, 27. Shr. Ind. 1, 21. V, 1, 22. T w . V, 181. J o h n I, 69. R 2 II, 2, 91. H4A II, 4, 69. 163. 176. HI, 3, 86. 117. 152. 154. 155. H 4 B I, 2, 251. II, 1, 160. III, 2, 261. V, 5, 12. 77. H 6 B III, 3, 13. H 8 II, 3, 64. Hml. Ill, 2, 298. Cymb. II, 1, 3. b) — s : Wiv. I, 1, 52. I, 3, 8. Ill, 4, 33. 50. V, 5, 117. Meas. II, 1, 204. IV, 3, 7. Shr. V, 1, 23. H 4 A IV, 2, 15. H 4 B III, 2, 57. H 5 I, 1 , 1 9 . H 8 II, 3, 95. Cymb. Ill, 1, 9. P e n n d , subst. a pinfold: Gent. I, 1 , 1 1 3 . P a n n d , vb. to shut u p as in a pinfold: 'twere best p. you, Gent. I, 1, 110. we'll break our walls, rather than they shall p. us up, Cor. I, 4, 17. cf. Impound. P e a r , 1) trans, to send or to throw streaming, as a fluid or like one: mine (fountain) I p. your ocean all among, Compl. 256. I will p. some (wine) in thy other mouth, T p . II, 2, 98. let me p. in some sack to the Thames water, W i v . Ill, 5 , 2 2 . Mids. II, 1, 50. As III, 2, 210. IV, 1, 215. V, 1 , 4 6 . All's I, 3, 209. II, 3, 126. W i n t . V, 3, 122. H 4 B IV, 4, 46. R 3 II, 2, 87. Tit. II, 3, 163. Mcb. IV, 1, 64. IV, 3, 98. Hml. I, 5, 63. V, 1, 197. Oth. IV, 3, 89. Ant. 11, 5, 34. Used of balms applied to wounds: in these windows I p. the helpless balm of my poor eyes, R 3 I, 2, 13. —est in the open ulcer of my heart her eyes, her hairs etc. Troil. I, 1, 53. is this the balsam that the usuring senate —s into captains' wounds, T i m . Ill, 5, 111. cf. meet we the medicine of the sickly weal, and with him p. we in our country's purge each drop of us, Mcb. V, 2, 28 (or = shed ?). Of rain and what comes down like i t : the sky would p. down stinking pitch, T p . I, 2, 3, thus p. the stars down plagues, L L L V, 2, 394. some airy devil—s down mischief, J o h n III, 2, 3. that pretty Welsh which thou —est down from these swelling heavens, H 4 A III, 1, 202. p. on; I will endure, Lr. Ill, 4, 18 ( = rain on). Of the promiscuous contents of packets: I would have ransacked the pedlar s silken treasury and have —ed it to her acceptance, Wint. IV, 4, 361. p. out the pack of matter to mine ear, Ant. II, 5, 54. Figurative use: thou that —est into my verse thine own sweet argument, Sonn. 38, 2. I would into thy bo-

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P

torn p. my thoughts, J o h n HI, 3, 53. p. down thy weather, IV, 2, 109 i = tell thy bad news), how London doth p. out her citizens, H 5 V Cbor. 24. force him with praises; p. in,p. in; his ambition is dry, Troil. II, 3, 2 3 3 . —ing war into the bowels of ungrateful Rome, Cor. IV, 5, 135 (like a flood), he outgoes the very heart of kindness. He —s it out, T i m . I, 1, 287. and —ed them (thy praises) down before him, Mcb. I, 3, 100. that 1 may p. my spirits in thine ear, I, 5, 27. I'U p. this pestilence into his ear, Oth. II, 3, 3 6 2 . your honour has through Ephesus —ed forth your charity. P e r . Ill, 2, 43. who p. their bounty on her, V P r o l . 10. 2) intr. to flow, to rush in a stream: the Scot on his unfurnished kingdom came —ing, like the tide into a breach, H 5 I, 2, 149. P a n t , to look snllen: who blushed and —ed in a dull disdain, Veil. 33. then we p. upon the morning, COT. V, 1, 52. thou —est upon thy fortune and thy love, R o m . Ill, 3, 144. P a v e r t y , want of riches, indigence: Tp.11,1,150. Meas. I, 2, 85. L L L V, 2, 269. 380. Merch. IV, 1, 271. A s 111, 5, 100. V, 2, 7. W i n t IV, 4, 647. H 4 A IV, 2, 76. H 4 B I, 2, 146. I, 3, 75. II, 1, 116. H 6 B I, 3, 84. R 3 III, 7, 159. H 8 IV, 2, 149. Rom. V, 1, 75. 76. T i m . IV, 2, 14. Oth. IV, 2, 50. P e r . I, 4, 30. A b s t r . p r o concr., = 1) one poor, or poor persons: to think my p. is treacherous, As I, 3, 67 ( = poor I), you houseless p. L r . Ill, 4, 26. 2) a little paltry stock of g o o d s : although thou steal thee all my p. Sonn. 40, 10. what p. my Muse brings forth, 103, 1. P a w , = pooh, an exclamation of contempt: Cor. II, 1, 157. P a w d e r , snbst. 1) Any substance comminuted, dust: T i t . V, 2, 199. Ant. IV, 9, 17. 2 ) g u n p o w d e r : J o h n II, 448. H 4 A I V , 2, 72. Rom. II, 6 , 1 0 . Ill, 3, 132. V, 1, 64. P a w n e r , vb. to salt: if thou embowel me to-day, I'll give you leave to p. me and eat me too, H 4 A V, 4, 112. Applied to the customary cure of the lues venerea by sweating in a heated t u b : ever your fresh whore and your —ed bawd, Meas. Ill, 2, 62. from the — ing tub of infamy fetch forth the lazar kite of Cressid's kind, H 5 II, 1, 79. P a w e r (sometimes disayll.; f. i. Merch. IV, 1, 241. H 4 B IV, 1, 177. R 3 IV, 4, 480. Rom. V, 3, 9 3 ) , 11 force, strength, ability, whether bodily or intellectual, physical or m o r a l : thy ( d e a t h ' s ) h a d lost his p. Ven. 944. when more is felt than one hath p. to tell, Lucr. 1288. he hath nop. to ask her how she fares, 1594. brass, nor stone, nor earth but sad mortality o'ersways their p. Sonn. 65, 2. darkening thy p. to give base subjects light, 100, 4. use p. with p. and slay me not by art, 139, 4 cf. Cor. II, 3, 4). had I been any god of p. T p . I, 2, 10. his art is of such p. 372. till mine enemy has more p. 466. and deal in her (the moon's) command without her p. V, 271 (without being subject to the pernicious influence of the moon). assay the p. you have, Meas. I, 4, 76. devices, which shall then have no p. to stand against us, IV, 4, 15. to your p. I'll yield, KIT. Ill, 2, 40. whose edge hath p. to cut, L L L II, 50. all the p. thereof it doth apply to prove, V, 2, 77. ere a man hath p. to say Behold, Mids. I, 1, 147. your p. to draw, II, 1, 197. all the p. this charm doth owe, II, 2, 79. Dian's bud o'er Cupid's flower hath such force and blessed p. IV, 1, 79. there is no p. in the tongue of man to alter me, Merch. IV, 1,

241. the sweet p. of music, V, 79. the p. of fancy, As III, 5, 29. be able for thine enemy rather in p. than use. All's 1,1, 75. ( a m e d i c i n e ) chief in p. II, 1 , 1 1 5 . I will prove so to my p. W i n t . V, 2, 182 (to the best of my ability); cf. Cor. II, 1, 2 6 2 . to bear above our p. J o h n V, 6, 38. beyond his p. to build it, H 4 B I, 3, 59. knit our —s to the arm of peace, IV, 1, 177. I have no p. to let her pass, H 6 A V, 3 , 6 0 . the eternal God, whose name and p. thou tremblest at, H 6 B I, 4, 28. I have not the p. to muzzle him, H 8 I, 1, 121. wisdom o'ertopping woman's p. II, 4, 88. entered me with a splitting p. 183. we have p. in ourselves to do it, but it is a p. that we have no p. to do, C o r . II, 3, 4 (we are legally authorized to do it, b u t it would b e immoral to make use of our authority), what a mental p. this eye shoots forth, T i m . I, 1, 31. 6« of any p. to expel sickness, III, 1, 65. his whole action grows not in the p. on't, Ant. Ill, 7, 70 (does not rest o n t h a t which makes its strength) etc. etc. 2 ) authority, dominion, sway, influence: a prince of p. T p . I, 2, 55. what my p. might else exact, 99. and given his deputation all the organs of our p. Meas. 1, 1, 22. a p. I have, but of what strength and nature I am not yet instructed, 80. my absolute p. and place here in Vienna, I, 3, 13. if p- change purpose, 54. which he spurs on his p. to qualify in others, IV, 2, 85. there to give up their p. IV, 3, 137. advance their pride against that p. that bred it. A d o III, 1, 11. if law, authority and p. deny not, Merch. Ill, 2, 291. upon my p. I may dismiss this court, IV, 1, 104. his sceptre shows the force of temporal p. 190. earthly p. doth then show likest God's, 196. there is no p. in Venice can alter a decree, 218. I must produce my p. All's II, 3, 157. what his hatred would effect wants not a minister in his p. H 8 I, 1, 108. by commission and main p. II, 2, 7. my p. rained honour on you. III, 2, 185. every thing includes itself in p., p. into will, T r o i l . I, 3, 119. our office may during his p. go sleep, Cor. II, 1, 239. seeking means to pluck away their (the people's! p. Ill, 3, 96. in the name o' the people, and in the p. of us the tribunes, we banish him, 100. ere thou hadst p. T i m . V, 4, 15. I could with barefaced p. sweep him from my sight, Mcb. Ill, 1, 119. giving to you no further personal p. to business with the king, H m l . I, 2, 36. my powers are crescent, and my auguring hope says it will come to the full, A n t . II, 1, 10 etc. etc. W i t h in: by that fatherly and kindly p. that you have in her, Ado IV, 1, 75. you have p. in me as in a kinsman, R 3 III, 1, 109. W i t h of: by the sovereign p. you have of us, Hml. II, 2, 27. my mother, having p. of his testiness, Cymb. IV, 1, 22. W i t h on: unless the next word have some malignant p. upon my life, Gent. Ill, 1, 238. death hath had no p. yet upon thy beauty, R o m . V, 3, 93. no man shall e'er have p. upon thee, Mcb. V, 3, 7. I have no p. upon you, A n t . I, 3, 23. the p. that I have on you is to spare you, Cymb. V, 5, 418. W i t h over: not age, but sorrow, over me hath p. Compl, 74. the rabble, o'er whom I give thee p. T p . IV, 1, 38. thou hadst but p. over his mortal body, R 3 I, 2, 47 (cf. Mids. IV, 1, 79). W i t h untA: his p. unto Octavia, A n t . II, 2, 146 (cf. Hml. I, 2, 36). in or within the p. of — at the discretion or disposal o f : S o n n . 126, 1. T p . I, 2, 450. Ill, 3, 90. L L L II, 51. Mids. 1, 1, 50. Merch. I, 3, 93. All s II, 1, 197. 111,6,33. W i n t . II,3, 26. H 6 A 1 , 4 , 3 7 . Mcb. IV, 3 , 1 1 9 etc. 3) a supernatural a g e n t having dominion over

p m a n : having solicited the eternal p. that his foul thoughts might compass his fair fair, Lucr. 345. from what p. hast thou this powerful might, Sonn. 150, 1. for which foul deeds the — s have incensed the leas, Tp. Ill, 3, 73. some heavenly p. guide us, V, 105. Gent. II, 6, 4. Meas. V, 374. Err. IV, 3, 44. Mid». 1,1, 59. IV, 1, 169. Merch. IV, 1, 292. J o h n V, 7, 75. H6C IV, 6, 68. Tit. Ill, 1, 209. Caes. V, 1, 107. Mcb. IV, 1, 69. IV, 3, 238. Lr. 1, 1, 210. Oth. II, 1,197. Ant. II, 1, 6 etc. etc. 4) vital organ, physical or intellectual function: and therein heartens up his servile — s , Lucr. 295. these rebel —s that thee (the sool) array, Sonn. 146, 2. the sudden surprise of my —s, Wiv. V, 5, 131. courses as swift as thought in every p., and gives to every p. a double p. L L L IV, 3, 330. 331. to flatter up these —s of mine with rest, V, 2, 824. all my —s, address your love and might to honour Helen, Midi. II, 2, 143. there is such confusion in my — s , Merch. Ill, 2, 179. thy conceit is nearer death than thy — s , As II, 6 , 9 . sorrow and grief have vanquished all my —s, H 6 B II, 1, 183. whose dismal tune bereft my vital —s, HI, 2 , 4 1 . your brain and every function of your p. H8 III, 2, 187. too sharp in sweetness for the capacity of my ruder —s, Troil. Ill, 2, 26. my—s do their bestowing lose, 39. when we will tempt the frailty of our — s , IV, 4, 98. as if a god were slily crept into his human —s and gave him graceful posture, Cor. II, 1, 236. my operant —s their functions leave to do, Hml. Ill, 2, 184. what his every action speaks in every p. that moves, Ant. Ill, 12, 36 etc. 6) armed force: the p. of Greece, Lucr. 1368. shall we knit our —s, J o h n II, 398. never such a p. was levied, IV, 2, 110. V, 5, 18. V, 6, 39. R2 II, 2,124. Ill, 2 , 6 3 . H4A IV, 1, 132. H4B IV, 4, 5. H6A I, 4, 103. II, 2, 33. Ill, 3, 83. IV, 2, 8. IV, 3 , 4 . H6B IV, 4, 40. H6C V, 2, 31. B3 IV, 3, 48. IV, 4, 449. 480. V, 3 , 1 0 . Cor. I, 2 , 3 2 . T i t IV, 4, 63. Mcb. IV, 3, 236. Ant. Ill, 7, 58 etc. etc. T h e plnr. form in the sense of the sing.: Til send those —s o'er to your majesty, John III, 3, 70. those —s of France, IV, 2, 129. the Dauphin and his — s, V, 1, 32. B2 V, 3, 140. H4A I, 3, 262. H 6 A III, 3, 30. V, 2, 5. H6B IV, 9 , 1 0 . V, 1,44. Tim. V, 4, 52. Hml. IV, 4 , 9 . Cymb. Ill, 5, 24 etc. Seemingly abstr. pro concr.: most p. to do most harm, least knowing ill, L L L II, 58 ( = a man most able?), and now are mounted where —s are your retainers, H8 II, 4, 11" (persons of the highest authority?). P o w e r f u l , 1) strong, mighty, forcible: this p. rhyme, Sonn. 55, 2. this p. might, 150, 1. Op. love, Wiv. V, 5, 4. p. to araise King Pepin, All's II, 1, 79. his p. sound, 179. 'tis p. (the planet) Wint. 1,2, 202. you re p. at it, II, 1, 28 (yon are a master in it), gallows and knock are too p. on the highway, IV, 3, 29. p. policy, H6C 1, 2, 58. winter'* p. wind, V, 2, 15. with a broad and p. fan, Troil. I, 3, 27. p. grace, Bom. II, 3, 15. a charm of p. trouble, Mcb. IV, 1, 18. drawn by the p. ran, Lr. II, 4, 169. mixtures p. o'er the blood, Oth. I, 3, 104. thy p. breath, II, 1, 78. 2) having great authority or command: some p. spirit, Wint. II, 3, 186. all their p. friends, B2 II, 2, 55. the p. regions under earth, H6A V, 3, 11. his p. arm, R3 I, 4, 223. his p. mandate, Ant. I, 1, 22. P o w e r f u l l y , strongly: all which though I most p. and potently believe, Hml. II, 2, 203. S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. II.

887 P l w e r l e u , weak, impotent: I give you welcome with a p. hand, John II, 15. P « w l e , see Paul. F a x , the venereal disease: a man-can no more separate age and covetousness than a'can part young limbs and lechery: but the gout galls the one, and the p. pinches the other, H4B I, 2, 258. a p. of this gout I or a gout of this p. 1 for the one or the other plays the rogue with my great toe, 273. the p. upon her green-sickness for me! Faith, there's no way to be rid ont but by the way to the p. Per. IV, 6, 17. Mostly used as a slight curse (and supposed, in this case, to mean the smallpox; c t L L L V, 2, 46): the p. of such fantasticoesl Bom. II, 4, 29. the p. upon her green-sickness, Per. IV, 6, 14. a p. of that jest, L L L V, 2, 46. H4B I, 2, 272. H5 III, 7, 130. Tim. IV, 3, 148. Oth. I, 3, 365. a p. on him, All's IV, 3, 307. a p. upon him for me, 295. a p. ont, All's III, 6, 48. Cymb. II, 1, 20. a p. o' your throat, T p . I, 1, 43. II, 1, 77. Ill, 2, 87. Meas. IV, 3, 26. p. of your love-letters, Gent. Ill, 1, 390. p. ont, Tw. Ill, 4, 308. p., leave thy damnable faces, Hml. Ill, 2, 263. show your knave's visage, with a p. to you, Meas. V, 359. what a p. have 1 to do with my hostess, H4A I, 2, 53. P « r a a n > , name: old P. the papist, All's I, 3, 56 (called so from poison f ) . Praetle, practical, opposed to theoretical: so that the art and p. part of life must be the mistress to this theoric, H5 1,1, 51. P r a c t i c e , subst. 1) doing, proceeding, action: we detest such vile base —s (as to do outrages on women) Gent. IV, 1, 73. courage and hope both teaching him the p. Tw. I, 2, 13. than ... he be approved in p. culpable, H6B III, 2, 22. heavens make our presence and our — s pleasant and helpful to him, Hml. II, 2, 38. these blushes of hers must be quenched with some present p. Per. IV, 2 , 1 3 6 . With o f , -= performance: paid me richly for the p. of it, Ado V, 1, 255. to put in p. = to carry into execution: Pilgr. 217. Gent, in, 2, 89. Ado I, 1, 330. II, 2, 53. L L L I, 1, 308. 2) habitual doing, frequent use, exercise: this it a p. as full of labour as a wise man's art, Tw. Ill, 1, 72. and by still p. learn to know thy meaning, Tit. Ill, 2 , 4 5 . I have been in continual p. Hml. V, 2 , 2 2 1 . your highness shall from this p. but make hard your heart, Cymb. I, 6 , 2 4 . 3) exercises made for instruction: proceed in p. with my younger daughter, Shr. II, 165. 4) exercise of a profession: he hath abandoned his physicians, under whose —s he hath persecuted time with hope, All's I, 1, 16. 5) experience, skill acquired by experience (opposed to theory): as art and p. hath enriched any, Meas. I, 1,13. despite his nice fence and his active p. Ado V, 1, 75. one (receipt) as the dearest issue of his p. All's II, 1, 109. had the whole theoric of war in the knot of his scarf, and the p. in the chape of his dagger, IV, 3,163. older in p. Caes. IV, 3, 31. this disease is beyond my p. Mcb. V, 1, 65. mere prattle, without p. Oth. I, 1, 26. and no p. had in the brave squares of war, Ant. Ill, 11, 39. together with my p. Per. Ill, 2, 34. 6) artifice, stratagem, insidious device: lest she some subtle p. smell, Pilgr. 307. suborned in hateful p. Meas. V, 107. this needs must be a p. 123. to find this p. out, 239. the p. of it lives in John the Bastard, 57

888

P

Ado IV, 1, 190. I overheard Km and hit —», As II, 3, 26. this p. hath most shrewdly passed upon thee, Tw. V, 360. unclasped my p. Wint. Ill, 2, 168. it is tie p. and the purpose of the king, John IT, 3 , 6 3 . sworn unto the —s of France, to kill us here, H5 II, 2, 90. God acquit them of their —s, 144. H6A IT, 1, 7. H6B III, 1, 46. H8 I, 1, 204. I, 2,127. Ill, 2, 29. V, 1, 129. Cor. IT, 1, 33. Tit. T, 2, 77. Hml. IT, 7, 63. 139 (a pass of p.; according to some, = a pass in which Laertes was well practised). T, 2, 328. Lr. I, 2, 198. II, 1, 75. 109. II, 4, 116. T, 3, 151. Oth. I, 3, 102. Ill, 4, 141. T, 2, 292. Cymb. T, 5, 199. Unintelligible: making p. on the times, Meas.111,2,288. Praetlsants, performers of a stratagem: here entered Pucelie and her p. H6A III, 2, 20. Practise, vb. 1) to execute: aught but Talbot's shadow whereon to p. your severity, H6A II, 3, 47. till you p. them (your infirmities) on me, Caes. IT, 3, 88 (German: auslassen). 2) to do habitually, to apply to,touseforinstruction or as a profession: there shall he p. tilts and tournaments, Gent. I, 3, 30. a thousand tricks which I will p. Merch. Ill, 4, 78. p. rhetoric in your common talk, Shr. I, 1, 35. which though I will not p. to deceive, yet, to avoid deceit, I mean to learn, John I, 214. canst thou catch any fishes 11 never —ed it, Per. II, 1, 71. he appears to have —ed more the whipstock than the lance, II, 2, 51. those that p. them (measures) II, 3, 105. 3) to exercise one's self; a) intr. on them (books and instruments) to look and p. by myself, Sbr. I, 1, 83. b)with an inf.: my true eyes have never —d how to cloak offences with a cunning brow, Lucr. 748. ere 1 learn love, III p. to obey, Err. II, 1, 29. shall sweet Bianca p. how to bride ill Shr. Ill, 2, 253. c) with an accus., = ]) to make one's self master of, to study (German: einuben, einstudiren): throttle their —d accent in their fears, Mids. T, 97. making —d smiles, Wint. I, 2, 116. p. an answer, H4A II, 4,412. he had no legs that —d not his gait, H4B II, 3, 23. I will p. the insinuating nod, Cor. II, 3, 106. With to, = to teach by much exercise: —ing behaviour to his own shadow, Tw. II, 5, 20. 2) to exercise, to drill, to instruct: the children must be —d well to this, Wir. IT, 4, 65. to p. his judgement with the disposition of natures, Mean. Ill, 1, 164. cry, Trojans, cry! p. your eyes with tears, Troil. II, 2, 108 ( = study the art of weeping, learn to weep). 4) to use stratagems, to contrive, to plot; intr.: I will so p. on Benedick that he shall fall in love with Beatrice, Ado II, 1, 398. he will p. against thee by poison, As I, 1, 156. I will p. on this drunken man, Shr. Ind. 1, 36. you have —d upon the easy yielding spirit of this woman, H4B II, 1, 125. wouldst thou have —d on me for thy use, H5 II, 2, 99. let them p. and converse with spirits, H6A II, 1, 25. have —d dangerously against your state, H6B II, 1, 171. hast—don man's life, Lr. Ill, 2, 57. thou hast —d on her with Joul charms, Oth. I, 2, 73. —ing upon his peace and quiet, Oth. II, 1, 319. if you there did p. on my state. Ant. II, 2, 39. 40. With an inf.: for —ing to steal away a lady, Gent. IT, 1, 48. With an accus.: my uncle —s more harm to me, John IT, 1, 20. that heaven should p. stratagems upon so soft a subject, Bom. Ill, 5, 211. Praetlser, practitioner, one engaged in the exer-

cise or profession of an art: other arts... finding barren —s, L L L IT, 3, 325. sweet p., thy physic Iwil try, All's II, 1, 188 physician), a p. of arts inhibited, Oth. I, 2, 78. Praemunire, a writ issued against one who luu committed the offence of introducing a foreign authority or power into England: H8 111, 2, 340. Praeter, title of the judicial officers of ancient Rome: Caes. I, 3,143. II, 4, 35. Prague, capital of Bohemia: as the old hermit oj P. said to a niece of King Gorboduc, Tw. IT, 2, U (Douce: "not the celebrated heresiarch Jerome ot Prague, but another of that name born likewise at Prague, and called the hermit of Camaldoli in Tuscany." Douce must, indeed, have been mightily im posed on by the learning which the clown displays or other occasions; cf. II, 3, 23—29). P r a i s e , subst. 1) commendation bestowed, higl approbation: Sonn. 2, 8. 39, 3. 59, 14. 69, 5. 70, 11 84, 2. 14. 85, 2. 95, 7. 101, 9. Compl. 226. Pilgr 70. 325. Tp. IT, 10. Gent 11,4, 196. Ado I, 1, 174 L L L II, 14. IT, 1, 17. 37. IT, 3, 240 (to things of sal. a seller's p. belongs). 241. T, 2, 40. Merch. I, 2, 133 111, 2, 127. As II, 4, 38. Alls I, 1, 56. H4A T, 1, 87 H6A 1, 6, 20. IT, 2, 33. H6B III, 1, 68. H8 I, 1, 31 (him in eye, still him in p.) etc. etc. Plur. — *: Lucr 108. Sonn. 105, 3. 106, 9. Gent. II, 4, 72. 148. A> II, 3, 22. All's II, 1, 106. Wint. I, 2,94. IT, 4, 147 B2 II, 1, 18. H4A T, 2, 57. Mcb. I, 3, 92. 99 etc in p. of = in commendation of: Sonn. 106, 4. Adc T, 2, 5. L L L 1, 2, 26. 27. T, 2, 896. Tw. I, 5, 202 H5 III, 7, 42. to give p. Wiv. Ill, 4, 62. L L L T, 2 366. Cymb. II, 4, 92. to have p. All's IT, 5, 10. Johr III, 4, 15. Troil. Ill, 2, 100. 2) glorification, thanks, tribute of gratitude: J give heaven p. Wiv. Ill, 4, 62. my vows of thanks am p. H6B IT, 9, 14. to sin's rebuke and my Creator's p H6C IT, 6, 44. cf. H6A T, 3, 173. 3) fame, renown: if my slight Muse do pleas> these curious days, the pain be mine, but thine shall ¿. the p. Sonn. 38, 14. your p. shall still find room evei in the eyes of all posterity, 55, 10. your p. is come tot swiftly home before you, As 11, 3, 9. the most virtuou; gentlewoman that ever nature had p. for creating, All': IT, 5, 10. 4) that which deserves to be extolled; desert, vir tne: praise, which makes your —s worse, Sonn. 84 14. how many things by season seasoned are to thev right p. and true perfection, Merch. T, 108. which u the prescript p. and perfection of a good mistress, Hi 111,7,49. so to be valiant is no p. at all, Troil. II, 2, 145 her face the book of —», Per. I, 1, 15. Praise, vb. 1) to commend, to applaud, to extol absol.: p. in departing, Tp. Ill, 3, 39 (proverbial ex pression). I will not p. Sonn. 21, 14. Trans.: Ven Ded. 3. Lucr. 11. 79. Sonn. 39, 4. 60, 14. 101, 12 Compl. 315. Gent. Ill, 1, 102. 354. Ill, 2, 54. IV, 4 107. Wiv. II, 1, 58. Ill, 2,48. Err. IT, 2, 15. Ado II 1, 394. Ill, 1,19. L L L I, 2, 28. IT, 1,14. Merch. II 9, 98. Ill, 4, 22. All's II, 3, 179 (she is now the —< of the king). Tw. II, 4, 33. H4A III, 3, 215. Troil IT, 2, 113 (scratch my —d cheeks). Per. Ill, 2, 10: (the diamonds of a most —d water) etc. etc. 21 to recommend, to cry up: I will not p. tha purpose not to sell, Sonn. 21, 14. she will often p. he> liquor, Gent. Ill, 1, 350 (probably by setting the ex

p ample of drinking), the soothsayer that you —rfso to the queen, Ant. I, 2, 3. cf. Alls II, 3, 179. 3) to glorify, to thank: 1 p. heaven for it, Wiv. I, 4, 150. I p. Godfor you. Ado V, 1, 325. LLL IV, 2, 75. V, 1, 2. All's V, 2, 59. p. God for the merry year, H4B V, 3, 19. p. my Maker, H8 V, 5, 69. God be —d, Wiv. II, 2, 324. As III, 3, 40. Tw. II, 5, 187. Wint. Ill, 2, 138. H5 III, 6, 10. IV, 7, 119. H6B II, 1, 96 etc. etc. 4) to appraise, to estimate: were you tent hither top. met Tw. I, 5, 268. p. ut at we are tatted, allow ut at we prove, Troil. Ill, 2, 97. Perhaps also in Per. Ill, 2, 102 Cthe diamondt of a molt —d water). Pralsefnl, laudable; writing of some M. Edd. in LLL IV, 2, 58; Qq F l prayful, F i praytful, Fa.4 preyful. Praiseworthy, deserving commendation: Ado V, 2, 90. Prance, to bound, to move in a sprightly and showy manner: trimmed Wee a younker —ing to hit love, H6C II, 1, 24. Prank, vb. to deck, to dress np, to adorn: 'tis that miracle and queen of gems that nature — s her in attracts my soul, Tw. II, 4, 89. and me, poor lowly maid, most goddess-like —ed up, Wint. IV, 4, 10. they do p. them in authority, Cor. Ill, 1, 23. Pranks, licentious or mischievous tricks: Err. II, 2, 210. Tw. IV, 1, 59. Wint. IV, 4, 718. H6A III, 1, 15. Hml. Ill, 4, 2. Lr. 1,4, 259. Oth. II, 1, 143 (doe* foul p.)- 1", 3, 202. Prat, name of an old woman, from which Ford derives a verb: come, mother P., come, give me your hand. lUp. her, Wiv. IV, 2, 191. 193. Prate, snbst. tattle: with hit innocent p. he will awake my mercy, John IV, 1, 25. and perish ye, with your audacious p. H6A IV, 1, 124. Prate, vb. to tattle, to talk idly, particularly in a bragging manner: Tp. II, 1, 263. Wiv. I, 4, 128. Ill, 3, 51. Err. I, 2,101. II, 1, 81. II, 2,195. Merch. V, 164. Shr. IV, 3, 114. Wint III, 2, 42. IV, 4, 349. H4B III, 2, 327. H5 IV, 1, 79. B3 I, 3, 351. Ill, 1, 151. Cor. I, 1,49. 111,3,83. IV, 5, 54. V, 3,48.159. Rom. II, 4, 212. IV, 5,135. 138 (the surreptitious Ql pretty, Qiprates, the rest of O. Edd. pratett). Mcb. II. 1,58. Hml. HI, 4, 215. V, 1, 303. Oth. I, 2, 6. II, 1, 227. II, 3, 153. Prater, a twaddler: a tpeaker it but a p. H5 V, 2, 166. Prattle, snbst. empty talk, tattle: thinking hit p. to be tedious, R2 V, 2, 26. mere p. without practice, Oth. I, 1, 26. Prattle, vb. to tattle: Tp. Ill, 1, 57. Wir. V, 1, I. Meas. V, 182. Tw. I, 2, 33. H6A III, 1, 16. Cor. II, 1, 222. Oth. 11, 1, 208. With an accus. denoting the effect: if you p. me into these peril», All's IV, 1,46. Prattler, tattler: Mcb. IV, 2, 64. Prattling*, idle talk: I have heard of your p. too, Hml. Ill, 1, 148 (Qq and M. Edd. paintings). Prawn, the animal Palaemon serratus: a good dish of—t, H4B II, 1, 104. Pray, 1) to ask earnestly, to entreat; absol.: I p. now, keep below, Tp. I, 1, 12. pardon the fault, I p. Gent. 1,2,40. give ut leave, I p., a while, III, 1, 1. how I —ed and kneeled, Meas. V, 93. tell me thit, I p. Err. I, 2, 53 etc. etc. With for: the guilty rebel for remission — t , Lucr. 714. a conqueror that will p. in aid

889 for kindness, where he for grace it kneeled to, Ant. V, 2, 27 (to p. in aid, a law-term, = to call in for help one who has interest in the cause) With a clause: and —t that you will hie you home. Err. I, 2, 90 etc. / often omitted before it: p., set it down, Tp. Ill, 1, 18. p., tell me that, Gent. Ill, 1, 123. Elliptically: to what, Ip.t Meas. I, 2,48 (i. e. I p. yon to tell me). I p., sir, why am I beaten t Err. II, 2, 39. what are you, lp., but... H6A III, 1, 43. what, I p., is Margaret more than thatt V, 5, 36 etc. Transitively: I p. you, hence, Ven. 382. I p. thee, mark me, Tp. I, 2, 67. 88. 175. Ill, 3, 109. Gent. 1,3, 89. Ill, 1, 239. Meas. IV, 1, 16. Shr. IV, 4, 21 etc. /omitted: no,p. thee, Tp. 1, 2, 371. Ill, 1,15. IV, 194. V, 167. Meas. II, 2, 2 etc. Elliptically: I p. you, sir, of what disposition was the duket Meas. Ill, 2,244. I p. you, is Signor Mountanto retumedt Ado I, 1,30. I p. you, how many hath he killedt 42. but, I p. you, who is his companionf 81. p. you, where lies Sir Proteus 1 Gent. IV, 2, 137. p. you, how goes the world, Tim. II, 2, 35. she is now the wife of Marcus Antonius. P. ye, sirt 'Tis true, Ant. II, 6, 120 (i. e. tell me if you are in earnest) etc. A clause following: the poor fool —s her that he may depart, Ven. 578. An inf. following; a) with to; I will p., Pompey, to increase your bondage, Meas. HI, 2, 78. and so I p. you all to think yourselves, Shr. II, 114. Tw. Ill, 4, 103. H5 I, 2, 9. IV, 4, 47. IV,8,68. V Chor. 3. H8 III, 1, 18 etc. b) without to: your father —s you leave your books. Shr. Ill, 1, 82. in that I p. you use her well, H6B11,4,81. p. 'em take their pleasures, H8 1, 4, 74. to p. Achilles see us at our tent, Troil. V, 9, 8. With an accus. and to: and p. her to a fault for which I chid her, Gent. I, 2, 52. I p. you home to dinner with me, Meas. II, 1,292. With an accus. denoting the thing asked: I know not how to p. your patience, Ado V, 1, 280. H4B V, 5, 125. H5 Prol. 33. p. your mother's blessing, Wint V, 3, 120. All's I, 3, 260. he humbly —* your speedy payment, Tim. 11, 2, 28. —ed me oft forbearance, Cymb. II, 5, 10. 2) to make petitions to heaven; absol.: for hit prey to p. he doth begin, Lucr. 342. on a love-book p. for my success, Gent I, 1, 19. you must p. Wiv. IV, 2, 162. top. against thy foes, H6A I, 1,43. Meas. I, 2, 16. IV, 3, 55. Err. I, 2, 51. IV, 2, 28. LLL I, 1, 304. Merch. 1,3,39. V, 31. H4A II, 1, 87. H6A I, I, 33 etc. With a clause (almost = to widh): to will I p. that thou maytt have thy will, Sonn. 143, 13. lp. she may (persuade) Meas. I, 2, 192. he heartily —s some occasion may detain us longer, Ado 1,1,151. / am not fair, and therefore I p. the gods make me honest, As III, 3, 34; cf. B2 V, 3, 146. let wives with child p. that their burthens may not jail this day, John III, 1, 90. I cannot p. that thou mayst win, 331. 332. and —s the Moor be safe, Oth. II, 1, 33. 34. to p. they have their will, Cymb. II, 5, 34. I omitted: p. heartily he be at palace, W i n t IV, 4, 731. blest p. you be, Cymb. V, 5, 370. With to: the powers to whom I p. Lucr. 349. I think and p. to several subjects, Meas. II, 4, 1. H4A II, 1, 88. John III, 1, 310. Tit. IV, 2, 48. Caes. I, 1, 59 etc. With an accus.: I p. the gods she may, Shr. IV, 4, 67. God, I p. him, B3 I, 3, 212. I p. God, amen I H8 II, 3, 56 etc. / omitted: p. heaven he prove so, Gent. II, 7, 79. p. heaven she win him, Meas. II, 2, 125. p. heaven his wisdom be not tainted, IV, 4, 4. As I, 2, 109. Oth. II, 1, 34. p. God our cheer may answer my good will, Err. Ill, 1, 19. R2 1» 67*

890

P

4, 64 etc. The word prayer as object: I'll p. a thouPrecedent (precedent), adj. former: our own p. sand prayers for thy death, Meas. Ill, 1, 146. passions do instruct us what levity's in youth, Tim. I, Prayer (monosyll. or dissjU. indiscriminately), 1, 133. your p. lord, Hml. Ill, 4, 98. thy p. services, 1) entreaty, snppiication: but the with vehement —s Ant. IV, 14, 83. Precedent (precedent) subst. 1) original copy o' urgeth ttill under what colour he commit* this ill, Lacr. 475. his ear her —s admits, 558. by your fair p. to a writing: return the p. to these lords again, John V, soften Angela, Meas. I, 4, 69. until my tears and—s 2, 3. the p. was full as long a doing, R3 III, 6, 7. 2) presage, sign: she seizes on his sweating palm, have won his grace, Err. V, 115. Mids. HI, 2, 250. Merch. Ill, 3, 20. IV, 1, 126 (to make). As IV, 3, 55. the p. of pith and livelihood, Yen. 26. R2 V, 3, 97. 101. 107. 109. 110. 127. H6B IV, 7, 3) example: the p. whereof in Lucrece view, Lncr. 73. H6C IV, 6, 7. Hml. I, 2, 118. Oth. I, 3, 152. 1261. who ever shunned by p. the destined ill she must 2) petition to heaven: Lucr. 344. Sonn. 108, 5. herself assayt Compl. 155. thy case shall be my p. Phoen. 67. Tp. 1, 1, 55. 57. I, 2, 422. Ill, 1, 35. Tp. II, 1, 291. that I may example my digression by Epil. 16. Gent. I, 1, 17. Wiv. II, 2, 102. Meas. II, some mighty p. L L L I, 2, 122. 'twill be recorded for 2, 151. II, 4, .71. IV, 3, 44. Err. IV, 4, 58. V, 104. a p. Merch. IV, 1, 220. lest barbarism, making me the Mids. I, 1, 197. II, 2, 62. Merch. Ill, 1, 23. Wint. p. W i n t II, 1, 84. R2 II, 1, 130. H4A II, 4, 37. V, 3, 141. H6A 1, 1, 32. R3 I, 3, 21. V, 3, 241 etc. H6C II, 2, 33. H8 I, 2, 91. II, 2, 86. Tit. V, 3, 44. etc. With to: my —s to heaven for you, H8 III, 2, 177. Hml. V, 2, 260. Lr. II, 3, 13. Cymb. Ill, 1, 75. Cor. V, 3, 105. Ant. II, 3, 3. a book of p. R3 III, 7, Precept, 1) precept, instruction, lesson: what are 98. a book of - s, IV, 3, 14. at —s, Tp. I, 1, 57. at —s worth of stale example t Compl. 267. my father's his —s, All's II, 5, 46. fall to thy —s, H4B V, 5, 51. —s I therein forget, Tp. Ill, 1, 58. in action all of p. forgot my —s, H8 III, 1, 132. when you make your Meas. IV, 1, 40. I will bestow some —s of this virgin. —s, H6B IV, 7, 121. I'll pray a thousand —s for thy All's III, 5, 103. to load me with —s, Cor. IV, 1, 10. death, Meas. Ill, 1, 146. said many a p. Wint. V, 3, never learned the icy —s of respect, Tim. IV, 3, 258. 141. while I say one p. Oth. V, 2, 83. said a century these few —s, Hml. I, 3, 58. then I—sgave her, II, of —s, Cymb. IV, 2, 391. to say my —s, Wiv. IV, 5, 2, 142 (Qq prescripts). 105. has thrice her —s said, V, 6, 54. Ado II, 1, 108. 2) precept, mandate, summons: those —s cannot All's I, 1, 228. Tw. Ill, 4, 131. H 4 A V , 1, 124. H5 be served, H4B V, 1, 14. send —s to the leviathan to III, 2, 40. IV, 2, 56. Troil. II, 3, 23. Mcb. II, 2, 25. come ashore, H5 III, 3, 26. Per. IV, 1, 66. IV, 6, 149. Passing into the sense of Preceptlal, instructive: would give p. medicine kind wishes: you had my —s, All's II, 4, 17. conclu- to rage, Ado V, 1, 24, i. e. the medicine of precepts, des in hearty —s that your attempts may overlive the of instructions. Precinct (precinct), district, quarter: within her hazard, H4B IV, 1, 14. shall have my -s, H8 111, 1, 180. madam, my thanks and —s, Per. Ill, 3, 34. quarter and mine own p. I was employed in passing to 3) the act of addressing the Snpreme Being: he and fro, H6A II, 1, 68. is given to p. Wiv. I, 4, 13. the more my p., the lesser Precleua, 1) of great price, valuable: Yen. 824. is my grace, Mids. II, 2, 89. to live in p. and contem- Lucr. 334. Sonn. 57, 3. 77,2. 86,2. 131,4. Gent. plation, Merch. Ill, 4,28. he is famedfor mildness, peace II, 6, 24. Ado IV, 1, 29. 229. Merch. II, 8, 20. Ill, 1, and p. H6C11,1,156. wast thou in p.t Troil. II, 3, 39. 91. As I, 3, 4. II, 1,14. John V, 2, 161. R2 I, 1, 32. Prayer-bttX, n book containing prayers or the I, 2, 19. 1, 3, 267. II, 1, 46. Ill, 3, 90. H4A II, 4, 420. forms of devotion: Merch. II, 2, 201. R3 III, 7, 47. H4B II, 4, 391. H6A I, 6, 24. V, 3, 119. R3 III, 2, 82. Preach, to pronounce a sermon, to speak exhor- V, 3, 250. Troil. II, 2, 55. Cor. II, 2, 129. Tit. 1, 72. tatively on religious and moral snbjects: harms that II,3,227. Rom. V, 3,31. Tim. IV, 3, 26. Hml. Ill, 4, p. in our behoof, Compl. 165. I have heard you p. 100. Lr. 111,2,71. V, 3,190. Cymb.1,4,81. 111,4,192. that malice was a sin, H6A III, 1, 127. his form and 2) exquisite, rare, of great worth: Ven.543. Lucr. cause conjoined, —ing to stones, Hml. Ill, 4, 126. Lr. 870. Sonn. 30, 6. 85,4. Tp. Ill, 1, 25. Wiv. V, 5, 66. IV, 6, 184. Transitively, = to inculcate as by a ser- L L L II, 4. IV, 3, 333. V, 2, 445. Mids. Ill, 2, 227. As mon, to teach earnestly: he —edpure maid, Compl. III, 3, 64. Shr. IV, 3,177. Wint. I, 2, 79. 452. IV, 2, 315 (i.e. chastity), my master —es patience to him, 27. V, 1,222. 223. V, 3,131. John III, 1, 79. IV, 1, Err. V, 174. where manners ne'er were —ed, Tw. IV, 94. IV, 3, 40. H4B1V.5, 162. R3 II, 1, 123. Troil. 1, 53. p. some philosophy to make me mad, John III, IV, 4, 10. Rom. I, I, 239.1,3, 87. Tim.1,2,108. Mcb. 4, 51. to have divinity —ed there, Per. IV, 5, 4. IV, 3, 27. 223. Hml. IV, 5, 162. Lr. I, 1, 76. 262. Preacher, one who inculcates religious and mo- Oth. Ill, 4, 66. Ant. I, 3, 73. Cymb. I, 6, 37. II, 3,127. Ill, 5, 59. IV, 2, 326. V, 5, 9. 242. ral truth: H5 IV, 1, 9. Ironically: p. villain. Oth. V, 2, 235. you p. panPreachment, a sermon, a highflown discourse: dar, Cymb. Ill, 5, 81. thou p. varlet, IV, 2, 83. made a p . of your high descent, H6C I, 4, 72. Precleaa-dear, not hyphened in Q and the earPreambalate, premised, introductory to the main subject: L L L V, 1, 85 (Armado's speech. Most lier Ff: Troil. V, 3, 28. Preclena-Jnlced (not hyphened in O. Edd.) of M. Edd. praeambula. Precede, to go before in the order of time: six an exquisite sap: p. flowers, Rom. II, 3, 8. Preelenaly, valuably: the time must by us both —ing ancestors, All's V, 3, 196. harbingers — ing still be spent most p. Tp. I, 2, 241 (in business of great the fates, Hml. I, 1, 122. Precedence (precedence) something going (said) importance). before: to make plain some obscure p. that hath before Precipice, a headlong steep: H8 V, 1, 140. Precipitate, to fall headlong: so many fathom been sain, L L L III, 83. 1 do not like 'But yet', it does down — ing, Lr. IV, 6, 50. allay the good p. Ant. II, 5, 51.

p

891

Preclpltatlen, the throwing or being thrown underwrite his humorous p. Troil. II, 3, 138. is't night's headlong: pile ten hills on the Tarpeian rock, that p. or the day's shame, Mcb. II, 4, 8. knaves, thieves the p. might down stretch below the beam of eight, Cor. and treachers by spherical p. Lr. I, 2, 134. Ill, 2, 4. in peril of p. from off the rock Tarpeian, III, Predemlnant, prevalent, supreme in influence; 3, 102. used of planets: All's I, 1, 211. Wint. I, 2, ?02. Of Precise, exact, nice,punctilious: to keep the terms bad qualities: H6B III, 1, 145. Bom. II, 3, 29. Mcb. of my honour p. Wiv. II, 2, 23. he was ever p. in pro- HI, 1, 87. mise-keeping, Meas. I, 2, 76. Lord Angelo is p., stands Predominate, to prevail, to oversway; with at a guard with envy, I, 3, 50. taffeta phrases, silken over: I will p. over the peasant, Wiv. II, 8, 294 (like terms p. LLL V, 2, 406. to hold your honour more p. a meteor or planet). Transitively: let your close fire and nice with others than with him, H4B II, 3, 40. In p. his smoke, Tim. IT, 3, 142. the Iangaage of Elbow, = decided, doubtless: I know Pre-eminence, superiority in rank and power: not well what they are, but p. villains they are, Meas. Err. II, 1, 23. Lr. I, 1, 133. II, 1, 54. Pre - emplay, to employ before another : thA Precisely, 1) exactly, expressly: I have taught villain whom I employed was —ed by him, Wint. II, him, even as one would say p., 'thus I would teach a 1, 49. dog', Gent. IV, 4, 6 (Launce's speech), therefore, p., Preface, subst. introduction by preliminary recan you carry your good will to the maidt Wiv. I, 1, marks: this superficial tale is but a p. of her worthy 237 (Evans' speech), tell me p. of what complexion, praise, H6A T, 5, 11. LLL I, 2, 85 (Armado's speech), such a fellow, to Prefer, 1) to like better than, to choose before say p., were not for the court, All's II, 2, 12 (the another: have I not reason to p. mine ownt Gent. II, clown's speech). 4, 156. in our opinions she should be —ed, H6A V, 2) accurately, nicely, scrupulously: he cannot so 5, 61. why Somerset should be —ed, H6B I, 3, 117. p. weed this land as his misdoubts present occasion, thou —est thy life before thine honour, H6C I, 1, 246. H4B IT, 1, 205. some craven scruple of thinking too p. a noble life before a long, Cor. Ill, 1, 152. this bep. on the event, Hml. IT, 4, 41. fore aU the world do I p. Tit. IV, 2, 109. — ing you Preclseness, nicety, scrupulousness: is all your before her father, Oth. I, 3, 187. you must not so far strict p. come to thist H6A V, 4, 67. p. her fore ours of Italy, Cymb. I, 4, 70. Befl.: our Precisian, perhaps = one who stands upon haste from hence is of so quick condition that it —s punctilios: though Love use Reason for his p., he ad- itself and leaves unquestioned matters of needful value, mits him not for his counsellor, Wiv. II, 1, 5, i. e. Meas. 1,1,55 ( = that it - s itself before the most though Lore may calculate the exact proportion of important matters, which it leaves unquestioned). nge, temper etc. in making his choice (as Falstaff 2) to present, to lay before, to show: that strongdoes in what follows) yet, after all, he is not to be bonded oath that shall p. and undertake my troth, controlled by the advice of reason. Most M. Edd., Compl. 280. our play is -ed, Mids. IV, 2,39 (given referring to Soon. 147, 5, physician, but the two in among others for the duke's option), although in passages have nothing in common. writing I —ed the manner of thy vile outrageous Pre-esntract (pre-contrdct), a betrothment pre- crimes, H6A1II, 1,10. why then —edyou not your sums vious to another: Meas. IT, 1, 72. and bills, when your false masters eat of my lord's P r e c u r r e r , forerunner: Phoen. 6. meatt Tim. Ill, 4, 49. and ne'er g. his injuries to hit Precorse, subst. forerunning: the ¡ike p. of fierce heart, III, 5, 34. let him go and presently p. kis suit to Caesar, Caes. Ill, 1, 28. I'll have —ed him a chaevents, Hml. I, 1, 121 (only in Qq). lice for the nonce, Hml. IT, 7, 160 (Ff prepared). Precursor, forerunner: Tp. I, 2, 201. Predecease, to die before: if children p. pro- without more wider and more overt test than these thin genitors, Lncr. 1756. —d = deceased in ancient habits and poor likelihoods of modern seeming do p. times, of old: worn as a memorable trophy of p. valour, against him, Oth. I, 3, 109. who is the first that doth p. himselft Per. II, 2, 17. H5 T, 1, 76. Predecessor, 1' one who was in an office before 3) to address, to direct: if you know any such, another: H6 I, 1, 81. Cor. II, 2, 147. p. them hither, Shr. 1,1, 97. fellow, wilt thou bestow 2) ancestor: H5 I, 2, 248. Cor. II, 1, 101. Mcb. thy time with met Ay, if Messala will p. me to you. II, 4, 34. Do so, good Messala, Caes. T, 5, 62. stood I within Predestinate, decreed by fate: a p. scratched his grace, I would p. him to a better place, Lr.1,1,277. face. Ado I, 1, 136. 4) to recommend: to call her bad, whose sovereignty Predicament, category, condition, situation: so oft thou hast —ed with twenty thousand soul-conthe offender's life lies in the mercy of the duke only, firming oaths, Gent. II, 6, 15. Shylock hath —ed thee, ...in which p. thou standest, Merch. IV, 1, 357. that Merch. II, 2, 155. who —eth peace more than I dot I descend so low, to show the line and the p. wherein H6A III, 1, 33. 110. my book —ed me to the king, you range, H4A I, 3, 168. piteous p.! even so lies she, H6B IV, 7, 77. who lets go by no vantages that may p. Kom. Ill, 3, 86. you to his daughter, Cymb. II, 3, 51. the emperor's Predict, prediction, prophecy: by oft p. that I in letters should not sooner than thine own worth p. thee, IT, 2, 386. he is —ed by thee to us, 400. heaven find, Sonn. 14, 8. Predict tan, presage; prophecy: these —s are to 5) to promote, to advance: I will help thee to p. the world in general as to Caesar, Caes. II, 2, 28. my her too, Gent. II, 4, 157. under the colour of commendpartner you greet with great p. of noble having, Mcb. ing him I have access my own love to p. IV, 2, 4. I I, 3, 55. Lr. I, 2, 119. 152. will love thee and p. thee too, R3 IV, 2, 82. (a bishop) Predemlnancc, superior power and influence: newly —ed from the king's secretary, H8 IV, 1, 102.

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to »hall you have a »hotter journey to your desire» by the means / shall then have to p. them, Oth. II, 1, 286. to be styled the under-hangman of hi» kingdom and hated for being ed so well, Cymb. II, 3, 136. ere 1 arise, I will p. my ion», V, 5, 326. P r e f e r m e n t , 1 ) preference given, precedence granted: nor is your firm resolve unknown to me, in the p. of the eldest lister, Shr. II, 94. 2) advancement, promotion: these do labour for their own p. H6B I, 1, 181. help you to many fair —s, B3 I, 3, 9a. H8 V, 1,36. Oth. 1,1,36. Synonymous to good fortune: to teek p. out, G e n t I, 3, 7. if it be p. to leave a rich Jew's service, to become the follower of so poor a gentleman, Merch. II, 2, 155. had I not the dash of my former life in me, would p. drop on my head, Wint. V, 2, 123. Lr. IV, 5, 38. Cymb. 1, 5, 71. Ill, 5, 116. 159. V, 4, 215. Prefigure, to form or shape in anticipation: all their praises are but prophecies of this our time, all you —ing, Sonn. 106, 10. Prefixed, appointed beforehand: Meas. IV, 3, 83. Wint. I, 2,42. Troil. IV, 3, 1. Bom. V, 3, 253. P r e f o r m e d , formed in the beginning, original: why all these things change their natures and p. faculties to monstrous quality, Caes. I, 3, 67. Pregnancy, cleverness: p. is made a tapster, and hath hi» quick wit wasted in giving reckonings, H4B 1, 2, 192. Pregnant, 1) expert, clever, ingenious, artful: the term» of common justice you are as p. in as ... any, Meas. I, 1, 12. wherein the p. enemy does much, Tw. II, 2, 29. to your own mott p. and vouchsafed ear, HI, 1, 100. how p. sometimes his replies are, Hml. II, 2, 212. 2) disposed, prompt, ready: crook the p. hinges of the knee, Hml. Ill, 2, 66. the profits of my death were very p. and potential spurs to make thee seek it, Lr. II, I , 78. curied Dionyza hath the p. instrument of wrath prest/or this blow, Per. IV Prol. 44. With to: fair virtues all, to which the Grecian» are most prompt and p. Troil. IV, 4, 90. who, by the art of known and feeling sorrows, amp. to good pity, Lr. IV, 6, 227. 3) probable in the highest degree, clear, evident: 'tis very p. Meas. II, 1, 23. Cymb. IV, 2, 325. most true, if ever truth were p. by circumstance, Wint. V, 2,34. it it a most p. and unforced position, Oth. II, 1, 239. wert't not that we stand up against them all, 'twere p. they should square between themselves, Ant. II, 1, 45. P r e g n a n t l y , clearly, evidently: a thousand moral paintings 1 can show that shall demonstrate these quick blows of Fortune s more p. than words, Tim. I, 1, 92. PreJndlcate. to judge or determine beforehand to disadvantage: wherein our dearest friend —s the businett and would teem to have us make denial, All's

1, 2, 8.

P r e j u d i c e , subst. detriment, injury: H8 1, 1, 182. II, 4, 154. P r e j u d i c e , vb. to injure: H6A III, 3, 91. P r e j u d i c i a l , detrimental, tending to impair: H6C 1, 1,144. P r e l a t e , a dignitary of the church: H4A I, 3, 267. V, 5,37. H 5 1,1,40. H6A I, 3, 23. 111,1,14. 46. 57. H6B I, 1, 142. R3 IV, 4, 502. P r e m e d i t a t e , to revolve in the mind beforehand, to contrive or design previously: he doth p. the dan-

ger», Lucr. 183. —d welcomes, Mids. V, 94. —d murder, H5 IV, 1, 170. deep —d line», H6A III, 1, 1. P r e m e d i t a t i » , previous deliberation: a cold p. for my purpose, H6C 111, 2, 133. Premised (premised) sent before the time: let the vile world end, and the p. flames of tie last day knit earth and heaven together, H6B V, 2, 41. P r e m i s e s (prémiset) conditions, suppositions: that he, in lieu o' the p. of homage ..., should presently extirpate me, Tp. I, 2, 123. the p. observed, thy will by my performance shall be served. All's II, 1, 204. '( has done, upon the p., but justice, H8 II, 1, 63. P r e n o m i n a t e , to forename, foretell: to p. in nice conjecture where thou wilt hit me dead, Troil. IV, 5, 250. Partic. p. — aforesaid : the p. crime«, Hml. II, 1, 43. P r e n t i c e , apprentice: All's IV, 3, 211. H4B 1, 2, 194. H 6 B 1, 3, 201. II, 3, 71. F r e n a l e or Prensy, probably = too nice, precise, demure, prim: the p. Angelo, Meas. Ill, 1, 94. the damned'st body to invest and cover in p. guards, 97. cf. Burns' Halloween: poor Willie, wi his bowkail runt, was brunt wi primsie Mallie. cf. also the modern prim, and the ancient Scotch prunse. Pre-eecupled, prepossessed : your minds, p. with what you rather mutt do than what you thould, Cor. II, 3, 240. P r e - e r d l n a n e e , a rule previously established: turn p. and firtt decree into the law of children, Caes. III, 1, 38. Preparation, 1) the act of making fit, of putting in readiness : you make grand p.for a duke de J am any, Wiv. IV, 5, 88. and have all charitable p. Meas. Ill, 2, 222. Ado I, 1, 280. II, 2, 50. Merch. II, 4, 4. All's III, 6, 82. H5 IV, 1, 192. Mcb. I, 5, 34. Ant. V, 2, 225. Particularly the act of putting one's self in readiness for combat: Tw. Ill, 4, 245. John II, 213. IV, 2, 111. H5 II Chor. 13. 11,4, 18. IV Chor. 14. H6A I, 1, 166. Cor. IV, 3, 18. Mcb. V, 3, 57. Hml. I, 1, 105 (—«). II, 2, 63. Lr. Ill, 7, 10. Ant. Ill, 4, 26 (I'll raise the p. of a war). IV, 10, 1 (their p. is today by sea). 2) the state of looking forward to sth., notice given : I make bold to press with so little p. upon you, W i r . II, 2, 162 (so unexpectedly and with so little ceremony). 3) a force ready for combat, an army or navy: the king is set forth with ttrong and mighty p. H4A IV, 1, 93. thete three lead on thit p. Cor. I, 2, 15. our p. stands in expectation of them, Lr. IV, 4, 22. the Turkish p. makes fir Rhodes, Oth. I, 3, 14. 221. your p. can affront no less, Cymb. IV, 3, 29. 4) accomplishment, qualification : your many warlike, court-like, and learned —s, Wiv. II, 2, 237. P r e p a r e , subst. preparation, armaments: make p. for war, H6C IV, 1, 131. Prepare, vb. 1) trans, a) to make fit, to make ready: Sonn. 114, 12. Tp. I, 2, 145. Meas. II, 2, 84. III, 1, 4. Ill, 2, 254. Ado 1, 2, 23. Merch. Ill, 5, 56. IV, 1, 245. 264. As II, 5, 65. All's II, 5, 66. IV, 4, 34. Tw. II, 4, 57. Wint. IV, 4, 512. H5 I, 2, 234. V Chor. 13. H6B II, 4, 15. R3 V, 3, 88. H8 111, 2, 328. IV, 1, 64. Cor. V, 2, 77. Tit. IV, 2, 146. V, 2, 197. Rom. I, 1, 116 (cf. L r . II, 1,53. Ant.IV, 12,39). Caes. Ill, 1, 253. Lr. I, 4, 280. Il, 1, 53 (cf. Rom. I, 1, 116). Ant. Ill, 3 , 4 1 . IV, 12, 39. Per. I, 1, 43. = to make

p ready for combat: John II, 83. V, 2, 130. 134. B2 I, 3, 5. H4A II, 3, 37. H4B Ind. 12. Cor. Ill, 2, 139. IV, 5, 140. Ant. Ill, 7,41. Reflexively: p. yourself to death. Meas. Ill, 1, 169. IV, 2, 72. IV, 3, 57. Merch. II, 4, 23. IV, 1, 324. Wint. II, 3, 201. John IV, 1, 90. R2 IV, 320. V, 1, 37 (p. thee hence for France). HCC V, 4, 60. Caes. V, 1, 12. Hml. HI, 3, 2. IV, 3,45. b) to make to expect, to give notice to: bring him hit confessor, let him be — d, Meas. II, 1, 35. go you and p. Aliena, As V, 2, 17. mine ear is open and my heart —d, R2 III, 2, 93. p. her ears to hear a wooer's tale, R3 IV, 4, 327. p. thy brow to frown, Cor. IV, 5, 69. p. thy aged eyes to weep, Tit. Ill, 1, 59. p. her against this wedding day. Bom. Ill, 4, 32. to p. him up against to-morrow, IV, 2, 45 (Qq up him). Partic —d = ready: I am —d, here is my sword, H6A I, 2, 98. for that I am —d and full resolved, Tit. II, 1, 57. be —d to hear, Caes. 1, 2, 66. an you will not, come when you are next —d for, Oth. IV, 1, 168. be —dto know, Ant. I, 3, 66. I came here a man —d to take this offer, II, 6, 41. - deliberate: with a leavened and —d choice, Meas. I, 1, 52. c) to provide: let us p. some welcome for the mistress, Merch. V, 37. have —d great store of wedding cheer, Shr. Ill, 2,188. p. thy grave, Tim. IV, 3, 378. Clean's wife a present murderer does p. for good Marina, Per. IV Prol. 38. 2) intr. a) to make every thing ready, to pat things in order: Boyet, p., I will away to-night, LLL V, 2, 737. p. for dinner, Merch. Ill, 5, 52 (purposely misinterpreted by Laancelot). Lr. I, 3, 26. p. there, the duke is coming, H8 II, 1, 97. Caes. IV, 3, 140. b) to make one's self ready: to bid the wind a base he now —s, Ven. 303. p. to carry it, Lucr. 1294. 1296. 1607. Tp. IV, 166. Meas. IV, 3, 136. LLL V,2, 81. 510. Merch. IV, 1, 304. H5 IV, 1, 196. H6B I, 2, 57. R3I, 4,185. Cor. V, 2, 51. Rom. 1, 5, 123. Ill, 3, 162. IV, 5, 92. Caes. II, 2, 118. With against: Sonn. 13, 3. With for: H5 V, 2, 398. Per. II, 3, 7. = to make one's self ready for combat: John II, 78. IV, 2, 114. H4A V, 2, 90. Cor. I, 2, 30. Mcb. Ill, 6, 39. Ant. Ill, 6, 58. the Dauphin is —ing hitherward, John V, 7, 59; cf. R2 V, 1, 37 and Cor. IV, 5, 140. c) to look forward to, to expect, to keep one's self ready for what is to happen: upon that day either p. to die or else to wed Demetrius, Mids. I, 1, 86. p. to see the life as lively mocked as ever ..., Wint. V, 3, 18. bid him p., for I will cut his throat, H5 IV, 4, 34. you mutt p. to fight without Achilles, Troil. II, 3, 238. in, and p.; ours is the fall, I fear, Tim. V, 2, 16. if you have tears, p. to shed them now, Caes. Ill, 2, 173. Preparedly, in a state of readiness for what is to happen: that she p. may frame herself to the way she's forced to, Ant. V, 1, 55. Prepeatereas, perverse, running codnterto common sense and natnre: H6C V, 6, 5. R3 II, 4, 63. Troil. V, 1, 27. Oth. I, 3, 333. Applied to persons: p. ass, Shr. Ill, 1, 9 because he would invert the natural order of things). Used with impropriety by Armado, LLL 1,1,244, and blunderingly for prosperous by the clown in Wint. V, 2, 159. Prepestereoaly, perversely, against the natural order of things: that it (my natnre) could so p. be t tained, to leave for nothing all thy sum of good, Sonn. 109, 11. methinks you prescribe to yourself very p.

893 Wiv. II, 2, 250. those things do best please me that befal p. Mids. Ill, 2, 121. whatsoever cunning fiend it was that wrought upon thee so p. H5 II, 2, 112. for nature so p. to err, Oth. I, 3, 62. P r e r o g a t i v e , 1) preeminence, precedence, first rank : executing the outward face of royalty with all p. Tp. I, 2, 105. then give me leave to have p. Shr. Ill, 1, 6. a very serious business calls on him. The great p. and right of love, which as your due time claims, he does acknowledge, All's II, 4, 42. our p. calls not your counsels, W i n t II, 1, 163. shall I detract so much from that p., as to be called but viceroy of the wholet H6A V, 4, 142. 2) privilege: my fortunes... give me this p. of speech, Tw. II, 5, 78. p. of age, crown, sceptres, laurels, Troil. I, 3,107. insisting on the old p. and power, Cor. 111,3,17. Misapplied byFluellen for rule, statute: H5 IV, 1, 67. PreregatlTed, privileged, exempt from certain evils: p. are they less than the base, Oth. Ill, 3, 274. P r e s a « e , subst. (présage or presdge), 1) prognostic: Ven. 457. Tw. Ill, 2, 69. John I, 28. Ill, 4, 158. 2) foreboding, presentiment : the sad augurs mock their own p. Sonn. 107,6. if hearts p. be not vain, R2 II, 2, 142. Presage, vb. (presàge), 1) to foreshow, to indicate prophetically: Merch. Ill, 2, 175. H6A IV, 1, 191. Bom. V, 1, 2. Caes. V, 1, 79. Lr. IV, 6, 121. Ant. I, 2, 47. 49. 2) to have a presentiment, to foresee prophetically: Merch. I, 1, 175. H6C IV, 6, 92. V, 1, 71. P r e t t i e r , one who, or that which, indicates something: let my books be then the eloquence and dumb —* of my speaking breast, Sonn. 23, 10. Prescience (priscience or prescience) foreknowledge; foresight: which in her p. she controlled still, Lncr. 727. by my p. I find my zenith doth depend upon a most auspicious star, Tp. I, 2, 180. count wisdom as no member of the war, forestall p. and esteem no act but that of hand, Troil. I, 3, 199. vex not his p. Ant. I, 2, 20 (jestingly used as a title belonging to the soothsayer). Preecrlbe, to set down authoritatively for direction: f . not us our duties, Lr. 1,1, 279. Used of the directions given by a physician: Wiv. II, 2, 249. B2 I, 1, 154. Tim. V, 4, 84. In Lr. 1, 2, 24 Ff — d, Qq and most M. Edd. subscribed. Prescript, subst. direction, order: and then I—s gave her, Hml. II, 2, 142 (Ff precepts'), do not exceed the p. of this scroll, Ant. Ill, 8, 5. Prescript, adj. set down as a rule, according to the canon (or = prescriptive, immemorial?): your mistress bears well. Me well; which is the p. praise and perfection of a good and particular mistress, H5 III, 7, 49. Prescription, 1) direction: I'll go along by your p. H8 1,1, 151. Particularly a medical direction, a recipe: Sonn. 147, 6. All's I, 3, 227. H4B I, 2, 147. Cor. II, 1, 127. Oth. I, 3, 310. 2) a right derived from immemorial custom: a pedigree of threescore and two years, a silly :ime to make p. for a kingdoms worth, H6C III, 3, 94. Presence, 1) the state of being in a certain place or company: we fairies that do run from the p. of the sun, Mids. V, 392. my p. may well abate the over-merry

894

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spleen, Shr. Ind. 1, 136. hü p. must be the whip of dart thy joints forget to pay their awful duty to our the other, All's IT, 3, 42. what p. must not lcnow, fromp.t R2 111, 3, 76. my p., like a robe pontifical, ne'er where you do remain, let paper show, R2 I, 3, 249 seen but wondered at, H4A III, 2, 56; cf. 39. 84; and ( = what cannot be ottered here where we are toge- Verges' blander in Ado 111, 5, 34. ther). John II, 542. IV, 3, 22. H4A 111, 2, 39. 84. 5) presence-chamber, state-room: suppose the grass H6A 111, 1, 181. H6B I, 1, 141. Ill, 2, 219. R3 I, whereon thou treadest the p. strewed, R2 I, 3, 289. Me 2, 58. Ill, 4, 26. H8 I, 1, 30. V, 5, 72. Tit. V, 3, 42. two great cardinals wait in the p. H8 III, 1, 17. her Mcb. Ill, 1, 15. Ill, 6, 22. Oth. Ill, 3, 281. A n t III, beauty makes this vault a feasting p. full of tight, Rom. 7, 11. Per. U, 3, 21. in the p. of: Meu.1,4, 11. H4A V, 3, 86. III, 2, 54. Cor. Ill, 3, 97. Caes. Ill, 1, 199. in p. of: Present, adj. 1) being in a certain place, not H6B I, 1, 6. R3 I, 3, 115. in your p. Merch. Ill, 4, absent: Lncr. 1696. Sonn. 47, 10. Tp. Ill, 3,35. As 1. Tw. II, 5,191. H6B III, 2, 238. H8 V, 3,124. Lr. III, 1,4. Wint. IV, 4, 274. R2 I, 3, 259. IV, 129. H6B IV, 3, 13. in p. = present, not absent: you were in V, 2, 87. R3 I, 3, 187. H8 I, 1, 8. II, 4, 95. Troil. p. then, B2 IV, 62. H4B IV, 4, 17. H5 I, 2, 2. II, 4, Ill, 3, 180. Tim. I, 1, 71. Ill, 6, 92. Mcb. Ill, 4, 41. 111. when he approacheth to your p. Gent. V, 4, 32 Cymb. IV, 2, 343. V, 5, 36. With at: All's III, 6, 29. ( = when he approaches yon). B6C 111, 3,44. crowd Wint. II, 2, 17. V, 2, 1. to his p. Meas. II, 4, 29 ( = round him), if you come 2) being at this time, not past or future: Ven. 970. in her p. Ado 1, 1, 124. H8 I, 2, 197. to come into Lucr. 632. Sonn. 106, 13. Tp. I, 2, 136. IV, 122. hü p. All's V, 1, 21. H6B V, 1, 65. H8 I, 4, 59. Gent. II, 1, 81. Meas. IV, 2, 151. Err. I, 2, 29. IV, tender your persons to his p. Wint. IV, 4, 827. desires 3, 88. V, 401. Ado I, 2, 15. L L L I, 1, 5. Merch. I, access to your high p. V, 1, 88. call them to our p. 1, 44. I, 3, 54. 141. IV, 1, 172. As V, 3, 31. Shr. R2 1, 1, 15. H6B III, 2, 15. R3 I, 3, 39. admitted to Ind 2, 22. All's II, 3, 306. IV, 3, 183. Tw. II, 3, 49. your p. Tit. V, 1,153. will not be denied your highness'III, 4, 377. V, 365. Wint. IV, 4, 145. V, 1, 32. 96. p. Ant. V,2,234. take him from our p. Cymb. V,5,301. John V, 1, 14. 77. B2 II, 1, 132. II, 3,14. H4A II, 4, Often = company: wherefore with infection should106. IV, 1,44. V, 1, 66. 88. H4B I, 1, 211. I, 3, 10. he live and with hü p. grace impiety 1 Sonn. 67, 2. re- 16. 36. 108. IV, 1, 83. 108. IV, 2, 74. IV, 5,153. H5 pair me with thy p. Gent. V, 4, 11. I promised your IV, 1, 18. R3 I, 1, 69. V, 1, 8. H8 I, 1, 206. 11,4, 154. p. and the chain, En-. IV, 1, 23. no marvel though De- 219. Ill, 2, 159. Troil. II, 2, 201. Cor. I, 1, 262. metrius do fly my p. Mids. II, 2, 97. from his p. I am 283. II, 2, 47. II, 3, 232. 257. IV, 6, 2. Rom. IV, 1, barred, Wint. Ill, 2, 98. be somewhat scanter of your 118. Caes. Ill, 1, 166. Mcb I, 3, 55. 137. II, 1,59. maiden p. Hml. I, 3, 121. heavens make our p. and Hml. 1, 1, 156. Lr. II, 1, 103. V, 3, 121. 318. Oth. our practices pleasant and helpful to him, 11,2,38. 1,1,156. 1, 3, 235. 11, 2, 10. 111, 4, 116. Ant. I, 2, Mids. Ill, 2, 80. Wint. I, 2, 38. K2 II, 3, 63. V, 3, 40. 128. I, 3, 52. I, 4, 32. 79. II, 2, 101. 140 ( = moTroil. Ill, 3, 28. Lr. I, 2, 176. mentary). Cymb. II, 4, 5. 151. IV, 3, 43. V, 4, 214. 2) Abstr. pro concr., = persons of rank assembled V, 5, 256. Per. V, 3, 40. Adverbially, = at present: in a place, noble company: p. majestical would put wherefore we are now p. here together, H8 II, 4, 202. him out, L L L V, 2, 102 (i. e. the princess being pre- you may salve so, not what is dangerous p., but the loss sent). here is like to be a good p. of Worthies, 536. of what is past, Cor. Ill, 2, 71. in such a p. here to plead my thoughts, Mids. I, 1, 61. 3) done or nsed on the spot, instant, immediate: it ill beseems this p. to cry aim, John II, 196. come I hindering their p. fall by this dividing, Lucr. 551. with appellant to this princely p. R2 I, 1, 34. the best in all circumstances strong of p. death, 1263. to afford some this p. IV, 32. 115. 117. H6A I, 1, 21. H6B I, 3,114. p. speed, 1307. do I not spend revenge upon myself H, 3,101. Ill, 2, 228. R3 I, 3, 54. II, 1, 58. 78. 84. with p. moan, Sonn. 149, 8. I'll make a p. recompense, HI, 4, 66. H8 IV, 2, 37 (i' the p. he would say untruths,Wir. IV, 6, 55. sign me a p. pardon, Meas. II, 4, 152. i. e. before the king and his court). Hml. V, 2, 239 a p. and a dangerous courtesy, IV, 2, 171. I will give (this p. knows). Ant. II, 2, 111. Per. II, 3,49. cf. him a p. shrift, 223. make p. satisfaction, Err. IV, 1, Cade's speech in H6B IV, 7, 32: be it known unto thee5. I am not furnished with the p. money, 84 (== I have by these p.; cf. As I, 2, 132. not the money about me, to pay you here at this 3) personal appearance, air, mien, port: be as thy instant; cf. Merch. I, 1, 179 and III, 2, 276). send p. is, gracious and kind, Sonn. 10, 11. bear a fair p., some p. help, V, 176. a p. remedy, Ado I, 3, 9. neither though your heart be tainted, Err. Ill, 2, 13. of such have I money nor commodity to raise a p. sum, Merch. enchanting p. and discourse, 166. which parti-coloured 1, 1, 179 ( = to be immediately paid), cf. Ill, 2, 276. p. of loose love put on by us, L L L V, 2, 776. now he beggars upon entreaty have a p. alms, Shr. IV, 3, 5. goes, with no less p., but with much more love, than 14. All's II, 2, 67. II, 5, 61. Wint. 1, 2, 281. II, 3, young Alcides, Merch. Ill, 2, 54. of excellent growth 184. Ill, 3, 4. IV, 2, 57. H4B IV, 1, 174. IV, 3, 80. and p. As I, 2, 130. how should I behold the sternness H5 11, 1, 112. 11, 4, 67. H6A 111, 4, 39. H6B V, 3, of his p. Wint. IV, 4, 24. your p. is too bold and per- 25. R3 IV, 5, 5. H8 I, 2, 211. Cor. Ill, 1, 212. Ill, emptory, H4A I, 3, 17. I will put on his p. Troil. Ill, 3, 21. IV, 3, 53. Tit. II, 3, 173. Rom. IV, 1, 61. V, 3, 272. show a fair p. and put off these Jrowns, Rom.1, 51. Tim. I, 1, 71. 11, 2, 154 (p. debts = instantly I, 5, 75. nature this dowry gave, to glad her p. Per. I, to be paid, due). 157. 111, 1,21. 111,2,39 (his p. I, 9. ü't not a goodly p.t V,l,66 (German: ein« schöne occasion, i. e. urgent). IV, 3, 527. V, 2, 4. Caes. II, Erscheinung). 2, 5. Mcb. I, 2, 64. Hml. IV, 3, 67. V, 1, 318. Lr. 4) person, personality, the whole of the personal I, 1, 195. Oth. I, 2, 90. Ill, 3, 47. Cymb. II, 4, 137. qualities of an individual: lord of thy p. and no land Per. IV Prol. 38. IV, 3, 136. V, 1, 193. beside, John I, 137. lord of our p., Angiers, and of Present, subst. 1) a gift, a donative: Tp. U, 2, you, II, 367. your royal —s be ruled by me, 377. how 72. Gent. Ill, 1, 92- IV, 2, 80. IV, 4, 7. 54. Wiv. II,

p 2, 206. Merch. II, 2, 108. 112. 114. H5 I, 2, 260. R3 I, 1, 120. Tit. IV, 1, 116. IV, 3, 75. Tim. 1, 2, 190. II, 2, 145. Ant. I, 5, 45. Cymb. 1, 6, 187. 208. 2) the present time: mothering his passions for the p. Lncr. Arg. 13. Mcb. Ill, 4, 31. crowning the p., doubting of the rest, Sonn. 115, 12. 123, 10. Tp. I, 1, 25. suck a one I teas this p. Tw. I, 5, 253 ( = this moment), many a man there is even at this p. Wint. I, 2, 192. make stale the glistering of this p. IV, 1, 14. Tm very sorry to sit here at this p. H8 V, 3, 9. no perfection in reversion shall have a praise in p. Troil. Ill, 2, 100. what they do in p., though less than yours in past, III, 3, 163. three talents on the p., in future ail, Tim. 1, 1,141. for this p. , I would not be any further moved, Cues. I, 2, 165. thy Utters have transported me beyond this ignorant p. Mcb. I, 5, 58. her son gone, so needful for this p. Cymb. IV, 3, 8. 3) an affair in hand, a question under consideration: use him for the p. and dismiss hat, Meas. IV, 2, 27 (i. e. for the present occasion), and that you not delay the p., but we prove this very hour, Cor. I, 6, 60. shall I be charged no further than this p. t must all determine heref III, 3, 42. this is from the p. Ant. II, 6, 30 (not to the pnrpose). 4) the money which a person has about him: Til make division of my p with you, Tw. Ill, 4, 380. 5) a mandate, a writing: what p. hast thou there t LLL IV, 3, 189. be it known unto all men by these —s, As 1,2,132 j cf. Cade's blnnder in H6BIV,7,32. P r e s e n t , vb. 1) to introduce: let's p. him to the duke like a Roman conqueror, As IV, 2, 3. thou shalt p. me as an eunuch to him, Tw. I, 2, 56. and there p. yourself and your fair princess fore Leontes, Wint. IV, 4, 555. 873. H6B V, 1, 59. H8 II, 2, 98. Lr. V, 3, 294. Cymb. Ill, 4, 176. 2) to offer: to take advantage on —ed joy, Ven. 405. a remedy —s itself, Meas. Ill, 1, 204. a blinking idiot —ing me a schedule, Merch. II, 9, 55. this theatre —s more woeful pageants, As II, 7, 138. we shall p. our services to a fine new prince, Wint. II, 1, 17. p. your hand, V, 3,107. the vilest stroke that ever staring rage —ed to the tears of soft remorse, John IV, 3, 50. within this coffin Ip. thy buried fear, R2 V, 6, 30. he —» no mark to the enemy, H4B III, 2, 284. IV, 1, 206. H6B V, 1,66. E3 IV, 4, 274. Cor. IV, 5, 101. V, 6, 31. Caes. I, 3,51. Ill, 2, 101. Mcb. Ill, 2,31. Lr. II, 3, 11. Oth. I, 3,124 ( = to lay before), to p. sth. to a person = to make a person a present of sth.: p. the fair steed to my lady Cressid, Troil. V, 5, 2. hath —ed to you four horses, Tim. I, 2, 188. V, 1, 19. 3) to show: jealousy —eth to mine eye the picture of a chafing boar, Ven. 661. this huge stage —eth nought but shows, Sonn. 15, 3. my souls imaginary sight — s thy shadow to my sightless view, 27, 10. thou —est a pure unstained prime, 70, 8. I will disease me and myself p. as I was sometime Milan, Tp. V, 85. the folly of my soul dares not p. itself, Wiy. II, 2, 253. the truth being known, we'll all p. ourselves, IV, 4, 63. to what end their shallow shows should be — ed at our tent to us, LLL V, 2, 307. As IV, 3, 104. Wint. II, I, 42. IV, 4, 67. John IV, 2, 266. H4A III, 1, 183. H5 IV Chor. 27. H8 I, 1, 30. Troil. Ill, 2, 81. Cor. Ill, 2, 1. Tim. IV, 3,192. 476. Caes. 11,1, 110. Oth. II, 1, 249. Per. I, 3, 30. II, 2, 3. 23. 4) to represent; a) to supply the place of: you are to p. the prince's own person, Ado III, 3, 79. the image

895

of the Icing whom I —ed, H4B V, 2, 79. the other (colour of oar hoase) his pale cheek - eth, H6C II, 5 100. b) to act, to perform: when 1—ed Ceres, Tp. IV, 167. must my sweet Nan p. the Fairy Queen, Wiy. IV, 6, 20. you shall p. the Nine Worthies, LLL V, 1, 124. 130. 132. 140. V, 2, 519. 537. 542. 592. Mids. III, 1, 62. 69. Ill, 2, 14. V, 132. 137. 157. 243. H5 V Chor. 6. H8 Prol. 5. Ant. V, 2, 217. 5) top. a person with sth. = to present sth. to a person: the ling would have me p. the princess with some delightful ostentation, LLL V, 1, 117. I do p. you with a man of mine, cunning in music and the mathematics, Sbr. II, 55. I did p. him with the Paris balls, H5 II, 4, 131. where I hope to be - ed by your victories with Charles, Alenfon, and that traitorous rout, H6A IV, 1,172. here comes the townsmen on procession, to p. your highness with the man, H6B II, 1, 69. and with his gifts p. your lordships, Tit. IV, 2, 14. 6) to accose, to bring an action against: you would p. her at the leet, because she brought stone jugs and no sealed quarts, Shr. Ind. 2, 89. P r e s e n t - a h i e n t , present and at the same time absent, being at the same time at different places: Sonn. 45, 4. Presentation, show, (deceptions) semblance: he uses his folly like a stalking-horse and under the p. of that he shoots his wit, As V, 4, 112. I called thee then poor shadow, painted queen, the p. of but what I was, R3 IV, 4, 84. Presently, immediately, on the spot: who in their pride do p. abuse it, Lncr. 864. the moon being clouded p. is missed, 1007. should p. extirpate me and mine, Tp. I, 2, 125. p.t Ay, with a twink, IV, 42. enforce them to this place, and p., I prithee, V, 101. when you fasted, it was p. after dinner, Gent II, 1, 30. I will send him hither to you p. II, 4, 86. and then I'll p. attend you, 189. II, 5, 9. II, 6, 36. II, 7, 83. 89. Ill, I, 42. Ill, 2, 91. IV, 2, 94. IV, 4, 45. 76. V, 2, 45. Wiy. Ill, 3, 95. IV, 2, 99. Mcas. HI, 1, 276. IV, 3, 82. 86. Err. Ill, 2, 152. IV, 1, 32. V, 31. Ado I, 1, 88. 308. 330. II, 2, 57. Ill, 1, 14. Ill, 3, 30. IV, 1, 253. V, 2, 102. V, 4, 71. Merch. I, 1, 183. II, 9, 3. IV, 1, 281 (Ff Qt.s.4 instantly). 387. 404. 455. As III, 2, 152. Shr. II, 108. IV, 4, 59. All's II, 3, 166. II,4,53. 11,5,69. 111,6,80. Tw. Ill, 4, 217. V, 176. Wint. II, 2, 47. V, 3, 86. John II, 538. V, 7, 86. R2 1, 4, 52. II, 2, 91. Ill, 1, 3. Ill, 2,179. H4A V, 2, 31. H4B II, 1, 190. II, 4, 401. H5 III, 2, 58. V, 2, 79. H6A 1,2,149. II, 3, 60. Ill, 2,34. V, 1,40. V, 2,13. 15. H6B I, 1, 171. I, 2, 60. 1, 3, 38. II, 1, 139. Ill, 2, 18. IV, 2, 128. IV, 7, 116. 137. H6C I, 2, 36. II, 2, 59. V, 1, 110. R3 1, 2, 213. Ill, 1, 34. Ill, 2, 16. H8 I, 2, 157. Ill, 2, 78. 229. V, 2,10. V, 4, 29. Troil. II, 3, 148. IV, 3, 6. Cor. II, 3, 261. Ill, 3, 12. IV, 5, 229. V, 2, 72. V, 6, 12». Tit. II, 3, 62. IV, 2, 166. IV, 4,45. V, 1,146. V, 5, 59. Rom. IV, 1, 54. 95. V, 1, 21. Tim. Ill, 5, 103. Ill, 6, 38. IV, 3, 378. Caes. III, 1, 28. 142. IV, 1, 45. IT, 3, 197. Mcb. IV, 3, 145. Bml. II, 2, 170. 620. Ill, 2, 63. 392. V, 2, 404. Lr. I, 2, 109. I, 4, 159. II, 4, 34. 118. V, 1, 33. Oth. Ill, 1, 38. V, 2, 52. Ant. II, 2, 161. Ill, 4, 15. Ill, 5, 22. Cymb. II, 3, 143. Ill, 2, 77. IV, 2, 166. Per. Ill, 1, 82. IV, 2, 58. The following passages may be taken in the modern sense of shortly, soon: Pilgr. 172. Gent. I, 2, 59. Wir. IV, 1, 3. Mid«. IV, 2, 37. Merch. I, 3, 177.

896

P

H, 6, 65. As II, 6, 11. R2 II, 2, 119. H4A III, 2, 3. wit, Ado 111, 1, 76. I am —ed to death through want IV, 3, 74. H5 II, 1, 93. Oth. II, 1, 215. II, 3, 310. of speaking, R2 III, 4, 72. p. it (the bed) to death, Troil. Ill, 2, 217. Metaphorically: do not p. my tongueAnt. Ill, 5, 8. Presentment, 1) presentation, the act of offering tied patience with too much disdain, Sonn. 140,1. griefs as a testimony of respect: when comet your book forth 1 of mine own lie heavy in my breast, which thou wilt propagate, to have it —ed with more of thine, Rom. I, 1, Upon the heels of my p. Tim. I, 1, 27. 2) representation, picture: the counterfeit p. of two 193. as if it —ed her breast, Lr. IV, 3, 28. I have this while with leaden thoughts been —ed, Oth. Ill, 4, brothers, Hml. Ill, 4, 54. Preservation, 1) the act of preserving, of keep- 177. With down: a pack of sorrows which would p. ing from injury or destruction: in their dear care you down ...to your timeless grave, Gent. Ill, 1, 20. and p. of our person, H5 II, 2, 59. by great p. we live I am —ed down with conceit, Err. IV, 2, 65. enow to to tdl it you, B3 111, 5, 36 (by the care of Providence). p. a royal merchant down, Merch. IV, 1, 29. b) to urge, to ply bard, to constrain: why should nature does require her times of p. H8 III, 2,147. those he stay, whom love doth p. to got Mids. Ill, 2, 184. (faces) for p. cased, Cymb. V, 3, 22. 2) the state of being preserved, escape from dan- you p. me far, and therefore I will yield, Mcrch. IV, ger, safety: our p. Tp. II, 1, 7. give us particulars of 1, 425. p. me not, beseech you, Wint. I, 2, 19. p. not thy p. V, 135. a falling man too far, H8 III, 2, 333. With from, = Preservative, a means of preserving life and to drive from, to keep from: what love could p. Lysander from my sidet Mids. Ill, 2, 185. that humour health: Cor. II, 1, 129. Preserve, 1) to keep in the same state, to defend that —s him from sleep, Wint II, 3, 39. from injury or destruction, to save; absol.: a choking c) to force into military service: R2 III, 2, 58. gall and a —ing sweet, Rom. I, 1, 200. Transitively: H4A IV, 2, 16. 22. 40. H6C II, 5, 64 (forth). 66. Cor. feeding on that which doth p. the ill, Sonn. 147, 3. a 1, 2, 9. Ill, 1, 122. cherubin that did p. me, Tp. I, 2, 153. prayers from 2) intr. a) to crowd, to throng: no humble suitors — d souls, Meas. II, 2, 153 (kept pure), to p. virgi- p. to speak for right, H6C III, 1, 19. many mazed connity, All's I, 1, 138. Tw. V, 263. Wint. I, 2, 328. V, siderings did throng and —ed in with this caution, H8 3, 124. 127. H4B II, 2, 103. IV, 5, 163. H6A IV, 5, II, 4, 186. it —es to my memory, like damned guilty 33. BUI, 1,301. B3 11,2,119. T i t III, 2, 2. V,3,110. deeds to sinners' minds, Rom. Ill, 2, 110. great men J>. II, 3, 6. IV, 6, 74. Oth. I, 3, 206. Ant. Ill, 4, 22. shall p. for tinctures, Caes. II, 2, 88. what suitors p. Cymb. V, 3, 58. Per. II, 2, 16. IV, 3, 15. V, 3, 57. to him, II, 4, 15. p. near and second him, III, 1, 29. p. With Jrom: to p. my sovereign from his foe, H6B III, not so upon me, III, 2. 171. I, 271. Oth. IV, 2, 84. Cymb. I, 4, 148. Per. V, 3, 89 b) to urge forward with force or importunity, to (O. Edd. preferred). Optatively: good angels p. the strain and strive eagerly: unless thy lady prove unking, Tp. II, 1, 307. Jesu p. thee, R2 V, 2, 17. H4B just, p. never thou to choose anew, Pilgr. 332. top. II, 4, 315. H5 IV, 7, 113. H6B I, 1, 162. I, 2, 70. with so little preparation upon you, Wiv. II, 2, 162. I R3 I, 3, 59. Cor. Ill, 3, 143. IV, 6, 20. Tim. I, 1, 162. p. in here amongst the rest, As V, 4, 57. flamens do p. Mcb. IV, 2, 72. Ant. V, 1,60. Per. IV, 6,114. V, 1, 14. among the throngs, Cor. II, 1, 230. to p. to heaven in 2) to condite, to pickle: to make perfumes, distil, my young days, Tit. IV, 3, 90. to p. before thy father p. Cymb. I, 5, 13. to a grave, Rom. V, 3, 215. Preserver, saver: Tp. V, 69. All'sII,3,53. Wint. Press - m e n e y , money given to one taken into IV, 4, 597. Cymb. V, 5, 2. military service: Lr. IV, 6, 87. President, chief, head, sovereign: and as the p. Pressure, impression, stamp, character impressof my kingdom, will appear there for a man, Ant. Ill, ed : ril wipe away ...all saws of books, all forms, 7, 18. all —s past, Hml. I, 5, 100. to show ...the very age Press, subst. 1) crowd, throng: Lucr. 1301. 1408. and body of the time his form and p. Ill, 2, 27. Joh V, 7, 19 ( = thronging). H8 IV, 1, 78. V, 4, 88. Prest, prompt, ready: lam p. unto it, Merch. 1,1, Caes. I, 2, 15. Cymb. II, 4, 72. 160. Dionyza hath the pregnant instrument of wrath p. 2) the machine for printing books: he cares not for this blow, Per. IV Prol. 45. Prest-bed, see Press vb. what he puts into the p. Wiv. II, 1, 80 (quibble between Prester, priest: P. John, Ado II, 1, 276; the printing and squeezing). title of a fabulous monarch supposed to have a great 3) a closet for the safe-keeping of clothes or other empire in the East. things: Wiv. HI, 3, 226. IV, 2, 62. Presume, 1) to suppose, to imagine: this gentle4) a commission to force men into military ser- man is happily arrived, my mind — s,for his own good vice : I have misused the king's p. damnably, I14A IV, and ours, Shr. I, 2, 214. I do p., sir, that you are not 2, 13. fallen from the report, All's V, 1, 12. p. not that I am Press, vb. 1) trans, a) to act on by weight, to be the thing I was, II4B V, 5, 60. O that I thought it could heavy on: now —ed with bearing, Ven. 430. he with be in a woman, as, if 1 can, I will p. in you, Troil. Ill, her plenty —ed, 545. with half that wish the wisher's 2, 166. I p. or I dare p. = I dare say: All's V, 1, 32. eyes be —ed, Mids. II, 2, 65. while thou on —ed R3 HI, 4, 21. H8 III, 2, 183. Troil. II, 2, 203. 213. flowers doest sleep, 111, 1, 162. on his —ed bed lolling, H6A IV, 1, 179. Oth. Ill, 3, 125 (Ql I dare p., the Troil. I, 3, 162. JFf prest-bed). p. one heavy bier, rest of 0 . Edd. I dare be sworn). Rom. Ill, 2, 60. the hag that —es them, I, 4, 93. Tar2) to be overconfident, to venture beyond license, quin thus dii softly p. the rushes, Cymb. II, 2, 13. her to be insolent: p. not, Shr. Ill, 1, 44. otherwise will breast, worthy the —ing, II, 4, 135. Allusions to an Henry ne'er p. H6A V, 5, 22. hadst thou been killed ancient kind of torture (peine forte et dure): —ing when first thou didst p. H6C V, 6, 35. With an inf., to death, Meas. V, 528. she would p. me to death with = to be so bold: Gent. I, 2, 42. Merch. II, 9, 39.

p

897

Shr. IV, 1, 96. H 6 A I, 1, 140. IV, 1, 44. V, 3, 185. Ado IV, 2, 85). I, 3,60. Cymb. Ill, 4,150. IV, 2, 398 H6C 111, 3, 178. Cor. I, 1, 195. Per. I, 1, 33. With etc. etc. = moderately great: a p. while, Lucr. 1233. on before the ground of confidence: —ing on an ague's my daughter's of a p. age, Rom. I, 3, 10. Used as a privilege, R2 II, 1, 116. Troil. IV, 4, 99. Cae». IV, term of endearment and supplying the place of dimi3, 63. Peculiar expression : p. not on thy heart when nutives: why, my p. ¡/outfit Gent. IV, 2, 58. Op. Isamine in tlain ; thou gavest me thine, not to give bacic bella, Meas. IV, 3, 157. piteous plainings of the p. again, Sonn. 22, 13 (evidently = do not lay claim to babes, Err. I, 1, 73; cf. R3 IV, 1, 101 and Mcb. IV, 3, thy heart). 216. p. soul, Mids. II, 2, 76. my —est Perdita, Wint. P r e a o m p t l s n , arrogance, insolence: All's II, 1, IV, 4, 595. p. traps to catch the petty thieves, H5 I, 2, 154. B 6 A II, 3, 70. H6B I, 2, 34. V, 1, 38. H6C IV, 177. my p. cousins, R3 II, 2, 8. my p. York, II, 4, 26 1, 114. V, 6, 34. (Ff young). 31. Op., p. pledge, Troil. V, 2, 77. what P r e r a m p t a e a s , arrogant, insolent: All's I, 3, hast thou there under thy cloak, p. Flaminiust Tim. Ill, 204. H 6 A 111, 1, 8. IV, 1, 125. H6B I, 2, 42. H6C I , 15. how now, my p. knave, Lr. I, 4, 107. the p. worm 1, 1, 157. of Nibts, Ant. V, 2, 243 etc. Ironically: that's a p. PrecnppaseJ, supposed or required as a previou? jest indeed, Wiv. Ill, 4, 59. there are p. orders begincondition : then earnest in smiling, and in such forms ning, Meas. II, 1, 249. lean tell thee p. tales of the which here were p. upon thee in the letter, T w . V, 358. duke, IV, 3, 175. 'tis p., sure, and very probable, As P r e a u r m l M , thought or suspicion previously HI, 5, 11. / thank your p. sweet wit for it, H4B I, 2, formed : it was your p. that in the dole of blows your 231. a p. plot, well chosen to build upon, H6B 1,4, 59. son might drop, H4B I, 1, 168. Substantively: I post unto my p. Pilgr. 201. may P r e t e n c e , 1) pretext: her p. is a pilyi image to breed thee, p. Wint. III, 3, 48. Saint Jaques, All's IV, 3, 57. under p. to see the queen P r e t t y , adv. in some degree, tolerably: I did think his aunt, B8 I, 1, 177. the p. for this is named your thee a p. wise fellow, All's II, 3, 212 (or adj.? . tear« in France, I, 2, 59. why hast thou abused so Pretty>T*oltlng(nothyphenedinO.Edd.)bonndmany miles with a p. Cymb. Ill, 4, 106. make p. of ing in an agreeable manner: the p. sea refused to wrong that I have done him, Per. I, 2, 91. drown me, H6B III, 2, 94. 2) intention, purpose, design : hath made me pubPrevail, to have the upperhand, to carry the viclisher of this p. Gent. HI, 1,47. the p. whereof being tory, to gain one's object, to overrule: a sin —ing laid open, Wint. Ill, 2, 18. to keep your great —» much in youthful men, Err. V, 52. God forbid any maveiled, Cor. I, 2, 20. against the undivulged p. I fight lice should p. H6B III, 2, 23. they shall no more p. than of treasonous malice, Mcb. II, 3, 137. he hath wrote we give way, H8 V, 1, 144. my practise so —ed, that this to no further p. of danger, Lr. I, 2, 95. which 1 returned with simular proof enough, Cymb. V, 5,199. I have rather blamed as mine own jealous curiosity Used of reasons, entreaties and the like, having effect: than as a very p. and purpose of unkindness. I, 4, 75. you have —ed, Gent. HI, 2, 46 ( = I will be ruled by P r e t e n d , 1) to assert: why shall we fight, if you you). V, 4, 158. Err. Ill, i , 107. no love-broker can p. no tide f H6C IV, 7, 57. whom you p. to honour and ' more p. than report of valour, Tw. 111, 2, 40. his ouadore, Tit. I, 42. thority, which often hath no less —ed than so, Wint. 2 ) to alledge falsely, to use as a pretext: —ing in II, 1, 54. if word nor oath p. not, go and see, HI, 2, her discoveries of dishonour, Meas. Ill, 1, 236. the con- 205. 1 shall sop. to force him after, IV, 4, 678. since tract you p. with that base wretch, Cymb. II, 3, 118. my office hath so far —ed, that ...you have congreeted, importuned me to temper poisons for her, still —ing H5 V, 2, 29. when a world of men could not p. with the satisfaction tf her knowledge, V, 5, 250. all their oratory, H6A II, 2, 49. I would p., if prayers 3 ) to intend, to mean: reward not hospitality with might p., to join your hearts, 111, 1, 67. thus Suffolk such black payment as thou hast —ed, Lncr. 576. their hath —ed, V, 5, 103. B6B IV, 2, 184. H6C IV, 6, 7. —ed flight, Gent. II, 6, 37. such as shall p. malicious Cor. V, 4, 43. Tit. I, 459. Ill, 1, 26. Caes. II, 2, 54. practices against his state, H 6 A IV, 1, 16. doth this Ant. IV, 5, 2. Cymb. III, 3, 66. Per. V, 1, 262. it churlish superscription p. some alteration in good willt (philosophy) helps not, it —s not, Bom. Ill, 3, 60 ( = 54 ( = mean), what good could theyp.t Mcb. II, 4, 24. has no effect), if wishes would p. with me, H5 111, 2, P r e t e x t (pretixt) motive assigned : my p. to strike 16 ( = if wishes, in my case, were of any avail; P i stol'» poetry). cf. Unprevailing. = to conquer an enemy, at him admits a good construction, Cor. V, 6, 20. P r e t t i l y , in a pleasing manner, neatly: Ven. 73. to be victorious: \J we p., their heads shall pay for it, Gent I, 2, 126. Mids. II, 2, 53. Wint. IV, 4, 377. R2 III, 2, 126. can you suffer hell so to p. t H 6 A I, 5, 9. sleeping or waking,must I still p.t 11,1,56. theDauphin H 6 A IV. 1, 175. R3 III, 1, 134. P r ê t t l n e » , a pleasing form and manner: H ml. hath —ed beyond the seas, H6B I, 3, 128. whose (justice's) rightful cause —s, II, 1, 205. thou hast —ed in IV, 5, 189. P r e t t y , adj. pleasing, neat, fine: Ven. 74. 242. right, II, 3, 101. sometime the flood —s, and then the Lucr. 1233. Sonn. 41, 1 (some M. Edd.petty; bnt cf. wind, H6C II, 5, 9. they nothing doubt —ing, Cor. I, Merch. II, 6, 37). 132, 4. 139, 10. Gent. II, 1, 122. 3, 111. but how —ed yout I, 6, 45. whose ministers W i v . I, 1, 46. I, 4, 146. 148. Ill, 2, 18. Err. Ill, 1, would p. under the service of a child, Ant. Ill, 13, 23. 110. A d o II, 3, 141. IV, 1, 99. IV, 2, 85 (cf. Rom. I, Used of success in love: when a woman wool, what 1, 34). L L L I, 2, 19. 22. V, 2, 97. Mids. II, 1, 130. woman's son will sourly leave her till she have — edt IV, 1, 60. Merch. II, 6, 37 (cf. Sonn. 41, 1). Ill, 4, 64 Sonn. 41, 8. how he did p. I shame to speak, John I, (cf. Wint. I, 2, 62). V, 21. As II, 4, 50. Shr. II, 188. 104. 'twas Reignier, king of Naples, that —ed, H 6 A All's I, 1, 103 ('twas p., to see him every hour). Wint. V, 4, 78. to understand you have —ed, Cymb. I, 4, 171. 1,2,62. IV, 4,156. 193. V,2,89. John 111,4, 95. R2III, With against, == to be victorious over: the spite 3, 165. H6C IV, 6, 70. R3 I, 1, 93. Rom. I, 1,34 (cf. of man —eth against me, H6B I, 3, «18. With on, =

898

P

to work npon efficaciously, to influence, to overcome: 46. Per. Prol. 35. With from: —ed from a damned they that tcere your enemies are his, and have —ed at enterprise, H5 II, 2, 164. much on him at you, R3 I, 1,131. have —ed upon my P r e T « t l * B , 1) something done before an emerbody with their hellish charmt. III, 4, 63. could it work gency, precaution: achievements, plots, orders, —s, to much upon your shape at it hath much —ed on your Troil. I, 3, 181. condition, I should not know you, Caes. II, 1, 254. tchat 2) hinderance by something done before: R2 II, false Italian hath — ed on thy too ready hearing t Cymb. I, 167. H5 I, 1, 21. II, 2, 158. H6B II, 4, 57. Caes. Ill, 2,5. With with, — to win, to gain the favour or II, 1, 85. Ill, 1,19. assent of: with her personage, her height, forsooth, she P r e y , subst 1) spoil, booty : rich —s make true hath —edwith him, Mi da. Ill, 2, 293. thy grave ad- men thieves, Ven. 724. the p. of every vulgar thief, monishments p. with me, H6A II, 5, 98. with whom an Sonn. 48, 8. reft the fishers of their p. Err. I, 1, 116. upright zeal to right —s more than the nature of a the French might have a good p. of us, H5 IV, 4, 81. brother's love, H6C V, 1, 78. did York's dread curse the rascal people, thirsting after p. H6B IV, 4, 51. p. so much with heaven, K3 I, 3, 191. he (the devil) Particularly that which carnivorous animals seize and cannot p. with me, I, 4, 155. the rabble should have feed on: Ven. 58. 63. 547. 1097. Lucr. 421. 677. 697. Hrst unroofed the city, ere so - ed with me, Cor. I, 1, Sonn. 74, 10. LLL IV, 1, 91. Merch. II, 1, 30. Tw. 223. most dangerously you have with him — ed, V, 3, III, 1, 139. H6A I, 2, 28. H6B V, 2, 11. H6C I, 3, 188. the ladies of Rome may p. with him, V, 4, 6. cf. 14. R3 IV, 4, 386. Tit. Ill, 1, 55. Caes. V, 1, 87. Ant. Tw. Ill, 2, 40. Ill, 13, 167. P r e T a l l m e n t , prevalence, superior influence: 2) one, or something, given up to another; a vicmessengers of strong p. in unhardened youth, Mids. I, tim: for his p. to pray he doth begin, Lucr. 342. the 1, 35. tenderness of her nature became as a p. to her grief, Prevent, 1) to come before, to anticipate, to be All's IV, 3, 61. give her as a p. to law and shame, beforehand with: I would have stayed till I had made H6B II, 1, 198. H6C 1, 1, 185. II, 3, 39. R3 IV, 4, you merry, if worthier friends had not —ed me, Merch. 106. Tit. IV, 2, 96. 1,1,61. I will answer you with gait and entrance. But 3) the act of preying, of catching and devouring we are —ed, Tw. Ill, 1, 94; cf. Per. V, 1, 64. but other creatures: an o'ergrown lion that goes not out to that I am —ed, I should have begged I might have p. Meas. I, 3, 23. methought a serpent eat my heart been employed, H6A IV, 1, 71. I must p. thee, Cimber, away, and you sat smiling at his cruel p. Mids. II, 2, Caes. HI, 1, 35. 1 do find it cowardly and vile, so to 150. the eagle England being in p. Ho I, 2, 169. night's p. the time of life, V, 1, 105. so shall my anticipation black agents to their —s do rouse, Mcb. Ill, 2, 53. dog p. your discovery, Hml. II, 2, 305. in madness, lion in p. Lr. Ill, 4, 97. subtle as the fox 2) to frustrate, to disappoint, to avoid, to escape: for p. Cymb. Ill, 3, 40. to make p. R3 I, 3, 71 (the I could p. this storm and shun thy wrack, Lucr. 966. later Qq may p.). Ill, 5, 84 (Ff make a p., Qq make give my love fame faster than time wastes life; so thou his p.). Troil. I, 3, 123. birds of p. Meas. II, 1, 2. —est his scythe and crooked knife, Sonn. 100, 14. to creatures of p. Wint. Ill, 3,13. beasts and birds of p. p. our maladies unseen, we sicken to shun sickness when Tit. V,3, 198. we purge, 118, 3. I would p. the loose encounters of Prey, vb. to chase and feed on animals: Ado V, lascivious men, Gent. II, 7, 40. that it wants matter to 3, 25. R3 I, 1, 133. I, 3, 71 (the later Qq may p.; p. so gross o'erreaching, Wiv. V, 5, 144. he comes the earlier Qq and Ff make p.). Tit. HI, 1, 55. Oth. armed in his fortune and —s the slander of his wife, III, 3, 263. With on: As IV, 3, 119. John V, 7, 15. As IV, 1, 61. she hath —ed me, Shr. V, 2, 49 (got out R2 II, 1, 39. H4A H, 1, 90. R3 IV, 4, 57. Hml. I, 5, of my way, escaped me). I could have well diverted 57. Lr. IV, 2, 49. Ant. Ill, 13, 199 (O. Edd. in reason). her intents, which thus she hath —ed, All's III, 4, 22. P r e y f u l , rich in prey, killing much game: LLL a disaster of war that Caesar himself could not have IV, 2, 58 (Qq Fl prayjull, F i praysfuU). —ed, III, 6, 56. many a good hanging —* a bad marP r i a m , the old king of Troy: Lucr. 1367. 1448. riage, Tw. I, 5, 20. which way to be —ed, Wint. I, 2, 1485. 1490. All's 1, 3, 77. H4B 1,1, 72. 74. H6C II, 405. p. the ways to wail, R2 III, 2, 179 (avoid), so 5, 120. Troil. Prol. 15. I, 1, 29 etc. Tit. 1,80. V, 3, both the degrees p. my curses, H4B I, 2, 259 (escape). 84. Hml. II, 2, 469. 486. 494. 501. 514. to p. the tyrant's violence, I'll hence forthwith unto the P r U m n « , the same: Troil. II, 2, 207. V, 3, 54. sanctuary, H6C IV, 4, 29. for I, too fond, might have P r l a p n s , an ancient god the characteristic of —ed this, R3 III, 4, 83. how shall this be —edf Rom. whose statue' was an erected yard: to freeze the god Ill, 5, 206. IV, 1, 51. 70. I'll teach them to p. wild P. Per. IV, 6, 4. Alcibiades' wrath, Tim. V, 1, 206. to p. the fiend and Prlbbles, a word of Evans' making: p. and prabto kill vermin, Lr. Ill, 4, 164. you are come a market- bles = idle prattle and quarrelling, Wiv. 1, 1, 56. V, maid to Rome and have —ed the ostentation of our love, 5, 168. Ant 111,6,51. Price, 1) the sum paid for a thing, or at which 3) to hinder by something done before, to obviate: it is valued: Ven. 551. Ado III, 3, 122. LLL III, 139. which cunning love did wittily p. Ven. 471. this vile Merch. Ill, 5, 26. H4A II, 1, 14. H5 II, 2, 154. HI, purpose lop. Lucr. 220. thou didst p. me, Tp. I, 2, 350. 6, 47. Cor. II, 3, 79. 81. Rom. Ill, 1, 188. Oth. IV, Wiv. II, 1, 121. II, 2, 325. Ado III, 2, 136. John I, 3, 69. Per. IV, 2, 54. At before it: we can afford no 35. R2 IV, 148. V, 2, 55. B4A IV, 4, 35. H6C IV, more at such a p. LLL V, 2, 223. All's IV, 3, 309. V, 6, 96. R3 II, 2, 131. II, 3, 26. Ill, 5, 55. Troil. IV, 3, 190. Tw. Ill, 4, 252. Cor. I, 1, 11. Ill, 3, 91. T i t 4, 38. Cor. IV, 6, 36. Caes. II, 1, 28 (then, lest he may, III, 1, 199. p.). 160. Hml. HI, 1, 175. Lr. I, 1, 46. Lr. Ill, 7, 83 2) worth, value: happy news of p. H4B V, 3, 100 (lest it see more, p. it). Ant. IV, 12, 42. Cymb. V, 5, (Pistol's speech), a pearl, whose p. hath launched above

p

899

P r i c k - e a r e d , having pointed ears: p. cur of Icea thousand ships, Troil. II, 2, 82. if he overhold hit p. II, 3, 142. Rom. IV, 1, 27. Lr. 1, 1, 200. Oth. I, land, H 5 II, 1, 44. P r i c k e t , a bnck in his second y e a r : L L L IV, 2, 1, 11. Cymb. I, 1, 51. 3) estimation: held in idle p. to haunt assemblies, 12. 22. 48. 53. 58. 61. P r i c k l e , the thorn of a rose: Ven. 574. Meas. I, 3, 9. our rash faults make trivial p. of serious P r i c k - s e n s , music sang from notes: Rom. II, 4, things we have, All's V, 3, 61. falls into abatement and 21 (he fights as you sing p.; German: nach Noten). low p. Tw. I, 1, 13. Pride, 1) splendid show, beauty displayed, ornaP r i c e l e s s , inestimable: Lucr. 17. P r i c k , snbst. 1) a prickle: hedgehogs mount their ment: began to clothe his wit in state and p. Lncr. — s , T p . II, 2, 12. he that sweetest rose will find must 1809. in themselves their p. lies buried, Sonn. 25, 7. find love's p. and Rosalind, A s III, 2, 118 (obscene new unfolding his imprisoned p. 5 2 , 1 2 . why is my verse so barren of new p.t 76, 1 . he of tall building and of quibbling), pins, wooden —s, nails, L r . II, 3, 16. 2) an impression or hurt made by a prickle, a goodly p. 80, 12. the purple p. that on thy (the violet's) sting, stitch: she is too hard for you at — s , L L L IV, soft cheek dwells, 99, 3. having such a scope to show 1, 140. live honestly by the p. of their needles, H 5 II, her p. 103, 2. three winters cold have from the forests 1,36. my conscience first received a tenderness, scruple, shook three summers' p. 104, 4. her hair, nor loot» nor and p. H8 II, 4, 171. / feel this pin p. L r . IV, 7, 56 tied in formal plat, proclaimed in her a careless hand of p. Compl. 3 0 ( = a band careless of ornament). (or verb ?). 3) a m a r k : ere he arrive his weary noontide p. livery falseness in a p. of truth, 105. the madams did Lacr. 781. made an evening at the noontide p. H6C I, almost sweat to bear the p. upon them, H8 I, 1, 25. let 4, 34. the bawdy hand of the dial is now upon the p. two more summers wither in their p. Rom. I, 2, 10. 'tis of noon, R o m . II, 4, 119. = the point in the centre much p. for fair without the fair within to hide, I, 3, of the butts: let the mark have a p. in't, L L L IV, 89 (it is a great ornament of external beanty, to enclose internal excellence^. 1, 134. 4) a small roll: in such indexes, although small 2) state of being at the highest pitch: while lust —s to their subsequent volumes, Troil. 1, 3, 343. is in his p. Lncr. 705. in the very heat and p. of their 5) By way of quibbling, = the privy member: contention, H4A I, 1, 60. a falcon towering in her p. L L L IV, 1, 134. 140. As III, 2, 118. Rom. 11,4, 119. of place, Mcb. 11,4,12. Hence — prime, glory: thou loathed in their shame, they in thy p. Lncr. 662. in p. Perhaps also in H 5 11,1, 36. P r i c k , vb. l ) t o pierce or wound as with a prickle, of all his growth a vengeful canker eat him up to death, to sting: the —ing spur, Ven. 285. the needle hi* finger Sonn. 99, 12. having thee, of all men's p. I boast, 91, —s, Lucr. 319. T p . IV, 180. A d o III, 4, 76. L L L II, 12. O short-lived p. I not fair? L L L IV, 1, 15. let's 189. IV, 2, 58. Merch. Ill, 1, 67. All's IV, 2, 19. J o h n die in p. H6A IV, 6, 57. there died my Icarus, my V, 7, 17. H 4 B II, 2, 121. Ill, 2, 186. 190. H5 II, 1, blossom, in his p. IV, 7, 16. I cannot flatter thee in p. 61. H6A II, 4, 49. H 6 C 1,4, 65. V , 5 , 1 3 . Cor. I, 3, H 6 B I, 3, 169 (cf. Oth. Ill, 3, 404). thus Eleanor's 96. Rom. I, 4, 26. 28. Mcb. V, 3, 14. Hml. I, 5, 88. p. diet in her youngest days, H 6 B II, 3, 46. mowed Lr. IV, 7, 56 (or snbst.?). Cymb. I, 1, 168. if honour down in topi of all their p. H6C V, 7, 4. Richard falls p. me o f f , H4A V, 1 , 1 3 2 ( = stab me, kill me; quib- in height of aU hit p. R 3 V, 3, 176. my high-blown p. bling). a little worm —ed from the lazy finger of a at length broke under me, H8 III, 2, 361. whose eatymaid, Rom. I, 4, 66 ( = picked with a needle. T h e borrowedp. dwells in the fickle grace of her he followt, surreptitious Q l and some M. Edd. picked), by the Lr. II, 4, 188. p., pomp and circumstance of glorious — ing of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes, war, Oth. 111,3,354. Mcb. IV, 1, 44 ( = a pricking sensation, an itching). = exuberance of animal spirits, mettle, fire: the 2) to g o a d , to s p n r , to incite: tome odd humour colt that's backed and burdened being young loseth his —s him to this fashion, Shr. HI, 2, 75. and p. my ten- p. and never waxeth strong, Ven. 420. their (the horder patience to those thoughts. R 2 II, 1, 207. Caes. II, ses') p. and mettle is asleep, H 4 A IV, 3, 22. as their 1, 124. Mcb. I, 7, 26. Oth. Ill, 3, 412. W i t h on: my captain, so their p. doth grow, Lncr. 298. 432. the duty —s me on to utter that, Gent. Ill, 1, 8. L L L 1, 1, tide boundeth in his p. 1669. wert thou the unicorn, 269. R 2 II, 3, 78. H 4 A V, 1, 131. H6A III, 2, 78. p. and wrath would confound thee, T i m . IV, 3, 339. Hml. I, 1 , 8 3 . Hence = lust, eager sexual desire: his hand, smoking 31 to erect, to point: they —ed their ears, T p . with p. Lucr. 438. wooing hit purity with her foul p. IV, 176. Sonn. 144, 8. proud of this p. he is contented thy poor 4) to stick by means of a pin: the humour of forty drudge to be, to stand in thy affairs, fall by thy side, fancies —ed in it for a feather, Shr. Ill, 2, 70. 151, 10 (the words stand and fall cannot be under5) to designate by a puncture, to choose, to m a r k : stood too literally), hit heart, like an agate, with your she —ed thee out for women's pleasure, S o n n . 2 0 , 1 3 . print impressed, proud with his form, tn his eye p. exthe whole world again cannot p. out five such, L L L V, pressed, L L L II, 237. as salt as wolves in p. Oth. Ill, 2 , 548 (Ql pick), the fiend hath —ed down Bardolph 3, 404. irrecoverable, H 4 B II, 4, 359. p. him, III, 2, 121. 125. = wantonness, extravagance: leaves it (his gold) 144. 153 (down). 156. 162. 171. 186. 190. will you to be mastered by his young, who in their p. do presently be —ed in number of our friends 1 Caes. Ill, 1, 216. abuse it, Lucr. 864. now much beshrew my manners their names are —ed, IV, 1, 1. p. him down, 3. who and my p., if Bermia meant to say Lysander lied, should be —ed to die, 16. Mids. II, 2, 54. ambitions, covetings, change of—s, 6) to dress n p , to t r i m : I was — ed well enough disdain, Cymb. II, 5, 25 ( = one excess changed for before, H4B III, 2, 122. p. him no more, 156. if he another). Hence = impertinence, Impudence: advance their p. against that power that bred it, Ado III, had bee» a man's tailor, he'Id ha' —ed you, 164.

900

P

1, 10. to abide thy kingly doom and sentence of his p. pero the p. duke, Tp. I, 2, 72. my p. request, 425. R2 V, 6, 23. suck is thy audacious wickedness, Ay from the p. creation, R3 IV, 3, 19. the p. man of the lewd, pestiferous and dissentious pranks, as very in- state, H8 HI, 2, 162. to such proceeding who ever but fants prattle of thy p. H6A HI, 1, 16. chastised with his approbation added, though not his p. consent, Per. arms our enemies' p. T i t I, 33. with strained p. to IV, 3, 27. Comp. and Snperl.: there is no —r busicome between our sentence and our power, Lr. I, 1, 172.ness, H8 I, 2, 67 (more important), the —st creature, = force strained to the utmost, full power: could II, 4, 229. entertain with half their forces the full p. of France, H5 2) rnttish (like beasts in spring-time): were they I, 2, 112. hardly we escaped the p. of France, H6A as p. as goats, as hot as monkeys, Oth. Ill, 3, 403. 111,2,40. and fromthe p. of Gallia rescued thee, IV, 6,15. Prime, snbst 1) height of perfection, flower of 3) self-esteem, mostly in a bad sense, haughtiness, life: flowers that are not gathered in their p. Ven. 131. arrogance: Ven. 278. Err. IV, 3, 81. L L L II, 36. As they wither in their p. 418. sith in his p. Death doth my 1, 2, 264. II, 7, 70. Ill, 5, 114. All's I, 2, 37. R2 I, love destroy, 1163. the lovely April of her p. Sonn. 3, 3, 129. Ill, 2, 81. IV, 206. V, 5, 22. 88. H4A I, 1, 10. past p. 12, 3. a pure unstained p. 70, 8. losing 92. Ill, 1,185. H4B IV, 5,171. H5 V Chor. 20. H6B this verdure even in the p. Gent. I, 1, 49. love is 1, 1, 172. 180. 201. I, 3, 179. II, 2, 71. IV, 1, 60. crowned with the p. in spring time, As V, 3, 33. all H6C II, 2, 159. H8 I, 1, 68. II, 2, 82. II, 4, 110. that happiness and p. can happy call, All's 11, 1, 185. Troil. 1, 3, 316. 371. 391. II, 3, 95. 162. 165. 181. come to p. R2 V, 2, 51. the p. of youth, H6C II, 1, 23. 215. 228. HI, 3, 45. 47. 136. IV, 5, 79. 82. Cor. II, cropped the golden p. of this sweet prince, R3I,2,248. 1, 22. 28. 42. II, 3, 227. Ill, 2, 126. IV, 6, 31. IV, thy p. of manhood, IV,4,170. inmy p.of youth, V,3.119. 7, 37. V, 3, 170. Tit. IV, 3, 62. Tim. IV, 3, 240. 2) the spring of the year: to add a more rejoicing Hml. 1, 1, 83. Oth. 1, 1,12. II, 3, 98. Cymb. II, 4, 72. to the p. Lncr. 332. bearing the wanton burden of the Per. I, 4, 30. to take p. = to be prond, to glory in p. Sonn. 97, 7. sth.: my gravity, wherein I take p. Meas. II, 4, 10. men Primer*, a game at cards now unknown: Wiv. of all sorts take a p. to gird at me, H4B I, 2, 7. took IV, 5, 104. H8 V, 1, 7. some p. to do myself this wrong, Cor. V, 6, 37. = the Primitive, original, archetypal: the p. statue of thing of which men are prond: As III, 2, 81. H4A cuckolds, Troil. V, 1, 60. I, 1, 83. Prim »genitive, the right of primogeniture: the 4) cold selfishness, nnkindness: in thy p. so fair a p. and due of birth, Troil. I, 3, 106 (Q primogenitie). hfipe is slain, Ven. 762. this p. of hers, Gent. Ill, 1, Prlmrase, the flower Primula: Wint. IV, 4, 122. 72. stand I condemned for p. and scorn so muchl Ado H6B III, 2, 63. Cymb. I, 5, 83. IV, 2, 221. AdjectiveIII, 1, 108. 109. maugre all thy p., nor wit nor reason ly: this p. bank, Ven. 151. p. beds, Uids. I, 1, 215. can my passion hide, Tw. Ill, 1, 163. let p., which she go the p. way to the everlasting bonfire, Mcb. II, 3, 21. calls plainness, marry her, Lr. I, 1,131. fall and blast the p. path of dalliance, Hml. I, 3, 50. her p. 11,4, 170. cf. also As III, 5, 114. P r l m y , being in its prime, flourishing: a violet Priest, one who officiates at the altar of any dei- in the youth of p. nature, Hml. I, 3, 7. ty; a clergyman: Phoen. 13. Wiv. I, 4, 116. 123. Prince, snbst. 1) a ruler of a state, a sovereign: II, 1, 149. 209. II, 3, 32. 65. Ill, 1, 106. IV, 6, 31. Lucr. 615. Sonn. 25, 5. Tp. I, 2, 55. V, 108. Gent. 53. Ado III, 3, 144. As 111, 2, 337. Ill, 3, 86. IV, 1, III, 1, 10. Meas. I, 3, 45. V, 22. 48. 57. 224. 375. 124. 140. V, 1, 3. Shr. Ill, 2, 5. 160. 163. 166. IV, 387. 530. Err. I, 1, 145. V, 162 etc. etc. the black 4, 88. 94. 103. V, 1, 1. All's II, 3, 286. Tw. Ill, 4, p., alias the p. of darkness, All's IV, 5, 44. P. Lucifer, 298. V, 350. Wint. Ill, 2, 129. IV, 4, 469. John III, John IV, 3, 122. the p. of fiends, H5 III, 3, 16. p. of 1, 153. 163. R2 IV, 173. H5 IV, 1, 318. H6A I, 3, plackets, L L L 111, 186. p. of cats, Rom. II, 4, 19. the 30. 47. I, 6, 19. Ill, 1, 8. 45. 120. V, 4, 23. H6B II, p. of palfreys, H5 III, 7, 29. the p. of chivalry, Troil. 1, 51. II, 4, 53. Ill, 1, 272. 274. V, 2, 71. R3 III, 2, I, 2, 249. 114. Ill, 4, 89. H8 II, 2, 21. 82. 97. Ill, 2, 252. 276. 2) a male member of a royal family: Tp. I, 1, 57. Troil. 1, 2, 245. II, 2, 37. IV, 3, 9. Cor. I, 10, 21. II, HI, 1,60. Wiv. Ill, 2, 74. Ado IV, 1, 164. 165. Wint. 1, 93. Tit. I, 323. 488. Tim. IV, 3, 31. 125. Caes. II, 1, 2, 164. 330. II, 1, 17. Ill, 2, 41. 145. IV, 2, 29 1, 129. II, 2, 5. Hml. V, 1, 263. Lr. Ill, 2, 81. Cvmb. (the P. Florizel) etc. etc. P. of Wales: R2 II, 1, 172. IV, 2, 242. Per. IV, 6, 13. H4A 11, 4, 10. R3 I, 3, 199. the Black P. (eldest son Fem., = priestess: live,like Diana's p., between cold of Edward 111): R2 II, 3, 101. H5 1, 2, 105. H6B II, sheets, Cymb. I, 6, 133. my maiden —s, Per. V, 1, 243.2, 11. — s = lords: Ado V, 1, 277. John V, 7, 97. Prlesthaad, the character of a priest: H6B II, 115. H5 IV, 1, 25. H8 11,2,48. 1, 23. H6C I, 3, 3. Plnr. —s including both sexes: these two —s, if Prlest-llke, 1) adj.: our p. fasts, Cor. V, 1, 56. you marry them, John II, 445. young —s, close your 2) adv.: wherein p. thou hast cleansed my bosom, Wint.hands, 533. Therefore we ought perhaps to read in 1, 2, 237. Tp. I, 2, 173: made thee more profit than other —s P r i e s t l y , sacerdotal: whiles I say a p. farewell can; O. Edd. princesse; most M. Edd. princesses to her, Per. Ill, 1, 70. against the metre. (Prince sometimes fem. with the Prig, a thief: Wint. IV, 3, 108. contemporaries of Sh.; f. i. in Greene's Pandosto, ed. Primal, first; it hath the p. eldest curse upon't, Collier, p. 15: alas, Bellaria, better thou hadst been Hml. Ill, 3, 37. it hath been taught us from the p. state,born a beggar than a prince, p. 20: seeing she was a Ant. I, 4, 41. prince she ought to be tried by her peers). Prlmater for pia mater, q. v.; reading of O. Edd. Prince, vb., with if, •= to play the prince: nain L L L IV, 2, 71. ture prompts them in simple and low things to p. it much Prime, adj. 1) first vin time or excellence): Pros- beyond the trick of others, Cymb. Ill, 3, 85.

p

901

2) a person of the highest dignity, superior to P r i n c e - l i k e , becoming a prince: the wrongs he other men: if not divine, yet let her be a p., sovereign did me were nothing p. Cymb. V, 5, 293. P r i n c e l y , 1) pertaining to, or coming from, a to all the creatures on the earth, Gent. II, 4, 152 (acprince: woundest his p. name, Lncr. 599. thy p. office, cording to some commentators, = an angel of the 628. hid my p. trunk, Tp. 1, 2, 86. his p. feet before, first order). Principle, a truth, a rule: these warlike—s do LLL IV, 1, 92. your p. knee, R2 III, 3, 190. p. favour, V, 6, 42. H4A 111, 2, 17. 86. H4B IV, 2, 66. H5 I, 2, not throw from you, All's II, 1, 1. that need must needs 171. H6A V, 3, 143. 176. H6B V, 1, 98. E3 II, 2, infer this p. that faith would live again by death of need, John HI, 1, 213. if 1 had a thousand sons, the 51. H8 IV, 2, 118. Cymb. Ill, 3, 93. 2) of the rank of princes (and bence = high, first humane p. I would teach them should be, to foraugust, royal): her p. guest, Lncr. 90. these p. suitors, swear thin potations, H4B IV, 3, 133. Princax, a pert boy, an impertinent: you are a Merch. I, 2, 38. thy p. son, John II, 484. IV, 3, 35. R2 I, 1, 34. H4B II, 2, 58. IV, 1, 141. H5 V, 2, 4. p., go, Bom. I, 5, 88. P r i n t , subst 1) any mark made by impression: B 6 A II, 2, 34. Ill, 1, 173. Ill, 3, 38. IV, 1. 18. IV, 3, 17. V, 3, 152. H6B I, 1, 72. IV, 1, 91. H6C I, 1, his tenderer cheek receives her soft hand'sp. Yen. 353. 166. II, 1, 1. II, 6, 51. V, 7, 27. B3 I, 3, 280. I, 4, which any p. of goodness wilt not take, Tp. I, 2, 352. 228. 241. 11, 1, 29. 41. 47. 53. HI, 1, 34. Ill, 2, 70. Meas. II, 4, 130. Ado I, 1, 203. LLL II, 236. John Ill, 3, 20. HI, 5, 88. IV, 4, 405. IV, 5, 6. Troil. IV, IV, 3 , 2 6 . Cymb. II, 3, 48. 5, 174. Tit. I, 429. Cymb. Ill, 4, 93. IV, 2 , 1 7 1 . 249. 2) typographical writing: we quarrel in p., by the book, As V, 4, 94. although the p. be little, Wint. n, 3, V, 5, 360. 473. Per. I, 3, 33. 3) becoming a prince: a p. testimony! Ado IV, 1, 98. Hove a ballad in p. IV, 4, 264. in p. = to the 317. his p. exercises, Wint. IV, 2 , 3 7 . p. liberty, H6A letter, accurately: all this I speak in p., for in p. 1 V, 3, 140. p. care, H8 V, 1, 49. V, 5, 26. Tit. 1,266. found it, Gent. II, 1, 175. I will do it, sir, in p. LLL 272. Per. I, 2, 100. Ill, 3, 16. III, 173. 4) high-minded, noble: his p. heart. John I, 267. P r i n t , vb. 1) to form by impression, to stamp: that young and p. gentleman, R2 II, 1, 175. trimmed the story that is —ed in her blood, Ado IV, 1, 124 up your praises with a p. tongue, H4A V, 2, 57. as (with the stain of which her blood is polluted). —ing full of valour as of kindness, p. in both, H5 IV, 3, 16. their hoofs in the earth, H5 Prol. 27. could this kiss he was most p. H8 IV, 2, 57. H6C II, 1, 91. V, 2,12. be —ed in thy hand, H6B III, 2, 343. heaven guide thy Troil. IV, 5, 279, Ant. V, 2, 22. pen top. thy sorrows plain, Tit. IV, 1, 7b. 5) magnificent, majestic: her p. gait, Shr. II, 261. 2) to make books by means of the press; intr.: too precious p. for a grave, John IV, 3, 40. beauty's thou hast caused —ing to be used, H6B IV, 7, 39. p. majesty is such, H6A V, 3, 70. most p. gifts, Cor. Trans.: thou shouldst p. more, not let that copy die, 1, 9, 80. Sonn. 11, 14. he will p. them, Wiv. II, 1, 79. she did Adverbially: my appetite was not p. got, H4B II, p. your royal father o f f , conceiving you, Wint. V, 1, 125 2, 12. (cf. II, 3, 98). Princes« (O. Edd. princesse), 1) a female sovePrlntleM, leaving no trace: Tp. V, 34. reign, or the consort of a sovereign: Lncr. 721. H8 P r t o r e n , a female superior of a convent of nnns: V, 5, 58. Lr. IV, 7, 29. Ant. V, 2, 329. Meas. 1,4,11. 2) the daughter of a sovereign, or the consort of Priority, precedence, superior rank: Troil. I, 3, his son: Tp. I, 2, 59. LLL I, 1, 141. II, 90.150. 172. 86. Cor. 1,1,251. V, 1, 93 etc. As I, 2, 175. 11, 2, 10. Wint. II, 3, 78 Priary, a convent nnder the superintendence of (used of a babe, and neuter). IV, 4, 555. 562. V, 1, a prior or prioress: Err. V, 37. John 1,48. 86. H6A V, 3, 110. H8 III, 2, 70; IV, 1, 23 (p. dowPriaclan, name of a Latin grammarian: LLL V, ager). V, 4, 91. Cymb. V, 2, 3 etc. let me kiss this 1, 31. p. of pure white (your hand), this seal of bliss, Mids. Priscr, see Prixer. HI, 2, 144 (cf. prince, and Ant. Ill, 13, 125). Used Prlsan, subst. a place of confinement: Lucr. 119. in flattery as a familiar compellation: Tw. Ill, 1,108. 379. 1726. Tp. 1, 2,362. 490. 493. Gent. III, 1,235 V, 307. (closep.). Meas. 11,3,6. 111,2,74. IV,2,9.156. IV,3,73. Seemingly not inflected in the plural: Tp. I, 2, V, 135 and 331 (at the p.). 470. Eit. IV, 3 , 1 7 . Mids. 173, but cf. prince. In As I, 2, 175 some M. Edd. the I, 2, 36. Tw. IV, 2,21. Wint. II, 2, 1. John III, 4, 19. princess' call for you, bat O. Edd. the princesse cals IV, 3, 34. V, 2, 143. R2 V, 5, 2. 21. H4B V, 5, 36. H5 for you. 1, 2, 243. H6A IV, 7, 58. H6B II, 4, 110. H6C II, 1, Principal, adj. chief: Lncr. Arg. 5. As III, 2, 74. R3 III, 3, 9. Tit. I, 99. II, 3, 283. Ill, 2,10. Tim. 369. 371. H6C III, 1, 4. IV, 3, 537. Hml. II, 2, 249. Lr. V, 3, 18. 253. Ant. Principal, subst. 1) a capital snm lent on inte- V, 2, 185 (make not your thoughts your —s). Cymb. rest: Merch. IV, 1, 26. 336. 342. All's I, 1, 161. HI, 3, 34. Without the article, = state of imprison2) abettor, accomplice: what she should shame to ment: has deserved p. Wint. II, 1, 120. I had the most know herself but with her most vile p. Wint. II, 1, 92. of them out of p. H4A IV, 2, 45. H6B IV, 9, 42. Tim. 3) employer: hath your p. made known unto you Ill, 3, 4. in p.: Meas. I, 4, 25. IV, 2, 148. Wint. II, who I ami Per. IV, 6, 89. 91. 2, 4. H6A II, 5, 116. H6C I, 3, 43. Ill, 2, 70. Hml. 4) a corner-poet of a bouse: the very —s did seem III, 2, 229. cast in p. Cymb. Ill, 2, 38. put in p. H6B to rend, Per. Ill, 2, 16. IV, 7, 48. Cor. IV, 6, 38. shut up in p. Rom. I, 2, 56. P r i n c i p a l i t y , 1) a country ruled by a prince: out of p.: John IV, 1, 17. H8 I, 2, 201. to p.: Meas. he will fill thy wishes to the brim with —es, Ant. Ill, I, 2, 61. 66. 118. 121. Ill, 2, 32. 64. 201. 218. V, 13, 19. 121. 326. Err. IV, 1,108. LLL I, 2, 163. Shr. V, 1,

902

P

98. 100. All's V, 3, 283. W i o t . II, 1, 103. H4B V, 2, the king employed 1 I left him p., full of sad thoughts 70. H6B I, 3, 223. II, 3, 5. Bom. Ill, 2,58. Hml. II, and troubles, H8 II, 2, 15. how dare you thrust your2, 246. Lr. V, 3, 8. 27. Oth. I, 2, 85. selves into ay p. meditations f 66. and p. in his chamber P r l a a a , vb. to confine, to restrain from liberty: pens himself, Bom. I, 1, 144. a lily — ed in a gaol of snow, Ven. 362. her tears ... 2 ) particular (opposed to general): when every p. being —ed in her eye ¡He pearls in ¡flat», 980. his widow may keep her husband's shape in mind, Sonn. true respect will p. false desire, Lncr. 642. p. my heart 9, 7 (whereas thy widow is the world at large), who in thy steel bosom's ward, Sonn. 133, 9. universal cries on pride, that can therein tax any p. party t A s plodding —i up the nimble spirits in the arteries, L L L II, 7, 71. IV, 3, 305 (O. Edd. poisons), the —ed bird, Cymb. 3) personal, respecting particular individnals(opp. III, 3, 43. to public): thy secret pleasure turns to open shame, P r i M B e r , 1) one confined, whether by legal ar- thy p. feasting to a public fast, Lucr. 891. why should rest, or m taken by an enemy: Ven. 110. Sonn. 5, the p. pleasure of some one become the public plague 10. T p . V, 9. Gent II, 4, 92. Meas. Ill, 2, 264. 272. of many moe? 1478. to plague a p. sin in general, IV, 2, 135. IV, 3, 70. V, 492. Err. IV, 4,113.115. A d o 1484. the p. wound is deepest, Gent. V, 4, 71. had V, 1, 328. L L L I, 2, 168. A s III, 2, 390. Wint. I, 2, you a special warrant for the deedt No, my good lord, 55. 57. 1!, 2, 28. John III, 4, 75. 123. H 4 A I, 1, 92. it was by p. message, Meas. V, 465. one in the prison, I, 3, 29. 48 etc. II, 3, 57. V, 3, 10. H5 I, 2, 162 (p. that should by p. order else have died, 471. for p. kings). 111,5,55. 111,7,94. IV, 6, 37. V, 2,43. H 6 A quarrel 'twixt your duke and him, Shr. IV, 2, 84. he 1, 4, 24. 27 etc. etc. l i e person in whose custody a is a devil in p. brawl, T w . Ill, 4, 259. in p. brabble prisoner is kept, as well as the place in which he is did we apprehend him, V, 68. with some few p. friends, confined, following with to: —s to her womanly per- B2 III, 3, 4. a poor and p. displeasure, H5 IV, 1, suasion, Shr. V, 2, 120. p. to her womb, Wint. II, 2, 210. let not your p. discord keep away your levied 59. p. to the palsy, B2 II, 3, 104. to whose flint bo- succours, H 6 A IV, 4, 22. the state takes notice of the som ... doomed a p. V, 1, 4. p. to your son, H4B I, 1, p. difference betwixt you and the cardinal, H8 I, 1, 20. p.! to IThomt H 6 A II, 3, 33. thy daughter p.! To 101. how innocent I was from any p. malice in his end, whomt To me! V, 3, 131. our king is p. to the bishop III, 2, 268. both in his p. conscience and his place, V, here, H6C IV, 5, 5. Henry is p. to the foe, V, 4, 77. 3, 40. for my p. part, Troil. II, 2, 125. one that knows now are you p. to an emperor, T i t . I, 258. To hold p. the youth even to his inches, and with p. soul did in Gent. II, 4, 92. Tit. II, 1, 15. to keep p. Wint. I, 2, great llion thus translate him to me, IV, 5, 111 (un52. H 6 A V, 3, 57. to take p. Lncr. 1608. A d o I, 1, bosoming to me his personal opinion, not speaking 326. L L L I, 2, 65. John III, 4, 7. H 4 A I, 1, 70. 1, in a public capacity), his regard for's p. friends, Cor. 3, 23. H4B I, 1, 126. H5 IV, 8, 80. H 6 A I, 1, 145. V, 1, 24. V, 3, 18. that these great towers should fall IV, 1, 26. IV, 7, 56. H6C IV, 4, 7. T i m . Ill, 5, 69. for p. faults in them, T i m . V, 4, 26. for your p. satisCaes. V, 3,37. Mcb. I, 3,85. Hml. II, 2,499. Cymb.' faction, Caes. II, 2, 73. what p. griefs they have, III, I, 6, 103. 2, 217. to manage p. and domestic quarrel, Oth. II, 2) one tried in a court of justice: when the judge 3, 215. is robbed the p. dies, Lucr. 1652. the jury passing on 4) belonging to a particular person: his p. arbours, the —'s life, Meas. II, 1, 19. what 'twere to be a judge, Caes. Ill, 2, 253. cf. in this p. plot, H6B II, 2, 60. and what a p. II, 2, 70. produce the p. Wint. Ill, 2, 8. 5 ) not known or not open to everybody, but only P r l a * n - h « n s e , prison, gaol: forbid to tell the se- to one person or to a f e w : in this p. plot, H 6 B II, 2, crets of my p. Hml. I, 5, 14. 60 (retired from the public v i e w , as belonging to a P r t e a n m e n t , imprisonment, confinement: John private man), may it please you to withdraw into your III, 4, 161. p. chamber, H8 III, 1, 28 (the queen having received P r i s t i n e , ancient: the p. wars of the Romans, H5 the cardinals in the midst of her court-ladies), saucy III, 2, 87 (Fluellen's speech), purge it to a sound and controller of our p. steps, Tit. II, 3, 60 (where we p. health, Mcb. V, 3, 52. would be alone), we talk here in the public haunt of P r i t h e e , a corruption otpray thee; with I: T p . men: either withdraw unto some p. place, Bom. Ill, 1, 1, 2, 246. II, 1, 25. II, 2, 153. 171. 177. Ill, 2, 38. V, 54. bring me to some p. place, Per. IV, 6, 98. a p. 101. Meas. I, 2, 181. 1,3,45. Ill, 2, 141. Err. II, 1, conference etc. = a conversation between two per55. A s I, 2, 28. II, 4, 71. II, 5, 9. 14. Ill, 2, 193. 199 sons, not overheard by others (German: unter vier ( I p. now with most petitionary vehemence). Ill, 4, 2. Augen): Mids. 1, 1, 116. All's II, 5, 62. H 4 A III, 2, H 6 A V, 2,10. H6B II, 1, 33. R 3 11, 4, 31 ( Q q I pray 2. B3 I, 1, 86. H8 II, 2, 81. Cor. V, 3, 7. Per. 11, thee). IV, 4, 179. Cymb. IV, 2, 163 etc. Without I: 4, 17. T p . II, 1, 9. 127. 170. 228. II, 2, 74. 118. Ill, 2, 91. Hence = secret: 0 unfelt sore! crest-wounding IV, 215. W i v . IV, 1, 75. V, 1, 1. Merch. I, 2, 39 ( F f p. scar, Lucr. 828. your p. grudge will out, though and later Qq / pray thee). II, 2, 194 and III, 5, 93 ne'er so cunningly you smother it, H 6 A IV, 1, 109. our ( F f and later Qq pray iAee\ A s I, 2, 86. I, 3, 96. mind partakes her p. actions to your secrecy, Per. I, Wint. II, 2, 18. H8 1,4,91 etc. 1, 153. by public war or p. treason, I, 2, 104. P r i v a c y , 1) secrecy: fie! p.tfle! W i v . IV, 5, 24. 6) not invested with a public function, or not done 2) retirement: of this my p. I have strong reasons, in an official capacity: a p. man, H5 IV, 1, 254. H 6 A Troil. Ill, 3, 190. 191. V, 4, 136. H8 V, 3, 55. Tit. IV, 4, 75. Ant. Ill, 12, P r i v a t e , adj. 1) being by one's self, lonely, soli- 15. a p. life, H6C IV, 6, 42. England's p. wrongs, tary : in respect that it (a shepherd's l i f e ) is solitary, I R2 II, 1, 166 ( = wrongs committed against private like it very well; but in respect that it is p., it is a very men, against quiet citizens), he hath very oft given vile life, As 111, 2, 17 (Touchstone's speech), how is p. time to you, Hml. I, 3, 92 (time spared from public

p

903

duties, leisure-time), not almost a fault to incur a p. 2) to authorize, to license: to p. dishonour in thy check, Oth. Ill, 3, 67 (a reproach made by a personal name, Lncr. 621. you yourself may p. your time te friend, mnch less a degradation from office), 'tis not what you wiU, Sonn. 58, 10. a time for p. stomaching, Ant. II, 2, 9 ( f o r personal Privily, under hand, without much noise, secretgrudge, in the midst of threatening pnblic dangers). ly : whence he shortly after p. withdrew himself, Lucr. 7) a p. soldier = 9 common soldier, not an offi- Arg. 14. I'U p. away, Meas. I, 1, 68. tell him p. of cer: H4B III, 2, 177. « our intent, H6C I, 2, 39. he p. deals with our cardinal, Private, sobst. 1) privacy, retirement: let me H8 I, 1, 183. I will p. relieve him, Lr. Ill, 3, 15. enjoy my p. Tw. Ill, 4, 100. I shall be sent for in p. Privity, joint knowledge, concurrence: without to him, H4B V, 5, 83 (when he is alone; though he the p. o' the king, H8 I, 1, 74. may think fit to disavow me in pnblic). tee are too Privy, 1 ) not destined for general use, but for open here to argue this; let's think in p. more, H8 II, particular accommodation: his face is Lucifer's p. 1, 169. in p. = the French entre guatre yeux (unter kitchen, H4B II, 4, 360. is the banquet ready in the p. vier Augen): Err. V, 60. Ado III, 2, 86. L L L V, 2, chamber 1 H8 I, 4, 99 (not a reception-room). 229. 241. 254. H6A I, 2, 69. H8 II, 4, 206. Cor. II, 2) not seen openly, secret: what p. marks I had 3, 84. 174. V, 3, 93. Lr. Ill, 4, 165. Oth. IV, 1, 2. about me, Err. Ill, 2, 146. the p. maidens' groans, H5 Cymb. V, 5, 115. 11, 4, 107 ( = the secret groans of maidens. The sur2) personal, not official, communication: whose reptitious Qq and M. Edd. pining), to take some p. p. with me of the Dauphin's love is much more general order, to draw the brats of Clarence out of sight, B3 than these Unes import, John IT, 3, 16. III, 5, 106. 3) one not invested with a pnblic office: what 3) assigned to secret uses: the other half comes to the p. coffer of the state, Mercb. IV, 1, 354; cf. 371. have kings, that —s have not toot H5 IV, 1, 255. 4) with to, being in the secret of: Gent. Ill, 1, 4 ) a common soldier: her (Fortune's) —s we, Hml. II, 2,238 (purposely misunderstood by Hamlet). 12. Wint. II, 1, 94. H6B 111, 1. 47. H6C I, 2, 46. Privately, 1) alone, by one's self, without the Bom. V, 3, 266. Hml. 1, 1, 133. Ant. I, 2, 42. attendance of others: she hath p. twice or thrice a day, 5) admitted to secrets of state: your highness' p. ever since the death of Hermione, visited that removed council, H6B II, 1, 176. H8 IV, 1, 112. house, Wint. V, 2, 114. Prise, subst. 1 ) anything taken and seized as 2) not officially, but in the character of a private booty: truth proves thievish for a p. so dear, Sonn. man, personally •. be it as you shallp. determine, either48, 14. a p.! a p.! Gent. V, 4, 121. give fire: she is for her stay or going, Oth. I, 3, 276. my p. Wiv. II, 2, 143. Tp. IV, 205. Wint. IV, 3, 31. 3) not before others, but only in the presence of H4A I, 1, 75. II, 4, 283. H4B III, 1, 101. H6A V, the persons concerned (en tre guatre yeux): if you 3, 33. H6B IV, 1, 8. 25. IV, 7, 22. Troil. II, 2, 86. handled her p., she would sooner confess, Meas. V, 277.V, 6, 10. Caes. V, 4, 27. Lr. IV, 6, 230. Oth. I, 2, speak it p. Merch. II, 4, 21. we'll pass the business 51. to make p. of = to gain: B3 III, 7, 187. p. and well, Shr. IV, 4, 57. he hears nought p. that 2) anything gained as the reward of exertion or comes from Troy, Troil. I, 3, 249. contest: desire my pilot is, beauty my p. Lncr. 279. Privilege, subst. 1) a particular right or immu- the proud full sail of his great verse, bound for the p. nity: Mids. Ill, 2, 79 (cf. II, 1, 220). All's II, 3, 220. of all too precious you, Sonn. 86, 2. doth point out thee IV, 5, 96. Wint. Ill, 2, 104. John IV, 3, 32. R2 II, as his triumphant p. 151, 10. lest too light winning I , 116. H4A 111, 2, 86. V, 2, 18. H6A V, 4, 61. B3 make the p. light, Tp. 1,2,452. Merch. II, 9, 60. As III, 1, 41. 54. Troil. Ill, 2, 136. Cor. I, 10, 23. V, 3, 1,1,168. Shr. II, 344. Hml. Ill, 3, 59. 25. Tit. IV, 4, 57. Lr. II, 2, 76. V, 3, 129. on one's p. 3) a contest for a reward: two contending in a p. = confiding or presuming on a particular right: L L L Merch. Ill, 2, 142. you have played your p. Tit. I, 399. IV, 2,162. II6A II,'4, 86. under p., in the same sense, 4) any gain or advantage, privilege: it is war's Ado V, 1,60. to bear a p. John 1,261. Tit. IV, 2,116. p. to take all vantages, H6C I, 4, 59. 'tis p. enough to 2) advantage, favourable circumstance: take heed be his son, II, 1, 20, place, riches, favour, —* of acciof this large p. Sonn. 95,13. think my patience, more dent as oft as merit, Troil. Ill, 3, 83. than thy desert, is p. for thy departure hence, Gent. Prise, subst. estimation: Caesar's no merchant, Ill, 1, 160. your virtue is my p. Mids. II, 1, 220 (or to make p. with you of things that merchants sold. Ant. = your virtue is my immunity from the common V, 2,183. thenhadmyp.been less, and so more equal ballaws of decency?), compassion on the king commands me lasting to thee, Cymb. Ill, 6,77.Lr.lI, 1,122 (Edd./>oi«)stoop, or J would see his heart out, ere the priest should Prise, vb. 1) to estimate, to rate: volumes thai I ever get that p. of me, H6A 111, 1, 121. p. above my dukedom, Tp. I, 2, 168. so swift and ex3) right in general: have you nuns no farther —si cellent a wit as she is —d to have, Ado III, 1, 90. Meas. I, 4, 1. I beg the ancient p. of Athens, as she is what we have u>e p. not to the worth, IV, 1, 220; cf. mine, I may dispose of her, Mids. I, 1, 41. where no Troil. IV, 4, 136. p. you yourselves: what buys your venom else but only they hath p. to live, R2 II, 1, 158.companyl L L L V, 2, 224. As III, 2, 160. Wint. Ill, retain but p. of a private man, H6A V, 4, 136. 2, 43. 111. H6A I, 3, 22. Troil. I, 2, 315. II, 2, 91. Privilege, vb. 1) to invest with a particular right Cor. Ill, 3, 121. Tim. 1, 1, 171 (things are —d by or immunity: such neighbour nearness to our blood their masters, i. e. according to the merit of their should nothing p. him, R21,1,120. Partic.—d: Compl. owners). Oth. IV, 1,186. Ant. 1,1, 56. to p. at = to 62. H6A I, 3, 46. H6C II, 2, 120. H8 I, 4, 52. Troil. rate at, to esteem worth: if you —d my lady's favour II,3,61. IV, 4, 132. With from: it shall p. him from at any thing more than contempt, Tw. II, 3, 130. slight your hands, Err. V, 95 (exempt him from the danger regard, contempt... doth he p. you at, H5 II, 4, 119. of falling into your hands). p. their hours at a cracked drachm, Cor. I, 5, 5. a Schmidt, Shakespeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. It 58

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tinder value than he hath hereto —d them at, II, 2, 64. / do p. it aim) love, Tim. V, 1, 184 (think it worth my love), p. me at her worth, Lr. I, 1, 72. 2) to value highly, to esteem: I do love, p., honour you, Tp. Ill, 1, 73. hit good nature - »the virtue that appears in Cassio, and looks not on his evils, Oth. II, 3, 139 (Qq praises), she —d it once, C j m b . 11,4,104. not to p. = to make no account of: not —ing her poor infant's discontent, Sonn. 143, 8. my love —* not quantity of dirty lands, Tw. II, 4, 85. W i n t IV, 4, 368. 386. P r l c e r , 1) a prize-fighter: the bonny p. of the humorous duke, As II, 3, 8. 2) one that sets the value of a thing: it holds his estimate and dignity as well wherein 'tis precious of itself as in the p. Troil. II, 2, 56. Prefcafele, 1) likely, having more evidence than the contrary: As 111, 5, 11. All's III, 6, 107. Oth. I, 2, 76. A n t V, 2, 356. Cymb. II, 4, 115. IV, 2, 141. 2) calculated to bias the judgment, satisfactory: single I'll resolve you, which to you shall seem p., of every these happened accidents, Tp. V, 24 9. strenghtened with what apology you think may make it p. need, All's II, 4, 52. the least of all these signs were p. H6B 111, 2, 178. it is spoke freely out of many mouths, — how p. I do not know, Cor. IV, 6, 65. P r e k a l , calculated to bias the judgment, satisfactory: this advice is free I give and honest, p. to thinking, Oth. II, 3, 344. P r e f e a t l e n , 1) proof: what he with his oath and all p. will make up full clear, Meas. V, 157. passed in p. with you, how you were borne in hand, Mcb. III, 1, 80. of the truth herein this present object made p. Hml. 1, 1, 156. that the p. bear no hinge nor loop to hang a doubt on, Oth. Ill, 3, 365. which for more p• I can with ease produce, Cymb. V, 5, 362. 2) examination, trial: I, in p. of a sisterhood, Meas. V, 72 ( = the year of noviciate), that suffers under p. Tw. II, 5,142. P r a e e e d , 1) to go forth, to issne, to come from: his eye drops fire, no water thence — s , Lucr. 1552. such childish humour from weak minds —s, 1825. showing their birth and where they did p. Sonn. 76, 8. and thence this slander — s , 131, 14. from lowest place when virtuous things p. All's II, 3, 132. H4B IV, 1, 148. II6A V, 4, 152. R3 1, 3, 28. H8 II, 3, 78. Cor. I, 1, 157. Tit. IV, 4, 52. Mcb. II, 1, 39. Hence = to arise, to be caused: little faults, —ing on distemper, H5 II, 2, 54. I pray his absence p. by swallowing that, Cymb. Ill, 5, 58. 2) to advance, to go on, to take one's course: and doth so far p., that what is vile shows like a virtuous deed, Lucr. 251. might but my bending down reprieve thee from thy fate, it should p. Meas. Ill, 1, 145. if thou p. as high as word, my deed shall match thy meed, All's II, 1, 212. —ed further, cut me off the heads ..., H4A IV, 3, 85. H6B IV, 4, 35. H8 II, 4, 90. Cor. I, 1, 1. Mcb. I, 7, 31. Cymb. I, 5, 15. Singular passage : hadst thou like us... —ed the sweet degrees, Tim. IV, 3, 252 (the sweet degrees not an object governed b y — e d , but an accus. denoting the way made). 3) to go forward, to pass, to be done: what in time —s may token to the future our past deeds, All's IV, 2, 62. where nothing can p. whereof I shall not have intelligence, R3 III, 2, 23. he will tell you what hath —ed, Cacs. I, 2, 181.

4) to go on, to continue: Tp. Ill, 2, 59. 94. Gent III, 1, 360. Wiv. II, 2, 197. Meas. V, 87. L L L IV, 3, 23. V, 2, 570. Mids. 1, 2, 21. 59. V, 260. As III, 2, 252. Shr. IV, 3, 139. Wint. Ill, 2, 109. 142. H8 1, 2, 17. 188. II, 4, 66. Troil. II, 3, 61. Caes. Ill, 3, 21. Hml. II, 2, 487. Cymb. 14 4, 66. V, 5,42. With in: p. in practice with my younger daughter, Shr. II, 165. if thou p. in this thy insolence, H6A I, 3, 37. V, 4, 162. Oth. IV, 1, 267. 5) to go to work, to act: muse not that I thus suddenly p. G e n t I, 3, 64. when you have seen more, p. accordingly, Ado III, 2, 125. —ed well, to stop all good —ing, LLL I, 1, 95. 0, some authority how to p. IV, 3, 287. p., p. As III, 3, 72. V, 4, 203. W i n t V, 3, 97. the Venetian law cannot impugn you as you do p. Merch. IV, 1, 179. All's V, 3, 236. Wint. Ill, 2, 6. B2 IV, 156. H5 I, 2, 9. HGB I, 3, 152. R3 III, 5, 48. H8 II, 4, 5. 221. V, 1, 108. Cor. I, 2, 3. II, 2, 85. Ill, 1, 314. 333. V, 6, 16. Caes. Ill, 1, 183. Hml. V, 2, 23. Lr. IV, 7, 19. Ant III, 9, 4. V, 1, 75. Cymb. II, 4, 55. to p. against = to take measures, to go to work against: H6B III, 2, 20. Cor. I, 1, 26. Hml. IV, 7, 6. Lr. I, 2, 89. with in the same sense: from thence, by cold gradation andwealbalanced form, we shall p. with Angela, Meas. IV, 3, 105. top. in = to set about: which I was much unwilling top. in, Gent. II, 1, 112. that I may p. in my speech, Tw. I, 5, 193. With an inf.: p. to procure my fall, Err. 1, 1, 1. orderly p. to swear him, R21,3,9. that thus you should p. to put me o f f , H8 II, 4, 21. With to: tee have with a leavened and prepared choice —ed to you, Meas. I, 1, 53 ( = chosen you), p. to judgment, Merch. IV, 1, 240. p. thus rashly to the villain's death, R3 HI, 5, 43. Cor. Ill, 1, 219. Oth. I, 3, 220. V, 2, 138. Per. I, 1, 113. Praeeeder, one who goes on and makes a progress: quick —s, Shr. IV, 2, 11. Proceeding, subst. 1) doing, action, coarse taken: his —s teach thee, Ven. 406. like the —s of a drunken brain, 910. FU cross Thurio's dull p. Gent. II, 6, 41. and here an engine fit for my p. Ill, 1, 138. determine our —s, III, 2, 97. to these violent —s all my neighbours shall cry aim, Wiv. Ill, 2, 44. the straitness of his p. Meas. Ill, 2, 270. unpregnant and dull to all —s, IV, 4, 24. Merch. IV, 1, 358. All's II, 4, 50. Wint. II, 1, 179. John II, 214. Ill, 1, 97. IV, 1, 114. IV, 2, 133. V, 2, 11. H4A II, 3, 34. IV, 1, 65. H4B IV, 2, 110. V, 5, 103. H6C IV, 2, 11. R3 111, 5, 66. IV, 4 , 4 0 3 . H 8 I , 2, 108. 11,4,18. 111,2,26. Troil. V, 7, 7. Cor. 11, 2, 163. Tit. V, 3, 8. Caes. II, 2, 103. Hml. V, 1, 322. Lr. I, 4, 233. V, 1, 32. Oth. 1, 3, 65. 93. Per. IV, 3, 25. 2) process, course: what plain p. is more plain than thisf H6B II, 2, 53. I have an interest in your hate's p. Rom. Ill, 1, 193. Praceas, 1) course, the act of going on and passing by (of time): in p. of the seasons, Sonn. 104, 6. (time) often at his very loose decides that which long p. could not arbitrate, L L L V, 2, 753. beguiled the tediousness and p. of my travel, R2 II, 3, 12. ere the glass finish the p. of his sandy hour, H6A IV, 2, 36. lest that the p. of thy kindness last longer telling than thy kindness' date, R3 IV, 4, 253 (the p. of telling thy kindness), in the course and p. of this time, H8II, 4,38. 2) a series of actions or events: and finds no other advantage in the p. but only the losing of hope by time,

905

p All's I, 1, 18. after this p. to give her the avaunt, H8 II, 3, 9. 3) the way and order in which something goes forward or happens: to set the neediest p. by, Meas. V, 92. tell her the p. of Antonio's end, Merch. IV, 1, 274. by law and p. of great nature freed, Wint II, 2, 60. tell the p. of their death, R3 IV, 3, 32. witness the p. of your speech, Troil. IV, 1, 8. Hml. I, 5, 37. Ill, 3, 29. Oth. I, 3, 142. 4) regular proceeding, course of law: proceed by p. Cor. Ill, 1, 314. 5) a mandate: thou mayst not coldly set our sovereign p. Hml. IV, 3, 65. where's Fulvia's p. t Ant. I, 1, 28. Pr*ce*al«n, a train marching with ceremonious solemnity: in p. H5 IV, 8, 118. H6A I, 6, 20. on p. H6B II, 1, 68. P n t t H - M r r e r , probably one who carries and delivers mandates or summons: Wint. IV, 3, 102 (Autolycus' speech). Proclaim, to declare or announce openly, either by words or in another way: peace —s olives of endless age, Sonn. 107, 8. her hair —ed in her a careless hand of pride, Compl. 30. the setting of thine eye and cheek p. a matter from thee, Tp. II, 1, 229. I will p. myself what I am, Wiv. Ill, 5, 146. as those cheekroses p. you are no less (than a virgin) Meas. I, 4 , 1 7 . these black masks p. an enshield beauty, II, 4, 80. I will p. thee, 151 (tell every body what thou art), ouiward courtesies would fain p. favours that keep within, V, 15. Me world's large tongue —s you for a man replete with mocks, LLL V, 2, 853. Iam not an impostor that p. myself against the level of mine aim, All's II, 1, 158. this satisfaction the by-gone day —ed, Wint. I, 2, 32. whom I p. a man of truth, III, 2, 158. the hottest day prognostication — s, IV, 4,818. whose daughter his tears —ed his, V, 1, 160. many other evidences p. her to be the king's daughter, V, 2, 42. H4A I, 3, 145. 156. H5 II, 2, 168. H6A II, 4, 26. H6C V, 1, 94. H8 I, 1, 138. Troil. V, 4 , 1 8 (the Grecians begin to p. barbarism, i. e. announce it to be their cause). Tim. IV, 3, 503 (I do p. one honest man). Hml. 1, 3, 72. II, 2, 621. Ill, 4, 85. IV, 5, 117. V, 2, 243. Lr. III, 6, 56. V, 3, 95. Ant. Ill, 11, 19. Ill, 13, 129. IV, 14, 126. Cymb. I, 1, 52. Per. I, 4, 15. IV, 6, 83. Intr. = to make one's declaration openly and publicly: her tender shame will not p. against her maiden loss, Meas. IV, 4, 27. Particularly —- to make known to the public by criers or by advertisements: Meas. IV, 4, 9. 17. V, 514. Err. V, 130. LLLI, 1,121. 262. 289. 293. Shr. Ill, 2, 16 (p. the banns). IV, 2, 85. 87. Wint III, 2, 103. John II, 310. B2 II, 2, 56. II, 3, 30. H4A V, 1, 73. H6 IV, 3, 34. IV, 8, 119. H6A I, 1, 169. V, 4, 117. H6B II, 1, 60. IV, 1, 43. IV, 2, 187. IV, 4, 28. IV, 9, 28. H6C II, 1, 194. II, 2, 71. IV, 7, 54. 63. 69. IV, 8, 53. R3 IV, 4, 517 (Qq given out). V, 5, 16. Troil. II, 1, 26. 133. Tit. I, 275. Caes. Ill, 1, 79. V, 4, 3. Lr. II, 1, 62. II, 3, 1. IV, 6, 230. Oth. I, 1, 69. II, 2, 9. Ant. HI, 6, 13. Per. I, 2, 44. IV, 6,194. Pr*clammtl*n, open declaration, manifestation: invention is ashamed, against the p. of thy passion, to say thou dost not (love my son) All's I, 3, 180. the very stream of his life and the business he hath helmed must upon a warranted need give him a better p. Meas.

III, 2, 152 (i. e. proclaim or manifest him to be a better man). Especially = publication, notice given to the public: Gent. HI, 1, 216. 111,2, 12. Meas. I, 2, 81. LLL I, 1, 286. Merch. IV, 1, 436. Wint. Ill, 1, 15. H4A I, 3, 147. H8 I, 3, 17. Troil. II, 1, 22. 25. 34. 100. Tit. I, 190. Lr. V, 3, 183. Per. IV, 2, 117. to make p. H6A I, 3, 71. H6CIV, 7, 70. V,5,9. R3 IV, 4,519. Praeme, see Progne. P r a c M u n l , a Roman officer who was charged with the government of a province: Cymb. Ill, 7, 8. Procrastinate, to delay to the morrow: Err. I, 1, 159. P r * e r e a n t , generating, begetting young: this bird hath made his pendent bed and p. cradle, Mcb.

I, 6, 8.

Pr*cremnti, two persons engaged in cohabitation: leave p. alone and shut the door, Otb. IV, 2, 28. P r o c r e a t i o n , the act of begetting, generation: whose p., residence and birth scarce is dividant, Tim. IV, 3, 4. P t k H i (misnamed Proems in the play of Pyramus and Thisbe) daughter of Erechthens and wife to Cephalus: Mids. V, 200. 201. P r e c n l o l o s , name in A n t IV, 15, 48. V, 1, 61. 70. V, 2, 12. Procurator, one who transacts affairs for another, a substitute: H6B I, 1, 3. Procure, 1) to bring about, to effect, to cause: I am sorry that such sorrow I p. Meas. V, 479. to p. my fall, Err. 1,1,1. all these could not p. me any scathe, H6B II, 4, 62. the injuries that they themselves p. Lr. II, 4, 306. what cause —s her hitherl Rom. Ill, 5, 68 ( = causes her to come hither). With an inf.- p. the vicar to stay for me, Wiv. IV, 6, 48. one that I'll p. to come to thee, Rom. II, 2, 145. With a clause: p. that Lady Margaret do vouchsafe to come, H6A V, 5, 88. 2) to obtain, to contrive to have, to gain, to get: not to be tempted, would she be immured, and now, to tempt, all liberty —d, Compl. 252. have —dhis leave for present parting, All's II, 5, 60. Wint. IV, 4, 634. B2 IV, 159. H6C II, 1, 180. H8 V, 1,133. Troil. Ill, 3 , 2 7 6 . Cor. Ill, 3, 9. Cymb. V, 4 , 1 6 2 . With a dat. and accus.: p. me music ready, Shr. Ind. 1, 50. you should p. him better assurance, H4B I, 2, 35. Wiv. II, 3, 95. H4A II, 4, 597. Ill, 3, 208. H6A I, 4, 7. Oth. Ill, 1, 38. 3) to contrive: (my d o g ) with sighs so deep —s to weep in howling wise, Pilgr. 276 (some M. Edd. my sighs ... p. to weep). 4) to pimp: —s she stillt Meas. Ill, 2, 58. P r e 4 l f a l , 1) lavish, profuse: Ven. 755. Pilgr. 411. Merch. I, 1, 129. II, 5, 16. W i n t IV, 3, 103 (the P. Son; cf. the prodigious son, in Launce's language, Gent. II, 3, 4). R2 I, 3, 256. H8 V, 5, 13. Tim. Ill, 4, 12. Hml. I, 3, 36. With of: p. of all dear grace, LLL II, 9. Adverbially: how p. the soul lends the tongue vows, Hml. I, 3, 116. Substantively: the niggard p. that praised her so, Lucr. 79. a p. Merch. II, 6, 14. Ill, 1, 47. Tw. I, 3, 25. Troil. V, 1, 37. Tim. IV, 3, 278. the P., the spendthrift of S. Luke ch. 15: Wiv. IV, 5, 8. Err. IV, 3, 19. Meroh. 11, 6, 17. H4A IV, 2, 37. H4B II, I, 157. 2) ample, abundant: spend his p. wits, LLL V, 2, 64. what p. portion have I spent, As I, 1, 41. with 58*

906

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oppression of their p. weight, R2 III, 4, 31. p. bits, Tim. II, 2, 174. Prodigality, excessive liberality, profusion: R3 I, 2, 244. P r » i l f » l l T , lavishly, profusely: LLL II, 12. Pradiglana, portentous: nor mark p., such as are despised in nativity, Mids. V, 419. crooked, swart, p., patched with foul moles, John III, 1, 46. if ever he have child, abortive be it, p. and untimely brought to light, R31, 2,22. when he performs, astronomers foretell it; it is p., there will come some change, Troil. V, 1, 100. p. birth of love it is to me, Rom. I, 5, 142. yet p. grown and fearful, as these strange eruptions are, Caes. I, 3, 77. Misapplied by Launce for prodigal: Gent. II, 3, 4. PradlgiaiKly, portentously: pray that their burthens may not fall this day, lest that their hopes p. be crossed, John 111, 1, 91 (viz by monstrous births). P r a d l ( y , portent, ominous apparition: the people are amazed at apparitions, signs and —es, Ven. 926. as if they saw some wondrous monument, some comet or unusual p. Shr. Ill, 2, 98. call them meteors, —es and signs, John III, 4, 157. now hath my soul brought forth her p. R2 II, 2, 64 (her monstrous birth), a p. offear and a portent of mischief, H4A V, 1,20. where s that valiant crook-back p. f H6C 1, 4, 75. disturbed with —es, Tit. I, 101. when these —es do so conjointly meet, Caes. 1, 3, 28. these apparent —es, II, 1, 198. P r t 4 i U r , traitor: usurping p., and not protector, of the king and realm, H6A I, 3, 31. P r e d a t e , 1) to bring forward, to offer to view: All's IV, 1, C. John I, 46. H6A I, 4,40. Caes. Ill, 1, 228 (p. his body to the market-place). Lr. V, 1, 43. V, 3, 230. Especially = to place before a court of justice; either as a defendant: p. the prisoner, Whit. Ill, 2, 8. —ing forth the cruel ministers of this dead butcher, Mcb. V, 8, 68. Or as an evidence: to p. so bad an instrument, All's V, 3, 201. to be —d against the Moor, Oth. I, 1, 147 (Ff producted). Used of things, = to exhibit: I must p. my power, All's II, 3, 157. Particularly to exhibit in proof of sth.: LLL II, 161. Merch. I, 3, 100. Wint. II, 3, 118. John II, 191. H5 I, 2, 37. H8 II, 4, 68. Ill, 2, 293. Lr. II, 1, 73. Cymb. V, 5, 363. 2) to bring forth, to bear: Tp. II, 1, 159. Wint. II, 1,150. John HI, 4, 54. P r a d n e t e d , = produced; reading of Ff in Oth. I, 1, 147; Qq and M. Edd. produced. P r e f a c e , mnch good may it do yon (cf. Prosit in German): H4B V, 3, 30. P r a f a n a t i a n , the act of violating holy things, irreverence: Meas. II, 2, 128. Tw. 1, 5, 233. Misapplied by Elbow in Meas. II, 1, 55. P r a f a n e , adj. 1) not sacred, not holy: in shape p. Wiv. IV, 4, 60. our p. hours, R2 V, 1, 25. 2) irreverent: lest J, too much p., should do it wrong, Sonn. 89, 11. p. coxcomb, LLL IV, 3,84. that word grace in an ungracious mouth is but p. R2 II, 3, 89. = gross in language, coarse-tongued: so old and so p. H4B V, 5, 54. what p. wretch art thoul Oth. I, 1, 115. a most p. and liberal counsellor, II, 1, 165. p. fellow, Cymb. II, 3, 129. P r a f a n e , vb. to desecrate, to pollute; absol.: no hand can gripe our sceptre unless he do p., steal, or usurp, R2 III, 3, 81. Transitively: Lucr. 847. Sonn. 127, 8. 142, 6. Gent. IV, 4, 141. LLL IV, 1, 86. R2

1, 3, 59. I, 4, 13. H4A III, 2, 64. H46 II, 4, 391. V, 2, 93. H6A IV, 1, 41. R3 IV, 4, 367. 369. Cor. I, 9, 41. Rom. I, 5, 95. Hml. V, 1, 259. Oth. 1,3, 390. Profanely, grossly: not to speak it p. Hml. Ill, 2, 34. P r a f i n e n e u , irreverence: my great p. 'gainst thine oracle, Wint. Ill, 2, 155. P r a f a n a r , polluter, defiler: - s of this neighbourstained steel, Rom. I, I, 89. Prafasa, 1) to declare openly and earnestly, to assure, to avow: crown what I p. with kind event if 1 speak true, Tp. Ill, 1, 69. he —es to have received no sinister measure, Meas. Ill, 2, 256. Angela hath to the public ear —ed the contrary, IV, 2, 103. since you do p. to be a suitor, Shr. I, 2, 272. let me hear what you p. Wint. IV, 4, 380. I do p. you speak not Wee yourself, H8 II, 4, 84. think us those we p., peace-makers, friends, III, 1, 167. I p. you have it (your wish) III, 2, 44. I do p. that for your highness' good I ever laboured more than mine own, 190. hear me p. sincerely, Cor. I, 3, 24. to your —ed bosoms 1 commit him, Lr. I, 1, 275 (your declared, avowed sentiments), so much (duty) I challenge that I may p. due to the Moor, Oth. 1, 3, 188. where, I confess, I slept not, but p. had that was well worth watching, Cymb. II, 4, 67. Refl - to declare, to pretend to be: whether dost thou p. thyself, a knave or a foolt All's IV, 5, 23. who p. myself your loyal servant, Wint. II, 3, 53. the day almost itself —es yours, Mcb. V, 7, 27. I p. myself an enemy to all other joys, Lr. 1,1,74. cf. 76. such a one do Ip. myself, Oth. I, 1, 55. I have —ed me thy friend, I, 3, 342. I p. myself her adorer, Cymb. I, 4, 73. I now p. myself the winner of her honour, II, 4, 53. Partic. —ed = declared, avowed: a —ed tyrant to their sex, Ado I, 1, 170. my friend—ed, Rom. Ill, 3, 50. thieves —ed, Tim. IV, 3, 429. 2) to avow, to acknowledge, to declare adherence to the dictates (of a person or a duty): I p. requital, Wiv. IV, 2, 3 (declare it to be my duty), by the saint whom I p. Meas. IV, 2, 192. Refl. = to own to be: so we p. ourselves the slaves of chance, Wint. IV, 4, 550. that I p. myself in banqueting to all the rout, Caes. 1,2, 77 (perhaps = unbosom myself to all the rout by constantly saying: I p. myself such or such a one) Hence absol.: = to declare friendship: dishonoured by a man which ever —ed to him, Wint. I, 2, 456. 3) to set up for, to make it one's business or trade: she —es a hot-house, Meas. II, 1, 66 (Elbow's speech). how long have you —ed apprehension f Ado HI, 4, 68. I p. curing it (love) by counsel, As III, 2, 425. Shr. IV, 2, 8. All's II, 1, 105. IV, 3, 282. H4A V, 2, 92. Troil. Ill, 3, 270. Mcb. IV, 1, 50. Lr. I, 4, 12. Per. IV, 6, 189. With an inf.: he only —es to persuade, Tp. II, 1, 236. rather rejoicing to see another merry, than merry at any thing which —ed to make him rejoice, Meas. Ill, 2, 250. I do p. to be no less than I seem, Lr. I, 4, 14. P r a f e s i l a n , 1) that which a person declares to be or to be able to do: one that in her sex, her years, p., wisdom and constancy, hath amazed me, All's II, 1, 86. I must not yield to any rites of love, for my p. 's sacred from above, H6A I, 2, 114. it is the privilege of mine honours, my oath, and my p. Lr. V, 3, 130. 2) business, calling, trade: Wiv. II, 3, 42. IV, 2, 184. Meas. IV, 3, 2. Shr. Ind. 2, 22. All's 1,1, 29, I, 3, 250 (cf. Great). Wint. IV, 3, 105. IV, 4, 698. H4A

p

907

ProfltaMe, gainful, useful: LLL V, 2,760. Merch. II,1,78. H6A 111, 1, 20. H8II, 4, 117. 111,1,157. Tira. IV, 3, 431. 455. Caes. I, 1, 5. Mcb. II, 3, 21. 1,3,167. All's 11, 4,36. H5 IV, 1,294. P r o f i t a b l y , 1) advantageously: the impediment Hml. V, 1, 35. Cymb. V, 2, 6. Per. IV, 2, 42 (neither is our p. any trade; it'» no calling). IV, 6, 7. 78. 144. most p. removed, Oth. II, 1, 286. 2) in a manner fit P r e f e s s e r , one who makes declaration of his to instruct and improve: would I had a rod in my sentiments: woe upon ye and all such false —s, H8 mouth, that I might answer thee p. Tim. II, 2, 80. P r e f l t l e u , void of gain or advantage: p. usurer, III, 1, 115. Particularly one who makes avowal of a religions belief: this is a creature, would the begin a Sonn. 4, 7. thy counsel, which falls into mine ears as sect, might quench the zeal of all —s else, Wint. V, 1, p. Ado V, 1, 4. wage a danger p. Oth. I, 3, 30. 108. — * of one faith, H6A V, 1, 14. P r o f o u n d , 1) deep: in so p. abysm I throw all Proffer, snbst. offer: Pilgr. 52. All's II, 1, 150. care, Sonn. 112, 9. the p. sea, Wint. IV, 4, 501. to H6A V, 1, 41. V, 4, 137. Per. II, 3, 68. the —est pit, Hml. IV, 5, 132. Proffer, vb. 1) to offer, to propose for acceptance: 2) deep - fetched, coming from the depth of the John II, 258 (our —ed offer). R2 III, 2, 32. H4A soul, hearty: with such a zealous laughter, so p. LLL I, 3, 252. IV, 3, 71. H6A IV, 2, 9. V, 1,19. B3 III, 7, V, 2, 116. a sigh so piteous and p. Hml. II, 1, 94. these 196. 202. Cymb. Ill, 5, 49. sighs, these p. heaves, IV, 1,1. Hence = heartfelt, 2) to offer, to attempt to do sth.: when time shall teaching to the core: when such p. respects do pull serve, be thou not slack to p., though she put thee back, you on, John III, 1, 318. with a respect more tender, Pilgr. 334. more holy and p. Cor. Ill, 3, 113. P r e f f e r e r , offerer: Gent I, 2, 56. 3) intellectually deep, very wise, sage: to see ... P r e f l e l e n t , one who has made progress: Icon p. Solomon to tune a jig, LLL IV, 3,168. an opinion so good a p. in one quarter of an hour, that lean drink of wisdom, gravity, p. conceit, Merch. I, 1, 92. a magiwith any tinker in his own language, H4A II, 4, 19. cian most p. in his art, As V, 2, 67. no, my p. heart, Profit, snbst. 1) any gain or advantage: the p. Tw. I, 5, 195. Hence = full of meaning and import: of excess is but to surfeit, Lncr. 138. my p. ont is, I upon the corner of the moon there hangs a vaporous know how to curse, Tp. I, 2, 363. have no more p. of drop p. Mcb. Ill, 5, 24. their shining lights, LLL 1,1,90. snail-slow in p. Merch. 4) thorough, complete: which of your hips has the II, 5, 47. the trade and p. of the city consisteth of all most p. sciatica ? Meas. I, 2, 59. in most p. earnest, nations, III, 3, 30. if you like upon report the soil, the Ado V, 1, 198. p. simplicity, LLL V, 2, 52. p., and this kind of life, As II, 4, 98 ( = produce ). Profoundly, deeply, heartily: why sigh you so p.t Wint. I, 2, 310. IV, 2, 21. R2 III, 4, 38. IV, 225. Troil. IV, 2, 83. H5 II, 1, 117. H6A III, 3, 63. H6B I, 1, 204. 206. Progenitor«, 1) parents: if children predecease H8 HI, 1, 83. Ill, 2, 158. 174. Tim. V, 1, 45. Mcb. p. Lucr. 1756. 2) ancestors: H5 I, 2, 95. H6A IV, 1, V, 3, 62. Hml. II, 2, 24. 344. IV, 4, 19. Lr. II, 1, 166. V, 4, 110. 77. Oth. I, 3, 392. II, 3, 10. Ill, 3, 79 (to do a pecuP r o s e n j , 1) offspring: though the mourning brow liar p. to your own person); cf. IV, 2, 238. Ant. II, 1, of p. forbid the smiling courtesy of love the holy suit, 7. II, 7, 82. Cymb. IV, 2, 163. V, 4, 214. Per. IV, 1, LLL V, 2, 754 (i. e. a daughter who has lost her 4. 81. IV, 2, 128. 132. father), this same p. of evils comes from our debate, 2) proficiency, improvement: doth blunt his natural Mids. 11, 1, 115. edge with —s of the mind, study and fast, Meas. I, 4, 2) descent: doubting thy birth and lawful p. H6A 61. report speaks goldenly of his p. (at school) As I, III, 3, 61. I , 7 . no p. grows where is no pleasure ta'en, Shr. 1,1, 3) race, ancestry: issued from the p. of kings, 39. / thank you for this p. Oth. Ill, 3, 379 ( = this H6A V, 4, 38. the Hector that was the why of your good lesson); cf. to apprehend thus, draws us a p. bragged p. Cor. I, 8,12. from all things wt see, Cymb. HI, 3, 18. Progna (some M. Edd. Procne) daughter of PanPrellt, vb. 1) tr. to be of use to, to benefit, to dion and wife to Terens, to whom she in revenge advantage: these offices shall p. thee, Sonn. 77, 14. gave his slaughtered son Itys to eat: Tit. V, 2, 196. Tp. 1,2,313. this nor hurts him nor —s you, Meas. IV, 3, P r e g n e s t l e a t e , to foretell, to prophesy: Sonn. 128. ill blows the wind that — s nobody, H6C11,5,55. 14,13. 2) intr. to be proficient, to make progress, to imPrognestlcatlMi, 1) the art of knowing the fuprove; intellectually or morally: here have I made ture: in the hottest day p. proclaims, Wint. IV, 4, 817 thee more p. than other princess can, Tp. I, 2, 172. my (there are almanacs of the poefs time extant with the son —s nothing in the world at his book, Wiv. IV, 1, title: An Almanack and Prognostication made for the 15. correction and instruction must both work, ere this year etc.). rude beast will p. Meas. Ill, 2, 34. their daughters p. 2) foretoken, sign: if an oily palm be not a fruitvery greatly under you, LLL IV, 2, 77. p. you in what ful p. Ant. I, 2, 54. you readt Shr. IV, 2, 6. by my foes I p. in the knowP r e (Teas, snbst. 1) a going forward, advance, ledge of myself, Tw. V, 21. God give him the ears of conrse: time's thievishp. to eternity, Sonn. 77,8. future —ing, H4A I, 2, 171. well read and —ed in strange evils ... new-conceived, and so in p. to be hatched and concealments, HI, 1, 166. has not the boy —edt H4B born, Meas. II, 2, 97. of that and all the p., more or II, 2, 90. to p. by — to be instructed by, to learn less, more leisure shall express, All's V, 3, 331. keep from: men their creation mar in —ing by them, Meas. a peaceful p. to the ocean, John II, 340. before (the II, 4, 128 (men spoil women by that which these learn sun) begins his golden p. in the east, H4A III, 1, 222. from them), if that an eye may p. by a tongue, then the happiest youth, viewing his p. through, H4B III, 1, should I know you by description, As IV, 3, 84. I p. 54. in the p. of this business he did require a respite, not by thy talk, Troil. V, 1, 16. H8 II, 4, 175. in all the p. of my life atd office, V, 3,

908

P

32. no pulse shall keep his native p. Rom. IV, 1, 97. 2, 260. All's III, 6, 30. H4B I, 3, 28. H6C II, 1, 134. I cannot by the p. of die stars give guess how near to Ill, 1, 51 etc. With to: your breach of p. to the Porday. Cues. II, 1, 2. pentine, Err. IV, 1, 49 ( = to come to the P.). it is 2) a journey made by a sovereign through his our part and p. to the Athenians, Tim. V, 1, 123 ( = own country: the king is now in p. towards Saint Al-made to). With an infinitive: Meas. IV, 1, 34. Merch. bans, H6B I, 4, 76. how a king may go a p. through III, 2, 208. Cymb. I, 6, 202. to break p. As IV, 1,44. the guts of a beggar, Hml. IV, 3,33. 194. IV, 3, 155. Tw. II, 3, 137 (with). Mcb. V, 8, PragreM, vb. to move, to proceed, to pass: this 22.toclaim a p. ( = to request its fulfilment) Gent IV, honourable dew, that silverly doth p. on thy cheeks, 4, 92. R3 III, 1, 197. to give p. Meas. Ill, 1, 275. to hold p. H5 II Prol. 29. to keep p. Mids. I, 1, 179. John V, 2, 46. Prafreaalaa, a word not very distinctly used by Merch. II, 3, 20. As I, 2, 255. IV, 1, 200. Tw. V, Holofernes: a letter which accidentally, or by the way106 (with). H4A III, 2, 168. Mcb. V, 8, 21. to make of p., hath miscarried, L L L IV, 2, 144 (perhaps = p. Wiv. IV, 6, 34. Meas. IV, 1, 34. Cor. Ill, 3, 86. Caes. II, 1, 56. Hml. 1, 3, 119. to pass one's p. Tit. by going from stage to stage, from hand to hand). Prohibit, used in a wrong sense by Dogberry: I, 469. cf. Caes. II, 1, 140. Ado V, 1, 335. 2) expectation raised: he hath borne himself beyond P r « h l k i t l i n , forbiddance, interdiction: Cymb. the p. of his age, Ado I, 1, 14. you have exceeded all Ill, 4, 79. p. As I, 2, 256. nothing of that wonderful p. Tw. Ill, Project, snbst. 1) a chalking ont, a forming in 4, 290. a gentleman of the greatest p. Wint. I, 1, 39. the mind, an idea: she cannot love, nor take no shapethe p. of his greener days, H5 II, 4,136. make gallant nor p. of affection, she is so self-endeared, Ado III, X,show and p. of their mettle, Caes. IV, 2, 24. 55. flattering himself in p. of a power much smaller Premise, vb. 1) to declare to be willing to do or than the smallest of his thoughts, H4B I, 3, 29 ( F f give something; absol.: knows at what time to p. H4A with p.). IV, 3, 53. to p. is most courtly, Tim. V, 1, 29. With 2) a scheme, design: Tp. II, 1, 299. IV, 175. V, an accns.: p. more speed, Lucr. 1349. to p. aid, 1696. 1. Epil. 12. All's 1,1, 243. Wint. IV, 4, 535. Troil. Sonn. 34, 1. Compl. 70. Tp. I, 2, 243. Meas. V, 219. 1, 3, 385. II, 2, 134. Cor. V, 6, 34. Hml. IV, 7, 153. Err. IV, 1, 23. IV, 3, 70. H6A I, 2, 82. IV, 3, 10. Praject, vb. (project) to chalk out, to form, to Tit. I, 298. Caes. I, 2, 293 (I am —d forth = I have shape: I cannot p. mine own cause so well to make itaccepted an invitation) etc. With a dative: p. you infinitely, H4B V, 5, 132. Accus. and dative; a) dat. clear, Ant. V, 2, 121. Prajectlan, outline, plan, calculation: which of with to: she is —d by her friends unto a gentleman, a weak and niggardly p. doth like a miser spoil his Gent. HI, 1, 106. will not p. her to any man, Shr. I, 2, 262. to whom I p. a counterpoise, All's II, 3, 181. coat with scanting a little cloth, H5 II, 4,46. P r a l l i U a s , tiresome and superfluous: lay by all could p. to himself a thought of added honour, Troil. IV, 5, 144. H5 II Chor. 11. H6C II, 2, 58. b) without nicety and p. blushes, Meas. II, 4, 162. Pr*llxlt7f tiresome length, tediousness: Merch. to: and p. you calm seas, Tp. V, 314. Wiv. Ill, 3, 239. Meas. Ill, 2, 212. Err. II, 1, 106. IV, 3, 47. 85. Merch. Ill, 1,13. Rom 1,4,3. P r * l « ( n e , subst. introduction to a discourse or Ill, 2, 34. All's II, 1, 193. Wint. IV, 4, 239. H4B V, performance: Tp. II, 1, 253. Wiv. Ill, 5, 75. L L L V, 5, 126. H6C II, 3, 52 etc. The dative subject in the 2, 305. Mids. Ill, 1, 18. 24.35. V, 106. 119. 122. As passive: I was —d them (gloves) Wint. IV, 4, 237. V, 3, 13. Epil. 3. H4A I, 2, 23. H6B III, 1, 151. Troil. shalt be what thou art —d, Mcb. I, 5, 17. he is —d Prol. 23. Rom. I, 4, 7 (only in Ql). Mcb. I, 3, 128. to be wived to fair Marina, Per. V, 2, 10. With an Hml. I, 1, 123. Ill, 2, 162. IV, 5, 18. V, 2, 30. Oth. inf.: thou didst p. to bate me a full year, Tp. I, 2, 249. Wiv. II, 3, 5. Meas. I, 2, 75. IV, 1, 18. Err. V, 222. II, 1,264. 11,3, 134. Pralague, vb. to introduce, to preface: thus he Ado I, 1, 44. V, 4, 13. L L L I, 2,37. Merch. I, 1, 121. As III, 3, 44. H6B I, 2, 78 etc. With a clause: Meas. his special nothing ever —s, All's II, 1, 95. Ill, 1, 181. H4B V, 5, 129 etc. cf. Wiv. Ill, 4, 112. Pr«l«giie>llke, like a prologue: H5 Prol. 33. Pralang, 1) to lengthen, to draw out in time: 2) to afford reason to hope or to expect; absol.: Err. I, 1, 120. H6C I, 4, 52. Tim. Ill, 1, 66. Hml. Ill, where most it (expectation) —s, All's 11, 1, 146. we 3, 96. Cymb. V, 5, 29. lay our best love and credence upon thy —ing fortune, 2) to defer, to pnt off: this wedding - day perhaps111, 3, 3. a cause more — ing than ..., Wijit. IV, 4, 576. is but —ed, Ado IV, 1, 256. lam not so well provided Ant. II, 7, 24. Transitively: my mind —s with my as else I would be, were the day —ed, R3 III, 4, 47. habit no loss shalt touch her, Meas. 111, 1, 181. thou Promethean, given to men by Prometheus: the meagre lead, which rather threatenest than dost p. aught, Merch. III, 2, 105. those hopes of her good that true P. fire, LLI/lV, 3, 304. 351. Oth. V, 2, 12. PrametheiK, the demigod who stole fire from her education —s, All's I, 1, 46. his image, which did p. most venerable worth, Tw. Ill, 4, 396. his expedition heaven: P. tied to Caucasus, T i t II, 1,17. Pramlie, subst. 1) a declaration by which a per- —s present approach, Tim. V. 2, 3. H6C II, 2, 40. son binds himself to do something: Ven. 85. Tp. IV, H8 I, 1, 48. II, 3, 97. V, 1, 168. Ant. Ill, 7, 47. IV, 41. Wiv. Ill, 5, 43. Mids. V, 174. Merch. II, 7, 6. 8, 35 etc. III, 2, 207 (tf p. last). As IV, 1, 43. IV, 3, 100. H4A 3) I p. you = let me tell you: not by my consent, HI, 1, 1. H4B 1, 3, 28. H6A I, 6, 6. H6B I, 4, 2. R3 I p. you, Wiv. Ill, 2, 72. I do not like thy look, I p. IV, 2, 91. Cymb. I, 6, 202 etc. etc. With for ( = con- thee, Ado IV, 2, 47. I fear it, I p. you, Mids. Ill, 1, 29. cerning) : the p. for her heavenly picture, Gent. IV, 4, 1 p. you, your kindred hath made my eyes water ere 92. your p. for the earldom, B3 IV, 2, 105. With of now, 199. therefore, I p. ye, I fear you, Merch. HI, 5, (objectively): Wiv. II, 2, 217. Meas. Ill, 1, 275. Ill, 3. the first time that ever I heard.... Or I, I p. thee,

p

909

188 (Nares: prompt, ready; Malone: significant, expressive. The words p. and speechless must be considered as a hendiadis, = speechlessly prone, prone e'en without speaking, speaking fervently and eagerly without words). P r e n e u n , a word used instead of a noun: Wiv. V, 4 1 0 . P r e m i s e - b r e a k e r , violator of promises: All's IV, 1, 41. 77. 111, 6, 12. Cor. I, 8, 2. P r o n e n n e e , T to speak, to utter solemnly or ofPremise-crammed, stuffed with promises: Hml. ficially: and do p. by me: lingering perdition shall attend you, Tp. Ill, 3, 76. that Edward be —d a traitor, III, 2, 99. Pram l i e - k e e p i n g , fulfilling one's promise: Meas. H6C IV, 6, 54. whom the oracle hath doubtfully —d thy throat shall cut, Tim. IV, 3, 121. the spirit* that 1, 2, 77. Pramantery, a high headland : Tp. V, 46. Mids. know all mortal consequences have —d me thus, Mcb. Il, 1, 149. U6C III, 2, 135. Tit. II, 2, 22. Hml. II, 2, V, 3, 5 (cf. H8 I, 1, 196). that I am to p. Caesar 311. Ant. IV, 14, 5. thine enemy, Cymb. Ill, 1, 63. Especially applied to P r o m e t l e n , exaltation in rank, preferment: As the decisions of a judge: we do here p., Marcius is II, 3, 60. Wint. 1, 2, 357. John II, 492. B3 I, 3, 80. worthy of death, Cor. Ill, 1, 209. let them p. the sttep Tarpeian death, III, 3, 88. p. his present death, Mcb. IV, 4, 314. H8 V, 2, 23. Rom. IV, 5, 71. P r o m p t , adj. foil of alacrity, brisk and clever: I, 2, 64. whose condemnation is — d , H5 III, 6, 144. all replication p. and reaton strong, Compi. 122. fair to p. a doom, R2 I, 3, 149. Tit. Ill, 1, 50. pardon, virtues all, to which the Grecians are most p. and pre- Merch. IV, 1, 392. H6B IV, 8, 9. a sentence, Meas. gnant , Troil. IV, 4, 90. I have observed thee always II, 4, 62. LLL I, 1, 302. As I, 3, 87. R3 I, 4,190. for a towardly p. spirit, Tim. Ill, 1, 37. a natural and cf. Rom. II, 3, 79. p. alacrity, Oth. I, 3, 233. I am p. to lay my crown 2) to deliver, to recite: good sentences and well at's feet, Ant. Ill, 13, 75 (ready without hesitation). — d, Merch. I, 2, 11. after your way his tale —d shall P r o m p t , vb. 1) to make willing and ready, to bury his reasons with his body, Cor. V, 6, 58. speak move, to incite: p. us to have mercy on htm. T v . Ill, the speech as I —d it to you, Hml. Ill, 2, 2. I am 4, 152. —ed by your present trouble, 377. Me advan- tame, sir; p. 322. tage of the time —s me aloud to call for recompense, 3) to articulate by the organs of speech: det, when Troil. Ill, 3, 2. my —ed sword falling on Diomed, V, he should p. debt, LLL V, 1, 23. 4) to declare, to express in words: I hate thee, p. 2, 175 ( = eager), ready, when time shall p. them, to make road upon us. Cor. Ill, 1, 5. love, who first did thee a gross lout, Wiot. I, 2, 301. this sessions, to our p. me to inquire, Horn. II, 2, 80. —ed to my revenge great grief we p., even pushes 'gainst our heart, III, 2, by heaven and hell, Hml. II, 2, 613. nature —s them 1. —ing that the paleness of this flower bewrayed the to prince it, Cymb. Ill, 3, 84. faintness of my master's heart, H6A IV, 1, 106. I do 2) to suggest words and thoughts; absol. : the p. him in that very shape he shall appear in proof, H8 —ing eyes of beauty's tutors, LLL IV, 3, 322 ( = in- I, 1, 196 (cf. Mcb. V, 3, 5). as 't please yourself p. spiring). With an object, denoting a) the thought their office, II, 4, 115. if thou dost love, p. it faithfully, suggested : it goes on as my heart —s it, Tp. 1. 2, 420. Rom. II, 2, 94. I do here p I eare not for you, b) the person instructed or inspired: p. me, plain and Cymb. II, 3, 112. holy innocence, Tp. Ill, 1, 82. desires, all —ing me 5) to speak out, to give utterance to: sometime how fair young Hero is, Ado 1,1, 306. my voice shall 'Tarqum' was —dplain, but through his teeth, Lucr. sound as you do p. mine ear, H4B V, 2, 119. vouch- 1786. my prime request, which I do last p. Tp. I, 2, safe to those that have not read the story, that I may 426. the thunder —d the name of Prosper, III, 3, 98. p. them, H5 V Chor. 2. my proud heart sues and —s for that name, which till this time my tongue did ne'er my tongue to speak, R3 I, 2, 171. we'U p. you, Cor. p. John III, 1, 307. is now leased out, 1 die —ing it, III, 2, 106. some devil p. me, Tit. V, 3, 12. Double R2 II, 1, 59. slanders the which in every language accus., or dat. and acc. : nor by the matter which your I p. H4B Ind. 7. Lord Hastings had —d your part, heart—'you, Cor. 111,2,54. to p. in = to instruct about, I mean your voice, R3 III, 4, 28. no tongue could ever to make fully acquainted with: I did endure no slight p. dishonour of her, H8 II, 3, 4. if what I now p. you checks, when I have —ed you in the ebb of your estate have found true, III, 2,163. p. but love and dove, Rom. and your great flow of debts, Tim. II, 2, 150. II, 1, 10. wherefore could not I p. Amen, Mcb. II, 2, P r o m p t e r , one who suggests the words to be 31. p. it (welcome) for me to allour friends, 111, 4, 7. spoken: Rom. 1,4, 8 (only in Qll. Oth I, 2, 84. the devil could not p. a title more hateful, V, 7, 8. by Pramptnro, instigation: though he hath fallen by — ing of some doubtful phrase, Hml. 1, 6, 175. 'gainst p. of the blood, Meas. 11, 4, 178. fortune's state would treason have —d, II, 2, 534. not P r a m n l c a t e (Qi provulgate) to make known, to I ...p. the beggary of his change, Cymb. 1,6, 114. pnblish : Oth. I, 2, 21. Preef, subst. 1) trial, experiment, test: mine apProne, eagerly ready : that p. hist should stain so petite I never more will grind on Hewer p. Sonn. 110, pure a bed, Lucr. 684. unless a man would marry a 11. if you, in your own p., have vanquished the resistgallows and beget young gibbets, I never saw one so p. ance of her youth, Ado IV, 1,46. you have seen cruel Cymb. V, 4, 208. With to: nor tender feeling, to base p. of this man's strength, As I, 2, 184. a terrible oath Inuches p Sonn. 141, 6. I am not p. to weeping, Wint. ... gives manhood more approbation than ever p. itself II. 1, 108. as p. to mischief as able to perform't, H8 could have earned him, Tw. Ill, 4,199. as you are like 1, 1, 160. Peculiar passage: in her youth there is a p. to find him in the p. of his valour, 292. we leave that and speechless dialect, such as move men, Meas. I, 2, to the p. H4A II, 2, 72. gentle exercise and p. of arms, As I, ?, 148. Shr. 11, 144. 287. Ill, 1, 54. H6A IV, 1, 174. R3 I, 4, 65 (Ff methinks). II, 3, 2. V, 3, 232. Tit. II, 3, 196. Rom. Ill, 4, 6. Tim. I, 2, 118. Lr. I, 2, 156. P r e m i s e - b r e a c h , violation of promise: Meas.

910

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V, 2, 55. only this p. TU of thy valour maJce, H6A 1, more p. than shields, Cor. I, 4, 25. I am p. against 2, 94. in the reproof of chance lies the true p. of men, their enmity, Rom. II, 2, 73. it (your heart) is p. and Troil. I, 3, 34. Troilu* trill stand to the p. I, 2, 142. bulwark against sense, Hml. Ill, 4 , 3 8 . cf. Ague-proof, set me on the p. Tim. II, 2, 166 (let me be tried, ex- High-proof, Pistol-proof, Plot-proof, Shame-proof. amined). I have made strong p. of my constancy, Caes. P r » r , subst. a support, a stay: Ven. Dedic. 2. II, 1, 299. that might hold, if this should blast in p. Merch. II, 2, 70. 72. IV, 1, 375. H6C II, 1, 68. R3 Hml. IV, 7,155. FUputit in p. L r . IV, 6,189. of whom III, 7, 96. Hml. IV, 5, 105. his eyes had seen the p. Oth. I, 1, 28. I will make p. P r * v , vb. to support: H8 I, 1, 59. Cymb. I, 5, of thine (coat) V, 1, 26. let p. speak, Cymb. Ill, 1, 77. 60. Per. IV, 6 , 1 2 7 . 2) a state of having been tried and having stood P r t p a | f t t « , 1) to beget: from whence an issue I the test: all my pains is sorted to no p. Shr. IV, 3 , 4 3 might p. Per. I, 2, 73. ( = proves to be to no purpose), there's never none 2) to promote, to improve, to increase: my low of these demure boys come to any p. H4B IV, 3, 98 ( = and humble name to p. with any branch or image of ha* proved to be of any worth). I have chastised the thy state, All's II, 1, 200. griefs of mine own lie heavy amorous Trojan and am her knight by p. Troil. V, 5, in my breast, which thou wilt p., to have it prest with 5. when false opinion... in thy just p. repeals and re- more of thine, Rom. I, 1, 193. all kind of natures, that conciles thee, Lr. Ill, 6, 120 ( = in thy proving to be labour on the bosom of this sphere to p. their states, just), cf. Sonn. 110, 11. Hml. Ill, 1, 115. Oth. I, 1, Tim. I, 1, 67. 28. Particularly applied to defensive arms tried and P r a p a ( a t l « n , augmentation, increase: this we found impenetrable: his brawny sides ... are better p. came not to, only for p. of a dower remaining in the than thy spear's point can enter, Ven. 626. be thou coffer of her friends, from whom we thought it meet to armed for some unhappy words. Ay, to the p. Shr. II, hide our love till time had made them for us, Meas. I, 141. add p. unto mine armour with thy prayers, R2 1, 2, 154; i. e. to receive a richer dower than she was 3, 73. his coat is of p. H6B IV, 2, 65 (qnibbling). ten likely to have under the existing circumstances. Mathousand soldiers armed in p. R 3 V, 3, 219. in strong lone prorogation, Jackson procuration, Grant White p. of chastity well armed, Bom. I, 1, 216. put armour preservation. on thine ears ... whose p. nor yells of mothers ... nor P r a p e n d , to incline: I p. to you in resolution to sight of priests ... shall pierce, Tim. IV, 3, 124. lap- keep Helen, Troil. 11,2,190. ped in p. Mcb. I, 2, 54. Mars's armour forged for p. P r « p e n s l * n , inclination, bent of mind: your full eterne, Hml. II, 2, 512. leap thou through p. of harness consent gave wings to my p. Troil. II, 2, 133. to my heart, Ant. IV, 8, 15. whose naked breast stepP r o p e r , 1) peculiar, belonging to a particular ped before targets of p. Cymb. V, 5, 5. person or state: thyself and thy belongings are not 3) experience; a) the state of experiencing, of thine own sop. as to waste thyself upon thy virtues, trying and seeing something: a bliss in p., and proved, Meas. I, 1 , 3 1 ; cf. what better or —er can we call our a very woe, Sonn. 129, 11. 1 do pronounce him in own than the riches of our friends f Tim. 1, 2, 106. it that very shape he shall appear in p. H8 1, 1, 197. p. imports no reason that with such vehemency he should is called impossibility, Troil. V, 5, 29. that love, so pursue faults p. to himself, Meas. V, 110. with great gentle in his view, should be so tyrannous and rough in imagination p. to madmen, H4B I, 3, 32. which canp. Rom. 1,1, 176. b) truth or knowledge gathered by not in their huge and p. life be here presented, 115 V experience: we must curb it (our blood) upon others' Chor. 5. conceptions only p. to myself, Caes. I, 2, 41. p. Compl. 163. this is an accident of hourly p. Ado it is as p. to our age to cast beyond ourselves in our II, 1, 188. we have ten —s to one that blood hath the opinions, Hml. II, 1, 114. victory, II, 3, 171. I urge this childhood p. Merch. 1, 2) (one's) own: men hang and drown their p. selves, 1, 144. 'tis a vulgar p. thai very oft we pity enemies, Tp. Ill, 3, 60. like rats that ravin drown their p. bane, Tw. Ill, 1, 135. as by j>. we see the waters swell before Meas. I, 2, 133. the mere effusion of thy p. loins, III, a storm, R3 II, 3, 43. tis a common p. that lowliness is 1, 30. in the witness of his p. ear to call him villain, young ambition's ladder, Caes. II, 1, 21. what my love V, 310. from his p. tongue, 413. All's IV, 3, 29. Tw. is,p. hath made you know, Hml. Ill, 2, 179. I see in V,327. Wint.II, 3,139. H4BV,2,109. Troil. II,2,89. passages of p., time qualifies the spark and fire of it Cor. I, 9, 57. Hml. V, 2, 66. Oth. I, 3, 69. 265. Cymb. (love) IV, 7, 113. the country gives me p. and prece- IV, 2, 97. Combined with own: your own p. wisdom dent of Bedlam beggars, Lr. II, 3, 13. who knows by brings in the champion Honour on my part, All's IV, history, report, or his own p. Cymb. I, 6, 70. out of 2, 49. of the Icing of Englands own p. cost, H6B I, 1, your p. you speak, III, 3, 27. 61. Ill, 1, 115. Caes. V, 3, 96. 4) a convincing token or argument: Compl. 153. 3) conformable, adapted, suitable, becoming: to Sonn. 117, 10. Gent. I, 1, 97. Wiv. IV, 2, 106. V, 5, cover with excuse that which appears in p. nakedness, 126. Meas. Ill, 2, 31. IV, 2, 45. 143. Ado II, 2, 27. Ado IV, I, 177. that the comparison may stand more V, 1, 105. All's V, 3, 121. 199. Tw. I, 5, 67 (make). p. Merch. Ill, 2, 46. why not the swift foot of timet 71. Wint. HI, 2, 113. V, 1, 180. V, 2, 36. R2 IV, 70. had not that been as p.t As 111, 2, 325. if damned H4A I, 2, 37. H6A III, 3, 68. V, 1, 46. V, 3, 8. H8 commotion so appeared, in his true, native and most p. I, 1, 154. II, 1, 16. Troil. V, 2, 113 (a p. of strength shape, H4B IV, 1, 37. this noble isle doth want her p. — a strong proof). Caes. V, 1, 49. Oth. I, 3, 106. limbs, R3 III, 7, 125. provide thee two p. palfreys, III, 3, 191. 196. 324. 360. 386. 430. 441. Cymb. Ill, black as jet, Tit. V, 2, 50. p. deformity seems not in 4, 24. V, 5, 200. the fiend so horrid as in woman, Lr. IV, 2,60 (deformUsed nonsensically byMrsQuickly: H4B1I,4,127. ity conformable to the character), 'tis p. I obey him, P r * » f , adj. able to resist, impenetrable: I am p. but not now, Oth. V, 2, 196. against that title, W i n t IV, 4, 872. fight with hearts 4) honest, respectable (used of women): that is

p

911

an advertisement to a p. maid in Florence, to take heed IV, 6, 92. V, 6, 86. R3 I, 1, 33. 39. 54. H8 I, 1, 92. All's IV, 3, 240. what pagan may that bet A p. 1, 2, 147. II, 1, 23. Troil. IV, 5, 218. Mcb. IV, 3, 157. gentlewoman, and a kinswoman of my master's, H4BLr. Ill, 2, 80. 95. II, 2, 169. Prophealer, prophet: All's IV, 3, 115. Propheay, vb. to foretell future events, to pre5) fine, nice, pretty (used of men): as p. a man, as ever went on four legs, Tp. II, 2, 63. he's a p. man, dict; tr. and intr.: Ven. 671. 1135. Tp. V, 217. Gent. IV, I, 10. Ado II, 3, 189. V, 1, 174. Mids. I, Wint IV, 1, 26. John IV, 2, 186. R2 IV, 136. H4A 2, 88. Merch. 1, 2, 77. As I, 2, 129. Ill, 5, 51. 55. V, 4, 83. H4B III, 1, 82. IV, 5, 237. H6A II, 4, 124. 115. Tw. Ill, 1, 144. John I, 250. H6A V, 3, 37. V, 1, 31. H6B I, 1, 146. II, 2, 76. Ill, 2, 283. B6C H6B IV, 2, 102. R3 1, 2, 255. Troil. I, 2, 209 (a p. V, 6, 37. R3 I, 3, 186. Ill, 4, 106. IV, 2, 99. IV, 4, 79. man of person). Rom. II, 4, 217. Caes. 1, 1, 28. Oth. V, 3, 129. Caes. Ill, 1, 259. Mcb. II, 3, 62. Hml. II, 1, 3, 398. IV, 3, 35. Ant. Ill, 3, 41. Cymb. Ill, 4,64 2, 405. V, 2, 366. Lr. V, 3, 175. Ant. II, 6,125. IV, (qnite = handsome), a p. squire, Ado I, 3, 54. a p. 14, 120. stripling, Shr. 1,2,144. a p. fellow of my hands, H4BII, Prophet, one who foretells fnture events: Meas. 2,72 (cf. Hand), the issue being of it so p. Lr. 1,1,18. II, 2, 94. Merch. 1, 3, 35 (your p. the Nazarite). All's Applied to things with irony: a p. saying, Ado I, 3, 62. John IV, 2, 147. V, 1, 25. R2 II, 1, 31. 104. IV, 1, 312. a p. jest, H6B I, 1, 132. a p. title of a II, 4, 11. H6A I, 2, 150. Ill, 2, 32 (a p. to the fall of peace, H8 I, 1, 98. O p. stuff, Mcb. Ill, 4,60. all our foes). H6B I, 3, 60. H6C V, 6, 57. R3 II, 2, Proper-falae (not hyphened in O. Edd.) well- 152. IV, 2, 103. Troil. I, 2, 10. Ill, 2,190. V, 3, 65. Lr. V, 3, 71. looking and deceitful: T w . II, 2, 30. Prophetesa, a female prophet: H6A I, 4, 102. Properly, 1) peculiarly, as belonging to a particular person: we need no more of your advice; the I, 6, 8. R3 I, 3, 301. V, 1, 27. Prophetic, foretelling future events, divinatory: matter, the loss, the gain, the ordering on't, is all p. ours, Wint. II, 1, 170. though I owe my revenge p., Sonn. 107, 1. John III, 4, 126. Troil. II, 2, 102. Mcb. 1, 3, 78. Hml. I, 5, 40. Oth. Ill, 4, 72 (in her p. fury). my remission lies in Volscian breasts, Cor. V, 2, 90. Prophetically, with a divining sonl: H4A 111, 2) conformably to the matter, suitably: he keeps me rustically at home, or, to speak more p., stays me 2, 38. Troil. Ill, 3, 248. Prophet-like, like a prophet: Mcb. Ill, 1, 59. here at home un kept, As I, 1, 8. or if you will, to speak Propinquity, nearness ot blood, kindred: p. and more p., I mill enforce it easily to my love, John II, 514. Property, 1) particularity, individuality: p. was property of blood, Lr. I, 1, 116. thus appalled, that the self was not the same, Phoen. 37. Propentlc, the Sea of Marmora: Oth. Ill, 3, 456. Propertlen, subst. 1) comparative relation: the 2) particular quality: it (the diamond) was beautiful and hard, whereto his invited —es did tend, Compl. realms of England, France and Ireland bear that p. 212. of government the —es to unfold, Meas. I, 1, 3. to my flesh and blood as did the fatal brand unto whose liquor hath this virtuous p. Mids. Ill, 2, 367. the the prince's heart ofCalydon, H6B I, 1, 233. and part p. of rain is to wet, As III, 2, 27. (/' I break time, or in just p. our small strength, R3 V, 3, 26. your enemies flinch in p. of what I spoke, All's II, 1, 190. the p. by are many and not small; their practices must bear the what it is should go, not by the title, II, 3, 137. R2 III, same p. H8 V, 1, 130. would thou hadst less deserved, 2, 135. H4B IV, 3, 111. Hml. II, 1, 103. Ill, 2, 270. that the p. both of thanks and payment might have been mine, Mcb. 1,4, 19 ( = that it had been in my power V, 1, 75. Oth. I, 1, 173. Ant. 1,1, 58. 3) ownership: here I disclaim all my paternal care, to reward thee in proportion). propinquity and p. of blood, Lr. I, 1, 116. 2) due relation, symmetry, order: you would have 4) a thing owned, possession: a king, upon whose married her most shamefully, where there was no p. p. and most dear life a damned defeat was made, Hml. held in love, Wir. V, 5, 235. why should we in the comII, 2, 597. pass of a pale keep form and law and due p. R2 III, 5) a thing wanted for a particular purpose, a tool, 4, 41. when time is broke and no p. kept, V, 5, 43. but implement: 'tis a thing impossible I should love thee thou, 'gainst aUp., didst bring in wonder to wait on but a* a p. Wir. Ill, 4, 10 (as a means to get rid of treason and on murder, H5 II, 2, 109. whom to disobey my debts), do not talk of him but as a p. Caes. IV, 1, were against all p. of subjection, IV, 1, 153. the pla40. Plur. —es = stage requisites: get us —es and nets and this centre observe degree, priority and place, tricking for our fairies, Wiv. IV, 4, 78. I will draw a insisture, course, p., season, form, Troil. 1,3, 87. keeps bill of—es, such as our play wants, Mids. I, 2, 108. time, distance and p. Rom. II, 4, 22. Property, yb. 1) to make a property or tool of: 3) measure: a second Hector for his grim aspect they have here —ed me, keep me in darkness, Tw. IV, and large p. of his strong-knit limbs, H6A II, 3, 21. 2, 99 (they hare done with me as with a thing having what you see is but the smallest part and least p. of no will of its own). Iam too high-born to be —ed, to humanity, 53. dost thou not usurp die just p. of my sorbe a secondary at control, John V, 2, 79. his large row t R3 IV. 4, 110. will you with counters sum the fortune ... subdues and —es to his love and tendancepast p. of his infinite* Troil. II, 2, 29 (the greatness all sorts of hearts, Tim. I, 1, 57. beyond measure). Even = metre, cadence: whatt in 2) partic., or rather adj., —ed, — endowed with metret In any p. or in any language, Meas. I, 2, 23; qualities: his voice was —ed as all the tuned spheres, cf. R2 V, 5, 43. Ant. V, 2, 83. 4) form, shape: there must be needs a like p. of Prophecy, subst. prediction, vaticination: Ven. lineaments, of manners and of spirit, Merch. Ill, 4, 14. 928. Sonn. 106, 9. Meas. II, 1, 259. Err. IV, 4, 44. extended or contracted all —s to a most hideous object, Wint. IV, 4, 662. H4A III, 1, 150. IV, 4, 18. H4B All's V, 3, 51. I thought King Henry had resembled HI, 1, 69. V, 2, 127. H6A 1,2, 55. Ill, 1, 195. H6C thee in courage, courtship and p. H6B I, 3, 57. I that

912

P

an cwrtailed of this fair p. E3 I, 1, 18. weU mayst thou know her by thine own p., for up and down the doth rtsemble thee. Tit. V, 2, 106. 5) calculation: whose power tcat in the fint p. II4A IT, 4, 15. the jutt p. that we gave them out, H4B IV, 1, 23. lay down our —t to defend against the Stat, H5 I, 2, 137. let our —t for these wart be toon collected, 304. to the —t of defence are filled, II, 4,45. the leoiet, the littt and full —t are all made out of hit subject, Hml, 1,2,32 (estimation of supplies). 6) portion, allotment, fortune: J have received my p. Gelt. II, 3, 3. her promised —t came thort of composition, Meas. V, 219. three or four thousand chequins were ts pretty a p. to live quietly, Per. IV, 2, 29. P i » p « r t l « i i , vb. to be adjusted, to correspond to: which (ransom) must p. the losses we have borne, H5 III, 6, 134. — ed, panic, or adj., = 1) adjusted, made equal: our size of sorrow, —ed to our cause, must be as great as that which makes it. Ant. IV, 15, 5. 2) regular, orderly: make war against—ed course of tun«, Lncr. 774. 3) formed, shaped: —ed as one's thought would wish a man, Rom. Ill, 5, 184. cf. Disproportioned, Unproportioned, WeHproportioned.

P r « p « o a < , to propose, to ask: such guettions at by your grace shall be — ed him, H6B I, 2, 81. P r o p r i e t y , individuality, proper and particilar state: it it the baseness of thy fear that makes Ihee strangle thy p. T w . V, 150 ( = makes thee disavow thyself), it frights the isle from her p. Oth. II, 3, ¡76 (i. e. out of herself). P r e p a r a t i o n , means of combat, defence : vhat p. is in one man's valour, to stand the push and emity of those this quarrel would excitet Troil. II, 2, 136. P r o r e s u e , 1) to delay: death —d, Rom. II, 2,78. nothing may p. it, IV, 1,48. 2) to draw out, to linger out, to keep in a languishing state: that tleep and feeding may p. hit hontur even till a Lethe'd dullness, Ant. II, 1, 26. nor talen sustenance but to p. hit grief, Per. V, 1, 26. Prase rlptlan, the act of dooming to death without legal proceeding: Caes. IV, 1, 17. IV, 3, 173. 178. 180. Prase, language unconfined to poetical measure: L L L IV, 3, 57. T w . II, 5, 154. P n i e c a t e , 1) to pursue with a view to reach or accomplish: why should not I then p. my rightt Mids. I, 1,105. that we will p. mortal revenge upon thtse traitorous Goths, Tit. IV, 1, 92. 2) to pursue by law : what they will inform 'gainst any of ut all, that will the king severely p. 'gainst us, oar lives etc. R2 II, 1, 244. rather comfort his distressed plight than p. the meanest or the best for thtse contempts, Tit. IV, 4, 33. P r o s e c u t i o n , pursuit : when 1 should see behind me the inevitable p. of disgrace and horror, Ant. IV, 14, Co. P r o s e l y t e , a convert: Wint. V, 1, 108. Proserpina, the daughter of Ceres and wife of Pluto: Wint. IV, 4, 116. Troil. II, 1, 37. Prospect, subst. sight, view: thall come ... into the eye and p. of his tout, Ado IV, 1, 231. nothing that can be can come between me and the full p. of my hopes, T w . Ill, 4, 90. these flags of France, that are advanced here before the eye and p. of your town, John II, 208. their chiefest p. murdering basilisks, H6B III, 2, 324. to be king stands not within the p. of belief, Mcb.

Prapartlanable, having a due comparative relation, corresponding, equal: for ut to levy power p. to the enemy is all unpossible, R2 II, 2, 125. P i * f * w , subst. conversation: to listen our p. Ado III, 1,12 (Vipurpose\ P n p a s e , vb. 1) to offer for consideration or acceptance : the wager which toe will p. Shr. V, 2, 69. which kis majesty did first p. All's IV, 5, 78. the king hath granted every article according to their firm —d natures, B5 V, 2, 362. you would not hear me at many leisures I—d, Tim. II, 2,137. that portion which yourself —d, Lr. 1, 1, 245. many —d matches, Oth. Ill, 3, 229. 2) to place before, to point out as a goal to be reached, to promise as a reward to be obtained: when great treasure is the meed — d, Lucr. 132. a joy —d, Sonn. 129, 12. so (for advantage) is running away, when ftar —* the safety, All's I, 1, 216. the gain —d, H4B 1,1, 183. now thy beauty is —d my fee, R3 I, 2, 170. the lily-beds —dfor the deserver, Troil. Ill, 2, 14. ere we could arrive the point —d, Caes. 1, 2, 110. what I, 3, 74. it were a tedious difficulty, to bring them to to ourselves in passion we p., the passion ending, doth that p. Oth. Ill, 3, 398. the purpose lose, Hml. Ill, 2, 204. Prosper, abbreviation of l'rospero : Tp. II, 2, 2. 2 ) to call before the eye of the mind, to image: 83. 111,3,99. be now the father and p. a ton, H4B V, 2, 92. I p. not Prosper, vb. 1) tr. to render successful, to make merely to mytelf the pleasures such a beauty brings with happy: Wiv. Ill, 1, 30. V, 2, 14. Mids. I, 1, 172. it, Troil. II, 2, 146. Hence = to look forward to, to II4B 111, 2, 313. H 6 A I, 1, 53. IV, 2, 56. Lr. Ill, 7, be ready to meet: a thousand deaths would I p. to 92. IV, 6, 30. achieve her, Tit. II, 1, 80. 2) intr. to succeed, to thrive, to be fortunate: Tp. 4 ) to speak: my cousin Beatrice —ing with the II, 1, 72. Wiv. IV, 5, 103. Merch. Ill, 2, 189. T w . I, prince and Claudio, Ado 111, 1, 3. whilst I p. the self- 4, 38. Wint. IV, 3, 126. IV, 4, 70. R2 V, 3, 84. H 6 A same words to thee which thou wouldst have me answer V, 5, 106. H6C II, 5, 18. R3 II, 1, 16. IV, 4, 397. H8 to, H6C V, 5, 20. p. the oath, my lord, Hml. I, 5, 152. I, 2, 169. Lr. I, 1, 285. I, 2, 21. Per. IV, 2, 13. wherein the toged consuls can p. as masterly as he, Oth. P r o s p e r i t y , good fortune, success: Meaa. 1,4, I, 1, 25. 15. L L L V, 2, 871 (a jest's p ). Mids. II, 1, 73. IV, P r i r t i e r , speaker, orator: and by what more I, 95 (Q2 F f posterity). Wint. IV, 4, 584. John III, 4, dear a better p. could charge you withal, Hml. II, 2,297. 28. V, 2, 61. R2IV, 280. R3IV, 4, 1. Cor. I, 5, 24. Proposition, 1) reward or success offered to II, 1, 188. V, 2, 75. Tim. IV, 3, 77 (when I had p.). sight; promise: the ample p. that hope makes in all V, 1, 36 Oth. II, 1, 288. Plur. — es: plenty's cup and designs begun on earth below fails in the promised her —et, Per. 1,4, 53. largeness, Troil. 1, 3, 3. Misapplied by Costard in L L L I, 1, 316. 2 ) t question asked: it is at easy to count atomies Praapera, name in Tp. I, 2, 20. 72. II, 1, 271. at to resolve the —t of a lover, A s III, 2, 246. 326. 111,2, 155. Ill, 3, 70. V, 107. 119. 134. 159. 211.

p

913

Prosperous, 1) successful, fortunate; of persons: dict solemnly): but then you'U think — which I p. Tp. IV, 104. Wint. II, 3, 189. B2 I, 3, 78. H6A I, 1, against — I am assisted by wicked powers, Wint. V, 32. Rom. IV, 1, 122. V, 3, 42. Mcb. I, 3, 73. Per. 3, 90. With an accus. denoting the thing averred: I, 1, 59 (of all say'd yet may'st thou prove p.). V, 1, do me right, or I'Up. your cowardice, Ado V, 1,149. 80. Of things: Meas. I, 2, 189. Ill, 1, 271. Ill, 2, 253 that, on mine honour, here I do p. Tit. I, 477. the lady Err. I, 1,41. All's III, 3, 7. H4A 111, 1, 2. H5 V, 2, —s too much, Hml. Ill, 2, 240. said nothing but what 402. H6A II, 5, 114. R3 V, 5, 34. H8 V, 5, 2. Cor. I p. intendment of doing, Oth. IV, 2, 205. Double II,1,114. Mcb. Ill, 1,22. Ant. IV, 6,6. Per. V, 1,72. accus.: p. me the baby of a girl, Mcb. Ill, 4, 105 ( = 2) favourable: a p. south-wind, Wint. V, 1, 161. to be the b.). Accus. denoting the effect: —ing oath I leave you to the protection of the p. gods, Tim. V, 1, on oath, Shr. II, 311. The person with to: I p. to you, 186. to my unfolding lend your p. ear, Oth. 1, 3, 245 Wiv. II, 2, 201. IV, 2, 33. Rom. II, 4, 183. Per. IV, 6, 95. Dat. and accus.: when I p. true loyalty to her, (Qq a gracious ear). P i i i f e t t a a l ; , successfully: Cor. V, 6, 75. Hml. Gent. IV, 2, 7. With an inf.: whom I p. to love, All's IV, 2, 28. Oftenest with a subordinate clause: the II, 2, 214 (cf. prosperity in L L L V, 2, 871). Prostitute, vb. to abandon, to expose, to give which (her heart) by Cupid's bow she doth p. he carup: to p. our past-cure malady to empirics, All's II, 1, ries thence, Ven. 581. I do p. that I have wept, Gent. IV, 4, 149. Wiv. II, 1,75. 222. Meas. V, 344. Err. 124. p. me to the basest groom, Per. IV, 6,201.. Prostrate, adj. lying at one's length: mother III, 1,112. V, 2. Ado IV, 1, 282. 286. L L L 1,1,176. Jourdam, be you p. and grovel on the earth, H6B I, 4, 11,158. V, 2,352. 410. 531. Merch. IV, 1, 290. As 13. = in a posture of extreme humility: this p. and IV, 1,110. IV, 3,21. All's II, 3, 73. IV, 3, 246. T w . exterior bending, H4B IV, 5, 149. look gracious on thy I,5,94. 111,4,330. V, 173. John II, 501. R 2 I I , 3 , p. thrall, H6A I, 2, 117. being p. Caes. Ill, 1, 125. I I . V, 6,45. H4A V, 1, 25. H 6 A I V , 2, 19. H6C III, I will fall p. at his feet, Err. V, 114. Rom. IV, 2, 20. 3,181. R 3 I , 1,52. 11,1,26. 111,2,81. Troil. II, 2, Protect, 1) to guard, to defend, to shield: T w . 138. Rom. Ill, 1, 71. Tim. Ill, 2, 86. Caes. Ill, 1, 238. II, 4, 75. H6A I, 3, 9. H6B I, 3, 5.40. II, 1, 54. H8 Lr. V,3,130. Oth. II, 3, 333. 111, 1, 50. IV, 2, 211. III, 2, 276. V, 1, 142. V, 4, 11. Lr. 1, 4, 227. Cymb. Per. II, 5, 27. I, 1, 128. IV, 2, 126. Per. I, 4, 97. With from: R3 2) to promise solemnly, to vow: on Diana's altars, to p-for aye austerity and single life, Mids. I, 1, 89. IV, 1, 20. Per. II, 1, 135. 2) to guard, to superintend, to tend: must you p. do villany, do, since you p. to do't, like workmen, Tim. my lady heref H6B II, 4, 79. despite the bearward that IV, 3,437. cf. L L L V, 2, 410. Peculiar passage: many —s the bear, V, 1, 210. unrough youths that even now p. their first of manhood, 3) to be protector, to be regent for: why should Mcb. V, 2, 11 (vow to try. According to Johnson, it he then p. our sovereign, H6B I, 1,165. why a king means here to prove, to give evidence o f ) . of years should be to be —ed like a child, II, 3, 29. Not understood by the nurse in Rom. II, 4, 189. the king had virtuous uncles to p. his grace, R3II, 3,21. Protestation, 1) a solemn declaration: here is Protection, defence, shelter from evil: Merch. a coil with p. Gent. I, 2, 99. (letters) stuffed with —s, V, 235. Tw. I, 2, 38. Wint. II, 3, 178. John II, 236. IV, 4, 133. but to your p.; let me hear what you proH6B III, 2, 180 (had him in p.). H6C II, 2, 28. H8 fess, Wint. IV, 4, 379. I have no cunning in p. H5 V, III, 1, 93. Ill, 2, 344. Tim. V, 1, 186. Lr. HI, 6,99. 2, 150. Cymb. 1,1, 41 (he takes the babe to his p.). I, 6, 193 2) a solemn promise, a vow: each present lord (to take them in p.). II, 2, 8. began to promise aid; but she ... the p. steps, Lucr. Protector, 1) one who favours and defends: 1700. and to his p. urged the rest, who, wondering at whom we have left —« of the king, B6C I, 2, 57. thou him, did his worth allow, 1844. I can but say their p. of this damned strumpet, R3 III, 4, 76. under the p. over, L L L I, 1, 33. upon his many —s to marry me covering of a cartful night, who seemed my good p. ...he won me, AU's V, 3, 139. be thou true, say I , to Per. I, 2, 82. fashion in my sequent p. Troil. IV, 4, 68. Protester, one who utters a solemn declaration: 2) a regent: H6A 1,1, 37. I, 3,8. 12. 32. 66. Ill, 1, 45. 60. 112. IV, 1, 48. V, 1, 48. V, 5, 23. H6B to stale with ordinary oaths my love to every new p. 1,1,39. 147. 164. 177. 1,2,44.56. 1,3,2. 14.15. Caes. I, 2, 74. 41. 71. 79. 122. 123. I, 4, 79. II, 1, 10. 54. II, 3, 24. Protesting*» solemn declarations, vows: Pilgr.95. 111, 1,250. IV, 2, 167. H6CI, 1,240. 1,2,57. IV, 6, Pro tens (dissyll. and trisyll. indiscriminately), 37. 41. B3 1,3,14. Ill, 1, 141 etc. 1) a marine god who had the faculty of assuming Protectorship, the office of protector or re- whatever shape he pleased: H6C III. 2, 192. gent: H6B II, 1, 30 ( O . Edd. an't like your lordly 2) ( O . Edd. Proiheus) name of the inconstant lord's p., M. Edd. lordly lord-protectorship). Ill, 1, lover in Gent. 1,1,1. 12. 56. 70. 1, 2,14. 20. 38. 97. 60. 121. 113. 117. 124. 1,3, 3. 12. 43. 88 etc. etc. Protectress, a female guardian or keeper: she Protract, 1) to draw out, to prolong: he shrives is p. of her honour too, Oth. IV, 1, 14. this woman to her smock ; else ne'er could he so long p. Protest, subst. (protist) asseveration: leave 'in his speech, H6A I, 2, 120. sooth' and such p. of pepper-gingerbread, H4A 111, 1, 2) to delay: let us bury him and not p. with admi260. full of p., of oath and big compare, Troil. Ill, ration what is now due debt, Cymb. IV, 2, 232. Protractlve, dilatory: the p. trials of great Jove 2, 182. Protest, vb. 1) to declare with solemnity, to as- to find persistive constancy in men, Troil. I, 3, 20. severate; absol.: after we had embraced, kissed and Proud, adj. 1) gorgeous: which the conceited — ed, Wiv. Ill, 5, 75 (i. e. declared our love), none is painter drew so p. as heaven, it seemed, to kiss the left top. Ado IV, 1, 289. With against ( = to contra- turrets bowed, Lucr. 1371. thy youth's p. livery, Sonn.

914

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2, 3. from their p. lap pluck them where they grew, 98, 8. rich scarf to my p. earth, Tp. IT, 82. why thould p. summer boast, L L L I, 1,102. the p. day is all too wanton and too full of gawds, J o h n 111, 3, 34. report of fashions in p. Italy, R2 II, 1, 21. set not thy sweet heart on p. array, Lr. Ill, 4, 85. Adverbially: his crest that —er than blue Iris bends, Troil. I, 3, 380. 2) lofty; fall of vigonr, mettle or beauty: rein his p. head to the saddle-bow, Ven. 14. a breeding jennet, lusty, young and p. 260. nothing else with his p. sight agrees, 288. a p. rider on so p. aback, 300. the blunt boar, rough bear, or lion p. 884. clapping their p. tails to the ground below, 923. this p. issue of a king, Lncr. 37. the flesh being p., desire doth fight with grace, 712. to ruinate p. buildings, 944. a complement of p. compare, Sonn. 21, 5. p. titles, 25, 2. the p. full sail of his verse, 86, 1. the —est of them shall well hear of it, Ado IT, 1,194. have every pelting river made so p. Mids. II, 1, 91. I'll bring mine action on the —est he, Shr. HI, 2, 236. our purses shall be p., our garments poor, IT, 3, 173. our party may well meet a —er foe, John T, 1, 79. with p. desire of bold-faced victory, H6 A IT, 6, 11. it would amaze the —est of you all, IT, 7, 84. at such p. rate, H8 111, 2, 127. will rouse the —est panther in the chase, Tit. II, 2, 21 etc. etc. 3) fall of self-esteem, elated, haughty: Sonn. 75, 5. 80,6. Wiv. II, 2, 77. Meas. II, 2, 117. Ado III, 1, 10. H6A I, 2, 138; cf. H6C II, 1, 168 and II, 2, 84. H6A IT, 3, 24. H6B I, 3, 143. Ant. Ill, 13,142. Cymb. Ill, 3, 9 etc. etc. With of: Lncr. 437. Sonn. 67, 12. 78, 9. Compl. 108. Gent. II, 4, 161. Err. I, 1, 59. L L L II, 35. Merch. Ill, 4, 8. All's I, 2, 44. H5 111, 3, 4. ITChor. 17. I16B IT, 10, 77. Troil. HI, 3, 248. Rom. Ill, 5, 148. Tit. I, 254. Cymb. II, 4, 135. p. of this pride, Sonn. 151, 10 (proud of being so full of mettle? or simply = so proud?). With on: mine that I was p. on, Ado IT, 1, 139. With with, = a) by: p. with his form, LLL II, 237. O death, made p. with pure and princely beauty, J o h n IT, 3, 35. to mate the base earth p. with kissing it, R2 III, 3, 191. T, 5, 86. b) to, against: an a' be p. with me, Troil. II, 3, 215. Followed by an inf.: to see him woo her, Yen. 309. L L L II, 17. T, 2,66. As 1,2,245. Troil. 111,3,37. Cor. 1,1, 240. II, 1, 247. Ant. IT, 15, 88. By a clause: so p. that Bolingbroke was on his back, R2 T, 5, 84. Rom. III, 5, 147. Tim. II, 2, 199. 4) selfish, cold, unkind: 0, be not p. Ven. 113. thy p. heart's slave, Sonn. 141, 12. p., disobedient, stubborn, Gent. Ill, 1, 69. she is p. Out with that too; it was Eve's legacy and cannot be ta'en from her, 341. I must not seem p. Ado II, 3, 237. never framed a woman's heart of - er stuff, III, 1, 50. p. Titania, Mids. 11, 1, 60. peevish, p., idle, made of self-love. All's I, 1, 156; cf. As III, 2, 431. is she not p.t Rom. Ill, 5, 144. P r a n d , a verb of Capulet's making, = to speak of being prond: thank me no thankings, nor p. me no prouds, Rom. Ill, 5, 153 (don't speak of being thankful or proud). F r a u d - h e a r t e d , haughty: H 6 C T , 1,98. P r a u d l y , 1) in a showy manner, gaudily: bearing their birthrights p. on their backs, John II, 70. 2) with full force: the tide of blood in me hath p. flowed in vanity till now, H4B T, 2, 130. 3) in a lofty or a haughty manner: Sonn. 131, 2. Ado II, 3, 234. R2 T, 5, 83. H5 IT, 3 , 1 0 8 . H6A 1,2,

62. IT, 7, 43 R3 IT, 3, 42. Troil. IV, 5, 74. V, 10, ?4. Comp. —er: he bears himself more —er, Cor. IT, 7. 8. P r a u d - m t n d e d , arrogant, obstinate: Shr.II, 132. P r a a d - p l e d , gorgeously variegated: p. April dressed in all his trim, Sonn. 98, 2. P r a n d - s w e l l l n g (not hyphened in O.Edd.) lofty, majestical: the unowed interest of p. state, John IT, 3, 147. P r a T a n d , provender, food: Cor. II, 1, 267. P r a v e , 1) trans, a ) to try, to bring to the t o t to tie the rider she begins to p. Ven. 40. she hath assayed as much as may be — d , 608. not show my htad where thou mayst p. me, Sonn. 26, 14. to p. the constancy and virtue of your love, 117, 13. how Falstaff ...his dove will p. Wiv. 1,3,107. shall we go p. whtt's to be donet Ado I, 3, 75. to p. whose blood is reddest, Merch- H, 1, 7. which if you seek to p., I dare not stand by, Wint. I, 2, 443. I mean top. this lady's courtesy, H6A II, 2, 58. p. me, my gracious sovereign, R3 IT, 2, 69. we p. this very hour, Cor. I, 6, 62. to p. mare fortunes thou'rt tired, IT, 5, 99. I'll p. him, speed how it will, T, 1,60. 'tis a question left us yet to p., whether love lead fortune, or else fortune love, Hml. Ill, 2, 212. I'll see before I doubt; when I doubt, p. Oth. 111,3, 190. which first she'll p. on cats and dogs, Cymb. I, 5, 38. Partic. —d = approved, tried: prescriptions of rare and — d effects, All's I, 3, 228. by nature —d an enemy to the flock, H6B III, 1, 258. cf. Hml. Ill, 1, 47. b) to make for trial or by trying: thou art a murderer. Do not p. me so, John IT, 3, 90. my brain I'll p. the female to my soul, R2 T, 5, 6. Troilus will stand to the proof, if you'll p. it so, Troil. I, 2, 143. c) to find by trying, to ascertain, to find: when they in thee the like offences p. Lncr. 613. you in me can nothing worthy p. Sonn. 72, 4. a seething bath, which yet men p. against strange maladies a sovereign cure, 153, 7. I am an ass, indeed; you may p. it by my long ears, Err. IT, 4, 29. to p. my saying true, John III, 1, 28. that e'er I —dthee false, H6B III, 1, 205. if I do p. her haggard, Oth. Ill, 3, 260. as you shall p. us, praise us, T, 1, 66. d) to experience, to taste, to see, to feel: all is imaginary she doth p. Ven. 597. a bliss in proof , and —d, a very woe, Sonn. 129, 11. in things of great receipt with ease we p. among a number one is reckoned none, 136, 7. this by that I p., love's fire heats water, water cools not love, 154,13. we will all the pleasures p. Pilgr. 354. 'tis too much —d, that with devotion's visage we do sugar o'er the devil himself, Hml. Ill, 1, 47. you have seen and —d a fairer former fortune than that which is to approach, Ant. I, 2, 33. p. you that or p. that = if you hear that, if: p. that ever I lose more blood with love than I will get again with drinking, pick out mine eyes, Ado 1, 1,252. p. you that any man with me conversed ... refuse me, hate me, IT, 1, 183. p that ever I dress myself handsome till thy return, II4B II, 4, 302. p. that I cannot, take me home again, Per. IT, 6, 200. e) to evince, to show: to p. by wit worth in simplicity, L L L T, 2, 78. doth not the crown of England p. the kingt John II, 273. With a double accus., = to show to be: —ing his beauty by succession thine, Sonn. 2, 12. and p. thee virtuous, 88, 4. —d thee my best of love, 110, 8. this —s me still a sheep, Gent. I, 1, 82. rather —d the sliding of your brother a merri-

p

915

met, Meas. 11,4, 115. IT, 2, 40. LLL I, 2, 59. IT, 154. Err. Ill, 1, 51. Ado T, 1, 17. Mids. HI, 2, 458. 3, 274. Mids. HI, 2, 127. 253. Tw. I, 5, 64. John Merch. II, 2, 158. II, 5, 55. Wint. II, 3, 96. John II, IT, 3,55. H6CIII,3,71. R3 I, 3, 146 etc. Keflexively: 137. H4A I, 2, 132. Ho III, 7, 72. 124. 129. 131. mercy to thee would p. itself a bawd, Meas. Ill, 1, 150. H6B 111, 1, 170. Cor. I, 1, 209. Hml. Ill, 2, 359. P r a v e r h e d , provided with a proverb: I am p. true she is, as she hath —d herself, Merch. II, 6, 55. in first seeing he had —d himself a man, Cor. 1,3,18. with a grandsire phrase. Bom. I, 4, 37. f) to evince or establish as a truth, to demonProvide, 1 1 to procure beforehand, to prepare in strate: —ing their right, Lucr. 67. I'll p. it, Gent. I, careful foresight: a small spare matt, such as seafa1,86. 111,1,369. Meas. II, 1,88. 111,2,30. LLL II, ring men p. for storms, Err. I, 1, 81. to p. a take for 159. Ill, 39. Mids. Ill, 2, 255. Shr. I, 2, 177. 178. Tw. any sore that may betide, H6C IT, 6, 87. according to 111,1,29. John 1,68. H6B I, 3,159. H6C 1,1,131. our law immediately —d in that case, Mids. I, 1, 45; Tim. Ill, 5, 23 etc. With against: I'll p. mine honour cf. p. more piercing statutes daily, Cor. I, 1, 86. to against thee presently, Err. T, 30. if it be —d against hold what distance his wisdom can p. Mcb. HI, 6, 45. an alien that he seek the life of any citizen, Merch. IT, Used of a heavenly dispensation (c£ Providence)', 'tis 1, 349. With on, in the same sense: if this be error an accident that heaven — s , Meas. IT, 3, 81. he was and upon me —d, Sonn. 116,13. as shall be —d upon —iI to do us good, Wint. IT, 4, 860. the gods themthee by good witness, Ado IT, 2, 82. I'U p. it on Us selves have —d that I shall have notch help from you, body, T, 1, 74. Shr. IT, 3, 148. R2 1,3, 37. IT, 47. Tim. I, 2, 92. H6A II, 4,98. Cor. Ill, 3,47. Lr. IT, 6, 91. T, 3, 93. —d, or —d that, followed by the subjunctive, = With a double accus.: be sure thou p. my love a whore, on condition: Gent IT, 1, 71. Merch. Ill, 2, 209. As Oth. Ill, 3,359. his description —d us unspeaking sots, II, 7, 45. Shr. I, 2, 217. Wint. I, 2, 335. B2 III, 3, Cymb. T, 5,178. With a clause: Pilgr. 33. Gent. Ill, 40. Hml. T, 2, 210. Cymb. I, 4, 166. Per. T, 1, 77. 1,297. Err. II, 2,101. Ado IT, 2, 23. T, 2,98. Troil. two things —d more, that... he become a Christian, I, 2,140 etc. Merch. IT, 1, 386. 2) intr. to be found, to be ascertained, to fall out: 2) to take care; absol.: we must to horse again; they wither in their prime, p. nothing worth, Yen. 418. go, go p. All's T, 1, 38. my cook and I'U p. Tim. HI, since men p. beasts, let beasts bear gentle minds, Lucr. 4, 119. we'll p. Per. II, 1, 168. With an infinitive: 1148. Sonn. 151,4. Tp. T, 175. Gent. I, 1, 37. Wiv. you must p. to bottom it (her love) on me, Gent. Ill, 2, IT, 2,119. Mids. T, 317. John II, 270. that my re- 53. let us p. to see her coronation be performed, H6B vengeful services p. as benefits to thee, Cor. IT, 5, 95. 1, 1, 73. With for = to take care of, to do what is p. this a prosperous day, Ant. IT, 6, 6 (if this p. a necessary for: Fortune that did not better Jor my life prosperous day), if it should p. that thou art so inhu- p. than public means, Sonn. 111,3. I have —d for you, man, All's T, 3, 115. 0,if it p., tempests are kind, Tw. Meas. II, 3, 17. take this mercy to p. for better times 111,4,418. if it p. she's otherwise, Wint. II, 1, 133. to come, T, 489. his wonted followers shall all be very allow us as we p. Troil. Ill, 2, 98 etc. With an adverb: well —d for, H4B T, 5, 105. we will presently p. for hasty marriage seldom —th well, H6C IT, 1, 18. he them, H6A T, 2, 15 ( i . e. arm), p. for thine own fuwas likely to have —d most royally, Hml. T, 2, 409 ture safety, H8 HI, 2, 421. he that's coming must be (Qq royal), my purpose would p. well, Cymb. Ill, 4, —d for, Mcb. I, 5, 68. 122 (cf. well found in All's II, 1, 105). pray heaven Transitively; with an accus. of the person, = to he p. so, Gent. 11,7,79. if it p. so, Err. 1,2,103. Ado III, furnish, to supply with what is necessary: p. yourself, 1, 105. Merch. 111,2,20. All'sT,3,116. Caes. T , l , 4 . As I, 3, 89. I will p. thee, H6C IT, 1, 60. we will ourOften quite *= to become, to be: they p. bankrupt selves p. Hml. Ill, 3, 7. Partic. —d: I cannot be so in this poor rich gain, Lucr. 140. since he died and soon —d, Gent I, 3, 72. it (danger) will seek me in poets better p. Sonn. 32, 13. truth —s thievish for a another place and find me worse —d, H4B II, 3, 50. prize so dear, 48, 14. now, jerkin, you are Wee to lose with a sharp —d wit, R3 III, 1, 132. you shall know your hair and p. a bald jerkin, Tp. IT, 238. I cannot many dare accuse you boldly, more than, I fear, you now p. constant to myself, without some treachery used are —d for, H8 T, 3, 57. H6B I, 4, 3. R3 III, 4, 46. to Valentine, Gent. II, 6, 31. with a prayer they (his Tim. I, 2, 185. Lr. II, 4, 235. With of: I am —d events) may prosperous p. Meas. Ill, 2, 253. this may of a torch-bearer, Merch. II, 4, 24. you are as well p. worse than hanging, T, 365. lest I should p. the —d of both, H5 III, 7, 9. mother of fools, Ado II, 1, 295. how art thou —d With an accus. of the thing, = to procure, to Judas? LLL T, 2, 604. the world will p. a cockney, prepare: p. your block and your axe to-morrow, Meas. Tw. IT, 1, 15. in hope he'll p. a widower shortly, B6C IT, 2, 55. hath he —d this musict Ado I, 2, 2. Shr. III, 3, 227. Ven. Dedic. 5. Sonn. 8, 14. 10,12. 39, II, 318. All's III, 4, 40. John V, 2, 98. R2 II, 2, 106. 9. 125, 4. Pilgr. 59. Tp. Ill, 2, 40. 153. Gent. I, 1, H6B III, 1, 276. Troil. Ill, 2, 220. Rom. Ill, 6,180. 147. Ill, 2, 20. IT, 4, 110. Meas. II, 4, 169. Ill, 2, 32. Tim. I, 2, 198. T, 1, 35. Mcb. HI, 5, 18. Oth. I, 3, Ado III, 3, 190. LLL 111, 40. T, 2, 563. Mids. II, 1, 378. Ant. HI, 4, 36 (p. your going). T, 2, 195. Dat. 265. Ill, 2, 350. Merch. I, 2, 53. Ill, 4, 64. As HI, and accus.: I'll p. you a chain, Wiv. T, 1,6. H4A I, 3, 89. R2 III, 2, 25 etc. etc. 2, 214. H4B 111, 2, 102. H6B III, 1, 319. Cymb. Ill, Pravender, dry food for beasts: Mids. IT, 1, 35. 2,77. H5 IT, 2, 58. H6A I, 2,11. Caes. IT, 1, 30. Oth. I, Providence, 1) foresight, timely care: the p. 1, 48. that's in a watchful state, Troil. Ill, 3, 196. it will be Praver, one who tries: why am 1 a fooll Make laid to us, whose p. should have ... restrained this mad that demand of the p. Troil. II, 3,72 Ff to the creator). young man, Hml. IT, 1, 17. Prvverfc, a current phrase or a maxim of wisdom, 2) the care of God, divine dispensation: Tp. I, 2, an adage: Gent. Ill, 1, 305. Wiv. Ill, 1, 107. III, 5, 159. T, 189. Caes. T, 1, 107. Hml. T, 2, 231.

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P r t T l i e a t , forecasting, prudent in preparing for future exigencies: Tw. I, 2, 12. H 5 II, 4, 11. P r a v M e a t l y , providentially: He that ...p. caters for the sparrow, As II, 3, 44. P r t T H e r , one who procures what is wanted: parted with prayers for the p. Cymb. Ill, 6, 53. P r a v l n e e , a country which makes part of an empire: Mess. Ill, 2,185. Wint. I, 2,369. John II, 528. Ill, 1, 3. H6A III, 3, 24. H6B I, 1, 120. H6C I, 1, 109. Ant. II, 5, 68. Ill, 10, 8. Per. V, 1, 61. P r o v i n c i a l , belonging to an ecclesiastical province and subject to its jurisdiction: hit subject am I not, nor here p. Meas. V, 318. P r o v i n c i a l , coining from Provins in France: would not this and a forest of feathers, with two P. roses on my razed shoes, get me a fellowship in a cry of players f Hml. Ill, 2, 288 (meaning ornamental shoe-ties called roses, which Hamlet intends to have particularly conspicuous). P r a v i a i a n , 1) provident care, preparation, measures taken beforehand: with such p. in mine art, Tp. I, 2, 28. herself had made p. for her following me. Err. 1,1,48. for p. to shield thee from diseases of the world, Lr. I, 1, 176. 2) stores of any kind necessary for an exigency: we shall be short in our p. Rom. IV, 2, 38. I am now from home, and out of that p. which shall be needful for your entertainment, Lr. II, 4, 208. follow me, that will to some p. give thee quick conduct, III, 6, 103. = store of money: that my p. was out, Tim. Ill, 6, 18. = victuals: that for our gold we may p. have, Per. V, 1, 56. 258. Praviaa, condition: he doth deny his prisoners, but with p. and exception, H4A I, 3, 78. P r a v a c a t l a a , stimulation to lust: let there come a tempest of p. Wiv. V, 5, 23. what an eye she has! methinks it sounds a parley of p. Oth. II, 3, 23. P r a v a k e , 1) to call forth, to rouse, to cause: swelling passion doth p. a pause, Ven. 218. dost thou drink tears, thai thou —st such weeping? 949. my tale —s that question, Tp. 1,2,140. thy best of rest is sleep, and that thou oft — st, Meas. Ill, 1, 18. rebuke me not for that which you p. L L L V, 2, 347. let my presumption not p. thy wrath, H6A II, 3, 70. the palsy, and not fear, —s me (to quiver) H6B IV, 7, 98. thy deed —s this deluge, R3 I, 2, 61. in this rage, —d by him, you cannot, Cor. V, 6, 138. our gentle flame —s itself, Tim. I, 1, 24. what three things does drink especially p.f Mcb. II, 3, 30. 32. 33. the need we have to use you did p. our hasty sending, Hml. II, 2, 3. that (sleep) to p. in him, Lr. IV, 4, 13. p. not battle, Ant. Ill, 8, 3. one sin another doth p. Per. I, 1, 137. 2) to incite, to impel, to instigate; absol.: no further enemy to you than the constraint of hospitable zeal... religiously — s , John II, 246. a —ing merit, Lr. Ill, 5, 8 (cf. Merit). Transitively: — d w i t h raging ire, Err. V, 216. beauty —th thieves sooner than gold, As I, 3, 112. did you not p. met John IV, 2, 207. like as rigour of tempestuous gusts —s the mightiest hulk against the tide, H6A V, 5, 6. thou wast —d by thy bloody mind, R3 I, 2, 99. 'twas thy beauty that —d me, 181. not —d by any suitor, I, 3, 64. the king, —d by the queen, devised impeachments, 11,2,21. With to: what this ecstasy may now p. them to, Tp. 111,3, 109. even that power —s me to this perjury, Gent. II, C, 5. Wiv. II, 3, 73. Meas. IV, 1, 15. L L L III, 78.

R2 II, 2, 101. H6A IT, 1, 141. Per. Prol. 26. With an inf.: so full of him, that thou —st thyself to cast him up, H4B I, 3, 96. With hither and thither: thither —d and instigated by his distemper, Wiv. Ill, 5, 77. p. us hither now to slaugther thee, R3 I, 4, 231. With on: the bloody spur cannot p. him on, Sonn. 50, 9. 3) to rouse to anger, to incense: Yen. 1003. H6A III, 1, 34. IV, 1, 104. B 3 I, 2, 97. H8 III, 2, 288. Troil. IV, 5, 99. Rom. V, 3, 70. Oth. I, 2, 7. II, 1, 280. Ant. IV, 15, 45. Cymb. I, 4, 72. V, 5, 293. P r a v a k e r , that which excites or causes: drink is a great p. ofjhree things, Mcb. II, 3, 27. P r a v a a t , the keeper of a prison, a gaoler: Meas. I, 2, 118. I, 4, 73. II, 1, 32. II, 2, 6. II, 3 , 1 . Ill, 1, 177 and passim in this play. P r a v u l g a t e , to make public: Oth. I, 2, 21 (only in Ql; the rest of O. Edd. promulgate). Praweaa, bravery: H6B V, 2, 22. H6C III, 3, 86. Mcb. V, 8, 41. Prudence, wisdom; used with irony: this Sir P. Tp. II, 1, 286. hold your tongue, good p. Rom. Ill, 5, 172. Prndemt, wise: 'tis thought among the p. Tw. I, 3, 34. Op. discipline! J o h n II, 413. your father was reputed for a prince most p. H8 II, 4, 46. those cold ways, that seem like p. helps, Cor. Ill, 1, 221. P r u a e , subst. a dried plum: Wint.IV,3,51. stewed —s a favourite dish in bawdy-houses: Wiv. I, 1, 296. Meas. II, 1, 93. 103. 111. H4A III, 3, 128. H4B II, 4, 159. P r i m e , vb. to trim; applied to trees, = to lop superfluous branches: Err. II, 2, 181. As II, 3, 63. T o persons, - to dress up: or spend a. minute's time in —ing me, L L L IV, 3, 183. To birds, = to pick ont damaged feathers and arrange the plumage with the bill: which makes him p. himself and bristle up the crest of youth, H4A I, 1, 98. his royal bird —s the immortal wing, Cymb. V, 4, 118. Pry, to look with scrutinizing curiosity: why —est thou through my windowt Lucr. 1089. into my deeds to p. Sonn. 61, 6. which —es not to the interior, Merch. II, 9, 28. I have cause to p. into this pedant, Shr. Ill, 1, 87. the eye of reason may p. in upon us, H4A IV, 1, 72. to p. into his title, IV, 3, 103. let it p. through the portage of the head, H5 III, 1, 10. to p. into the secrets of the state, H6B I, 1, 250. p . on every side, R3 III, 5, 6. I —ed me through the crevice, Tit. V, 1, 114. to p. in what I further shall intend to do, Rom. V, 3, 33. cf. Narrow-prying. P s a l m , a holy song: Wiv. II, 1, 63 (O. Edd. the hundred —s, M. Edd. the hundredth p.). Wint. IV, 3, 47. H4A II, 4, 147 (Ff ail manner of songs). P s a l m i s t , the author of the Psalms: death, as the P. saith, is certain to all, H4B III, 2, 41. P s a l t e r i e s , stringed instruments of music: Cor. V,4, 52. P t a l e m y , name of the Macedonian dynasty in Egypt: A n t I, 4, 6. 17. Ill, 6, 15. Plur. —es: II, 7, 39. Ill, 12, 18. P u b l i c , adj. 1) pertaining to the state: the body p. Meas. I, 2, 163. the p. body, Tim. V, 1, 148. p. weal, H6A I, 1, 177. Cor. Ill, 1,176. pricked on by p. wrongs, H6A 111, 2, 78. for the p. good, H6B I, 1, 199. treasury, I, 3, 134. peace, H8 V, 3, 41. benefit. Cor. 1,1,156. power, III, 1,269. laws, Tim. V, 4,62. reasons, Caes. Ill, 2, 7. p. leave to speak, 224 ( = offi-

p

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cial). chair, 68. a p. minister ofjustice, Ant. V, 1, 20. Pair, name in H4B V, 3, 94. by p. war, Per. I, 2, 104. Pair, vb. 1) to blow with a quick blast: his hot 2) general, common, open to all, or done in the heart... —s forth another wind that fires the torch, sight of the people: a p. fast, Lucr. 891. the p. plague Lucr. 315. tapers they are, with your sweet breaths —ed out, L L L V, 2, 267. like foggy south —ing with of many, 1479. p. honour, Sonn. 25,2. with p. kindness, 36, 11. p. means, 111, 4. sport, Wiv. IV, 4, 14. the p. wind and rain, As III, 5, 50. the sea —ed up with ear, Meas. IV, 2, 102. Ant. III. 4, 5. in the p. eye, III, winds, Shr. I, 2, 202. distinction, with a broad and 6,11. thanks, Meas. V, 7. p. accusation. Ado IV, 1, powerful fan - ing at all, Troil. 1, 3, 28. —s away 307; cf. Hml. IV, 7, 17. shame, L L L I, 1, 132. street, from thence, Rom. I, 4, 102. when it (the cannon) Merch. II, 5, 32. Ant. II, 2, 234. our p. court, As I, hath from his very arm — ed his own brother, Oth. Ill, 3, 46. haunt, II, 1, 15. Rom. Ill, 1, 53. spectacle, 4, 137. H6A I, 4, 41. commoner, Oth. IV, 2, 73. = vulgar: 2) to breathe with vehemence, as after violent p. means which p. manners breeds, Sonn. I l l , 4. in exertion: and p. to win a vulgar station, Cor. II, 1,230. p. = in open view, not in private or secretly: Whit. 3) to blow up, to inflate: a —ed man, Wiv. V, 5, II, 1, 197. Cymb. I, 4, 59. 160. till thy cheek outsweli the colic of —ed Aquilon, P o H I c m , a collector of toll: Merch. I, 3, 42. Troil. IV, 5, 9. whose selfsame mettle, whereof arroPufclleatlen, notification to the world, procla- gant man is —ed, Tim. IV, 3,180. a —ed and reckmation: Troil. I, 3, 326. less libertine, Hml. I, 3, 49. spirit with divine ambiPuhllely, in open view, in public: Wiv. IV, 2, tion —ed, IV, 4, 49. With up: the heart, who, great 236. Meas. IV, 3, 101. V, 278. Err. V, 127. 130. and —ed up with this retime, H4B IV, 3, 121. cf. Wint.11,3,204. R3I,4, 222. H8 11,4,3. Ant. Ill, 6,5. Lazy-puffing. Paklleelu, Roman name: Cor. V, 3, 64. A n t III, P o g g l e g , thievish: set my p. tooth on edge, W i n t IV, 3, 7. 7,74. Pah, see Pooh. Publish, 1) to make generally known: Lncr. 1852. Sonn. 102, 4. Ado IV, 1, 206. Shr. IV, 2, 85. P a l m y (cf. Puny) petty, having but the skill of H4B 1, 3, 86. H6B III, 2, 17. H8 III, 2, 68. Lr. 1, 1, a novice: as a p. filter breaks his staff like a noble 44. IV, 6, 236 (a —ed traitor). Cymb. V, 5, 478. goose, As III, 4, 46. 2) to bring to light, to show, to ntter, to express Puissance (dissyll. or trisyll.) 1 ) strength: not in words: whose trial shall better p. his commendation, arrived to pith and p. H5 HI Chor. 21. thereby is Merch. IV, I, 165. then we wound our modesty and England mained and fain to go with a staff, but that make foul the clearness of our deservings, when ofmy p. holds it up, H6B IV, 2, 173. ourselves we p. them, All's 1,3, 7. thus far ¡will boldly 2) armed force: draw our p. together, John III, 1, p. her, she bore a mind that envy could not but call fair,339. to look with forehead bold and big enough upon Tw. II, 1, 30. how will this grieve you, when you shall the power and p. of the long, H4BI,3,9. come against come to clearer knowledge, that you thus have —ed me, us in full p. 77. till that the nobles and the armed comWint. II, 1, 98. a proof of strength she could not p. mons have of their p. made a little taste, II, 3, 52. more, Troil. V, 2,113. if I tell how these two didcoact,make imaginary p. H5 Prol. 25. let us deliver our p. shall 1 not lie in —ing a trutht 119. into the hand of God, II, 2, 190. in the main battle, Pafcllaher, one who shows, who brings to light: whose p. shall be well winged with our chiefest horse, why is Collatine the p. of that rich jewel he should keep R3 V, 3, 299. unknown from thievish ears, Lncr. 33. love of you, not Put ••ant, mighty, powerful: with your p. arm hate unto my friend, hath made me p. of this pretence, renew their feats, H5 I, 2, 116. my thrice p. liege, 119. Gent. Ill, 1, 47. frailest thou the p. piket IV, 1, 40 (Pistol's speech). Publlus, Roman praenomen: Lncr. Arg. 19. with a p. and a mighty power, H6B IV, 9, 25. with a Cor. II, 3, 249. Tit. IV, 3, 10. 25. V, 2,151 etc. Caes. p. host, H6CII, 1, 207. V, 1, 6. V, 2, 31. a p. navy, III, 1, 53. 57. Incorrectly used as a family name in R3 IV, 4, 434. most high, most mighty, and most p. Caes. II, 2, 108. Ill, 1, 85. 89. 91. IV, 1, 4. Caesar, Caes. Ill, 1,33. his grief grew p. Lr. V, 3, 216. Pueelle (O. Edd. Puzel, Puzell, and Pucell), the Pake, to spew, to vomit: Me infant mewling and usual name of Joan of Arc, the maid of Orleans: —ing in the nurse's arms, As II, 7, 144. H6A I, 2, 110. I, 4, 101 (O. Edd. Joan de Puzel). Pake-etecklag, probably = dark-coloured stock107 v O. Edd. Puzel or Pussel). 1, 5, 36. I, 6, 3 (0. ing: H4A 11,4, 78. Edd. Joane de Puxel). II, 1, 20. Ill, 2, 20. 38. 58. P o l i o s , whining, whimpering: Gent II, 1, 26. 121. Ill, 3,40. 88. Troil. IV, 1, 61. Cor. IV, 2, 52. Rom. Ill, 5, 185. Pack, the goblin styled also Robin Goodfellow: Pall, subst. a plnck, a shake, a jerk: two —* at Mids. II, 1, 40. 148. IV, 1, 69. V, 438. 442. once, his lady banished, and a limb lopped off, H6B P a H t r , see Pother. II, 3, 41. Pudding, a kind of food generally made of P a l l , vb. to draw, to tug, to pluck; absol.: thou meal, milk and eggs: Gent. IV, 4, 34. Wiv. II, 1, 32. hast top. at a smack o' the contrary, All's II, 3, 237 All's II, 2, 29. H4A II, 4, 498. H5 II, 1, 92. Oth. II, (at a taste of folly, as at a vessel, cf. Smack). Trans.: I, 258. Per. II, 1, 86. Name in Meas. IV, 3, 17. rUp. thee by the lesser legs, Tp. II, 2, 108. —edthe Paddle, snbst a muddy plash: Lucr. 657. 658. law upon you, Meas. II, 1, 16. we'll p. his plumes, H6A H6B IV, 1, 71. Ant. I, 4, 62. III, 3, 7. let them p. all about mine ears, Cor. Ill, 2, 1. Puddle, vb. to make muddy: Err. V, 173. Oth. p. her out of Acheron, Tit. IV, 3, 44. you —ed me by Ill, 4, 143. the cloak, Caes. I, 2, 215. ne'er p. your hat upon your Pudency, modesty: did it with a p. so rosy, Cymb. brows, Mcb. IV, 3, 208. her garments ... —ed the poor II, 5, 11. wretch ...to muddy death, Hml. IV, 7,183. hales and

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—s me, Oth. IT, 1,144. With adverbs: doth backward p. our slow designs, All's I, 1, 233. shall all our houses be —ed down, Meas. I, 2, 105. p. down the Savoy, H6B IV, 7, 1. hath —edfair England down, I, 1, 259 (bronght down, brought low), the weight that—ed me down, H8 III, 2, 408. 'tis pride that —s the country down, Oth. II, 3, 98. I p. in resolution, Mcb. V, 5, 42 ( = lose confidence), to p. off = to take off (ornaments or articles of dress): Shr. II, 4. Caes. 1,2, 289. Mcb. V, 3, 54. Lr. IV, 6,177. profound respects do p. you on, John 111, 1, 318. unless his teeth be —ed out, H6B IV, 7,19. —ed out thy tongue, As I, 1, 64. the weeds — are —ed up root and all by Bolingbroke, R2 III, 4, 52 (Qq plucked). P u l l e r - d a w n , one who subverts or deposes: setter-up and p. of kings, H6C III, 3, 157. Pallet-»perm, treadle: Wiv. Ill, 5, 32. Pulpit, the rostra of ancient Borne: Caes. Ill, 1, 80. 84. 229. 236. 250. Pulplter, preacher; conjectured by M. Edd. in As III, 2,163; O. Edd. Jupiter. Pulse, the throbbing of the arteries as the blood is driven through them: Ven. 476. Tp. V, 103. 113. Err. IV, 4, 55. V, 243. All's I, 3, 175. John IV, 2, 92. Troil. Ill, 2, 38. Bom. IV, 1, 96. Hml. Ill, 4, 140. Per. V, 1, 155. P n l t l i i e , Mrs Quickly's form of the word pulse: H4B II, 4, 25. Pummel (M. Edd. Pommel) the knob on the hilt of a sword: LLL V, 2, 618. Pump, a light shoe (often worn with ribbons formed into the shape of flowers): new ribbons to your —s, Mids. IV, 2, 37. Gabriels —s were all unpinked i the heel, Shr. IV, 1, 136. then is my p. well flowered, Rom. II, 4, 64. till thou hast worn out thy p. 66. Pumplen, a gourd, Cucurbita Pepo: Wiv. Ill, 3, 43. t Pun, vb. to pound as in a mortar, to dash to pieces: he would p. thee into shivers with his fist, as a sailor breaks a biscuit, Troil. II, 1, 42. Punch, vb. to bore, to perforate: —ed full of deadly holes, B3 V, 3, 125. Punish, 1) to afflict with a penalty, to chastise, to correct: Gent. II, 4, 130. Wiv. IV, 4, 25. Meas. V, 31. 240. LLL I, 2, 155. Tw. V, 141. Wint. I, 2, 59. 111,2,226. IV, 4, 712. John II, 189. Ill, 1, 11. H4A III, 2, 11. V, 2, 7. H4B I, 2, 141. H5 II, 2, 45. 48. 60. H6B II, 4, 7. R3 II, 1, 34. H8 II, 4, 75. Cor. Ill, 1, 81. IV, 6, 52. V, 1, 21. Bom. V, 3, 295. 308. Hml. HI, 4, 174. Lr. II, 2, 152. Ill, 4, 16. IV, 2, 54. Ant. II, 5, 100. Cymb. Ill, 2, 7. Per. I, 2, 28. 32. V, 3, 100. 2) to afflict with pain and suffering: if I have too austerely —ed you, your compensation makes amends, Tp. IV, 1,1 .p. me not with your hard thoughts, As I, 2, 195. the reason why they are not so —ed and cured, III, 2, 423. whose very naming —es me with the remembrance of that penitent king, Wint IV, 2, 24. that the people may not be —ed with my thwarting stars, H6C IV, 6, 22. how I am —ed with sore distraction, Hml. V, 2, 240. bid that welcome which comes to p. us, and we p. it seeming to bear it lightly, Ant. IV, 14, 137. Punishment, 1) penalty, chastisement, correction: Pilgr. and LLL IV, 3, 63. Wiv. Ill, 3, 208. Meas. 1,3, 39. 1, 4, 28. Ado 111, 3, 4. V, 1, 316. V,

4,130. LLL 1,1,270. H5IV, 1,176. H6B III, 1,13< (to give). B3 II, 1, 105. H8 III, 2, 183. Tit. V, 3 145. Lr. Ill, 4, 76. IV, 2, 94. Oth. II, 3, 274. Ant. 1 1, 39 (on pain of p.). Cymb. 1,4, 129. Ill, 6, 11. V 5, 334. 343. 2) affliction, suffering: the pleasing p. that wome bear, Err. I, 1,47 (but cf. Genesis III, 16). Punk, a strumpet: Wiv. II, 2, 141. Meas. V, 179 528. All's II, 2, 24. Pont«, a thrust or stroke in fencing: to see the pass thy p. Wiv. II, 3, 26. the p. reverso = a back handed stroke or cut: Bom. II, 4, 27. P a n ; (cf. Puisny) little, petty: p. lies, Merch. Ill 4, 74. a p. subject strikes at thy great glory, B2 111 2, 86. my p. drawer, H4A II, 4, 33. his p. swore H6A IV, 7, 36. that thy wives with spits and boys wit stones in p. battle slay me, Cor. IV, 4, 6. every p whipster gets my sword, Oth. V, 2, 244. Pupil, 1) one under the care of a tutor: Gem II, 1,144. LLL IV, 2, 160. 163. Shr. II, 108. R2 I 3, 171. H4A III, 1, 46. Rom. II, 3, 82. Cymb. I, 5, l i Per. V Prol. 9. 2) one under the care of a guardian, a ward: H61 1,3,49. Adjectively, = not of age, unripe: my p pen, Sonn. 16, 10. to the p. age of this present twelv o' clock, H4A II, 4, 106. his p. age man-entered thu: Cor. II, 2, 102. P u p i l - l i k e , like a child instructed by a tutor R2 V, 1, 31. Puppet, a small human figure made to play witb a doll: Gent. II, 1, 101. Mids. Ill, 2, 288. 289. Shr 1, 2, 79, IV, 3, 103. 104. 106. Lr. II, 2, 39. Ant. V, 2 208. I could interpret between you and your love, if could see the —s dallying, Hml. Ill, 2, 257; meaning according to some commentators, the babies, or mi niature reflections, in the eyes, but more probably al luding to a puppet-show, in which Ophelia and he lover were to play a part. Puppy, a young dog, a whelp: Gent. IV, 4, 3 Wiv. Ill, 5, 11. H8 1, 1, 175. Oth. I, 3,341. Adject ively: a p. dog = a new-born dog, John II, 460. H. HI, 2, 78. a p. greyhound, II4B II, 4, 107. Term 0 contempt, implying stupidity: Wint. IV, 4, 726. H V, 4, 30. Cymb. I, 2, 22. Puppy-headed, stupid: this p. monster, Tp. II 2, 159. Pur, the low murmuring sound of a cat: here i a p. of fortune's, sir, or of fortune's cat, All's V, 2, 20 p., the cat is gray, Lr. Ill, 6, 47. Purblind, 1) quite blind: this whimpled, whi ning,p., wayward boy, LLL III, 181. lower messes per chance are to this business p. Wint. I, 2, 228. p. Ar gus, all eyes and no sight, Troil. I, 2, 31 (Ff pur blinded), her p. son (Cupid) Rom. II, 1, 12. 2) half-blind, short-sighted: the p. hare, Ven. 679 any p. eye may find it out, H6A II, 4, 21. Purbllnded, — purblind; reading of Ff in Troil I, 2, 31; Q purblind. Purchase, subst. acquisition of any kind and b} any means: the difference is p. of a heavy curse fron Rome, or the light loss of England for a friend, Joht III, 1, 205. Me p. made, the fruits are to ensue, Oth II,3,9. the p. is to make men glorious, Per. Prol. ! ( = gain, profit). I sought the p. of a glorious beauty I, 2, 72. = acquisition by money, buying, bargain which p. if thou make, Yen. 515. these wise men tha

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give fools money get themselves a good report after Caes. II, 2, 78. Lr. II, 4, 127. Oth. V, 2, 205. Per. fourteen years' p. Tw. IV, 1, 24 (after having paid for III, 2, 17. it a pretty loDg time), there's no p. in money, H4A b) absolute, perfect, not impaired or adulterated III, 3, 45. will his vouchers vouch him no more of his in any manner: to mingle p. perfection with impure —s, Hml. V, 1, 117. if there were wealth enough for defeature, Ven. 736. welcome, p. wit, L L L V, 3, 484. the p. Cymb. I, 4, 91. = booty: thou shalt have a death, made proud with p. and princely beauty, J o h n share in our p. H4A II, 1, 101 (¥f purpose). they will IV, 3, 35. the —st treasure mortal times afford. R2 I, steal any thing and call it p. H5 III, 2 , 4 5 . made prize 1, 177. in p. truth, H 5 I, 2, 73 with p. heart's love, and p. of his lustful eye, R3 III, 7, 187. R3 IV, 4, 403 ( = sincere, true), that praise, sole p., P u r c h a s e , vb. to acquire, to obtain, to gain (a transcends, Troil. 1, 3, 244. the eye itself, that most p. profit), or to draw on one's self (an evil) in any spirit of sense, III, 3, 106. let desert in p. election shine, manner; absol.: there's wondrous things spoke of him. T i t 1,16 (not influenced by any other considerations). Wondrous I ay, I warrant you, and not without his true to turn your households' rancour to p. love, Rom. II, —ing, Cor. II, 1, 155 (desert earned by exertion). 3, 92. the finest part of p. love. Ant. I, 2, 152. Transitively: as my gift and thine own acquisition 2) unsullied, unspotted, undisturbed, clean, clear: worthily —d take my daughter, Tp. IV, 1 , 1 4 . I have that p. congealed white, high Taurus' snow, Miis. Ill, —d as many diseases under her roof, Meas. I, 2, 46. 2, 141. 144. in p. white robes, Wint. Ill, 3, 22. the his pardon, —d by such sin, IV, 2,111. and never gives —st spring is not so fret from mud, H6B III, 1, 101. to truth and virtue that which simplenest and merit —st snow, Cor. V, 3, 66. the meanest bird thst flies —th, Ado III, 1, 70 ( = deserves; cf. above), which in the —r air, Per. IV, 6, 109. his p. brain... doth with pain —d doth inherit pain, L L L 1,1,73. how hast by the idle comments that it makes foretell the ending thou —d this experience 1 111, 27. that clear honour of mortality, J o h n V, 7, 2 ; cf. ingrateful mas with were —d by the merit of the bearer, Merch. II, 9, 43. liquorish draughts greases his p. mind, Tim. IV, 3 , 1 9 5 your accent is something finer than you could p. in so (i. e. naturally clear and nndistnrbed). o'er whom his removed a dwelling, As III, 2, 360. with die and drab very madness... shows itself p. Hml. IV, 1, 27 (i. e. I —d this caparison, Wint. IV, 3, 27. p. the sight as having a clear perception of what has happened). again of dear Sicilia, IV, 4, 522. I sent thee forth Hence in a moral sense, = a) stainless, blameless: to p. honour, R2 I, 3, 282. how can tyrants safely go- our p. honours, J o h n IV, 3, 25. in my p. and irmacuvern home, unless abroad they p. great alliance, H6C late valour, H4B IV, 3 , 4 1 . that p. blood, H6A IV, 6, III, 3, 70. true peace, which I wilt p. with my duteous 23. virtues asp. as grace, Hml. I, 4, 33. p. honour, service, R3 II, 1, 63. which (peace) she shall p. with Cymb. II, 4, 59. still lasting war, IT, 4, 344. do this and p. us thy b) innocent, guiltless, chaste: Ven. 69. 511. 558. lasting friends, Tit. II, 3, 275. though his right arm Lucr. 14. 73. 167. 194. 531 (a p. compound, i. e. not might p. his own time, Tim. Ill, 5, 78. —ing but poisonous). 542. 684. 826 (p. to CoUatine). 1078. trouble, Cymb. II, 3 , 9 3 . Dat. and accua., = to bring 1704. Bonn. 66, 4. 1 1 0 , 1 4 . Compl. 315. Pilgr- 95. in, to gain sth. to a person: one poor retiring minute Tp. II, 1,155. Gent. II, 7, 77. Ill, 1,144. 229. IT, 2, in an age would p. thee a thousand friends, Lncr. 963. 88. IV, 3, 21. Err. Ill, 2, 37. Ado IV, 1, 105. L L L lest it make you choleric and p. me another dry basting, V, 2, 351. Wint. II, 2, 41. John II, 429. B2 IV, 99. Err. II, 2, 63. the glove may haply p. him a box o' the H5 I, 2 , 3 2 . Ill, 3, 20. H6A II, 1, 20. V, 3, 182. V, ear, H5 IV, 7, 181. his silver hairs will p. us a good 4 , 8 3 . H8 V, 5 , 2 6 . Bom. Ill, 3,38. Tim. IV, 3, 366. opinion, Caes. II, 1, 145. Partic. —d, opposed to 384. Mcb. IV, 3, 53. Hml. Ill, 1,141. Oth. 1,1, 107. hereditary: what in me wat —d (viz the crown) Ill, 3, 138. IV, 2 , 1 8 . Per. V, 3 , 6 9 . falls upon thee in a more fairer sort, H4B IV, 5, Adverbially: p. for his love, Tw. V, 86 ( = mere200. his faults ... hereditary rather than — d , Ant. ly). live the —r with the other half, Hml. 111,4,158 1,4,14. (the more chastely, virtuously). — to acquire by paying an equivalent, to buy: P u r e l y , without alloy: faith and troth, strained Wiv. II, 2 , 2 1 3 . LLL V, 2, 59. Merch. Ill, 3, 89. Ill, p. from all hollow bias-drawing, Troil. IV, 5, 169. 4, 20. IV, I, 90. Tw. Ill, 3 , 4 5 . Wint. IV, 3, 127. J o h n P u r g a t l e n , 1) the act of cleansing the body III, 1, 166 ( o f ) . H6B 1,1, 223. Ill, 3, 3. H6C III, 2. by evacuation: to put him to his p. Hml. Ill, 3, 318. 73. H8 I, 1,98. Tit. HI, 1, 199. A n t V , 2 , 148. top. 2) clearing from the imputation of guilt, exculout = to buy ont (q. v.), to redeem: nor tears nor pation: As 1, 3, 55. Wint. Ill, 2, 7. H8 V, 3, 152. prayers shall p. out abuses, Bom. Ill, 1, 198. Absol., Misapplied by Costard in L L L III, 128, and used with - to make a bargain: that I should p. the day before purposed impropriety by Touchstone in As V, 4, 45. for a little part, Tim. Ill, 2, 52. P u r g a t i v e , adj. having the power to came evaP o r e , 1) free from mixture, unalloyed: p. gold, cuation: p. drug, Mcb. V, 3, 55. Gent. II, 4 , 1 7 1 . Bom. V, 3, 299. he is p. air and fire, P u r g a t e r r , the place where departed souls are H5 III, 7, 22. Hence figuratively, = a) mere, sheer: purged by fire from carnal impurity: Bom. Ill,3,18. a halting sonnet of his own p. brain. Ado V, 4, 87. p. Oth. IV, 3 , 7 7 . idolatry, L L L IV, 3, 75. dry-beaten with p. scoff, V, P u r e e , subst. cure, restoration to health: meet 2, 263. what follows is p. innocence, Merch. I, 1, 145. we the medicine of the sickly weal, and with hin pour with safety of a p. blush, As I, 2, 30 (a blush and we in our country's p. each drop of us, Mcb. V, 2, 28. nothing else), who after me hath many a weary step Purge, vb. 1) to purify, to cleanse; absol.: slight limped in p. love, II, 7, 131. IV, 3, 3. All's III, 4, 38. air and —ing fire, Sonn. 45, 1. Trans.: mine eyes ... p. fear, H4B II, 4, 352. blush for p. shame, H6A II, shall gush pure streams to p. my impure tale, Lucr. 4, 66. of p. devotion, H6B II, 1, 89. we did it for p. 1078. you must be —d too, L L L V, 2, 828. I will p. need, 157. H6C III, 1,13. R3 IV, 1, 4. US II, 3, 95. thy mortal grossness so that thou shalt like an airy g c b m l d t , Shakeapeare Lexicon. 3. Ed. T. LI. 59

920

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spirit go, Mids. Ill, 1, 163. and but in —d judgment trusting neither, H 5 II, 2, 136. love it... being —d, a fire sparkling in lovers' eyet, Rom. I, 1, 197 (cleaned from smoke), ere human statute —d the geräle weal, Mcb. Ill, 4, 76. to take him in the —ing of hit soul, Hml. Ill, 3, 85. With from: my heart is —d from grudging hate, R 3 II, 1, 9. With of: she —d the air of pestilence, Tw. I, 1, 20. top. him of that humour, Wint. II, 3, 38. these hands, so lately —d of blood, John III, 1, 239. p. you of your scum, H4B IV, 5, 124. to p. this field of such a hilding foe. H5 IV, 2, 29. we would p. the land of these drones, Per. II, 1, 50. 2) to evacuate the body by a cathartic; absol.: we sicken to shun sickness when tee p. Sonn. 118, 4. Til p. and leave sack, II4A V, 4, 168. Trans.: and p. it (my land) to a sound and pristine health, Mcb. V, 3, 52. 3) to clear from crime; always reflexively: you cannot with such freedom p. yourself, H8 V, 1, 103. hoping to p. himself with words, Cor. V, 6, 8. to impeach and p. myself, Rom. V, 3, 226. With of: I can p. myself of many (offences) H4A III, 2, 20. whereof you cannot easily p. yourself, H6B III, 1, 135. 4) to remove, to expel, to sweep away, to void; with from: the blessed gods p. all infection from our air, Wint. V, 1, 169. from his bosom p. this black despair, H6B III, 3, 23. thus from my lips, by yours, my sin is — d , Rom. I, 5, 109. With a simple accus.: he is gone aboard a new ship to p. melancholy and air himself, Wint. IV, 4, 790. until our fears be —d and deposed, John II, 372. let's p. this choler without letting blood, R2 1, 1, 153. and p. the obstructions which begin to stop our very veins of life, H4B IV, 1, 65. to p. his fear, I'll be thy death, H6C V, 6, 88. till the foul crimes done in my days of nature are burnt and —d away, Hml. I, 5, 13. their eyes —ing thick amber, II, 2, 200 ( = secreting), when she saw that your rage would not be —d, Ant. IV, 14, 124. 5) intr. to be cured, to be restored to health (cf. the transitive nse in Wint. IV, 4, 790. R2 I, 1, 153. H6C V, 6, 88. Mcb. V, 3, 52): quietness, grown sick of rest, would p. by any desperate change, Ant. I, 3, 53. P u r g e r , one who cares and restores to health by clearing away noxious matter: we shall be called —s, not murderers, Caes. II, 1, 180. P u r l f j - , to make pure, to clear of evil or reproach : his venom in effect is —ed, Lucr. 532. the spots whereof could weeping p. 685. falsehood thus —es itself and turns to grace, L L L V, 2, 786. which is a —ing o' the song, All's I, 3, 87. P u r i t a n , an adherent of the sect which intended to restore the church to the pure form of the apostolic time; disliked and ridiculed by the poet: All's I, 3, 56. 98. Tw. II, 3, 152. 155. 159. Wint. IV, 3,46. P e r . IV, 6, 9. P a r i t y , freedom from any stain or foreign admixture (cf. Pure): Lucr. 780. Sonn. 144, 8. Wiv. II, 2, 258. Ado IV, 1, 105. As V, 2, 104. Wint. 1, 2, 327. IV, 4, 394. John IV, 3, 53. Troil. Ill, 2, 174. IV, 4, 26. Tim. IV, 3, 14. P a r i , to curl, to run in circles: from his lips did fly thin winding breath, which —ed up to the sky, Lucr. 1407. P u r l i e u * , the grounds on the borders of a forest: in the p. of this forest, As IV, 3, 77. P u r l o i n , to steal: his scarlet lust came evidence

to twear that my poor beauty had — ed his eyes, Lucr. 1651. P u r p l e , subst. 1) a purple dress: I never see thy fact but I think upon hell-fire and Dives that lived in p., for there he is in his robes, H4A 111, 3, 36. 2) the flower Orchis mascnla: Hml. IV, 7, 171. P u r p l e , adj. 1) of the colour of the violet: the p. pride which on thy (the violet's) soft cheek for complexion dwells, Sonn. 99, 3. the p. violets, Per. IV, 1, 16. before milk-white, now p. with love's wound (the viola tricolor) Mids. II, 1, 167. Ill, 2, 102. p. grapes, III, 1, 170. p. the sails, Ant. II, 2, 198. cf. Wiv. V, 5, 74. Ven. 1168. 2) red; used of blood: p. tears that his wound wept, Ven. 1054. the p. fountain (of her wonnd) Lncr. 1734. R2 III, 3, 94. H6C I, 4, 12. II, 5, 99. V, 6, 64. R3 IV, 4, 277. Rom. I, 1, 92. P u r p l e - c e l e u r e d , red: as the sun with p. face had ta'en his last leave of the weeping morn, Ven. 1. P u r p l e d , red with blood: John II, 322. Caes. Ill, 1, 158. P u r p l e - h o e d , in Mustachio-purple-hued, q. v. P u r p l e - l n - f r a l n , see Grain. P u r p a r t , snbst. (purp&rt) meaning, expression: with a look so piteous in p. Hml. II, 1, 82. P u r p e a e , snbst. 1) that which a person intends to do, design, plan, project: far from the p. of his coming hither, he makes excuses, Lucr. 113. this vile p. to prevent, 220. one midnight fated to the p. Tp. I. 2, 129. the ministers for the p. 131. forego the p. Ill, 3, 12. the sole drift of my p. V, 29. Gent. II, 6, 42. Wiv. II, 2, 233. IV, 4, 77. IV, 6, 3. 21. V, 5, 214. Meas. I, 1, 74. I, 3,4. IV, 5, 2. V, 314. L L L II, 109. V, 2, 122. Merch. I, 1, 133. Ill, 2, 230. As I, 1, 145. Tw. II, 3, 181. Ill, 4, 280. Wint. V, 1, 36. J o h n II, 28. Ill, 1, 274. H4A I, 1, 28. II, 3, 7 (undertake). H4B II, 2, 195. IV, 2, 56. V, 2, 5. H6B III, 1, 256. R3 III, 1, 171. H8 1,2, 209. Ill, 2, 168. Cor. Ill, 1, 148. Tim. V, 1, 17. Hml. Ill, 2, 23. Lr. II, 1, 113 (make your own p., how in my strength you please; cf. Make). Oth. 1,1, 12. 1, 3, 39. Ant. I, 3, 67 (bear). II, 6, 126. IV, 3, 12 ('tis a brave army, and full of p.). V, 2, 131 etc. to have a p. John V, 1, 76. H4B IV, 5, 210. Mcb. I, 6, 21. to have p. Wint. IV, 4,152. Cor. IV, 5, 125. to have the p. Meas. Ill, 1, 163. this their p. hither to this wood, Mids. IV, 1,166. our holy p. to Jerusalem, H4A I, 1, 102. we recommend to you, tribunes of the people, our p. to them. Cor. 11, 2,156. my p. was for Tharsus, Per. V, 1, 253. by advised p. R2 I, 3, 188. for the selfsame p. Lucr. 1047. for the p. Gent. Ill, 1, 152. Meas. II, 1, 155. L L L V, 1, 143. Merch. I, 3, 99. As IV, 2, 7. R3 V, 3, 274. Rom. II, 2, 130. Cymb. Ill, 4, 30. that more for praise than p. meant to kill, L L L IV, 1, 29 (a kind of zeugma, = more for praise than on purpose), of p. = with a design: of p. to obscure my noble birth, H6A V, 4, 22. this is of p. laid by some that hate me to quench mine honour, H8 V, 2, 14. of p. to have him spend less, Tim. Ill, 1, 26 (later Ff on p.). on p. = designedly, intentionally, expressly: a swallowed bait on p. laid to make the taker mad, Sonn. 129, 8. belike his wife, acquainted with his fits, on p. shut the doors against his way. Err IV, 3, 92. people sin upon p., because they would go thither (to hell) Ado II, 1, 267. as hushed on p. tc grace harmony, II, 3, 41. the lustful bed on p. trimmed up for Semiramis, Shr. Ind. 2, 41. she sends him on

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p. that I may appear stubborn to him, Tw. Ill, 4, 74. to the p. = a) come to the matter in question: Gent. H4B II, 4, 334. Lr. IV, 2, 94. Cymb. I, 6, 202. II, IV, 1, 53. Meas. II, 1, 120. All's V, 3, 241. H4B V, 3, 61 (on angry p.). Per. II, 2, 54 (on set p.). to 5, 122. Lr. II, 4, 184. Cymb. V, 5, 178. b) conformthit p. Sonn. 126, 7. Wiv. II, 2, 227. Mens. IV, 6 , 4 ably to the subject or object in view, well, rightly: (to vail/ui p.; some M. Edd. to veil full p.). Err. IV, he was wont to speak plain and to the p. Ado 11,3, I, 97. R2 I, 3, 253. Cymb. IV, 1, 25 (to a tore p.). 20. Tw. I, 3, 21. Wint I, 2, 100. 106. Cor. II, 1, 95. with a p. Troil. I, 3, 128. with p. Merch. I, 1, 91. Rom. II, 4, 46. Caes. Ill, 1, 146. Hml. II, 2, 287. V, 1,44. to p., in the same sense: nothing is done to p. John V, 7, 86. H6A I, 1, 133. 2) that which a person pursues and wishes to ob- Cor. Ill, 1, 149. tain, aim, object, and hence = bent of mind: adding P a r p e s e , vb. 1) to intend, to design; absol.: yet one thing to my p. nothing, Sonn. 20, 12. you are to did I p. at they do entreat, II6B III, 2, 282. to-morttrongly in my p. bred that all the world betidet me- row, as he —s, Mcb. I, 5, 61. to speak andp. not, Lr. thinks are dead, 112, 13. if power change p. Meas. I, I, 1, 228. he —th to Athent, Ant. Ill, 1, 35 ( = to go 3, 54. that the retolute acting of your blood could have to A.). With an inf.: Lncr. 514. Sonn. 21, 14. Tp. attained the effect of your own p. II, 1, 13. but the next II, 1, 20. Gent. Ill, 1, 26. Ado V, 4, 106. LLL V,2, worn betimet, hit p. tur/eiting, he sends a warrant for 343. Mids. V, 93. As IV, 3, 128. John IV, 1, 124. my poor brother's head, V, 102 (baring satisfied his R2 V, 2, 55. H6A III, 1, 7. IV, 6, 25. Cor. V, 3,119. desire to excess), am the tongue of these to sound the Cymb. V, 5, 52. With an accus.: LLL II, 142. V, 2, — t of all their heartt, John IV, 2,48. it it the shame- 759. Merch. II, 2, 212. Wint. IV, 4, 480. 483. H4A ful work of Hubert't hand, the practice and the p. of V, 1, 43. H4B IV, 5, 155. B5 IV, 1, 165. H8 II, 1, the king, IV, 3, 63. this shall make our p. necessary 164. V, 3, 149. Caes. II, 2, 27. Ant. I, 2,184. Cymb. and not envious, Caes. II, 1, 178. be a soldier to thy III, 4, 110. IV, 3,15. Per. Ill, 4, 12. — d = intendp. Per. IV, 1, 8. ask him hit —t, why he appear! upon ed, designed: Sonn. 90, 8.' Compl. 118. LLL V, 2, this call o' the trumpet, Lr. V, 3, 118. 91. Mids. IV, 1, 188. Cor. Ill, 1, 38. Hml. IV, 4, 11. 3) that which a person demands; request, propo- V, 2, 252. Lr. II, 2, 149. Oth. Ill, 4, 117. Dat. and sal: in the morning early shall my uncle bring him our accus.: does p. honour to you. H8 II, 3, 62. we p. her —t, H4A IV, 3, 111. your p. is both good and reason- no shame, Ant. V, 1, 62. his daughter whom he —d able, H6A V, 1, 36. we'll execute your p. and put on to his wife's sole son, Cymb. I, 1, 5. a form of strangeness as we pass along, Troil. Ill, 3, 2) to mean, to wish: I have postetsed your grace 50. may I never to thit good p. dream of impediment, of what I p. Merch. IV, 1, 35. when I spake darkly Ant. II, 2, 147. therefore have we our written —s be- what I — d , John IV, 2, 232. or do you p. a victor fore us sent, II, 6, 4. our p. to them, Cor. II, 2,156. thall be known t Troil. IV, 5, 66. 4) that which a person or thing means to say or Purpose-changer, one who makes people change express, sense, meaning, purport: 1 endowed thy —t their intentions: John II, 567. with words, Tp. I, 2, 357. how you the p. cherish, II, Purposed, having a purpose, resolved: to am I 1, 224. my words express my p. Meas. II, 4, 148. 150. p. Lr. II, 4, 296. if they do tpeak our language, 'tit our will that tome P a r p t t c l r , designedly, intentionally, expressly: plain man recount their —s, LLL V, 2, 176. the intent which were on foot p. to take hit brother here, As V, and p. of the law hath full relation to the penalty, 4, 163. put quarrels p. on others to taste their valour, Merch. IV, 1, 247. solicits her in the unlawful p. All's Tw. Ill, 4, 267. p. therefore left I the court, H6B II, III, 5, 73. a passion hateful to my — t , John III, 3,47. 3, 52. come hither p. to poison me, T i t III, 2, 73. you start away and lend no ear unto my —t, H4A I, P u r r , see Pur. 3, 217. this challenge relatet in p. only to AchiUet, P a r s e , subst. a small money-bag carried in the Troil. I, 3, 323. men may construe things after their pocket: Gent 1, 1, 134. HI, 1, 357. IV, 4, 181. Wiv. fashion, clean from the p. of the things themselves.Caes. I, 3, 59. II, 1, 198. II, 2, 138. Err. IV, 1, 105 (a p. 1, 3, 35. you bear a graver p., I hope, Cymb. I, 4, 151. of ducats). IV, 2, 29. IV, 4, 90 (a p. of ducats). Ado Lr.I,4,260. With to; have you importuned her to such a II, 1, 16. Merch. I, 1, 138. II, 5, 51. As II, 4, 14. p.t Wiv. 11,2,221 ( = in snch a sense; with respect to Shr. I, 2, 57. IV, 3, 173. All's 111, 7, 14 (this p. of this), the speech we had to such a p. Meas. I, 2, 79. gold). IV, 5, 46. Tw. I, 5, 303. Wint. IV, 3, 127 I will think nothing to any p. that the world can say (your p. is not hot enough). John V, 2, 61. H4A I, 2, against it, Ado V, 4, 107 (of any meaning, i. e of 142 (fat —s). II, 4, 355 (cold—s). H4B V, 1, 34 any importance), now I tpeak to tome p. As V, 2, 58. (a friend i the court is better than a penny in p.). H5 thou never spokest to better p. Wint. I, 2, 89. he bade II, 2,10. IV, 3, 37. H6A I, 3, 64. H6B 1,1, 112. B3 me take a trumpet and to this p. speak, Troil. I, 3, 264. I, 4, 131. 144. IV, 4, 516 etc. etc. she bears the p. they have pardons as free at words to little p. Cor. Ill, Wiv. I, 3, 76; cf. hatt had my p. Oth. I, 1, 2. nor will 2, 89. speakest with every tongue to every p. Tim. IV, he know hit p. Tim. I, 2, 200 (the state of his finan3, 390. ces). a halfpenny p. Wiv. Ill, 5, 149. thou halfpenny 5) something spoken of or to be done, matter, p. of wit, LLL V, 1, 77. question, subject: to listen our p. Ado III, 1, 12 (Qq Parse, vb. 1) to put in a purse: I will go and p. propose), the extreme parts of time extremely forms the ducatt, Merch. I, 3, 175. With up: the —d up all causes to the p. of his speed, LLL V, 2, 751 (i. e. hit heart, A n t II, 2, 192 (German: sie hatte sein Here the haste and shortness of time, which is then the in der Tasche). chief subject of consideration), any such proverb so 2) to contract into wrinkles, to knit: didst conlittle kin to the p. H5 III, 7, 72. haste her to the 'p. tract andp. thy brow together, Oth. Ill, 3, 113. Troil. IV, 3, 5. what have you dreamed of late of this P a r s e - b e a r e r , one who bears the purse of anowar's p.t Cymb. IV, 2, 345 (i. e. concerning this war). ther: Tw. Ill, 3, 47. 59*

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P o T M B t , Costard's corruption from present: L L L V, 2, 488. P a r s e - t a k i n g , stealing: H4A 1, 2, 115. P u r s u e , 1) to follow, to attend: ¡/our tetue —s not mine, Meas. II, 4, 74. p. him and entreat him to a peace, T w . Y, 389. your love —s a banished traitor, B2 II, 3, 59. where (to bis bed) eagerly his sickness —d him still, H8 IT, 2, 25. p. we him on knees, Troil. V, 3 , 1 0 . ignomy and shame p. thy life, V, 10, 34. —d my humour not —ing his, Bom. I, 1,135. p. me lasting strife, Hml. Ill, 2, 232. Fortune p. thee! A n t III, 12, 25. 2) to proceed i n , to carry o n , to follow u p , to continne: I pray thee, p. sentence, Merch. IV, 1, 298. I will p. the amity, All's II, 5, 15. I cannot p. this sport to the upshot, Tw. IV, 2, 76. had we —d that life, W i n t . I, 2, 71. thus far our bending author hath —d the story, H5 Epil. 2. a speedier course must we p. T i t II, 1, 111. can vengeance be —d further than death? Rom. V, 3, 55. howsoever thou —st this act, Hml. 1, 5, 84. will they p. the quality no longer than they can singf Hml. II, 2, 363. she hath —d conclusions infinite of easy way« to die, Ant. V, 2, 358. 3) to follow with a view to overtake, to chase; absol.: clap on more sails, p. Wiv. II, 2, 142. when cowardice —s, Mids. II, 1, 234. H6C I, 4, 22. B 3 III, 2, 28. Transitivelv: p. these fearful creatures, Ven. 677. 699. Err. V, 155. Mids. I, 1, 163. 248. II, 1, 188. 232. Shr. V, 2, 47. Tw. I, 1, 23. Ill, 4, 144. H 4 B IV, 2, 120. H6B V, 3, 26. H6C I, 1, 2. I, 4, 5. II, 6, 33. Cor. Ill, 1, 309. IV, 6, 94. Lr. II, 1, 45. 91. 111. Oth. II, 3, 230. Cymb. Ill, 5, 100. 166. IV, 2, 157. 4) to persecute, to treat with hostility, to seek to injure: p. him with any further revenge, Wiv. IV, 2, 221. that with such vehemency he should p. faults proper to himself, Meas. V, 109. will you the knights shall to the edge of all extremity p. each other, or shall be divided by any voice or order of the field? Troil.IV,5,69. 5) to follow with a desire to obtain, to strive to g a i n : they fright him, but he still —s his fear, Lucr. 308. possessing or —ing no delight, Soon. 75, 11. I have —d her as love hath —d me, Wiv. II, 2, 208. 215. 216. our natures do p. a thirsty evil, Meas. I, 2, 132. she shall p. it with the soul of love, Mids. II, 1, 182. he —d my life, Hml. IV, 7, 5. if I knew what hoop should hold us stanch, from edge to edge o' the world I would p. it, Ant. II, 2, 118. would I might never o'ertake —d success, V, 2, 103. Absol.: emulation hath a thousand sons that one by one p. Troil. HI, 3, 157. I n B 3 II, 3, 43 Ff men's minds mistrust —ing dangers, Qq ensuing dangers. P u r s u e r « , such as follow in hostility: Ven. 688. H 4 A V, 5, 22. P u r s u i t , 1) the act of following and seeking: my willing love set forth in your p. Tw. Ill, 3, 13. 2) the act of following with a view to overtake; mostly in a hostile sense: Lucr. 1691. Mids. IV, 1, 128. All's III, 4, 25. H4B IV, 3, 77. H 5 II, 4, 69. H6A II, 2, 3. H6C II, 1, 3. 149. II, 3, 13. to make p. Lucr. 696. As 1, 3, 138. B 3 III, 2, 30. death doth hold us in p. H6C II, 5, 127. in p. of-. Sonn. 143, 4. 3) endeavour to gain: mad tn p. and in possession so, Sonn. 129, 9. Paris should ne'er retract what he hath done, nor faint in the p. Troil. II, 2, 142. I'll

play the hunter for thy life with all my force, p. and policy, IV, 1, 18. P u r s u i v a n t , an of6cer at arms, of a lower rank than heralds: these grey locks, the —s of death, H6A II, 5, 5 (as forerunning and announcing death), send for his master with a p. H 6 B I, 3, 37. I told the p. B 3 III, 4, 90. send out a p. at arms, V, 3, 59. —s, pages andfootboys, H8 V, 2, 24. P u r a y , f a t and short - winded: and p. insolence shall break his wind with fear and horrid flight, Tim. V, 4 , 1 2 . in the fatness of these p. times virtue itself of vice must pardon beg, Hml. Ill, 4, 153. P u r v e y o r , one who goes before to make provision for the table: we coursed him at the heels and had a purpose to be his p. Mcb. I, 6, 22. P o s h , interj. pshaw, pish: made a p. at chance and sufferance, Ado V, 1, 38. p.! did you see my capt Tim. Ill, 6, 119. P o s h , subst. a thrust, calculated either to overturn something, or to set it in m o t i o n ; hence 1) attack, onset: sudden p. gives them the overthrow, Caes. V, 2, 5. this p. will cheer me ever, or disseat me now, Mcb. V, 3, 20. to stand the p. of = to expose one's self to, to face: stand the p. of every beardless vain comparative, H 4 A III, 2, 66. I stand the p. of your one thing that you will tell, H4B II, 2, 40. to stand the p. and enmity of those this quarrel wouldexcite, Troil.11,2,137. 2) an impulse given, a setting in motion: lest they desire upon this p. to trouble your joys with like relation, Wint. V, 3, 129. we'U put the matter to the present p. Hml. V, 1, 318 ( = let us push on the matter immediately, let us immediately go to work). P o s h , vb. to thrust; absol. — to make a thrust: this sessions ... —es 'gainst our heart, W i n t . Ill, 2, 2. make a head to p. against a kingdom, H 4 A IV, 1, 81. p. home, H 5 II, 1, 103. we may as well p. against Paul's, H8 V, 4, 16. Transitively, = to thrust, to drive, to press by force: backward she —edhim, Ven. 41. top. grief on, and back the same grief draw, Lucr. 1673. p. him out of doors, As III, 1, 15. will you not p. her outf Wint. II, 3, 73. do not p. me, 125. J o h n V, 7, 77. H 5 I, 1, 5. Cor. V, 2, 41. Bom. I, 1, 21. Caes. V, 5, 25. Mcb. Ill, 4, 82. Per. V, 1, 127. With on, = to urge o n , to promote: doth p. on this proceeding, W i n t II, 1, 179. one that will either p. on or pluck back thy business, IV, 4, 762. In Troil. II, 3, 213 Qq I'll p. him o'er the face, Ff posh. P u s b - p l n , a child's play in which pins are pushed alternately: L L L IV, 3, 169. P u s i l l a n i m i t y , want of courage: the liver white and pale, which is the badge of p. and cowardice, H4B IV, 3, 114. P u t , I. trans. 1) to place, to set, to lay; expressi n g , in the most general manner, the causing of a change or effect in local position: she —s the period often from his place, Lucr. 565. what eyes hath Love p. in my head, Sonn. 148, 1. p. some lime upon your fingers, T p . IV, 246. I'U never p. my finger in the fire, Wiv. 1, 4, 91. what he —s into the press, II, 1, SO. p. a toast in it, 111, 5, 3. p. him into the basket, IV, 2, 48. to p. metal in restrained means, Meas. II, 4, 48. — ing the hand in the pocket, 111, 2, 49. to p. a ducat in her clack-dish, 134. p. them in secret holds, IV, 3, 91. to p. the finger in the eye, Err. II, 2, 206. a case to p. it into, Ado I, 1, 184. you must p. in the pikes with a

p vice, V, 2, 21. p. together, LLL I, 1, 210. how easy it is to p. years to the word three, 1, 2, 55. I'll p. a girdle round about the earth, Mids. II, 1, 175. your vows, p. into two scales, III, 2,132. the man should be p. into the lanthorn, V, 251. hep. his hand behind him, Merch. II, 8, 47. p. bars between the owners and their rights, III, 2, 19. so you may p. a man in your belly, As III, 2, 215. to p. a good meat into an unclean dish, III, 3, 36. he p. it into his mouth, T, 1, 38. p. finger in the eye, Shr. I, 1, 79. p. me in thy books, II, 225. p. you in the catalogue of those, All's I, 3,149. tongue, I must p. you into a butter-woman's mouth, IT, 1, 44. p. your grace in your pocket, Tw. V, 35. p. me into darkness, 312. to p. him i' the ground ( = to b u y him) Wint. Ill, 3, 140. the rogue that p. me into this apparel, IT, 3, 111. my name p. in the book of virtue, 131. I'll not p. the dibble in earth, IT, 4, 99. and p. the same (sword) into young Arthur's hand, John I, 14. p. my eyeballs in thy brows, III, 4, 30. p. a little water in a spoon, IT, 3, 131. p. a few flocks in the 'point, H4A II, 1, 7. p. ratsbane in my mouth, H4B 1, 2, 48. he hath p. all my substance into that belly of his, II, 1, 81. p. me a caliver into Wart's hand, 111, 2, 289. has p. us in these ill -beseeming arms, IT, 1, 84. p. thy face between his sheets, H5 II, 1, 87. I p. my hand into the bed, II, 3, 24. top. into mine (pocket) III, 2, 54. our scions, p. in wild and savage stock, III, 7. crowns ...p. into his purse, IT, 3, 37. top. a golden sceptre in thy hand, H6A T, 3, 118. you p. sharp weapons in a madman's hands, H6B III, 1, 347. p. them in prison, IT, 7, 48. p. in their hands thy bruising irons of wrath, R3 T, 3, 110. would have p. his knife into him, H8 I, 2, 199. p. my cause into his hands, HI, 1, 118. a noble spirit, as yours was p. into you, 170. there p. unwittingly, III, 2, 123. some spirit p. this paper in the packet, 129. 215. —s me her hand to his chin, Troil. 1, 2, 131. and in my vantbrace p. this withered brawn, 1, 3, 297. we'll p. you V the fills, 111, 2, 48. wherein he —s alms for oblivion, III, 3,146. p. your shields before your hearts, Cor. I, 4, 24. we'll p. you in manacles, I, 9, 56. to p. our tongues into those wounds, II, 3,7. p. not your worthy rage into your tongue, 111, 1, 241. p. in prison, IT, 6, 38. if he were —ing to my house the brand, 115. a case top. my visage in, Rom. I, 4, 29. p. this in any liquid thing, T, 1, 77. has no house top. his head in, Tim. Ill, 4, 64. we p. a sting in him, Caes. II, 1, 16. p. a tongue in every wound, HI, 2, 232. I p. it in the pocket, IT, 3, 253. p. on my brows this wreath of victory, T, 3, 82. p. a barren sceptre in my gripe, Mcb. Ill, 1, 62. p. rancours in the vessel of my peace, 67. enchanting all that you p. in, IT, 1, 43. we wiU fetters p. upon this fear, Hml. Ill, 3, 25. p. it in his pocket, III, 4, 101. to p. his head in, Lr. I, 5, 32. p. in his legs, II, 2, 157. she p. 'em i' the paste, II, 4, 124. who p. my man i' the stocks, 185. a house to p. his head in, III, 2, 25. p. money in thy purse, Oth. I, 3, 345. 347. 349. she —s her tongue in her heart, II, 1, 107. to p. you in your place again, II, 3, 324. p. in every honest hand a whip, IT, 2, 142. p. it (your rapier) home, \, 1, 2 (do not miss your adversary).^. garlands on thy head, Ant. Ill, 1, 11. not what you reserved... p. we t the roll of conquest, T, 2, 181. you should have been p. together with so mortal a purpose, Cymb. I, 4, 43. p. the moon in his pocket, III, 1,44. did p. the yoke upon's, 52. p. his brows within a golden crown, 60.

923

Beflexively: hast p. thyself upon this island as a spy, Tp. I, 2, 454. have p. themselves into voluntary exile, As I, 1, 106. I'll p. myself in poor and mean attire, I, 3, 113. p. you in your best array, T, 2, 78. I p. myself into thy file, All's III, 3, 9. p. myself into my mortal preparation III, 6, 81. England hath p. himself in arms, John II, 57. Ant. II, 2, 168. p. yourself under his shrowd, III, 13, 71. —s himself in posture, Cymb. Ill, 3, 94. Ill, 4, 8. Figurative use: that same groan doth p. this in my mind, Sonn. 50, 13. and in it (his picture) p. their mind, Compl. 135 (cf. Cymb. T, 5, 176). the strangeness of your story p. heaviness in me, Tp. I, 2, 306. and p. your trial in the villain s mouth, Meas. T, 304. —s the world into her person, Ado II, 1, 215. to p. a strange face on his own perfection, II, 3, 49. had p. such difference betwixt their two estates, All's I, 3, 116. would not p. my reputation now in any staining act, III, 7, 6. to p. fire in your heart, Tw. Ill, 2, 21. could p. breath into his work, Wint. T, 2, 107. that e'er I p. between your holy looks my ill suspicion, T, 3, 148. p. spirit in the French, John T, 4, 2. now p. it, God, in the physician's mind, R2 I, 4, 59. p. the world's whole strength into one giant arm, H4B IT, 5, 44. God p. it in thy mind, 179. let me p. in your minds, R3 I, 3, 131. II, 1, 120. p. meekness in thy mind, II, 2,107. p. in her tender heart the aspiring flame, IT, 4, 328. p. your main cause into the king'» protection, H8 111, 1, 93. —s his Shall against a graver bench, Cor. Ill, 1, 105. —'st odds amongst the rout of nations, Tim. IT, 3, 42. I will p. that business in your bosoms, Mcb. Ill, 1, 104. —s toys of desperation into every brain, Hml. 1, 4, 75. with more offences at my beck than I have thoughts to p. them in, III, 1, 128. p. your discourse into some frame, III, 2,320. you must p. me in your heart for friend, IT, 7, 2. if any wretch have p. this in your head, Oth. IT, 2, 15. p. colour in thy cheek, Ant. IT, 14, 69. would I had p. my estate on the approbation of what I have spoke, Cymb. 1, 4, 133 ( = laid, betted), p. them into mine hand, IT, 1, 25. p. the strength of the Leonati in me, T, 1,31. and then a mind p. in it (the picture) T, 5,176. those arts they have as I could p. into them, 339. in your supposing once more p. your sight of heavy Pericles, Per. T Prol. 21 (but Ff on heavy Pericles). Used of articles of dress or ornament taken on or off the body: —s apparel on my tattered loving, Sonn. 26, 11. rings p. upon his fingers, Shr. Ind. 1, 38. on your finger I'll p. another ring, All's IT, 2, 61. she would never p. it from her finger, T, 3, 109. I p. it (the crown) on my head, H4B IT, 5, 166. nicer would he ... on him p. the vesture of humility, Cor. II, 1, 249. p. armour on thine ears, Tim. IT, 3, 123. we p. fresh garments on him, Lr. IT, 7, 22. p. my tires and mantles on him. Ant. II, 5, 22. p. my brogues from off my feet, Cymb. IT, 2, 214. With adverbs: —'st down thine own breeches, Lr. 1,4, 189. p. off that gown, Tp. IT, 226. —ing off his hat, H4B II, 4, 7. All's II, 2, 9. 10. Lr. IT, 7, 8. Ant. IT, 15, 66. p. his bonnet on, Ven. 1087. when we p. them (our garments) on, Tp. 11, 1, 69. your rye-straw hats p. on, IT, 136. to p. on your hose, Gent. II. 1, 84. Wiv. IT, 2, 73. 85. Ado T, 3, 30. Merch. IT, 1, 442. Shr. I, 1, 234. Ill, 2, 115. 128. Tw. II, 5, 186. IT, 2, 1. 5. T, 346. John IT, 2, 27. R2 T, 6, 48. H4B II, 2, 189. H6C II, 2, 130. Ill, 3, 230. R3 II, 3, 32. Cor. II, 2, 141. Ill, 2, 34.

924

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T i t I, 185. Caen. I, 1, 53. Ill, 2, 175. Mcb. IV, 3, do you wrong to p. you so ofl upon't (the office of 154. V, 1, 68. V, 3, 34. Oth. I, 1, 86. Ant. IV, 4 , 1 0 . constable) Meas. II, 1,280 ( = to p. it so often on you). Per. II, 1, 83. IV, 4, 29. Peculiar use: some hangman Sometimes = to impart, to communicate, to tell: pout p. on my shroud, Wint. IV, 4, 468 (i. e. for me; why do you p. these sayings upon met Meas. 11,2,133. = gome hangman must put my shroud on me). that new* . . . which he will p. on us, as pigeons feed their the bleak air will p. thy shirt on inarm, Tim. IV, 3,223. young, As I, 2, 99. p. strange speech upon me, Tw. V, p. mine armour on, Mcb. V, 3, 48 ( f o r me), p. thine 70. if it be so, as so'tis p. on me, Hml. I, 3, 94. Withiron on, Ant. IV, 4, 3 (i. e. put on me the iron which out on, — to tell, to pretend: am not one that rejoices thou hast in thy hand. Some M. Edd. mine iron). in the common wreck, as common bruit doth p. it, Tim. Figurative use: she —» on outward strangeness, V, 1,196. cf. Oth. Ill, 3, 392. Yen. 310. hast thou p. on this shape, Lucr. 597. each 3) to place in a state or condition: is p. besides hand hath p. on nature's power, Sonn. 127, 5 (in imi- his part, Sonn. 23, 2. to p. him beside his patience, tating nature by painting), have p. on black, 132, 3. H4A III, 1, 179. p. Armada's page out of his part, to p-fair truth upon so foul a face, 137,12. (penitence) . L L L V, 2, 336. 478. / will not be p. out of countenance, hollowly p. on, Meas. 11,3, 23. —ing on the destined 611. 624. this will p. them out of fear, Mids. Ill, 1,23. livery, II, 4, 138. which parti-coated presence of loose p. out of ofUce, Tim. I, 2, 207. when we first p. this loot p. on by us, L L L V, 2, 777. if 1 do not p. on a dangerous stone a rolling, H8 V, 3 , 1 0 4 . With from, sober habit, Merch. II, 2, 199. to p. on your boldest = to deprive of, to deliver from, to take from: such suit of mirth, 210. the seeming truth which cunning a deal of skimble-skamble stuff as —* me from my times p. on, III, 2, 100. therefore p. I on the counte- faith, H4A III, 1, 155. p. the king from these sad nance of stern commandment, As II, 7, 108. th* duke thoughts, H8 II, 2, 57. did I p. Henry from his native hath p. on a religious life, V, 4, 187. the semblance I right, H6C III, 3 , 1 9 0 . to p. thee from thy heaviness, p. on, Tw. V, 315. may a free face p. on, W i n t I, 2, Rom. Ill, 5, 109. which (sorrow) may be p. from her 112. —s on his pretty looks, John III, 4, 95. p. on the by society, IV, 1,14. they have e'enp. my breath from dauntless]spirit of resolution, V, 1, 52. happily may me, Tim. Ill, 4,104. that thus hath p. him so much your sweet self p. on the lineal state and glory of the from the understanding of himself, Hml. II, 2, 8. —s land, V, 7, 101. death p. on his ugliest mask, H4B I, him from fashion of himself, III, 1, 182. hath p. himself 1, 66. p. not you on the visage of the times, II, 3, 3. from rest, and must needs taste his folly, Lr. II, 4,293. p. the fashion on, V, 2, 52. p. off your maiden blushes, this is a trick to p. me from my suit, Oth. Ill, 4, 87. H5 V, 2, 253. p. on some other shape, R3 IV, 4, 286. With into or in: top. in practice, Pilgr. 217. Gent. whose figure this cloud —s on, H8 1, 1, 225. thy top- Ill, 2, 89. Ado I, 1, 330. II, 2, 53. L L L I, 1, 308. you less deputation he —s on, Troil. I, 3, 152. the savage have p. the wild waters in this roar, Tp. I, 2, 2. to p. strangeness he —s on, II, 3, 135. Ill, 3, 50. I will p. me into everlasting liberty, Wiv. Ill, 3,31. p. not youron his presence, 272. I would have had you p. your self into amazement, Meas. IV, 2, 219. I could p. thee power well on, Cor. Ill, 2, 17. p. off these frowns, Horn. in comfort, L L L IV, 3, 52. we have p. thee in counteI, 5, 75. p. on a most importunate aspect, Tim. II, 1, nance, V, 2, 623. — s the wretch in remembrance of a 28. — ing on the cunning of a sharper, IV, 3, 209. shroud, Mids. V, 384. toe could p. us in readiness, Shr. didst p. this sour-cold habit on, 239. —s on this tardy form, Caes. I, 2, 303. and p. on fear, I, 3, 60. let not 1, 1, 43. this has p. me in heart, IV, 5, 77. p. me into our looks p. on our purposes, II, 1, 225. let's p. on good fooling, Tw. I, 5, 35. you should p. your lord manly readiness, Mcb. II, 3, 139. p. we on industrious into a desperate assurance, II, 2, 8. p. thyself into the soldiership, V, 4, 15. we p. on a compelled valour, trick of singularity, II, 5, 164. thou hast p. him in such Hml. IV, 6 , 1 7 . to p. an antic disposition on, I, 5, 172. a dream, 210. may p. you in mind, V, 42. —s some p. on a livery, 111, 4,165. p. on weary negligence, Lr. of us in distemper, Wint. I, 2, 385. the prince p. thee into my service, H4B I, 2, 14. —ing all affairs else in 1, 3, 12. p. upon him such a deal of man, II, 2, 127. oblivion, V, 5, 27. government ...p. into parts, H5 I, — ing on the mere form of civil seeming, Oth. II, 1, 243. 2, 181. —ing it in expedition, II, 2, 191. to p. your 2) to bestow, to confer, to impose, to inflict, to grace in mind, R3 IV, 2, 113. he hath into monstrous charge; with the prepos. on or upon: do you p. tricks habits p. the graces that once were his, H8 I, 2 , 1 2 2 . upon'si Tp. II, 2,60. — s the neglected act freshly on the queen is p. in anger, 11,4,161. to p. it in execution, me, Meas. I, 2, 174. if I p. any tricks upon 'em, All's Cor. II, 1, 256. this mutiny were better p. in hazard, IV, 5, 63. dost thou p. upon me the office of Godt V, II, 3, 264. will you be p. in mind of his blind fortune, 2, 51. p. quarrels purposely on others, Tw. Ill, 4, 266. V, 6, 118. Rom. I, 1, 237. I would have p. my wealth that forced baseness which he has p. upon't, Wint. II, into donation, Tim. Ill, 2, 90. you shall p. this night's 3, 79. this business, p. on thee by my lord, III, 3, 35. great business into my despatch, Mcb. I, 5, 68. p. me p. not another «in upon my head, Rom. V, 3, 62. what into a towering passion, Hml. V, 2, 79. will p. me in cannot you and I... p. upon his spongy officers t Mcb. trust, Lr. 1,4, 15. I'll p. it in proof, IV, 6, 189. 1 I, 7, 70. which —s upon them suspicion of the deed, would not my free condition p. into circumscription, II, 4, 26. when first they p. the name of king upon me, Oth. 1, 2, 27. to p. my father in impatient thoughts, HI, 1, 58. p. on him what forgeries you please, Hml. 1, 3, 243. I p. the Moor into a jealousy, II, 1, 309. II, 1, 19. you must not p. another scindal on him, 29. every man p. himself into triumph, II, 2, 4. to p. our yet must not we p. the strong law on him, IV, 3, 3. or Cassio in some action, 11, 3, 62. the trust Othello —s p. upon you what restraint and grievance the law ... him in, 131. the general were p. in mind of it, 137. will give him cable, Oth. I, 2, 15. you shall think your- p. into courage, Cymb. II, 3, 8. p. into contempt the self bound to p. it (death) on him , IV, 2, 248. honour, suits, III, 4, 92. top. those powers in motion, IV, 3, if p. upon you, Per. IV, 6, 100. p. your sight on heavy 31. you have p. me into rhyme, V, 3, 63. Pericles, V Prol. 21 (Qq o f ) . Inverted relation: they With to; a) followed by an inf., = to mike: /

p am p. to know that your own science exceeds ..., Mens. 1, 1, 5. had I first been p. to speak my mind, H6B III, 1, 43. you p. me to forget a lady's manners, Cymb. II, 3, 110. b) by a noun, = 1) to bring to, to cause to come to; whether to acting or to goffering: or my affection p. to the smallest teen, Compl. 192. 'twould p. me to my slipper, Tp. II, 1, 277. to the perpetual wink might p. Ms ancient morsel, 285. some defect... p. it (her graceN to the foil. Ill, 1, 46. to rise and be p. to death, Meas. IT, 3, 29. 8 2 V, 3, 73. R3 III, 2, 105. Ill, 5, 76. Rom. Ill, 5, 17. Caes. IV, 3, 175. Hml. V, 2, 46. p. me to this shame and trouble, Err. V, 14. p. the liveries to making, Merch. II, 2, 123. then she —s you to entreaty, As IV, 1, 80. let him p. me to my purgation, V, 4, 44. p. him to the sword, 164. H6B III, 1, 284. I shall now p. you to the height of your breeding, All's II, 2, 1. J p. you to the use of your own virtues, V, 1, 15. p. them (yonr legs) to motion, Tw. Ill, 1, 87. as mine honesty —s it to utterance, Wint. I, 1, 21. top. you to it (fear), IV, 4, 153. to p. to torment, John IV, 1, 84. I p. thee now to thy bookoath: deny it, if thou canst, H4B II, 1, 111. p. him to execution, H5 III, 6, 58. if you would p. me to verses or to dance, V, 2, 137. our soldiers p. to flight, H6C III, 3, 36. it should be p. to no apparent likelihood of breach, R3 II, 2,135. there's in him stuff that —s him to these ends, H8 1, 1, 58. while it is hot, I'll p. it to the issue, V, 1,178. —ing him to rage, Cor. II, 3,205. shall it be p. to thatt 111, 1, 233. you have p. me now to such a part which never I shall discharge to the life, 111, 2, 105. p. him to choler, III, 3, 25. we need not p. new matter to his charge, 76 (or = lay?). —s us to our shifts, Tit. IV, 2,176. nature —s me to a heavy task, V, 3, 150. his land's p. to their books, Tim. I, 2, 206. are p. to silence, Caes. 1, 2, 290. p. your dread pleasures more into(= anto) command than to entreaty, Hml. II, 2, 28 (cf. As IV, 1, 80). to p. him to his purgation, HI, 2, 318. we'll p. the matter to the present push, V, 1, 318. to p. him to ill thinking, Oth. Ill, 4, 29. p. me to some impatience, Ant. II, 6,43. you shall p. your children to that destruction, V, 2, 131. go p. it to the haste, 196. and p. us to our answer, Cymb. IV, 2, 161. —s himself unto the shipman's toil, Per. 1,3, 24. p. me to present pain, V, 1,193. top. to it = to try hard, to drive to straits: he — s transgression to't, Meas. Ill, 2, 101. nay, p. me to't, All's II, 2, 50. p. him to't, let him have his way, III, 6, 1. »« are tougher than you can p. us to't, Wint. I, 2,16. they have a leader that will p. you to it, Cor. 1,1, 233. p. them not to't, II, 2, 145. do not p. me to't, for I am nothing, if not critical, Oth. II, 1, 119. and will upon the instant p. thee to't, 111, 3, 471 (try thee? or require thy activity?). 2) to leave, to give up, to confide to: and to him p. the manage of my state, Tp. I, 2, 69. p. it to fortuna delta guerra, L L L V, 2, 533. I'll p. my fortunes to your service, Wint. I, 2, 440. and p. his cause and quarrel to the disposing of the cardinal, John V, 7, 91. p. we our quarrel to the will of heaven, B2 I, 2, 6. being p. to nurse, H6B IV, 2, 150. his minority is p. unto the trust of Richard Gloster, R3 I, 3, 12. p. thy fortune to the arbitrement of bloody strokes, V, 3, 89. I p. it to your care, H8 I, 2, 102. 'tis p. to lottery, Troil. II, 1, 140. which else would p. you to your fortune and the hazard of much blood, Cor. Ill, 2, 60. I p. myself to thy direction, Mcb. IV, 3, 122. to be p. to the arbitrement of swords, Cymb. 1,4, 52. 3) to apply,

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to employ: gold that's p. to use, Ven. 768. thou usurer that —'st forth all to use, Sonn. 134, 10. what use to p. her to, Err. Ill, 2, 97. Tw. Ill, 1, 56. happy are they that hear their detractions and can p. them to mending, Ado II, 3, 238. I cannot p. him to a private soldier, H4B III, 2, 177. 4 ) to impart: —s fear to valour, courage to the coward, Ven. 1158. if their daughters be capahU, I will p. it to them, L L L IV, 2, 82. who in spite p. stuff to some she beggar and compounded thee, Tim. IV, 3, 272. p. strength enough to it (your sword) Lr. IV, 6, 235. I do repent me that I p. it to you, Oth. Ill, 3, 392. —s to him all the learnings, Cymb. 1,1,43. With upon, :— to move, to incite to: when his soaring insolence shall touch the people, which time shall not want, if he be p. upon it, Cor. II, 1, 272. 'tis they have p. him on the old man's death, Lr. II, 1,101. Joined with adverbs; a) to p. apart and to p. away --- to send off, to remove: to p. apart these your attendants, Wint. II, 2, 14. Henry p. apart, M< next for me, H6B III, 1, 383. and twice desire that which with scorn she p. away, Pilgr. 316. two may keep counsel, — ing one away, Rom. II, 4, 209. p. away these dispositions, Lr. I, 4, 241. b) to p. back = to refuse, to say nay to, not to admit: coming from thee, I could not p. him back, Lncr. 843. though she p. thee back, Pilgr. 334. petitioners for blood thou ne'er —'st back, H6C V, 5, 80. injury of chance —s back leave-taking, Troil. IV, 4, 36. when my indisposition p. you back, Tim. II, 2, 139. c) to p. by = 1) to push aside: hp p. it by with the back of his hand, Caes. I, 2, 221. 229. 231. 2) to desist from, to abandon, to leave: these both (Lady Lncy and Bona)», by, a poor petitioner ... made prize and purchase of his lustful eye, R3 III, 7, 183. p. by this barbarous brawl, Otb. II, 3, 172. d ) t o p . down = to overthrow, to confound, to repress, to abolish, to baffle: I'll exhibit a bill in the parliament for the —ing down of men, Wiv. II, 1, 30. the merriest (usury) was p. down, Meas. Ill, 2, 7. till eating and drinking be p. down, 111. you have p. him down, Ado II, 1, 292 (with a quibble; cf. Shr. V, 2, 36 and Tw. I, 3, 88). how the ladies and I have p. him down, LLL IV, ], 143. my Kate does p. her down, Shr. V, 2, 35. when did I see thee p. so downt Tw. I, 3, 86. I saw him p. down with an ordinary fool, I, 5, 90. we'll p. thee dmtm, 'gainst whom these arms we beat, John II, 346. to p. down Richard, that sweet lovely rose, H4A I, 3, 175. how a plain tale shall p. you down, II, 4, 281. —ing down kings and princes, H6B IV, 2, 38. until a power be raised to p. them down, IV, 4, 40. to p. me down and reign thyself, H6C I, 1, 200. top. a tyrant down, B3 V, 3, 255. e) to p. forth — 1) to extend: to p. forth my rightful hand in a well-hallowed cause, H5 I, 2, 292. p. forth thy hand, H6B I, 2, 11. 2) to send out: p. forth their sons to seek preferment out, Gent. I, 3, 7. 3) to lay out: —'st forth all to use, Sonn. 134, 10. 4) to shoot oat, to emit as a sprout: peace —s forth her olive everywhere, H4B IV, 4, 87. her hedges p. forth disordered twigs, H5 V, 2, 44. to-day he —s forth the tender leaves of hopes, H8 111, 2, 352. f) to p. in = a) to instate, to install in an office: to blot out me and p. his own son in, H6C II, 2, 92. b) to give in, to offer, to present: I'll p. in bail, All's V, 3, 286. p. in now, Titus, Tim. Ill, 4, 85 (i. e. your claim).

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g ) top. off = 1) to lay aside, to dismiss, to dis- from her native bay, Merch. II, 6, 15. to p. to sea, Err. card : I will p. off my hope, T p . Ill, 3, 7. I cannot p. V, 21. T w . II, 4, 78. W i n t . IV, 4, 509. to p. forth, off my opinion so easily, W i v . II, 1, 243. when you p. Meas. I, 2, 14. Err. I l l , 2, 155. IV, 3, 35. H 4 B I, 1, off that (the c o u r t ) with such contempt, A l l ' s II, 2, 6. 186. T r o i l . Prol. 7. P e r . II P r o l . 27. A n t . IV, 10, 7. the clothiers have p. off the spinsters, H 8 I, 2, 32. to p. in, Oth. 11,1, 25. 65. p. o f f , A n t . II, 7, 78. P e r . V, p. me o f f , 11,4,21. 2 ) to turn away, to elude, to b a f f l e : I , 3. p. out, T p . V, 225. Err. Ill, 2, 190. finely p. o f f , L L L IV, 1, 112. there's a simple —ing 2 ) with forth, = to shoot out, to bud: before one o f f , A l l ' s II, 2, 43. you p. me off with limber vows, leaf p. forth, V e n . 416. to make us say: ¡his is p. W i n t 1, 2, 47. — s him o f f , slights him, IV, 4, 200. to forth too truly, W i n t . I, 2, 14. his negligence, his folly, p. off the shame, P e r . I, 1, 140. 3 ) to refuse: your fear ... sometimes —s forth, 254. hewing Rutland steward —> me o f f , T i m . II, 2, 31. which (invitation) when his leaves p. forth, H 6 C II, 6, 48. your valour my near occasions did urge me to p. o f f , III, 6, 12. 4 ) —s well forth, Cor. I, 1, 255. t o defer, to delay ( b y referring t o ) : — s it off to a 3 ) with in, = to intercede: a wise burgher p. in compelled restraint, A l l ' s U, 4, 44. he hath p. me off for them, Meas. I, 2, 103. to the succession of new days this month, T i m . II, 2,19. 4) with to, = to g o to it: as any flax-wench that h ) to p. on = 1) to lay on (as a b l o w ) : finely p. - s to before her troth-plight, W i n t . 1, 2, 277. on, L L L IV, 1, 115. 118. 2 ) to set to w o r k : the powers P a t r l f y , to corrupt: blood untainted still doth red above p. on their instruments, Mcb. IV, 3, 239. we'll abide, blushing at that which is so —ed, Lucr. 1750. p. on those shall praise your excellence, Hml. IV, 7, they would but stink and p. the air, I I 6 A IV, 7, 90. 132. he was likely, had he been p. on, to have proved most —ed core, so fair without, T r o i l . V, 8, 1. most royally, V, 2, 408 ( = had he become king), one P v t t e r - H , 1) author: they vent reproaches most that in the authority of her merit did justly p. on the bitterly on you as p. of these exactions, H 8 I, 2, 24. vouch of very malice itself, Oth. II, 1,147. 3 ) to incite, 2 ) instigator: you are abused and by some p. W i n t to instigate, to cause by instigating: awakens me with II, 1, 141. this unwonted —ing o n , Meas. IV, 2, 120. you ne'er P u t t e r - a n t , one who goes abroad ( b y s e a ) , a had done it, but by our —ing on, Cor. II, 3, 260. why voyager: which now we find each p. of five for one he —s on this confusion, H m l . I l l , 1, 2. deaths p. on will bring us good warrant of, T p . Ill, 3, 48 ( a traby cunning and forced cause, V, 2, 394. you protect veller o f the class o f five for one, i. e. one who pnts this course and p. it on by your allowance, L r . I, 4, to sea on purpose to see wonders, and therefore, on 227. if this poor trash of Venice stand the —ing on, setting out on his voyage, places out a sum of money, Oth. II, 1, 313. when devils will the blackest sins p. on, on condition of receiving five f o r one at his return. II, 3,357. I never had lived to p. on this, Cymb. V, 1,9. T h e interpretation generally received i s : one who i ) lop. out = 1 ) to extend, to show: p. out all your hands, T i m . IV, 2, 28. p. out your icit, R o m . IV, 5, 124. 2 ) to make to forget one's part, to embarrass, to puzzle: presence majestical would p. him out, L L L V, 2, 102. I have p. you out, W i n t . IV, 4, 378. 3 ) to extinguish, to blind: Compl. 250. Gent. V, 2, 13. A d o V, 3, 24. John IV, 1, 56. 69. B o m . V, 3, 2. L r . IV, 2, 71. Oth. V, 2, 7. 10. k ) to p. over = to r e f e r : I p. you o'er to heaven and to my mother, John I, 62. 1) to p. up, = 1) to hold up, to raise: why Peace should not p. up her lovely visage, H 5 V, 2, 37. why then do J p. up that womanly defence, to say I have done no harmt Mcb. IV, 2, 78. 2 ) to hide in a place where a thing is kept when not used: p. thy sword up (in the scabbard) T p . I, 2, 469. T w . Ill, 4, 343. IV, 1, 42. John IV, 3, 79. 98. H 4 B II, 4, 222. H 5 II, 1, 46. 109. R 3 1, 2, 197. Cor. V, 6, 136. T i t II, 1, 53. Rom. I, 1, 72. Ill, 1, 87. IV, 5, 123. 126. p. up this ( l e t t e r ) L L L IV, 1,109 (in the pocket). A l l ' s IV, 3, 243. L r . I, 2, 28. had not your man p. up the fowl so suddenly, H 6 B II, 1, 45 (called it back from pursuit). we may p. up our pipes, Rom. IV, 5, 96. Oth. Ill, 1, 20. p. up thy gold, T i m . IV, 3, 107. Hence 3 ) = not to resent, to pocket: be dishonoured openly and basely p. it up without revenge, T i t . I, 433. nor am J yet persuaded to p. up in peace what already I have foolishly suffered, Oth. IV, 2, 181. 4 ) to propose: I'll V, 1, 43 (the clown's I I . intr. 1) to g o p. unluckily into this

lays out money; but abstractedly from the verb to put out not being used by Sh. in this sense, the context would then require: each p. of one for five, as D y c e and others are indeed bold enough to write). P u t t a e k , a k i t e : who finds the partridge in the —'s nest, H 6 B III, 2, 191. a toad, a lizard, an owl, a p. T r o i l . V, 1, 68. I chose an eagle, and did avoid a p. Cymb. I, 1, 140. P a z z e l , a hussy: H 6 A I, 4, 107; cf. PuceUe. P n c s l e , to perplex, to embarrass: in which ( i g n o rance) thou art more —d than the Egyptians in their fog, T w . IV, 2, 48. the dread of something after death —s the will, Hml. Ill, 1, 80. your presence needs must p. Antony, A n t III, 7, 11.

P y g m a l i o n , an ancient artist who fell in love with a female statue which he had made, and prevailed on the gods to give it l i f e : Meas III, 2, 48. P y r a m i d , one o f the celebrated structures o f ancient E g y p t : Sonn. 123, 2. Mcb. IV, 1, 57. A n t . II, 7, 21. P y r a m l a , the same: H 6 A I, 6, 21. PI.pyramises: A n t . II, 7, 40. pyramides: V, 2, 61. P y r a m u s , the lover of Thisbe: Mids. I, 2, 12. 24 etc. T i t . II, 3, 231. P y r e n e a n , the range o f mountains between France and Spain: John I, 203. P y r r h u s , the son o f Achilles: Lucr. 1449. 1467. T r o i l . Ill, 3, 209. H m l . II, 2, 472. 485. 494. 499. 502. p. another question to thee, Hml. 509. 513. 536. speech). P ) t h > | « » i , the famous Greek philosopher, supor come by water, to sail: who posed to have professed the doctrine of tbemigrrtion bay, Err. V, 125. the bark —s of souls: Merch.lV,l,131.Asll!,2,187.Tw.lV,2,54.62.

Q

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Q, Q, writing of Ff for cue in R3 III, 4, 27. Quadrangle, the inner square or court of a large building: H6B 1, 3, 156. Quaff, to drink freely and copiously: this —ing and drinking, Tw. I, 3, 14. With an accus.: Shr. I, 2, 277. H4B IV, 5, 86. With o f f : Shr. Ill, 2, 174. Q u a g m i r e , a bog: and make a q. of your mingled brains, H6A I, 4, 109. o'er bog and q. Lr. Ill, 4, 54. Quail, subst the bird Perdix coturnix; trained to fighting by the ancients (as cocks at present): Ant. 11,3,37. Cant term for a loose woman: Troil. V, 1,57. Quail, vb. 1) tr. to quell, to crash, to overawe: q., crush, conclude and quell, Mids. V, 292 (Pyramus' speech), when he meant to q. and shake the orb, Ant. V, 2, 85. 2) intr. to shrink, to faint, to slacken: let not search and inquisition q. As II, 2, 20. there is no —ing now, because the king is certainly possessed of all our purposes, H4A IV, 1, 39. this may plant courage in their —ing breasts, H6C II, 3, 54. my jalse spirits q. to remember, Cymb. V, 5,149. Quaint, fine, neat, pretty, pleasant: my q. Ariel, Tp. I, 2, 317. q. in green she shall be loose enrobed, Wiv. IV, 6,41. a fine, q , graceful and excellent Jashion, Ado 111, 4, 22. the q. mazes in the wanton green, Mids. II, 1,99. the owl wonders at our q. spirits, II, 2, 7. tell q. lies, Merch. Ill, 4, 69. the q. musician, amorous Licio, Sbr. HI, 2, 149. a gown more q., more pleasing, IV, 3, 102. with forged q conceit, H6A IV, 1, 102. to show how q. an orator you are, H6B III, 2, 274. Q u a i n t l y , finely, neatly, pleasantly: the lines are very q. writ, Gent. II, 1, 128. a ladder q. made of cords, III, 1, 117. 'tis vUe, unless it maybe q. ordered, Merch. II, 4, 6. to carve out dials q. H6C II, 5, 24. breathe his faults so q. that they may seem the taints of liberty, Hml. II, 1, 31. and time ... with your fine fancies q. eche, Per. Ill Prol. 13. Quake, to tremble; mostly with fear: Ven. 899. 1045. Lucr. 1393,. 1556 (with cold). Wiv. Ill, 5, 104. Meas. Ill, 1, 74. Ado I, 1, 274 (thou wilt q. for this shortly). Mids. II, 2, 148. V, 224. Wint. V, 1, 199. John III, 1, 18. H6A I, 1, 156. H6B IV, 8,17. R3 I, 3, 162. Ill, 5, 1. Tit. V, 2, 40. Hml. Ill, 2, 410. Lr. IV, 6, 110. Cymb. II, 4, 5 (q. in the present winter's state). Per. Ill, 2, 15 (as the earth did q.). Q u a k e d = affected with quakes, quaking: where ladies shall be frighted, and, gladly quaked, hear more, Cor. I, 9, 6. Q u a l i f i c a t i o n , appeasement, abatement: even out of that will I cause these of Cyprus to mutiny, whose q. shall come into no true taste again but by the displanting of Cassio, Oth. II, 1, 282. Qualified, 1) of a quality, of a kind: she is so q. as may beseem the spouse of any noble gentleman, Shr. IV, 5, 66. with thoughts so q. as your charities shall best instruct you, measure me, Wint. II, 1, 113. 2) having a qualification, endowed, fit: that which ordinary men are fit for, I am q. in, Lr. I, 4, 37. more fair, virtuous, wise, chaste, constant, q. Cymb. I, 4, 65 (some M. Gdd. constant-qualified). Q u a l i f y , to temper, to moderate, to abate, to

soften: his rage of lust by gazing —erf, slacked, not suppressed, Lucr. 424. absence seemed my flame to q. Sonn. 109, 2. the fire's rage, Gent. II, 7, 22. to enforce or q. the laws, Meas. 1, 1, 66. he doth with holy abstinence subdue that in himself which he spurs on his power to q. in others, IV, 2, 86. all this amazement can I q. Ado V, 4, 67. to q. his rigorous course, Merch. IV, 1, 7. your discontenting father strive to q. Wint. IV, 4, 543. this inundation of mistempered humour rests by you only to be —erf, John V, 1, 13. i* your blood so mcuily hot that no discourse of reason can q. the samel Troil. II, 2, 118. my love admits no —ing dross, IV, 4, 9. time —es the spark and fire oj it, Hml. IV, 7, 114. till some little time hath —erf the heat o/ his displeasure, Lr.1,2,176. one cup, and that was craftily —erf too, Oth. II, 3, 41 (mixed with water). Quality, 1) any thing which can be predicated as characteristic of a thing or person; a natural or adventitious property or adjunct:/amour, savour, hue and —es, whereat the impartial gazer late did wonder, Ven. 747. of plagues, or dearths, or seasons' q. Sonn. 14, 4. full of virtue, bounty, worth and —es beseeming such a wife, Gent III, 1, 65. endued with worthy —es, V, 4, 153. of what q. was your love, then1 Wiv. II, 2, 223. I have many ill —es, Ado II, 1, 106. owner of no one good q. All's 111, 6, 12. his —es being at this poor price, IV, 3, 308. fruit of baser q. H5 I, 1, 62. (peace) bless us with her former —es, V, 2, 67 (the state of things described in what precedes). —es are so weighed, Lr. I, 1, 5 (Qq equalities), all the —es that man loves woman for, Cymb. V, 5, 166. 2) nature, character, particular condition (German : Wesen, Art): may know her grief, but not her griefs true q. Lucr. 1313. we have no good that we can say is ours, but ill-annexed opportunity or kills his life or else his q. 875. what is the q. of mine offence, being constrained with dreadful circumstancel 1702. it is the q. of the climate, Tp. II, 1, 200. the q. of mercy is not strained, Merch. IV, 1, 184. he must observe the q. of persons, Tw. Ill, 1, 70. the q. of the time and quarrel might well have given us bloody argument, III, 3, 31. the q. and hair of our attempt brooks no division, H4A IV, 1, 61. this present q. of war, H4B I, 3, 36. to establish here a peace indeed, concurring both in name and q. IV, 1, 87. you must now speak Sir John Falstaff fair, which swims against your stream of q. V, 2, 34. what worst, as oft, hitting a grosser q., is cried up for our best act, H8 I, 2, 84. of grave and austere q. Tim. I, 1, 54. the flamen that scolds against Me q. of flesh, IV, 3, 156. why birds and beasts from q. and kind, Caes. I, 3, 64. change their faculties to monstrous q. 68. such rebel blood that will be thawed from the true q. with that which melteth fools, HI, 1, 41. whose true-fixed and resting q. 61. I hold ambition of so airy and light a q. that it is but a shadow's shadow, Hml. II, 2, 268. take more composition and fierce q. Lr. I, 2, 12. the q. of nothing hath not such need to hide itself, 33. you know the fiery q. of the duke, II, 4, 93. 97. my heart's subdued even to the very q. of my lord, Oth. I, 3, 252. knows

928

Q

all - « of human dealings, III, 3, 259 (Ff Q2. S quantities). all q., pride, pomp and circumstance of glorious tear, 353. note the —es of people, Ant. I, 1, 54. whose y., going on, the sides o' the world may danger, 1,2,198. things outward do draw the inward q. ajter them, to suffer all alike. III, 13, 33. give her what comforts the q. of her passion shall require, V, 1, 63. 3) virtue, power, efficacy (of things); accomplishment, faculty (of persons): each stone's dear nature, worth and q. Compl. 210. showed thee all the —es of the isle, T p I, 2, 337. in your fine frame hath love no q. t All's IV, 2, 4. allay the burning q. of that fell poison, John V, 7, 8. the venom of such looks, we fairly hope, have lost their q. H5 V, 2, 19. their (the herbs', stones' etc.) true —es, Bom. II, 3, 16. his —es were beauteous as his form, Compl. 99. to thy strong bidding task Ariel and all his q. Tp. I, 2, 193. she has more —es than a water-spaniel, G e n t III, 1, 271. admiring of his —es, Mids. I, 1, 231. in fortunes, in graces, andin — es of breeding, Merch.II, 7,33. hiding from me all gentleman-like —es, As I, 1, 74. her wondrous —es and mild behaviour, Shr. II, 50. where an unclean mind carries virtuous —es, All's I, 1, 49. we will, accordiig to your strengths and -es, give you advancement, H4B V, 5, 73. thy rare —es, H8 II, 4, 137. Troil. 1, 2, 94. the Grecian youths are full ofq. Troil. IV, 4, 78 ( = are highly accomplished). I have bred her in —es of the best, Tim. I, 1, 125. give us a taste of your q. Hml. II, 2, 452. a q. wherein you shine, IV, 7, 73. taking a beggar without less q. Cyrnb. I, 4, 24. the adornment of my —es, III, 5, 141. has she any —es? Per. IV, 2, 50. 53. 4) profession: a man of such perfection as we do in our q. much want, Gent. IV, 1, 58. attend your office and your q. Wiv. V, 5, 44. what q. are they off Meas. II, 1, 59. what is thy namef I know thy q. H5 III, 6, 146. will they pursue the q. no longer than they can singl Bml. II, 2, 363; cf. 452. Peculiar passage: because you are not of our q., but stand against us like an enemy, H4A IV, 3, 36 (do not follow the same cause, are not of our party). Plur. —es — arts, tricks: she hath lived too long, to fill the world with vicious — es, H6A V, 4, 35. cf. Gent. Ill, 1, 271. 5) r a n k : Love no god, that would not extend his might, only where —es were level, All's I, 3, 118. with such powers as might hold sortance with his q. H4B IV, 1, 11. your namef your q. f Lr. V, 3, 120. he shall our commission bring to you, with such things else of q. and respect as doth import you, Oth. 1, 3, 283. = high r a n k : gentlemen of blood and q. H5 IV, 8, 95. any man of q. or degree, Lr. V, 3, 111. Oth. II, 3, 110. a stranger of his q. Cymb. I, 4, 30. 6) a state of affairs producing certain effects; occasion, cause: give him note of our approach, with the whole q. wherefore, Troil. IV, 1, 44. know you the q. of Lord Timon's furyl Tim. Ill, 6, 117. 7) manner: hate counsels not in such a q. Merch. Ill, 2, 6. with how depraved a q. Lr. II, 4, 139 (Qq of how deprived a q.). Q u a l m , a fit of sickness, nausea: Ado III, 4, 75. L L L V, 2, 279. H 4 B II, 4, 40 (the hostess pronounces calm). HGB I, 1, 54. Q u a l m i s h , affected with nausea: H5 V, 1, 22. O o t n i t r y , perplexity; the word supposed to be meant by canary in Mrs Quickly's language: Wiv. II, 2, 61. 64.

Q u a n t i t y , 1 ) measure, mass, extent, number, size: he is not q. enough for that Worthy's thumb, L L L V, 1, 137 (Armado's speech), my love prizes not q. of dirty lands, Tw. II, 4, 85. my moiety in q. equals not one of yours, H4A III, 1, 97. he enriched poor straggling soldiers with great q. (of gold) Tim. V, 1, 7. with loves above their (thy griefs') q. V, 4, 18. to set on some q. of barren spectators to laugh too, Hml. Ill, 2 , 4 5 . it reserved some q. of choice, III, 4, 75. with all their q. of love, V, 1, 293. how much the q., the weight as much, as I do love my father, Cymb.IV,2,17. 2) correspondent degree, proportion: things base and vile, holding no q., love can transpose to form and dignity, Mids. 1,1,232 (bearing no proportion to what they are estimated at by lore), women's love and fear holds q.; in neither aught, or in extremity, Hml. Ill, 2, 177 (have the same proportion). 3) a small portion, any thing very little and diminutive: thou rag, thou q., thou remnant, Shr. IV, 3,112. retaining but a q. of life, J o h n V, 4, 23. if I were sawed into —es, I should make four dozen of such, H4B V, 1, 70. In Oth. Ill, 3, 259 Ff and later Qq quantities, Ql and M. Edd. qualities. Q u a r r e l , subst. any dispute or contest that cannot be settled by words; a private difference as well as a dissension and combat for a public cause and on a larger scale: a) in the managing of —« he is wise, Ado II, 3, 197. enter into a q. 203. in a false q. there is no true valour, V, 1, 120. a q. already! Merch. V, 146. 238. As II, 7, 151. V, 4, 48. 51. 70. Shr. I, 1, 116. 236. I, 2, 27. IV, 2, 84. Tw. Ill, 4, 266. 327. V, 364. R2 I, 2 , 6 . 37. II, 1,248. H4B IV, 5, 195. H5 IV, 1, 219. 225. IV, 8, 69. H6A II, 4, 134. IV, I, 118. 136. H6B II, 1, 28. II, 3, 53. H6C I, 2, 5. 6. R3 I, 4, 223. H8 I, 3, 20. Tit. 1, 293. 465. II, 1, 47. 67. 11,3,54. V, 3, 20. Boin. I, 1, 23. 111. 11,4,168. Ill, 1, 24. 159. Mcb. IV, 3, 83. Hml. I, 3, 66. Lr. II, 1, 56. II, 2, 66. Ill, 7, 77. IV, 6, 38. Oth. II, 3, 52. 215. 290. Ant. II, 2, 52. Cymb. I, 4, 51. to pick a q. H4A III, 3, 76. to take up a q. ( = to compose i t ) : As V, 4, 104. Tw. Ill, 4, 320. to have a q. to = to have a difference, to be at odds with: Ado II, 1, 243. Tw. Ill, 4, 248. Cor. IV, 5, 133. b) holy seems the q. upon your grace's part, All's III, 1, 4. the quality of the time and q. might well have given us bloody argument, Tw. Ill, 3, 31. put his cause and q. to the disposing of the cardinal, John V, 7, 91. O, would the q. lay upon our heads, H4A V, 2, 48. derives from heaven his q. and his cause, H4B I, 1, 206. I make my q. in particular, IV, 1, 96. hold this q. up, IV, 2, 48. foreign —s, IV, 5, 215. H5 II, 4, 17. IV, 1, 133. 240. V, 2, 20. H6A V, 4, 105. H6C II, 2, 65. II, 5, 91. Ill, 3, 216. Troil. Prol. 10. II, 2, 123. 138. II, 3, 79. 217. V, 7, 21. Cor. IV, 5, 133. Tit. V, 3, 102. Mcb. I, 2, 14 ( 0 . Edd. quarry). in q. or in the q. of = in the cause of: in the king's q. H5 IV, 1, 180. in q. of the house of York the worthy gentleman did lose his life, H6C III, 2, 6. to fight in q. of the house of Lancaster, R3 I, 4, 209. my blood in Rome's great q. shed, Tit. Ill, 1, 4. Often = cause, occasion and motive of dispnte: what's thy q. t R2 I, 3, 33. the q. of a true inheritor, H4B IV, 5, 169. it is a q. most unnatural, to be revenged on him that loveth you, R3 I, 2, 134. 136. since the q. will bear no colour for the thing he is, Caes. II,

Q

929

Quatch-butteek, a sqnat or flat backside: All's 1, 28. H6B III, 2, 233. Hml. IV, 4, 55. Mcb. IV, 3, 137. Lr. V, 3, 56. II, 2, 18. Quean, a contemptible wench, a hussy: a witch, In H8 II, 3, 14: if that q. fortune do divorce it (pomp) from the hearer, 'tis a sufferance panging etc., a q., an old cozening q. Wiv. IV, 2, 180. as a scolding some commentators suppose the word to be used in q. to a wrangling knave, All's II, 2, 27. throw the q. the sense of dart, arrow; bat it may well be abstr. pro in the channel, H4B II, 1, 51. cf. Cotquean. concr., = quarreller. Queaalne*», nausea, disgust: they did fight with Quarrel, vb. to wrangle, to seek occasion of a q., a* men drink potions, H4B I, 1, 196. fray, to pick a quarrel (German: Handel suche»): Queasy, 1) inclined to nausea, squeamish, fastiAdo V, 1, 51. As V, 4, »4. Tw. I, 3, 33. Bom. I, 1, dious: in despite of his quick wit and his q. stomach 39. 59. Ill, I , 26. 32. 34. Tim. Ill, 5, 27. Hml. II, I, he shall fall in love with Beatrice, Ado II, 1, 399. q. 25. Lr. I, 4, 222. Ant. I, 3, 66. With at: Wiv. I, 1, with - disgusted with: q. with his insolence, Ant. 111. 303. Troil. II, 3, 182. With with: Ado V, 1, 50. Bom. 6, 20. III, 1,18. 20. 26. to q. with = to be in contrast with, 2) ticklish, nice: I have one thing of q. question, to be contrary to: some defect in her did q. with the which I must act, Lr. II, 1, 19. noblest grace she owed, Tp. Ill, 1, 45. get more —ing Queen, snbst. a female sovereign, or the consort with occasion, Merch. Ill, 5, 61 (contrary to, and of a king: Sonn. 96, 5. Tp. I, 2, 449. II, 1, 75. 246. seeking to elnde, the matter in question; cavilling) III, 2, 115. V, 150. L L L II, 8. IV, 1, 125. Mids. I, our people q. with obedience, John V, 1, 9. 1, 173. H6A V, 3, 111. H6B I, 1, 12 etc. etc. q. of Quarreller, one who picks quarrels: Tw. 1,3,31. love, Ven. 251; cf. 175. beauty's q. Pilgr. 46. the q. Q a » r r e l l » i u , disposed to quarrel: Cymb. Ill, o'the sky, Tp. IV, 70. 82. q. of night, Gent. IV, 2, 100. 4, 162. As III, 2, 2. the fairy q. Wiv. IV, 4, 71. IV, 6, 20. Q a a r r e l « « m e , the same: As V, 4, 85. 99. Shr. V,5,50. Mids. II, 1,8 etc. Dian no q. of virgins, All's 1, 2, 13. I, 3, 119. Juno, that is q. of marriage, Per. II, 3, 30. Quarry, 1) a place where stones are taken from Phoebus' hite, the q. of music, Pilgr. 112. that miracle rocks: Oth. I, 3, 141. and q. of gems, Tw. II, 4, 88. she is the q. of curds 2) a heap of slaughtered game (Fr. curie): I'ld and cream, Wint. IV, 4, 161. q. o the feast, Per. II, make a q. with thousands of these slaves, Cor. I, 1, 3, 17. O q. of —s, L L L IV, 3, 41. H8 II, 4,141. Ill, 202. fortune, on his damned q. smiling, Mcb. I, 2, 14 2,95. all your acts are—s, Wint. IV, 4,146. Henry's (M. Edd. quarrel), on the q. of these murdered deer, q. H6A V, 3, 117 ( = his royal consort). H6C IV, 1, IV, 3, 206. this q. cries on havoc, Hml. V, 2, 375. 102. Menelaus' q. Troil. Prol. 9. the q. of Ptolemy, Quart, a vessel containing the fourth part of a Ant. 1,4, 6. q. to the worthy Leontes, Wint. Ill, 2, 12. gallon: Wiv. Ill, 5, 3. Shr. Ind. 2, 90. Wint. IV, 3, the turtle and his q. Phoen. 31. my q. Mids. Ill, 2, 8. H4B V, 3, 66. a q. pot, H6B IV, 10, 16. 375. IV, 1, 80. Wint. I, 2, 27. H6A V, 5, 51. H6C Quart d'4cu, see Cardecue. II, 6, 90. Ill, 2, 88. 89. H8 III, 2, 405. V, 1, 168. Quarter, subst. 1) a fourth part: Wiv. I, 1, 28. Hml. I, 2, 8. Per. Ill Prol. 40 etc. Used as a flatterIV, 4, 5. Meas. Ill, 2, 213. Err. Ill, 2, 112. Ado V, ing compellation to other women: Merch. II, 1, 12. 2, 85. Shr. IV, 3, 109. Wint. IV, 3, 85. IV, 4, 814. All's I, 1, 116. Cymb. I, 1, 92. I, 3, 5. = mistress: H4A II, 4, 19. Ill, 3, 20. H5 I, 2, 215. Rom. Ill, 1, these mine eyes, true leaders to their q. Ven. 503. of 36. Mcb. V, 1, 34. = the fourth part of a year: once either s colour was the other q. Lucr. 66. his fancy1* or twice in a q. H4B V, 1, 53. q. Tw. V, 397. but now I was q. o'er myself, Merch. 2) a region in the hemisphere: all the —s that III, 2, 171. she was a q. over her passion, Lr. IV, they know t" the shopman's card, Mcb. 1, 3, 16. 3, 15. 3) the place where troops are lodged: All's III, 6, Adjectively: his q. mother = his royal mother, 70. John V, 5, 20. H6A II, 1, 63. 68. Tim. V, 4, 60. Hml. Ill, 1, 190. Ant. IV, 3, 22. Queen, vb., with it, — to play the qneen: I'll q. 4) peace, friendship, concord: keep fair q. with it no inch farther, Wint. IV, 4, 460. a three-pence his bed, Err. II, 1, 108 (cf. John V, 5, 20). in q. and bowed would hire me to q. it, H8 II, 3, 37. in terms like bride and groom, Oth. II, 3, 180. Qnell, subst. euphemistically = murder: who Quarter, vb. 1) to divide into fonr parts: a thought shall bear the guilt of our great q. Mcb. 1, 7, 72. which, —ed, hath but one part wisdom and ever three Quell, vb. to crush, to destroy: Gent. IV, 2, 13. parts coward, Hml. IV, 4,42. = to execute by cutting Mids. V, 292. H6A 1, 1, 163. H6B V, 1, 212. Tim. or tearing into fonr parts: John II, 506. 508. IV, 3, 163. 2) to divide in general: I that with my sword —ed Qaeller, in Boy-queller, Man-queUer, Wbmanthe world, Ant. IV, 14, 58. queller, q. v. 3) to cnt to pieces, to slaughter: —ing steel and Quench, 1) tr. a ) to pnt out, to extinguish (a climbing fire, H6A IV, 2, 11. make a quarry with thou- fire or light): Ven. 192. Lucr. 47.1231. 1468. Sonn. sands of these —ed slaves, Cor. I, 1, 203. their infants 154, 9. Gent. II, 7, 20. Err. V, 173. Mids. II, 1, 162. —ed, Caes. Ill, 1, 268. All's II, 1, 167. Wint. IV, 4, 61. John 111, 1, 345. IV, 4) to place the arms of another family in the com- 1, 63. H4B Ind. 26. H6C II, 1, 80. IV, 8, 8. H8 I, partments of a shield: Wiv. I, 1, 24. 26. 1, 148. II, 4, 80. Cor. Ill, 1, 197. V, 2, 78. Tit. V, 5) Partic. —ed = lodged, stationed: B3 V, 3, 34. I, 134. Rom. I, 1, 91. I, 5, 30. Lr. 111,7, 61. Oth. H8 V, 4, 56. Caes. IV, 2, 28. behold their —edfires, II, 1, 15. V, 2, 8. Per. 1,4,4. Ill, 1, 5. Figuratively; Cymb. IV, 4,18 (burning in the quarters of their army). of blushes: Ven. 50. Wint. IV, 4, 67. Per. IV, 2, 135. Quat, a pustule, a pimple: I have rubbed this of love: Meas. Ill, 1, 250. of thirst: Shr. I, 1, 24. young q. almost to the sense, Oth. V, 1, 11 (Ql gnat). b) to suppress, to stifle, to check: the supposition

930 of the lady's death will q. the wonder of her infamy, A d o IV, 1, 241. —ing my familiar smile with an austere regard of control, T w . II, 5, 72. might q. the teal of all professors else, W i n t . V, 1, 107. to q. mine honour, H 8 V, 2, 16. what hath —ed them hath given me fire, Mcb. 11, 2, 2. — ed of hope, not longing, Cymb. V, 5, 195 (checked, disappointed in my hope). 2) intr. a) to be extinguished, to go o n t : in never —ing fire, K2 V, 5, 109. b ) to lose z e a l , to become cool: dost thou think in time she will not q. and let instructions enter where folly now possesses t Cymb. I, 5, 47. V a e n e h l e M , inextinguishable: Lucr. 1554. H 6 C 1, 4, 28. Q u e r n , a handmill: skim milk, and sometimes labour in the q. Mids. II, 1, 36. Q u e s t , 1) search: with all due diligence that horse and sail and high expense can stead the q P e r . Ill P r o l . 21. in q. or in the q. of = in search of: Err. I, I , 130. I, 2, 40. — a body of searchers: the senate hath sent about three several —s to search you out, Oth. I, 2, 46 (cf. search in I, 1, 159). 2) pursuit, suit: cease your q. of love, L r . I, 1, 196. had, having, and in q. to have, extreme, Sonn. 129, 10. many Jasons come in q. of her, Merch. I, 1, 172. go in q. of beauty, J o h n II, 426. 3 ) i n q u i r y : volumes of report run with these false and most contrarious—s upon thy doings, Meas. IV, 1,62. 4) inquest, j u r y : to cide this title is impanneled a q. of thoughts, Sonn. 46, 10. what lawful q. have given their verdict up, R3 1, 4, 189. crowner's q. law, Hml. V, 1, 24. Q u e a t a n t , seeker, aspirant: when the bravest q. shrinks, find what you seek, that fame may cry you loud. All's II, 1, 16. Q u e a t l a n , subst. 1 ) the act of a s k i n g , and the thing asked: T p . 1, 2, 140. 184. A d o V, 2, 84. L L L II, 119. Merch. Ill, 4, 79. As III, 2, 291. All's II, 2, 16. 20. 31. 4 1 ( I will be a fool in q.). II, 5, 42 (suffer q. for your residence). T w . 1, 5, 191. J o h n I, 195. 199. H 6 B I, 2, 80. 82. H 8 II, 4, 212. Troil. 1, 2, 173. IV, 5, 248. Hml. U, 1, 10. Ill, 1, 56. Ill, 2, 212. L r . II, 4, 66. to askap.a q.: Wiv. IV, 1, 16. L L L II, 117. All's I, 1, 123. Ill, 2, 7. H 4 A I I , 3, 89. II, 4, 451. 452. H6A I, 2, 87. Cor. IV, 5, 205. T i m . II, 2, 61. Hml. V, 1, 65. Cymb. I, 5, 11. to make a q. H 4 B IV, 1, 167. Oth. Ill, 4, 17. let me but move one q. to your daughter, A d o IV, 1, 74. I'll put another q. to thee, Hml. V, 1,43 (the clown's speech), the q. standeth thus, H 4 B 1, 3, 15. IV, 1, 53. in q. = in d e m a n d : a commodity in q. Ado III, 3, 192 (quibbling). 2) a thing disputed, a subject of debate: a certain q. in the late, H 6 A IV, 1, 95. not ever the justice and the truth o' the q. carries the due o' the verdict with it, H 8 V, 1, 131. the q. of his death is enrolled in the Capitol, Caes. Ill, 2, 41. debate the q. of this straw, Hml. IV, 4, 26. 3) judicial trial: a commodity in q. A d o III, 3, 192 (quibbling), who now has these poor men in q. W i n t . V, 1, 198. he that was in q. for the robbery, H 4 B I, 2, 68. Hence also a trial and decision by the force of arms, as the ultima ratio regain: so may he (the T u r k ) with more facile q. bear it (Cyprus) Oth. I, 3, 23. 4 ) controversy,doubt: controversy hence a q. takes, whether ... or ..., Compl. 110. that is a q.: how shall

we try itt E r r . V, 421. breed a kind of q. in our cause, H 4 A IV, 1, 68. ay, there's the q. H 6 B IV, 2, 149. how that might change his nature, there's the q. Cues. II, 1, 13. to call in q. — t o doubt o f : T w . I, 4, 6. T r o i l . IV, 4, 86. to make q. = to d o u b t : I fell; and yet do q. make, what I should do again for such a sake, Compl. 321. you do me now more wrong in making q. of my uttermost, Merch. I, 1, 156. I no q. make to have it, 184. make that thy q. and go rot, W i n t . I, 2, 324. Troil. I, 2, 174. Cor. II, 1, 246. no q. = no d o n b t : wise! why, no q. but he was, Meas. Ill, 2, 146. no q. T w . I, 3, 92. no q. of that, H 6 B IV, 2, 61. Troil. II, 3, 155. Oth. IV, 3 , 6 3 . out of q. = out of d o u b t : Ado II, 1, 346. V, 4, 117. L L L IV, 1,30. Mids. Ill, 2, 279. T w . V, 355. H 5 V, 1, 48. past q., sans q., and in contempt of q., in the same sense: T w . I, 3, 104. L L L V, 1, 91. T w . II, 5, 98. 5' subject, matter, cause: that is not the q. W i v . I, 1, 227. as it appears in the true course of all the q. Ado V, 4, 6. since the first sword was drawn about this q. Troil. II, 2, 18. the cause and q. now in hand, 164. I'll decline the whole q. II, 3, 55. we dare not move the q. of our place, 89. the king that was and is the q. of these wars, Hml. I, 1, 111. little eyases that cry out on the top of q. II. 2, 356 ( a b o v e the subject, more and louder than the occasion requires), there was no money bid for argument, unless the poet and the player went to cuffs in the q. 3 7 3 (obscure passage). though some necessary q. of the play be then to be considered, HI, 2 , 4 7 . so jump upon this bloody q. V, 2, 386. these domestic and particular brawls are not the q. here, L r . V, 1, 31. the q. of Cordelia and her father requires a fitter place, V, 3, 58. if you there did practise on my state, your being in Egypt might be my q. Ant. II, 2, 40. he being the mered q. Ill, 13, 10. 6 ) discussion, disquisition, consideration: then of thy beauty do I q. make, that thou among the wastes of time must go, Sonn. 1 2 , 9 . all kind of arguments and q. deep, Compl. 121. Escalus, though first in q., is thy secondary, Meas. I, 1 , 4 7 ( = first in consideration). I subscribe not that, nor any other, but in the loss of q. II, 4, 90 (cf. Loss~). the difference that holds this present q. in the court, Merch. IV, 1, 172. make the trial of it in any constant q. T w . IV, 2, 53. this haste was hot in q. H 4 A 1, 1, 34. the unquiet time did push it out of farther q. H 5 I, 1, 5. though war nor no known quarrel were in q. II, 4, 17. laid any scruple in your way, which might induce you to the q. on't, H 8 II, 4, 151. I'ld have it come to q. L r . I, 3, 13. one thing of a queasy q. II, 1 , 1 9 (to be discussed, or treated, with nicety), thy great employment will not bear q. V, 3, 33. if we contend, out of our q. wipe him, Ant. II, 2, 81. this gentleman in q. Cymb. 1, 1, 34. to call in q. — to take into consideration, to inquire into, to e x a m i n e : neither call the giddiness of it in q., nor . . . , As V, 2, 6. 'tis the way to call hers (beauty) in q. more, Rom. I, 1, 235. and call inq. our necessities, Caes. IV, 3, 165. I must calit in q. Hml. IV, 5, 217. she'll bereave, you o' the deeds too, if she call your activity in q. Troil. III, 2, 60 ( = if she examines it by trying). 7) conversation, speech, t a l k : I will not stay thy —s; let me go, Mids. II, 1, 235. you may as well use q. with the wolf why he hath made the ewe bleat for the lamb, Merch. IV, 1, 73. I'll stay no longer q. 346. I met the duke yesterday find had much q. with him, A s III, 4, 39. where meeting with an old religious man,

Q after tome q. with him, teas converted, V,4,167. where we will have tome q. with the shepherd, Wint. IV, 2, 55. Haying no longer q. H4B I, 1, 48 (German: Rede stehen). health to you during all q. of the gentle truce, Troil. IV, 1, 11. speak not...; q. enrages him, Mcb. Ill, 4, 118. niggard of q., but, of our demands, most free in hit reply, Hml. Ill, 1, 13. made she no verbal q.1 Lr. IV, 3, 26 ( = did she not speak?), came it by request and such fair q. as soul to soul affordeth, Oth. I, 3, 113. OoMtlMi, vb. 1) to ask; absol.: let me q. more in particular, Hml. II, 2,244. you q. with a wicked tongue, III, 4, 12. With a clause: than q. hou 'tis born, Wint. I, 2,433. V, 3,139. With an accus. a) indicating the person asked: my daughter will I q. how she loves you, Wiv. Ill, 4, 94. do you q. me for my simple true judgment Ado I, 1, 167. q. him yourself, I, 2, 20. As II, 4, 64. II, 7, 172. All's II, 1, 208. Ill, 5, 35. H4A II, 3, 106. II, 4, 33. H4B I, 3, 53. H5 11, 4, 31. V, 2, 211. Troil. Ill, 3, 42. Tit. II, 3, 48. Mcb. I, 5, 4. b) indicating the thing asked after: to q. our delay, H5 II, 4, 142. —edme the story of my life, Oth. I, 3, 129. The thing asked after with of: lam — ed by my fears of what may chance or breed upon our absence, Wint. I, 2, 11. I'll q. you of my lord's tricks, 60. go we to the man that took him, to q. of his apprehension, H6C III, 2, 122. now will I q. Cassia of Bianco, Oth. IV, 1, 94. to q. me of your king's departure, Per. I, 3, 12. 2) to examine, to inquire into by interrogatory: give me leave to q. Meas. V,272. q. your desires, Mids. I, 1, G7. q. your royal thoughts, H4B V, 2, 91. q. her proudly, H6A I, 2, 62. to every county where this is - ed tend our Utters, H8 I, 2, 99. and q. this most bloody piece of work, Mcb. II, 3, 134. I would thou grewest unto the shores o' the haven and —edst every sail, Cymb. 1,3,2. yourself... cannot be —ed, IV, 4,34. 3) to donbt of: it is not to be —ed that they had gathered a wise council to them, H8 II, 4, 50. 4) to discuss, to consider, to reason: nor dare I q. with my jealous thought where you may be, Sonn. 57,9. let your reason with your choler q. what 'tis you go about, H8 I, 1, 130. With of: q. no further of the case, how or which way, H6A II, 1, 72. 5) to talk, to converse: after supper long he —ed with modest Lucrece, Lucr. 122. disarm them, and let them q. Wiv. Ill, 1, 78. think you q. with the Jew, Merch. IV, 1, 70. feed yourselves with —ing, As V, 4, 144. stay not to q.,for the watch it coming, Rom. V, 3, 158. had I not brought the knowledge of your mistress home, I grant we were to q. further, Cymb. II, 4, 52 (i. e. to fight a duel). Transitively, = to speak to: with many holiday and lady terms he —ed me, H4A I, 3, 47. live yout or are you aught that man may q.t Mcb. I, 3, 43. it would be spoke to; q. it, Hml. I, 1, 45 (Qq speak to it). QneatUnable, propitious to conversation, affable : thou comest in such a q. shape that I will speak to thee, Hml. 1,4, 43. cf. Unquestionable. Questionless, adj. doubtless: Merch. I, 1, 176. Per. V, 1, 45. Qnestrist, one going in qnest of another: some thirty of his knights, hot —s after him, met him at gate, Lr. Ill, 7, 17 (Qq questrits). Qneubns, name of a place in Sir Andrew's geography: Tw. II, 3, 25.

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Qolek, adj. 1) living, alive: I had rather be set q. r the earth and bowled to death with turnips, Wiv. Ill, 4, 90. one that's dead is q. All's V, 3, 304. not to be buried, but q. and in mine arms, Wint. IV, 4, 132. the mercy that wat q. in us ... by your oum counsel is suppressed and killed, H5 II, 2, 79. 0 earth, gape open wide and eat him q. R3 I, 2, 65. thou'rt q , but yet I'U bury thee, Tim. IV, 3, 44. 'tis for the dead, not for the q. Hml. V, 1, 137. 274. 302. cf. the quibbles in LLL V, 2, 687 and B3 IV, 4, 361. to the q. = to the living flesh, so as to cause a keen sensation: with their high wrongs lam struck to the q. Tp. V, 25. Err. II, 2,139. Tit. IV, 2, 28. IV, 4, 36. cf. I'U tent him to the q. Hml. II, 2, 626. but to the q. of the ulcer: Hamlet coaMA back, IV, 7, 124. 2) lively, sprightly, nimble: mine eyes are gray and bright and q. in turning, Ven. 140. now q. desa» hath caught the yielding prey, 547. in youth q. beartuy and dexterity, Lucr. 1389. my verse, so far from ret* nation or q. change, Sonn. 76, 2. you have a q. wit, Gent. 1, 1, 132. dumb jewels ... more than q. wands do move a woman's mind, III, 1, 91. his q. wit, Ado II, 1, 399. V, 2, 11. is there no q. recreation grantedt LLL I, 1, 162. therefore apt, because q. I, 2, 25. 31. a q. venue of wit, V, 1, 62. q. Biron hath plighted faith to me, V, 2, 283. I long to see q. Cupid's post, Merch. II, 9, 100. sudden and q. in quarrel, As II, 7, 151. if the q. fire of youth light not your mind, All's IV, 2, 5. O spirit of love, how q. and fresh art thou, Tw. I, 1, 9. thy assailant is q., skilful and deadly, III, 4, 245. his q. wit, H4B I, 2, 193. apprehensive, q., forgetbe, IV, 3, 107. shall our q. blood, spirited with wine, seem frosty t H5 111, 5, 21. cheer his grace with q. and merry words, R3 I, 3, 5. give way, dull clouds, to my q. curses, 196. bold, q., ingenious, III, 1, 155. a woman of q. sense, Troil. IV, 5, 54. an eagle hath not so green, so q., so fair an eye, Rom. Ill, 5, 222. that q. spirit that is in Antony, Caes. I, 2, 29. he was q. mettle when he went to school, 300. his q. hunting, Oth. II, 1, 313. the q. comedians will stage us, Ant. V, 2, 216. 3) fresh: where the q. freshes are, Tp III, 2, 75. when our q. winds lie still, A n t I, 2, 114 (some M. Edd. q. minds), the air is q. there, and it pierces and sharpens the stomach, Per. IV, 1, 28. 4) sensitive, perceptive in a high degree: you have a q. ear, Gent. IV, 2, 63. night ...the ear more q. of apprehension makes, Mids. Ill, 2, 178. to have an open ear, a q. eye, Wint. IV, 4, 685. q. is mine ear to hear of good towards him, R2 II, 1, 234. my eye's too q., my heart o'erweens too much, H6C III, 2, 144. have i q. eye to see, Oth. I, 3, 293 (Ff and later Qq if thou hast eyes to see), the gods are q. of ear, Per. IV, 1, 70 (hear also a short prayer). 5) swift, speedy: Ven. 38. Sonn. 45, 5. 55, 7. 113, 7. Tp. I, 2, 366. IV, 39. Meas. I, 1, 64. IV, 2, 113. LLL I, 2, 30. 11,31. Mids. Ill, 2, 342. Shr.1V, 2, 11. All's V, 3,40. H4AII,4, 286. H5VChor. 23. V, 1,91. H6A V, 3, 8. H6B III, 1, 288. R3IV, 4,283. H8 1,2, 66. Cor. I, 4, 10. Rom. V, 3,120. Tim. I, 1, 91. Hml. Ill, 1, 176. V, 1, 139. V, 2, 120. Lr. 111,6, 104. IV, 7, 35. Oth. H, 1, 80. Ant. 1, 2, 203. HI, 1, 19. = rash: you mutt not be to q. LLL II, 118. your reasons are too shallow and too q. R3 IV, 4, 361. 6) pregnant, with child; in the language of Costard: she's q.; the child brags in her belly already, LLL V, 2, 682. Jaquenetta that is q. by him, 687.

932

ti

• n i c k , adv. speedily, rapidly: Tp. V, 304. Wiv. Hml. Ill, 1, 3. V, 1, 321. Oth. I, 1, 101. n, 1, 319. IV, 2, 84. IV, 5, 3. 44. Meas. IV, 1, 7. IV, 3, 96. HI, 3, 152. Per. I, 2, 5. L L L T, 1, 63. Mids. I, 1,149. Ill, 2, 256. Merch. II, 2) freedom from passion or emotion of the mind, 9, 1. H4A 111, I, 230. Oth. V, 1, 3. Ant. I, 3, 5. IV, peace of the soul, patience, calmness: the storing 15, 31. V, 2, 39. 286. ruffian thall it keep in q. Ven. 1149. I will depart in ( i d e k - M i w t r a l , furnished with, or having, q. Err. Ill, 1, 107. she it much out of q. Tw. II, 3, nimble and brisk answers: Cymb. Ill, 4, 161. 144. thy greatest help it q. H6B II, 4, 67. for your ( o l e k - c n c e l T l n i , readily and easily understand- own q. H8 II, 4, 63. ing: H4A I, 3, 189. Quiet, adj. (comp. —er in Tw. HI, 4, 147) 1) • s i c k e n , 1) tr. a) to make alive: — t what's free from disturbance or alarm, at rest, still, tranquil, dead, Tp. Ill, 1, 6. to breathe life into a stone, q. a peaceful: the q. cloture of my breast, Ten. 782. musterrock, All's 11, 1, 77. B3 IV, 4, 297. Tim. IV, 3, 184. ing to the q. cabinet (the heart) Lacr. 442. q. days, Ant. 1,3, 69. Tp. IV, 24. Jove would ne'er be q. Meas. II, 2, 111. b) to cheer, to refresh: q. hit embraced heaviness he hath got a q. catch, Shr. II, 333. q. life, V, 2, 108. with wnc delight, Merch. II, 8, 52. music atuipot$y the house will be the —er. T w . Ill, 4, 147. John III, use to q. you, Shr. I, 1, 36. H5 IV, 1, 20. H6A IV, 4, 134. R2 I, 3, 96. 137. IV, 69. H4A II, 4, 117. 6, 13. R3 IV, 4, 124. V, 1, 25. H4B 1, 2, 171. II, 4, 199. H5 I, 2, 79. 2) intr. to receive life: I tee a —ing in hit eye, H6A II, 1, 6. Ill, 2, 110. H6B IV, 10, 19. H6C 11, Meas. V, 500. these hairs will q. and accuse thee, Lr.5, 40. R3 I, 3, 60. V, 3, 43. 149. 160. H8 HI, 2, Ill, 7, 39. this forked plague it fated to us when we 380. V, 1, 77. Hml. I, 1, 10. 11, 2, 77. Oth. I, 3, 95. do q. 0th. HI, 3, 277. summer flies that q. even with IV, 1, 54. Cymb. Ill, 3, 30. IV, 2, 280. Per. Ill, 1, blowing, IV, 2, 67. q. with kitting, Ant. IV, 15, 39. 29. 42. Qoickly, (compar—er, All's I, 1, 135) speedily; 2) free from emotion, calm, patient, coutented: without delay, soon: Ven. 87. 520. 990. 1192. Sonn. be q. Tp. IV, 215. 235. Err. V, 38. 112. Shr. Ill, 2, 153, 3. Compl. 113. Pilgr. 416. Tp. V, 86. Gent. II, 219. H4B II, 4, 174. H6B I, 3, 146. Cor. V, 6, 135. 4, 34. II, 6, 40. IV, 2, 89. Wiv. Ill, 3, 2. 155. 157. Rom. I, 5, 89. Hml. V, 1, 288. Per. 11. Prol. 5. I am III, 5, 48. IV, 2, 112. IV, 4, 83. V, 3, 4. Meas. II, 4, glad he is so q. Wiv. I, 4, 95. a wretched tout ...we 51. Ill, 1, 151. 279. IV, 3, 33. Ado IV, 1, 126. L L L bid be q. Err. II, 1, 35. I can be q. L L L I, 2, 171. V, 2, 244. 899. Mids. I, 1, 7. As II, 6, 15. Ill, 2, 208. translate the stubbornness of fortune into to q. and so IV, 3, 132. Shr. Ill, 2, 243. All's I, 2, 66. II, 4, 12. tweet a style, As II, 1, 20. a couple of q. ones, Shr. Tw. I, 5, 314. Ill, 1, 14. John V, 6, 1. 1121, 3, 260. Ill, 2, 242. a killing tongue and a q. sword, H5 III, H5 V, 2, 145. H6A I, 3, 28. IV, 6, 19. H6B 1, 1, 169. 2, 36. I, 3, HO. II, 1, 151. II, 4, 69. Ill, 1, 133. 171. V, I, Misapplied by Dogberry in Ado III, 3, 42. 84. H6C I, 1, 69. I, 4, 174. IV, 1, 132. IV, 8, 7. V, Adverbially: a man may live at q. in hell, Ado 1, 65. R3 IV, 4, 313. Mcb. I, 7, 2. Ant. Ill, 7, 23. II, 1, 266. let me q. go, Mids. Ill, 2, 314. John IV, 1, Cymb. V, 3, 62 etc. etc. 80. H8 IV, 2, 81 ( = still, without motion). Quickly, name of the hostess and procuress of FalQuiet, vb. to calm, to appease: q. thy cudgel, H5 staff: Wiv. I, 2, 3 etc. H 4 A III, 3, 106. H4B II, 1, V, 1,54 (Pistol's speech), g. yourselves, H6AIV,1,115. 49 etc. H5 II, 1, 20. 82. Quietly, 1) still, without motion: lie q. Ven. 709. Qoickneaa, speed: Hml. IV, 3, 45. 2) without disturbance or alarm, peaceably: so Qniek-ralacd, swiftly levied: H4A IV, 4, 12. shall you q. enjoy your hope, Shr. Ill, 2, 138. H6A V, Qulckisnd, moving sand affording an nnsolid 3, 153. 159. H6C I, 2, 15. Tim. HI, 4, 54. Ill, 5, 44. footing: a q. of deceit, H6C V, 4, 26. — s, Ant. II, Hml. I, 4, 49. Per. IV, 2, 29. 7, 65. 3) calmly: these quarrels must be q. debated, Tit. Quick-shifting, rapidly changing: q. antics, ugly V, 3, 20. in her eyes, Lucr. 459. Quietness, 1) tranquillity, peace: H6A V, 1, 10. Quicksilver, mercury; emblem of swiftness: the H6C IV, 3, 16. Troil. II, 1, 90. Cor. IV, 6, 3. Ant. rogue fled from me like q. H4B II, 4, 248. swift at q. I, 3, 53. it courses through the natural gates and alleys of the 2) calmness: Merch. IV, 1, 12. Ant. IV, 15, 68. body, Hml. I, 5, 66. Quietus, final settlement of an account, audit: Quick-witted, having a ready and sprightly wit: her audit, though delayed, answered must be, and her Shr. V, 2, 38. q. is to render thee, Sonn. 126, 12. when he himself Quiddities, equivocations, snbtilties, cavils: H4A might his q. make with a bare bodkin, Hml. Ill, 1, 75. I, 2, 51. Hml. V, 1, 107 (Ff quiddits). Quill, 1) the prickle of a porcupine: Hml. 1,5,20. Quiddits, the same: Hml. V, 1, 107 (Qq quid2) the strong feather of the wing of a bird: to dities). pluck the —t from ancient ravens' wingt, Lucr. 949. Quid f « r measure for measure, tit for tat: the wren with little q. Mids. HI, 1,131 (Bottom's song). I cry you mercy, 'tis but Q. H6A V, 3, 109. Hence = pen: Lucr. 1297. Sonn. 83, 7. 85, 3. cf. Volet, subst. 1) freedom from disturbance or Goosr-quilL alarm, tranquillity, peace, repose: her house is sacked, Obscure passage: then we may deliver our suppliher q. interrupted, Lucr. 1170. my limbs ..., my mind cations in the q. H6B 1,3,4 (Steevens: written, penned; ... no q. find, Sonn. 27, 14. q. in the match, Shr. II, Nares: in form and order, like a quilled ruff; Singer: 332. thought to fill hit grave in q. Wint. IV, 4, 465. in the coil; Halliwell: all together). to thee it thall descend with better q. H4B IV, 5, 188. Quilled, in Sharp-quille.d, q. v. IV, 1, 71. H6CI, 1, 173. R3 111, 1, 142. H8 11, 2, 75. Quillet«, sly tricks in argument, subtleties, cavilBom. I, 1, 98. Ill, 5, 100. Mcb. II, 3, 18 (at q.). ling, chicanery: some tricks, tome q., how to cheat the

Q

933

devil, L L L IV, 3, 288. these nice sharp q. of the law, thou canst q. thee by thy brother's mouth of what we H6A II, 4, 17. do not stand on q. how to slay him, think against thee, As III, 1,11. here I q. him, All's V, H6B III, 1, 261. crack the lawyer's voice, that he may 3, 300. I would I could q. all offences with as clear never more ... sound his q. shrilly, Tim. IV, 3, 155. excuse, H4A III, 2, 19. I think thou art q. for that, his quiddities, his q. Hml. V, 1, 108. keep up thy q. H4B 11,4,371. God q. you in his mercy, H5 11,2, 166. 4) to remit, to release from: unless a thousand Oth. Ill, 1, 25. Quilt, a cover made by patting wool or cotton marks be levied, to q. the penalty. Err. I, 1, 23. those between two cloths; Falstaff called so: H4A IV, 2,54. earthly faults, I q. them all, Meas. V, 488. to q. the Quinapril!», an apocryphal philosophermention- fine for one half of his goods, Merch. IV, 1, 381. 5) to requite, to repay, to pay for: like doth q. like, ed by the clown in T w . I, 5, 39. Q uluce, the fruit of Pyrus Cydonia: Rom. IV, 4,2. and measure still for measure, Meas. V, 416. your evil —i you well, 501 (yoa receive good for evil), to q. Name in Mids. I, 2, 8. 15 etc. Quintain, a post or figure set np for beginners their grief, tell thou the lamentable tale of me, R2 V, 1, in tilting to rnn at: my better parts are all thrown 43 (to pay them for their sad stories. Qq quite). I shall down, and that which here stands up is 6ut a q., a mere q.you, H5 III, 2,110 (tell you also interesting things). unless the Lady Bona q. his pain, H6C III, 3, 128 lifeless block, As I, 2, 263. Quintessence, (quintessence) an extract from a ( = reward). Plantagenet doth q. Plantagenet, B3 IV, thing, containing its virtues in a small quantity; and 4, 20. 64. your children's children q. it in your age, hence the best and purest part of a thing: the q. of V, 3, 262. to q. the bloody wrongs upon her foes, Tit. every sprite heaven would in little show, A s III, 2, 147. 1, 141. rU q. thy pains, Rom. II, 4, 204 (O. Edd. what is this q. of duett Hml. II, 2, 321. quite), is't not perfect conscience, to q. him with this armt Hml. V, 2, 68. if Hamlet give the first or second ( n l a t n t , Boman name in Cor. II, 3, 249. • a l p , a sharp jest, ft sarcasm: htr sudden —the hit, or q. in answer of the third exchange, 280. enkindle least whereof would quell a lover's hope, Gent IV, 2, all the sparks of nature, to q. this horrid act, Lr. Ill, 12. no —s now, Pistol, Wiv. I, 3, 45. — » and sen- 7, 87. God q. you! Ant. Ill, 13, 124. whom he may at tences and these paper bullets of the brain, Ado II, 3, pleasure whip ... to q. me, 151. thy loss is more than 249. this is called the Q. Modest, As V, 4, 79. in Ay can thy portage q. Per. Ill, 1, 35. to q. oneself of — to be even with: to q. me of them thoroughly, Ado IV, 1, —* and thy quiddities, H4A 1, 2, 51. Voire, snbst. 1) company: the whole q. hold their 202. q. of, and q. with, = even with: to be full q. of those my banishers, Cor. IV, 5, 89. Hortensio will be hips and laugh, Mids. II, 1, 55. 2) a company of singers, a chorus: placed aq.of q. with thee, Shr. Ill, 1, 92. 6) to q. oneself — to acquit oneself: now q. you such enticing birds, H6B I, 3, 92. 3) a place for singers: our cage we make a q., as well, Lr. II, 1, 32. Quite, vb. — quit; reading of Qq in R2 V, 1, 43; doth the prisoned bird, Cymb. Ill, 3, 43. • a i r e , vb. to sing in concert and be tnned accord- of Ff in Rom. II, 4, 204; of Qq in Per. Ill, 2, 18 ( F f ingly : the smallest orb ... like an angel sings, still leave, M. Edd. quit.). Quite, adv. completely: Ven. 783. Lucr. 1563. —ing to the young-eyed cherubins, Merch. V, 62. my throat of war which —d with my drum, Cor. Ill, 2, 113. Sonn. 5, 7. 25, 11. 62, 11. 72,3. 103, 7. Pilgr. 253. Quirk, 1) humour, caprice: I have felt so many Tp. IV, 190. Gent.II, 4,195. Meas. 1,3, 30. II, 2,186. —i of joy and grief, that the first face of neither, on Ill, 2,110. IV, 4, 23. Err. Ill, 2, 1. L L L I, 1, 70. 142. the start, can woman me tittio't, All's III, 2, 51. belike V, 2, 150. Mids. II, 1, 32. 251. Ill, 2, 88. Merch. V, this is a man of that q. Tw. Ill, 4, 268. she has me her 251. As III, 4, 45. All's II, 3, 197. Tw. Ill, 1, 75. —s, her reasons, Per. IV, 6, 8. John IV, 3, 4. H5 V Chor. 22. H6A I, 1, 90. Ill, 1, 2) a shallow conceit: I may chance have some odd25. IV, 1,43. H6C IV, 3,6. Hml. Ill, 1,162. Ant. V, —s and remnants of wit broken on me, Ado II, 3, 245. 2, 100 etc. on« that excels the —s of blazoning pens, Oth. II, 1,63. Qalttal, requital: as in revenge or q. of such strife, Quit, (impf. and partic. quit; partic. —ed only in Lucr. 236. Wint. V, 1, 192) 1) to leave: time had not scythed all Quittance, subst. 1) discharge from a debt, acthat youth begun, nor youth all q. Compl. 13. the rats quittance: in any bill, warrant, q. or obligation, Wiv. I, hadq. it, Tp. I, 2, 148. q. the vessel, 211. that we q. 1, 10. omittance is no q. As III, 5, 133. this place, II, 1, 322. Meas. II, 4, 28. W i n t V, 1,192. 2) payment, return, requital: rendering faint q. to Ill, 2, 168. V, 3, 86. H5 III, 2, 92. Ill, 5, 3. V Chor. Harry Monmouth, H4B I, 1, 108. shallforget the office 33. Mcb. Ill, 4, 93 (q. my sight). Lr. IV, 2, 94. Ant. of our hand sooner than q. of desert, H5 II, 2, 34. no Ill, 13, 65. Cymb. I, 1, 38 (he q. being). V, 5, 397. gift to him, but breeds the giver a return exceeding all Per. Ill, 2, 18. use of q. Tim. I, 1, 291. 2) to set at liberty, to free, to deliver: your master Quittance, vb. to requite, to retaliate: to q. their —s you, Tw. V, 329. With of: for your great seats deceit, H6A II, 1, 14. now q. you of great shames, H5 III, 5, 47. —ing thee QulTer, subst. a case for arrows: Ado I, 1, 274. thereby of ten thousand shames, H6B III, 2, 218. God Quiver, adj. nimble, active: H4B III, 2, 301. safely q. her of her burthen, H8 V, 1, 70. q. — free, Quiver, vb. to tremble, to shake: Lucr. 1030. safe, rid: he that dies this year is qfor the next, H4B H6B IV, 7, 97. T i t II, 3,14. Rom II, 1,19. II, 4,171. III, 2, 255. so I would he were (up to the neck in Qoeir, a cap or hood: Wint. IV, 4, 226. H4B I, Thames) andIby him, so we were q. here, H5IV, 1,122. 1, 147. I am q. Tim. IV, 3, 397. of this contradiction you shall Quaint, name in R2 II, 1, 284. nowbeq. Cymb. V,4,169. cf. the pun in H4BII, 4,371. Quelt, subst. something thrown at a fixed object 3) to clear, to excuse, to absolve, to acquit: till in play: a' plays at —s well, H4B II, 4, 266.

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tacit, vb. to throw: q. him down like a shove-groat »killing, H4JB II, 4, 206. l a t n d t m , that was; former: these q. carpetmongers, Ado V, 2, 32. I did converse this q. day with a companion of the king's, L L L V, 1,7 (Sir Nathaniel's speech), hold the q. Quickly for the only she, H5 II, 1, 82. this is the q. king, H6CIII, 1, 23. Ill, 3,153. Troil. IV, 5, 179. • n e t « , (sometimes written cote or coate, and probably pronounced so; cf. Gent. IT, 2, 18. 19) 1) to note, to observe, to examine: I have perused thee, and —d joint by joint, Troil. IV, 5, 233. note how she —s the leaves, Tit. IV, 1, 50. I am sorry that with better heed and judgment I had not —d him, Hml. II, 1, 112. 2) to construe, to interpret: our letters showed much more than jest. So did our looks. We did not q. them so, LLL V, 2, 796. cf. Misquote. 3) to perceive, to read: the illiterate will q. my loathsome trespass in my looks, Lucr. 812. how q. you my follyt I q. it in your jerkin, Gent. II, 4, 18. 19. what curious eye doth q. deformities, Rom. I, 4, 31. 4) to note, to set down, as in writing: his face's own margent did q. such amazes, L L L II, 246 (like marginal notes), her amber hair for foul hath amber — d , IV, 3, 87. he's —d for a most perfidious slave, All's V, 3, 205. a fellow by the hand of nature marked, —d and signed to do a deed of shame, John IV, 2, 222. Q u * t h , say, says, said: 1) pres. say, says; used only to repeat in jest or irony what another has said before: did they, q.youf L L L IV, 3, 221. veal, q. the Dutchman, V, 2, 247. at hand, q. pickpurse, H4A II,

1, 53. 54. I do, q. he, perceive my king is tangled in affection, H8 III, 2, 34 (quotation from a letter), q. he, Tp. Ill, 2 , 3 6 . H4A II, 1, 44 (Ff q. a), q. a, Wiv. II, 1, 142. All's I, 3, 90. H4A II, 1, 44 (Qq q. he). H4B V, 3, 17. Troil. V, 1, 82. Bom. II, 4, 124. Per. II, 1, 82 (O. Edd. ke-tha). 2) impf. said; sometimes placed before thespeech: q.he: she took me kindly by the hand, Lacr. 253. q.he: I must deflower, 348. q. she: reward not hospitality, 575. q. she: here's but two, Troil. I, 2, 171. q. she: before you tumbled me, Hml. IV, 5, 62. Oftener inserted in the speech: q. Venus, Yen. 187. q. Adon, 769. q. Lucrece,Lucr. 1284. q.Lucretius, 1800. q.whol Gent II, 1, 69. q. my master, 70. q. the king, LLLV, 2, 103. q. Jaques, As II, 1, 54. q. my uncle, B3 II, 4, 12. q. Dighton, IV, 3, 9. q. the dove-house, Bom. I, 3, 33. q. my husband, 55. q. I: Gent. IV, 4, 27. 29. Err. II, 1, 62. 63. 64. 66. 67. L L L V, 2, 277. As II, 7, 18. H5 II, 3, 18. R3 III, 7, 38. IV, 1, 72. Mcb. I, 3, 5. q. he: Ven. 409. 523. 715. 718. Lucr. 330. 512. 645. 667. Pilgr. 235. G e n t IV, 4, 28. Err. II, 1, 62. 63. 64. 66. 71. L L L IV, 3, 109. As II, 1, 47. 51. II, 7, 18. 23. Shr. I, 1, 219. Ill, 2, 162. All's I, 2, 58. B2 V, 4, 4. 118 I, 2, 193. Troil. I, 2, 175. 179. Cor. I, 1, 134. Rom. I, 3, 41. 48. Ant. I, 5, 42. q. she: Ven. 427. 493. 537. 589. 613. 717. 720. 997. 1015. 1070. 1133. 1177. Lucr. 652. Pilgr. 84. 125. 147. 185. Shr. II, 153. All's I, 3, 74. R3 V, 1, 26. Troil. I, 2, 177. Q a a t l d l a n , a fever whose paroxysms return every day: he seems to have the q. of love upon him, As 111, 2, 383. Mrs Quickly knows a burning q. tertian, H5 II, 1, 124.

R. B, the eighteenth letter of the alphabet: both (begin) with anR. Ah, mocker! that's the dog's name, R o m . II, 4, 222 (cf. Dog). R a b a t * (O. Edd. re6a/o)akind of ruff: Ado III, 4,6. B a b b i t , the animal Lepus cuniculns: L L L III, 19. Shr. IV, 4, 101. H4B II, 2, 91. B a b b l t - r a c k e r , a sucking rabbit: H4AII,4,480. Bmbble, 1) a crowd: bring the r.,j>er whom I give thee power, here to this place, Tp. IV, 37. at his heels a r. of his companions, Wiv. Ill, 5, 76. tee met my wife, her sisters, and a r. more of vile confederates, Err. V, 236. followed with a r. that rejoice to see my tears, H6B II, 4, 32. there's a trim r. let in, H8 V, 4, 75. your disordered r. make servants of their betters, Lr. I, 4, 277. 2) the mean people, populace: the r. should have first unroofed the city, Cor. I, 1, 222. make the r. call our cares fears. III, 1, 136. IV, 2, 33. Mcb. V, 8, 29. Hml. IV, 5, 102. B a b b l e m e n t , rabble: Caes. I, 2, 245. B a c e , . 1) a root: a r. or two of ginger, Wint. IV, 3, 50 (cf. Raze). 2) lineage, generation (of men); breed (of animak or plants): a wanton herd or r. of youthful and unhandled colts, Merch. V, 72. make conceive a bark of baser kind by bud of nobler r. Wint. IV, 4, 95. of the Nevils' noble r. H6B III, 2, 215. a happy r. of kings, B3 V, 3, 157. the whole r. of mankind, Tim. IV, 1, 40.

Duncan's horses, the minions of their r. Mcb. II, 4, 15. the getting of a lawful r. Ant. Ill, 13, 107. a valiant r. Cymb. V, 4, 83. pupils of noble r. Per. V Prol. 9. Peculiar passage: none our parts so poor but was a r. of heaven, Ant. I, 3, 37 ( = a breed of heaven, of heavenly origin. Warburton: had a smack or flavour of heaven). 3) natural disposition: thy vile r., though thou didst learn, had that in't which good natures could not abide to be with, Tp. I, 2, 358. now I give my sensual r. the rein, Meas. II, 4 , 1 6 0 . Baee, running, conrse: Sonn 51, 11. John III, 3, 39. H6C II, 3, 1. B a c k , subst. floating vapour, a cloud: permit the basest clouds to ride with ugly r. on his celestial face, Sonn. 33, 6. and like this insubstantial pageant faded, leave not a r. behind, Tp. IV, 156. as we often see ... the r. stand still, Hml. II, 2, 506. the r. dislimns, Ant. IV, 14, 10. B a c k , subst. an engine of torture: Meas. V, 313. Merch. Ill, 2, 25. 26. 32. Wint. Ill, 2, 177. H4A II, 4 , 2 6 2 . H6A II, 5, 3. Troil. I, 2, 152. L r . V, 3, 314 (O. Edd. tcrack). Oth. Ill, 3, 335. B a c k , vb. to move as clouds, to fleet: three suns ... not separated with the —ing clouds, H6C II, 1, 27. B a c k , vb. 1 ) to extend, to stretch, to strain; a) trans.: being lacked and lost, why, then we r. the value, Ado IV, 1, 222. that (my credit) shall be —ed, even

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tacit, vb. to throw: q. him down like a shove-groat »killing, H4JB II, 4, 206. l a t n d t m , that was; former: these q. carpetmongers, Ado V, 2, 32. I did converse this q. day with a companion of the king's, L L L V, 1,7 (Sir Nathaniel's speech), hold the q. Quickly for the only she, H5 II, 1, 82. this is the q. king, H6CIII, 1, 23. Ill, 3,153. Troil. IV, 5, 179. • n e t « , (sometimes written cote or coate, and probably pronounced so; cf. Gent. IT, 2, 18. 19) 1) to note, to observe, to examine: I have perused thee, and —d joint by joint, Troil. IV, 5, 233. note how she —s the leaves, Tit. IV, 1, 50. I am sorry that with better heed and judgment I had not —d him, Hml. II, 1, 112. 2) to construe, to interpret: our letters showed much more than jest. So did our looks. We did not q. them so, LLL V, 2, 796. cf. Misquote. 3) to perceive, to read: the illiterate will q. my loathsome trespass in my looks, Lucr. 812. how q. you my follyt I q. it in your jerkin, Gent. II, 4, 18. 19. what curious eye doth q. deformities, Rom. I, 4, 31. 4) to note, to set down, as in writing: his face's own margent did q. such amazes, L L L II, 246 (like marginal notes), her amber hair for foul hath amber — d , IV, 3, 87. he's —d for a most perfidious slave, All's V, 3, 205. a fellow by the hand of nature marked, —d and signed to do a deed of shame, John IV, 2, 222. Q u * t h , say, says, said: 1) pres. say, says; used only to repeat in jest or irony what another has said before: did they, q.youf L L L IV, 3, 221. veal, q. the Dutchman, V, 2, 247. at hand, q. pickpurse, H4A II,

1, 53. 54. I do, q. he, perceive my king is tangled in affection, H8 III, 2, 34 (quotation from a letter), q. he, Tp. Ill, 2 , 3 6 . H4A II, 1, 44 (Ff q. a), q. a, Wiv. II, 1, 142. All's I, 3, 90. H4A II, 1, 44 (Qq q. he). H4B V, 3, 17. Troil. V, 1, 82. Bom. II, 4, 124. Per. II, 1, 82 (O. Edd. ke-tha). 2) impf. said; sometimes placed before thespeech: q.he: she took me kindly by the hand, Lacr. 253. q.he: I must deflower, 348. q. she: reward not hospitality, 575. q. she: here's but two, Troil. I, 2, 171. q. she: before you tumbled me, Hml. IV, 5, 62. Oftener inserted in the speech: q. Venus, Yen. 187. q. Adon, 769. q. Lucrece,Lucr. 1284. q.Lucretius, 1800. q.whol Gent II, 1, 69. q. my master, 70. q. the king, LLLV, 2, 103. q. Jaques, As II, 1, 54. q. my uncle, B3 II, 4, 12. q. Dighton, IV, 3, 9. q. the dove-house, Bom. I, 3, 33. q. my husband, 55. q. I: Gent. IV, 4, 27. 29. Err. II, 1, 62. 63. 64. 66. 67. L L L V, 2, 277. As II, 7, 18. H5 II, 3, 18. R3 III, 7, 38. IV, 1, 72. Mcb. I, 3, 5. q. he: Ven. 409. 523. 715. 718. Lucr. 330. 512. 645. 667. Pilgr. 235. G e n t IV, 4, 28. Err. II, 1, 62. 63. 64. 66. 71. L L L IV, 3, 109. As II, 1, 47. 51. II, 7, 18. 23. Shr. I, 1, 219. Ill, 2, 162. All's I, 2, 58. B2 V, 4, 4. 118 I, 2, 193. Troil. I, 2, 175. 179. Cor. I, 1, 134. Rom. I, 3, 41. 48. Ant. I, 5, 42. q. she: Ven. 427. 493. 537. 589. 613. 717. 720. 997. 1015. 1070. 1133. 1177. Lucr. 652. Pilgr. 84. 125. 147. 185. Shr. II, 153. All's I, 3, 74. R3 V, 1, 26. Troil. I, 2, 177. Q a a t l d l a n , a fever whose paroxysms return every day: he seems to have the q. of love upon him, As 111, 2, 383. Mrs Quickly knows a burning q. tertian, H5 II, 1, 124.

R. B, the eighteenth letter of the alphabet: both (begin) with anR. Ah, mocker! that's the dog's name, R o m . II, 4, 222 (cf. Dog). R a b a t * (O. Edd. re6a/o)akind of ruff: Ado III, 4,6. B a b b i t , the animal Lepus cuniculns: L L L III, 19. Shr. IV, 4, 101. H4B II, 2, 91. B a b b l t - r a c k e r , a sucking rabbit: H4AII,4,480. Bmbble, 1) a crowd: bring the r.,j>er whom I give thee power, here to this place, Tp. IV, 37. at his heels a r. of his companions, Wiv. Ill, 5, 76. tee met my wife, her sisters, and a r. more of vile confederates, Err. V, 236. followed with a r. that rejoice to see my tears, H6B II, 4, 32. there's a trim r. let in, H8 V, 4, 75. your disordered r. make servants of their betters, Lr. I, 4, 277. 2) the mean people, populace: the r. should have first unroofed the city, Cor. I, 1, 222. make the r. call our cares fears. III, 1, 136. IV, 2, 33. Mcb. V, 8, 29. Hml. IV, 5, 102. B a b b l e m e n t , rabble: Caes. I, 2, 245. B a c e , . 1) a root: a r. or two of ginger, Wint. IV, 3, 50 (cf. Raze). 2) lineage, generation (of men); breed (of animak or plants): a wanton herd or r. of youthful and unhandled colts, Merch. V, 72. make conceive a bark of baser kind by bud of nobler r. Wint. IV, 4, 95. of the Nevils' noble r. H6B III, 2, 215. a happy r. of kings, B3 V, 3, 157. the whole r. of mankind, Tim. IV, 1, 40.

Duncan's horses, the minions of their r. Mcb. II, 4, 15. the getting of a lawful r. Ant. Ill, 13, 107. a valiant r. Cymb. V, 4, 83. pupils of noble r. Per. V Prol. 9. Peculiar passage: none our parts so poor but was a r. of heaven, Ant. I, 3, 37 ( = a breed of heaven, of heavenly origin. Warburton: had a smack or flavour of heaven). 3) natural disposition: thy vile r., though thou didst learn, had that in't which good natures could not abide to be with, Tp. I, 2, 358. now I give my sensual r. the rein, Meas. II, 4 , 1 6 0 . Baee, running, conrse: Sonn 51, 11. John III, 3, 39. H6C II, 3, 1. B a c k , subst. floating vapour, a cloud: permit the basest clouds to ride with ugly r. on his celestial face, Sonn. 33, 6. and like this insubstantial pageant faded, leave not a r. behind, Tp. IV, 156. as we often see ... the r. stand still, Hml. II, 2, 506. the r. dislimns, Ant. IV, 14, 10. B a c k , subst. an engine of torture: Meas. V, 313. Merch. Ill, 2, 25. 26. 32. Wint. Ill, 2, 177. H4A II, 4 , 2 6 2 . H6A II, 5, 3. Troil. I, 2, 152. L r . V, 3, 314 (O. Edd. tcrack). Oth. Ill, 3, 335. B a c k , vb. to move as clouds, to fleet: three suns ... not separated with the —ing clouds, H6C II, 1, 27. B a c k , vb. 1 ) to extend, to stretch, to strain; a) trans.: being lacked and lost, why, then we r. the value, Ado IV, 1, 222. that (my credit) shall be —ed, even

935

R to the uttermost, Merch. 1, 1, 181. thousand escapes of wit make thee the father of their idle dreams and r. thee in their fancies, Meas. IV, 1,65 (form strained and unnatural conceptions of thee, disfigure thee; cf. Rackefj. b) intr. = to strain, to make violent efforts: a pair of tribunes that have ed for Rome, to make coals cheap, Cor. V, 1, 16 (0. Edd. wracked). 2) to torture by stretching the limbs: Meas. V, 317. H6B 11!, 1, 376. 3) to pnt to pain, to torment, to harass: I'U r. thee with old cramps, Tp. I, 2, 369. how have the hours — ed and tortured me, Tw. V, 226. the commons hast thou —ed, H6B I, 3, 131 (i. e. by exaction). In LLL V, 2, 828 0 . Edd. —ed, M. Edd. rank. H a c k e r , one who disfigures by forcing into an unnatural form (or simply = tormentor?): such —s of orthography, as to speak dout, when he should say doubt, LLL V, 1, 21. B a c k e t , the instrument with which players at tennis strike the ball: H4B n , 2, 23. H5 I, 2, 261. R a M a e k (some M. Edd. ruddock) the redbreast: Cymb. IV, 2, 224. R a d i a n c e , brightness shooting in rays or beams: All's I, 1, 99. Lr. 1,1, 111. Used of eyes: weak sights their sickly r. do amend, Compl. 214. R a d i a n t , beaming, bright: Wiv. V, 5, 50. Mids. HI, 1, 95. Tw. I, 5,181. Ilml. I, 5, 55. Lr. II, 2, 113. Cymb. 1,6, 86. V, 4,121. V, 5, 475. Radish, the root of Baphanns: H4B III, 2, 334. Not inflected in the plural: a bunch ofr. H4A11,4,206. Raft, a float: Err. V, 348. Rag, 1) a piece torn off, a tatter: not a r. of money, Err. IV, 4, 89. tear a passion to tatters, to very —s, Hml. Ill, 2, 11. 2) a shabby beggarly person: you witch, you r., you baggage, Wiv. IV, 2, 194 (the later Ff and some M. Edd. hag), thou r., thou quantity, thou remnant, Shr. IV, 3, 112. thou r. of honour, R3 I, 3, 233. these overweening —s of France, V, 3, 328. thy father, that poor r. Tim. IV, 3, 271 (cf. Tag-rag). 3) Plur. — s , = worn out clothes, mean dress: Wiv. II, 2, 27. Err. Ill, 2, 99. L L L IV, 1,84. Wint. IV, 3, 56. 58. John II, 457. H6B IV, 1,46. Tim. IV, 3, 303. Lr. II, 4, 48. IV, 6, 171. Cymb. V, 6, 4. R a c a m a f f l n a (O. Edd. rag of Muffins) paltry fellows: H4A V, 3, 36. Rage, subst 1) violent anger, fury: Lncr. 1419. Sonn. 23, 3. Compl. 55. Tp. I, 2, 276. L L L IV, 1, 96. Mids. V, 49. 225. Merch. IV, 1, 13. Tw. Ill, 4, 213. IV, 2, 137. John III, 1, 329. 341. 344. IV, 2, 261. 264. IV, 3, 49. 85. R2 1, 1, 19. 173. Ill, 3, 59. V, 1, 30. H5 III, 2, 24. IV, 7, 82. H6A IV, 7,11. H6B III, 1, 174. IV, 1, 112. H6C I, 1, 265. 1, 4, 28. R3 I, 2, 188. I, 3, 278. I, 4, 229. II, 1, 56. H8 III, 1, 101. Troil. I, 3, 52. V, 10, 6. Cor. II, 3, 205. Ill, 1, 241. 248. 312. V, 6, 137. 148. Tit. IV, 2, 114. Rom. Prol. 10. 1,1, 91. Ill, 1, 66. Tim. V, 4, 39. Caes. II, 1, 176. Ill, 2, 127. Mcb. Ill, 6, 12. Hml. Ill, 3, 89. IV, 7, 93. Lr. I, 2, 182. IV, 4, 19. Oth. II, 3, 173. Ant. II, 5, 70. IV, 12, 44. IV, 14, 123. Cymb. I, 1, 77. 88. Per. 1, 2, 107. V, 3, 97. Plur. — s : H5 IV, 7, 37 (Fluellen's speech). Cor. V, 3, 85. to be in r. Lr. II, 4, 299. to fall in r. Cor. II, 3, 266. took it in r. Per. II, 1, 138. in r. = furious: Lucr. 1671. Err. IV, 4, 79. 140. H4A IV, 3, 100. H6A IV, 7, 80. H6B V, 3, 2. Tim. IV, 2, 45. Hml. II, 2, 494. Oth. II, 3, S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon.

2. Ed. T . II.

243. a r. — t.: it moved her. Not to a r. Lr. TV, 3, 18. in a r. H6B I, 1, 147. in a desperate r. Lucr. 219. 2) extreme violence, wild impetuosity, furious fighting: in fell battle's r. Lucr. 145. murder's —s, 909. against the stormy gusts of winter's day and barren r. of death's eternal cold, Sonn. 13,12. when sometime lofty towers I see down-razed, and brass eternal slave to mortal r. 6 4 , 4 (mortal r. = r. of mortality). how with this r. shall beauty hold a plea, 65, 3. spite of heaven's fell r. some beauty peeped through lattice of seared age, Compl. 13. shall we give the signal to our r. John II, 265. to enjoy by r. and war, R2 II, 4, 14. dry with r. and extreme totf, H4A I, 3, 31. the king before the Douglas' r. stooped his anointed head, H4B Ind. 31. disguise fair nature with hard-favoured r. H5 III, 1, 8. left us to the r. of France his sword, H6A IV, 6, 3. quickened with youthful spleen and warlike r. 13. if I die not with Frenchmen's r. 34. commence rough deeds of r. IV, 7, 8. Used of the element«: a river... swetleth with more r. Ven. 332. qualify the fire's extreme r. Gent. II, 7, 22. so high above his limits swells the r. of Bolingbroke, R2 III, 2, 109 (like a river), when the r. allays, the rain begins, H6C I, 4, 146. the blasts, with eyeless r. Lr. Ill, 1, 8. the furious winter's —s, Cymb. IV, 2, 259. 3) headlong passion, vehement desire: his r. of lust by gazing qualified, Lucr. 424. this moves in him more r. 468. when r. and hot blood are his counsellors, H4B IV, 4, 63. 4) raving madness: this present instance of his r. Err. IV, 3, 88. felt the vigour of his r. IV, 4, 81. till this afternoon his passion ne'er brake into extremity of r. V, 48. bearing thence rings, jewels, any thing his r. did like, 144. in this r. Rom. IV, 3, 53. the great r. is killed in him, Lr. IV. 7, 78. Applied, in contempt, to poetical inspiration: termed a poet's r. Sonn. 17, 11. 5) vehement sensation of pain: would give preceptial medicine to r. Ado V, 1, 24. I have a trick of the old r.; bear with me, I am sick, L L L V, 2, 417. send succours, lords, and stop the r. betime, before the wound do grow uncurable, H6B III, 1, 285. to give thy —s balm, Tim. V, 4, 16. 6) savageness: in Ajax' eyes blunt r. and rigour rolled, Lucr. 1398. nought so stockish, hard and full of r., but music for the time doth change his nature, Merch. V, 81. lass the rod and fawn on r. R2 V, 1, 33. harsh r., defect of manners, H4A III, 1, 183. misery could beguile the tyrant's r. Lr. IV, 6, 63. Rage, vb. 1) intr. at to be furious with anger or any wild excitement: Err. V, 216. R2 II, 1, 70. H4B V, 5, 34. H6C I, 4, 143. Troil. II, 3, 185. Lr. I, 2, 178. Ill, 4, 137. Cymb. Ill, 5, 67. Per. Ill, 3, 10. Used of the elements: Gent. I, 2, 122. II, 7, 26. Err. V, 75. Shr. I, 2, 203. II, 133. W i n t III, 3, 90. H6B III, 1, 302. 351. H6C I, 4, 145. Troil. I, 3,97. Tit. Ill, 1, 223. Rom. Ill, 5, 136. Caes. I, 3, 7. Lr. Ill, 2, 1. Ill, 4, 10. Per. IV, 4, 43. b) to ravage, to act with mischievous impetuosity: Mids. I, 2, 33 (the —ing rocks; Bottom's poetry). Shr. V, 2, 2. John V, 7, 80. H6A IV, 1, 185. H6C II, 3, 26. II, 5, 126. Cor. IV, 6, 76. c) to be driven headlong by desire and passion: when we r., advice is often seen to make our wits more keen, Compl. 160. those pampered animals that r. in

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R

B a i l e r , a scold: H6C V, 5, 38. image sensuality, Ado IT, 1, 62. where hit —in^ eye lifted to make his prey, R 3 III, 5 , 8 3 (.Qq lustful), those R a l m e a t , vesture, dress: Sonn. 22, 6. Gent. V, —ing appetites, Troil. II, 2, 181. to cool our —ing 4, 106. Shr. Ind. 2, 4. 8. II, 5. Cor. V, 3, 94. Tim. motions, Oth. I, 3, 334. Ill, 5, 33. Lr. II, 4, 158. d) to r a v e : doth he still r.t J o h n T, 7 , 1 1 . still in B a i n , subst water falling in drops from the motion of—ing waste, Tim. II, 1 , 4 . when one so great clouds: Ven. 71. 200. 238. 799. 965. Lucr. 1788. begins to r . Ant. IV, 1, 7. Sonn. 14, 6. 34, 6. 135,9. Meas. Ill, 2 , 5 2 . Ado III, e) to cause extreme pain: like the hectic in my 3, 111. L L L 1 V , 3 , 270. Mids. I, 1, 130. Merch. IV, blood he — s , Hml. IT, 3, 68. troubled with a —ing 1, 185. As III, 2, 27. Ill, 5, 50. IV, 1, 152. T w . V, 399. 401. J o h n II, 128. H4B IV, 5, 9. H6A II, 1, 7. tooth, Oth. Ill, 3 , 4 1 4 . 2) tr. to e n r a g e , to chafe: young hot colts being III, 2, 59. H6B III, 2, 341. C III, 2, 50 (much r. wears —d do rage the more, R2 II, 1, 70. in war was never the marble; cf. Ven. 200. Tit. II, 3, 141. Lucr. 560). Hon —d more fierce, 173. R 3 I, 2, 164. Cor. IV, 5, 226. Tit. II, 3, 141. Mcb. • • M e d , 1) rent or worn into tatters: r. sails, 1, 1, 2. Ill, 3, 16. Hml. Ill, 3, 45. Lr. Ill, 1, 11.. Ill, Merch.11,6,18. more r. than an old faced ancient, H4A 2, 14. 47. 75. 77. IV, 3, 20. IV, 6, 102. Cymb. Ill, IV, 2, 33. r . curtains, H 5 IV, 2, 41. 3, 37. Per. II, 1, 2. Used of tears: Ven. 959. Compl. 2) wearing tattered clothes, and hence = beggarly, 7. H 6 C I, 4, 146. Tit. Ill, 1, 16. Ant. I, 2, 156. cf. wretched: thy smoothing titles (turn) to a r. name, Lncr. Lncr. 1788. Mids. I, 1,130. A s l l l , 5 , 5 0 . H4BIV,5,9. 892. a wretched r. man, As IV, 3, 107. the rest were B a i n , vb. 1) iutr. to fall in drops: the rain it r., old and beggarly, Shr. IV, 1, 140. asr. as Lazarus, —eth, Tw. V, 401. L r . Ill, 2, 77. dissolve, thick cloud, H 4 A IV, 2, 27. thou art a very r. Wart, H4B III, 2, and r. Ant. V, 2, 302. Impersonally: it — s , Ven. 152. a r . appearance, 279. a r. and forestalled re- 458. Lucr. 1790. Rom. 111,5, 129. it begins tor. L r . mission, V, 2, 38. four or Jive most vile and r. foils, II, 4, 81. though marble wear with —ing, Lucr. 560. H 5 IV Chor. 60. the r. soldiers, H6B IV, 1, 90. a r. 1677. Metaphorically, of tears: her tears, which long multitude, IV, 4, 32. have —erf, Ven. 83. Lucr. 1271. H4B II, 3, 59. Troil. 3) ragged, uneven: a r . bough, Ven. 37. a r. fear- IV, 4, 55. Hml. IV, 5, 166. ful hanging rock, Gent. I, 2, ] 21. r. horns, Wiv. IV, 4, 2) tr. to shower down like rain: on the earth I r. 31. my r. prison walls, R2 V, 5, 21. hold of r. stone, my waters, R2 III, 3, 59. Used of any thing poured H 4 B Ind. 35. their (the rocks') r. sides, H6B III, 2, down in great plenty (therefore in Merch. Ill, 2 , 1 1 3 98. the r. s t a f f , V, 1, 203. a r. rock, H6C V, 4, 27. read rein): heavens r. grace on that, Tp. HI, 1, 75. let rude r. nurse ( t h e T o w e r ) R 3 IV, 1, 102. the r. en- the sky r. potatoes, Wiv. V, 5,21. the heavens r. odours trails of the pit, Tit. II, 3, 230. on the r. stones, V, 3, on you, Tw. Ill, 1, 96. r. their drift of bullets, J o h n 133. Metaphorically, = rough: winter's r. hand, Sonn. II, 412. r. hot vengeance, R2 I, 2, 8. with showers of 6, 1. my voice is r. As II, 5, 15. the —st hour that blood —ei from the wounds, III, 3, 44. it —ed down time and spite dare bring, H4B I, 1, 151. fortune on your head, H4A V, 1, 47. my power —ed whisperB a ( g e 4 n e s a , state of being dressed in tatters: honour on you, H8 III, 2, 185. r. sacrificial ings in his ear, Tim. 1,1,81. —ed all kinds of shames Lr. Ill, 4, 31. • a c l n g - n » « , raving: Ven. 1151. H6BIII,2,394. on my head, Oth. IV, 2, 48. as it —ed kisses, Ant. R > | I I I | . « M < , the same ( c f . Wood)-. H6A IV, III, 13, 85. Of tears: Ven. 360. L L L V, 2, 819. Shr. 7, 35. Ind. 1, 125. B a l n b a w , the iris: Lucr. 1587 ( c f . All's I, 3, B a c a z l n e , name in Meas. IV, 3, 75. 80. V, 539. R a h t a b t a h , an exclamation expressive of 157). Wiv. IV, 5,119. Wint.IV,4, 206. J o h n IV, 2,14. B a l n a l « (Ff Rainald), name: R2 II, 1, 279. nimbleness: r . would a' say; bounce would a' say, H6B R a i n - w a t e r , water falling from the clouds: Lr. III, 2, 303. Ill, 2, 11. B a l e d , see Rayed. B a l l , snbst. a cross-beam forming part of a baB a l n y , 1) attended with rain: a r. morrow, Sonn. lustrade: E 8 V, 4, 93. 90, 7. besmirched with r. marching, H5 IV, 3, 111. 2) raining, weeping: r. eyes, R2 III, 2, 146. Tit. B a l l , vb. intr. to use reproachful language, to scold in opprobrious terms: Err. IV, 4,77. V,71. Mids. V, 1, 117. R a i s e , 1) to lift, to put in a higher place: did III, 2, 362. As IV, 3, 42. 43. 46. Shr. I, 2, 112. II, 171. IV, 1, 187. 209. Tw. I, 5, 102. J o h n II, 593. he r. his chin, Ven. 85. r. aloft the milk-white rose, H4A III, 1, 160. H6A III, 2, 64. H6B III, 1, 172. H6B I, 1, 254. when the morning sun shall r. his car, Troil. II, 3, 26. V, 4, 30. Lr. II, 2, 126. Oth. IV, 1, H6C IV, 7, 80. to r. the waters = to set all wheels 170. Ant. I, 2, 111. IV, 15, 43. W i t h against: Wiv. a-going, to do one's best: Merch. II, 2, 51 (LaunceIV, 2, 23. Ado II, 3, 246. As II, 5, 63. Ill, 2, 295. lot's speech). Refl.: let me r. me from my knees, Meas. H 5 II, 2, 41. Tim. Ill, 4, 65. W i t h at: Lucr. 1023. V, 231. Gent. Ill, 2, 4. Ado II, 3, 147. H6C II, 6, 81. Troil. Metaphorically, = a) to enhanoe, to increase: r. the II, 3, 3. 5. Tit. II, 4, 35. Cymb. IV, 2, 56. With on price of hogs, Merch. Ill, 5, 26. b) to exalt, to ador upon: Ven. 1002. Lucr. 1467. Merch. I, 3, 49. vance: to advance or r. myself, H6A 111, 1, 32. he A s I, 1, 65. II, 7, 16. Shr. Ind. 2, 88. J o h n II, 587. would r. his issue, H6C II, 2, 22. one —d in blood, 592. R2 V, 5, 90. B3 IV, 4, 150. H8 V, 4, 50. Troil. R 3 V, 3, 247. whose hand has —d me, H8 II, 2, 120. I, 3, 191. II, 1,35. 100. Rom. Ill, 3, 119. Tim. I, 2, I —d him, Cor. V, 6, 21. my estate deserves an heir 245. 250. Lr. II, 2, 28. IV, 6, 155. With an accus. more — d , Tim. I, 1, 119. r. me this beggar, IV, 3, 9. to denote the effect: till thou canst r. the seal from off to r. my fortunes, Lr. IV, 6, 232. With to: I —d him my bond, Merch. IV, 1, 139. I shall sooner r. thee into to the crown, H6C III, 3, 262. IV, 1, 68. R 3 I, 3, 83. wit, Troil. II, 1, 17. 2) to erect, to build u p : he hath —d the wall, T p .

R II, 1, 87. those twin» of learning that he —d in you, Ipswich and Oxford, H8 IV, 2, 58. I will r. her statue in pure gold, Rom. V, 3, 299. the stones whereof it (the house) is —d, Lr. Ill, 2, 64. 3 ) to heave, to force from the breast: sighs that burning lungs did r. Compl. 228. he —d a sigh so piteous and profound, Hml. II, 1, 94. 4) to rouse, to stir op, to awake, to make to rise: thy unworthiness —d love in me, Sonn. 150, 13. which —d in me an undergoing stomach, T p . I, 2, 156. — i n g this sea-storm, 177. I —d the tempest, V, 6. I'll r. all Windsor, W i v . V, 5, 223. —d with it (beating) when I sit, Err. IT, 4, 35. the villain Jew with outcries —d the duke, Merch. II, 8,4. to r. such love in mine (eyes) A s IV, 3, 51. she has —d me from my sickly bed, All's II, 3,118. 120. this business will r. us all To laughter, Willi. II, 1, 198. if you r. this house against this house, R2IV, 145 (German: empire»). r. the power of France upon hit head, John III, 1, 193. to r. a mutiny, H 6 A IV, 1,131. A t county's page, that —d the watch, Rom. V, 3, 279. I shall r. you by and by on business, Caes. IV, 3, 247. Ae —d the house with loud cries, Lr. II, 4, 43. the —d search, Oth. I, 1, 159. 168. 183. I, 2, 29. 43. I, 3, 54. it —s the greater war between him and his discretion, Ant. II, 7, 10. dust —d by your troops, III, 6, 50. With up: r. up the organs of her fantasy, W i v . V, 5, 55. r. up such a storm, Shr. I, 1, 177. r. up the Montagues, Rom. V, 3, 178. if my gentle love be not —d up, Oth. II. 3, 250. 5 ) to call op (a spirit) from below, to conjure: H 4 A III, 1, 60. H6B I, 2, 79. 1, 4, 24. Troil. II, 3, 6. Rom. II, 1, 24. Mcb. Ill, 5, 27. W i t h up: H6B II, 1, 174. Rom. II, 1, 29. 6 ) to levy, to collect; used of troops: Err. V, 153. H 4 A I, 3, 284. V, 1, 66. H6B IV, 4, 40. V, 1, 21. H6C V, 3, 8. H8 II, 1, 108. T i t . Ill, 1, 286. 300. Ant. Ill, 4, 26. O f money: Merch. I, 1, 179. H5 I, 2, 133. Caes. IV, 3, 71. W i t h up: Merch. I, 3, 56. 7 ) to bring into being, to beget: from her blood r. up issue to me, H5 V, 2, 376. O f news, = to invent, to originate: his —ing; nothing but his report, Cor. IV, 6, 60. — d only, that the weaker sort may wish good Marcius home again, 69. 8 ) to r. a siege = to relieve a besieged place by dislodging the enemy: H5 HI, 3, 47. H 6 A I, 2, 13. 53. 130. 146. I, 4, 103. R a l i l n , dried grape: — s o' the rati, Wint. IV, 3, 52 (dried in the son). B a k e , subst. 1) an instrument with teeth nsed in gathering up things from the gronnd; 2 ) a dissolute man; with a pun: let tu revenge this with our pikes, ere we become — s , Cor. I, 1, 24 (alluding to the proverb: as lean as a rake). B a k e , vb. to scrape, to gather as with a rake; with from, = to bring to light from nnder the covering earth: let me r. it from the earth, Gent. IV, 2, 116. from the dust of old oblivion —d, H5 II, 4, 87. W i t h for, — to search f o r : even in your hearts, there will he r. for it, H5 II, 4, 98. W i t h together, = to scrape together: how does he r. this together, H8 III, 2, 110. With up, = to cover np with earth, to bury: here in the sands thee I U r. up, Lr. IV, 6, 281. B a k e r , in Foot-land-raker, q. v. R a l p h , name: Shr. IV, 1, 139. H 4 A II, 4, 42. H4B 111, 2, 109. B a m , snbst. 1) a male sheep: P i l g r . 247. Merch.

937

I, 3, 82. 96. A s m , 2, 83. 87. V, 2, 34. Wint. IV, 4, 29. Oth. I, 1, 88. 2) the Aries of the sodiac: T i t . IV, 3, 72. 3 ) a battering-ram: Lucr. 464. H8 IV, 1, 77. Troil. I, 3, 206. A n t III, 2, 30. B a m , vb. 1) to thrust or drive with violence: r. thou thy fruitful tidings in mine ears, Ant. II, 5, 24 (cf. to thrust in Caes. V, 3, 74. 75). 2 ) to staff, to cram tightly: —ed me in with foul shirts, W i v . Ill, 5, 90. till that time have we —ed up our gates, John II, 272 (German: verrammeln). R a m b o r e a , French name: H5III, 5,43. IV,8,99. • a m p , snbst. a leap: whiles he is vaulting variable —s, in your despite, upon your purse, Cymb. I, 6, 134 (according to others, = prostitutes). • • n p , vb., nsed only in the partic. —ing, = 1) rampant, springing o p : a couching lion and a —ing cat, H 4 A III, 1, 153. 2) knowing no restraint: what a fool art thou, a —ing fool, John HI, 1, 122. under whose shade the —ing lion slept, H6C V, 9, 13. B a m p a l l l a n , a term of low abuse for a woman. you scullion, you r. H4B II, 1, 65. • u n p i a t , standing on the hind legs ( t e r m o r heraldry): the r. bear chained to the ragged staff, H6B V, 1, 203. B a m p l r e d , barred, barricaded, rammed: set but thy foot against our r. gates, and they shall ope, T i m . V, 4, 47 ( c f . Lodge's Rosalynd, ed. Collier, p. 48: Rosader rampierd up the house). B a m a t e n , name in R 2 II, 1, 283. H a m - t e n d e r , one who tends rams, a shepherd: W i n t IV, 4, 805. B a n c e r a n a , malignant: Err. I, 1, 6. H 6 A IV, 1, 185. H6B III, 1, 24. Ill, 2, 199. R3 I, 3, 50. R a n e a a r , malice, hatred: A d o IV, 1, 308. R 2 I, 1, 143. H6B I, 1, 142. Ill, 1, 144. R 3 II, 2, 117. Ill, 2, 89. Rom. II, 3, 92. put —s in the vessel of my peace, Mcb. Ill, 1, 67 (made myself live in discord with myself). B a n t a m i at r. = without a settled aim or purpose, without care, at hap-hazard: Ven. 940. Sonn. 147, 12. Gent. II, 1,117. Err. 1,1,43. H 6 A V, 3,86. B a n g e , subst. rank: that great face of war, whose several —s frighted each other, A n t III, 13, 5. R a n g e , vb. 1) tr. to dispose in order: the wide arch of the —d empire fall, Ant. I, 1, 34 ( F f raing'd). 2 ) intr. to be ranked: whatsoever comes athwart his affection —s evenly with mine, A d o II, 2, 7. the line and the predicament wherein you r. under this subtle king, H 4 A I, 3, 169. r. with humble livers in content, H8 II, 3, 20. bury all, which yet distinctly —s, in heaps and piles of rum, Cor. Ill, 1, 206. B a n g e , vb. 1) intr. to roam, to rove at large: A s I, 3, 70. R2 III, 2, 39. H4B I, 1, 174. H5 111, 3, 12. H6C II, 1, 11. Caes. II, 1, 118. Ill, 1,270. Hml. Ill, 3, 2. Metaphorically, a to be inconstant: if I hare —d, like him that travels I return again, Sonn. 109, 5. if once I find thee —ing, Hbrtensio will be quit with thee by changing, Shr. Ill, 1, 91. 2 ) tr. to roam, to rove through: he did r. the town to seek me out, T w . IV, 3, 7. B a n g e r , one who tends the game of a forest: 'tis gold which makes Diana's —s false themselves, yield up their deer to the stand o' the stealer, Cymb. II, 3, 74 ( = makes Diana's nymphs yield up their chastity ?). 60»

938

R

B a n k , subst. 1) a row, a line: the r. of osier*... bring1 you to the place, As IV, 3, 80. on the brow 0' the sea stand —1 of people., Oth. II, 1, 54. Doubtful passage: it is the right butterwomen's r. to market, As III, 2, 103 ( = file? Some M. Edd. rate). Plnr. — s = lines of troops: Lucr. 73. 440. 783. 1439. J o h n IV, 2, 244. V, 2 , 2 9 . R2 II, 3, 102. H4A I, 1, 14. H5 IV, 5, 6 H6C II, 3, 10. Troil. IV, 5, 185. Tim. V, 4, 39. Caes. II, 2, 20. Mcb. I, 3, 95. Lr. IV, 2, 25. Oth. Ill, 4, 135. Ant. Ill, 1, 32. Singular: a gallant horse fallen in first r. Troil. Ill, 3, 161. 2) degree of dignity: to march in —s of better equipage, Sonn. 32, 12. holds his r. before, 85, 12. which shall above that idle r. remain, 122, 3. if I keep not my r. As I, 2, 113. bowed his eminent top to their low — s . All's I, 2, 43. go in equal r. with the best governed nation, H4B V, 2, 137. holds on his r. Caes. Ill, 1, 69. not in the worst r. of manhood, Mcb. Ill, 1, 103. of the best r. and station, Hml. 1, 3, 73. stands in some r. of praise, Lr. II, 4, 261. one of my r. Cymb. II, 1, 17. 3) = rankness, by way of punning: if I keep not my r. — Thou losest thy old smell, As 1,2,113. would he had been one of my r. 1 To have smelt like a fool, Cymb. II, 1, 17. Rank, adj. 1) too luxuriant, exuberant, grown to immoderate height: rain added to a river that is r. perforce will force it overflow the bank, Ven. 71 ( = brimful), weed your better judgments of all opinion that grows r. in them that I am wise, A9 II, 7, 46 (like a weed). I should think my honesty —er than my wit, IV, I, 85 ( = greater), wanting the scythe, all uncorrected, r. H5 V, 2, 50. r. fumitory, V, 2, 45. cf. Lr. IV, 4, 3. the seeded pride that hath to this maturity blown up in r. Achilles must be cropped, Troil. I, 3, 318 ( = insolent). do not spread the compost on the weeds, to make them —er, Hml. Ill, 4, 152 (Ff r.). nor would it yield to Norway or the Pole a —er rate, IV, 4, 22 ( = greater). Adverbially, = overmuch, abundantly: while other jests are something r. on foot, Wiv. IV, 6, 22. to weaken and discredit our exposure, how r. soever rounded in with danger, Troil. I, 3, 196. 2) lustful: the ewes, being r., turned to the rams, Merch. I, 3, 81. abuse him to the Moor in the r. garb, Oth. II, 1,315 (Ff right), lust and r. thoughts, Cymb. II, 5, 24. 3) sick (of hypertrophy), corrupted, morbid: brought to medicine a healthful state which, r. of goodness, would by ill be cured, Sonn. 118, 12 (cf. v. 7: sick of welfare), what r. diseases grow, H4B III, 1, 39. to diet r. minds sick of happiness, IV, 1,64. the r.poison of the old (infection) will die, Rom. 1, 2, 51. who else must be let blood, who else is r. Caes. Ill, 1, 152. r. corruption, mining all within, infects unseen, Hml. Ill, 4, 148. one may smell in such a will most r. Oth. Ill, 3, 232. Troil. IV, 6, 132. 4) virulent, noisome, foul, disgusting, gross: to thy fair flower add the r. smell of weeds, Sonn. 69, 12. \y their r. thoughts my deeds must not be shown, 121, 12. to blush at speeches r. Compl. 307. I do forgive thy — est fault, Tp. V, J 32. the —est compound of villanous smell, Wiv. Ill, 5, 93. he would give't thee, from this r. offence, so to offend him still, Meas. Ill, 1, 100. deserves a name as r. as any flax-wench, Wint. 1, 2, 277. ha! what, so r.t H8 1, 2,186. he's a r. weed, V, 1, 52.

when r. Thersites opes his mastic jaws, Troil. I, 3, 73. things r. and gross in nature possess it merely, Hml. I, 2, 136. none (forgery) so r. as may dishonour him, II, 1, 20. thou mixture r., of midnight weeds collected, III. 2, 268. my offence is r., ti smells to heaven, III, 3, 36. to live in the r. sweat of an enseamed bed, III, 4, 92. r. and not-to-be endured riots, Lr. I, 4, 223. their thick breaths, r. of gross diets, Ant. V, 2, 212. 5) strong-scented, rancid: Sowter will cry upon it for all this, though it be as r. as a fox, Tw. II, 5, 136 cf. Hml. HI, 3, 36. Rank, vb. 1) tr. a) to place with respect to degree and dignity: my fortunes (are) as fairly —ed as Demetrius', Mids. I, 1, 101. I will not r. me with thi barbarous multitudes, Merch. II, 9, 33. he was a man of an unbounded stomach, ever —ing himself with princes, H8 IV, 2, 34. let the world r. me in register a master-leaver, Ant. IV, 9, 21. b) to match, to couple: to r. our chosen truth with such a show as fool andfight is, H8 Prol. 18. if sour woe delights in fellowship ana needly will be —ed with other griefs, Rom. Ill, 2, 117 2) intr. to be coupled, to go together: let that one article r. with the rest, H5 V, 2, 374. Hanked, 1) placed in lines: embattailed and r John IV, 2, 200. 2) disposed of and occupied witl respect to degree and dignity: the base 0' the moun is r. with all deserts, all kind of natures, Tim. I, 1, 6i ("covered with ranks of all kinds of men". Johnson) Rankle, to breed corruption, to poison: fellsor row's tooth doth never r. more than when he bites, bu lanceth not the sore, R2 I, 3, 302. when he bites, hi venom tooth will r. to the death, R3 I, 3, 291 (Qq r thee to death). Rankly, grossly, foully: the whole earof Denmarl is by a forged process of my death r. abused, Hml. I 5, 38. Rankness, exuberance: like a bated and retiret flood, leaving our r. and irregular course, stoop lov within those bounds we have o'erlooked, J o h n V, 4, 54 I am stifled with the mere r. of their joy, H8 IV, 1, 59 Hence = insolence: I will physic your r. As I, 1, 92 Rank-scented, having a bad smell: the mutabl r. many, Cor. Ill, 1, 66. Ransack, 1) to pillage, to plunder: and I, adrone like bee, have no perfection of my summer left, but robbe> and —ed by injurious theft, Lucr. 838. my coffers—ed Wiv. II, 2, 306. I would have —ed the pedlar's silkei treasury, Wint. IV, 4, 360. — ing the church, J o h n 111 4, 172. to r. Troy, Troil. Prol. 8. 2) to ravish: the —ed queen, Troil. II, 2, 150. Ranaam, subst. 1) price paid for the redemptio; of a prisoner; in a proper and a metaphorical sense Ven. 550. Meas. II, 4, 111. IV, 4, 35. All's I, 3, 121 IV, 1, 74 ( 0 r., r.l). R2II, 1, 56 (the world's r., blesse Mary's son; cf. Wint. V, 2, 16). H4A I, 3, 141. 26C II, 3, 57. IV, 3, 96. 115 III, 5, 60. 63. Ill, 6, 133. 16S IV, 3, 80. 120. 122. 128. IV, 4, 11. 48. IV, 5, 9. IV 7, 72. 73. H6A I, 1, 148. 150. Ill, 3, 72. V, 3, 73. 71 80. 157. H6B III, 2, 297. IV, 1, 10 (make their r -- pay). 15. 28. 139. II6C V, 7, 40. Tim. I, 1, 10 ( = a sum paid to deliver a prisoner for debt). Cae. III, 2, 94 (—«). Lr. IV, 6, 196. 2) atonement, expiation: if hearty sorrow be sufficient r. for offence, Gent. V, 4, 75. lowly word were r. for their fault, H6B III, 1, 127. R3 V, 3, 26.' Tit. Ill, 1, 156. Cymb. V, 3, 80. V, 5, 80.

R

939

I i d m b , vb. 1) to redeem from captivity: Err. I, this jewel holds his building on my arm, Per. II, 1, 161 1, 23. H4A I, 3, 79. 92 (to r. home). 2219. H5 IV, 1, (O. Edd. rupture). 127. 203. 206. H6A I, 4, 29. Ant. Ill, 113, 180. Cymb. R a r e , 1) uncommon, not often seen: were man V, 5, 85. as r. as phoenix, As IV, 3, 17. nothing pleaseth but r. 2) to set at liberty, to release: —ting him, or pi- accidents, H4A I, 2, 231. we'll have thee, as our — r lying, Cor. I, 6, 36. With to: I woulld take Desire monsters are, painted upon a pole, Mcb. V, 8, 25. lived prisoner and r. him to any French couftier for a new- in court — which r. it is to do — most praised, Cymb. I, 1, 47. devised courtesy, L L L I, 2, 65 (Armadlo'a speech). 2) extraordinary; mostly in the sense of excellent, 3) to deliver: labouring art can mever r. nature from her inaidible estate. All's II, 1, 1211. to r. my two very praiseworthy: all things r. that heaven's air in this nephews from their death, Tit. Ill, 1,173.. = to redeem, huge rondure hems, Sonn. 21,7. therefore are feasts so in a religious sense: a world —ed, or one destroyed, solemn and so r., since, seldom coming,... 52, 5. makes Wint. V, 2, 16 (cf. R2 II, 1, 56). Witth into, = to summer's welcome thrice more wished, more r. 56, 14. restore to: that nor my service past nor present sorrows I think my love as r. as any she, 130, 13. whose —st havings made the blossoms dote, Compl. 235. the —st can r. me into his love again, Oth. Ill, 4 , 118. 4) to atone for: they (tears) r. all UUdeeds, Sonn. (queen) that e'er came there, Tp. II, 1, 99. two most 34, 14. your trespass now becomes a jfee; mine —J, — to have a taste or flavour: virtut cannot so inatculate our old stock but we shall r. of it Hml. Ill, 1, 120. let what is here contained r. o/ love Cymb. Ill, 2, 30. my thoughts, that never —ed of o base descent, Per. II, 5, 60. 2) trans, a ) to taste, and hence to feel, to perceive one of their hind, that r. all as sharply, Tp. V, 23. taki a taste of my finding him, and r. it with good obser vance, As 111, 2, 247. which if you ... cannot or wii not r. a truth like us, Wint. II, 1, 167. b) to like, to be pleased with: r. your nimble note> to pleasing ears, Lncr. 1126 (take pleasure in singing where others like to hear yon. Or = serve up as a relish?), to r. a love-song, Gent. H, 1, 20. 1 do not r. well their loud applause, Meas. 1,1,70. 1,2,16. Troil. I, 3, 388. L r . I, 2, 51. Oth. II, 1, 166. R e l i v e , to live again: how this dead queen —s Per. V, 3, 64. R e l l v e r , to give back: and r. our authorities there. Meas. IV, 4 , 6 (the later Ff deliver, M. Edd. redeliver) R e l u m e , to rekindle, to light again: that Promethean heat that can thy light r. Oth. V, 2, 13 (Ql return, Q2.3 relumine). R e l y , with on, = to lean, to rest on, to depend on: as one —ing on your lordship's will, and not depending on his friendly wish, Gent. I, 3, 61. if thou hast (wit or impudence), r. upon it till my tale be heard, and hold no longer out, Meas. V, 370. for I, thy resolved patient, on thee still r. All's II, 1, 207. bade me r. on him as on my father, R3 11, 2, 25. he doth r. on mone (excuse) Troil. II, 3, 173. that destruction which I'll guard them from, if thereon (my good purposes) you r. Ant. V, 2, 133. R e m a i n , subst. 1) stay: let's fetch him o f f , or make r. alike, Cor. I, 4, 62 (cf. Here-remain). 2) that which is left to be done: all the r. is 'Welcome', Cymb. Ill, 1, 87. Plur. — s = that which is left: of five and twenty valiant sons behold the poor —s, alive and dead, Tit. I, 81. poor —s of friends, Caes. V, 5, 1. R e m a i n , vb. 1) to stay behind after others have withdrawn: if what parts can so r. Phoen. 48 (and consequently continne to be together), trouble being gone, comfort should r. Ado 1, 1, 101. the ladies follow

R

957

her and but one visor —s, II, 1, 164. I r. a pinched 6) to continue in a state or quality: doth always thing, Wint. II, 1, 51. if the r., whom they have ra- fresh r. Ven. 801. thy husband shall r. the stornful vished must by me be slain, Per. IV, 1, 102. Hence = mark of every eye, Lncr. 519. a little harm dale to a to be left as a trace: the scar that will despite of cure great good end for lawful policy —s enacted, 829 ( = r. Lucr. 732. those blots that do with me r. Sonn. 36, is always), to have their unseen sin r. untola, 753. 3. scratch thee but with a pin, and there —s some scar some of her blood still pure and red —ed, 1*42. to of it. As III, 5, 21. cf. proofs new-bleeding, which —ed dwell with him in thoughts, or to r. in pertonci duty, the foil of this false jewel, Compl. 153. I hope it —s Compl. 129. imprisoned thou didst painfully r. Tp. 1, not unkindly with your lordship, that I returned you an 2, 278. this mystery —ed undiscovered, Win. V, 2, empty messenger, Tim. Ill, 6, eare Lexicon. J . E d . T. II.

968

R

• c M l T e d l f , so that doubts and uncertainties are removed, satisfactorily, clearly: of that ani all the progress more or lets, r. more leisure shall express, All's T, 3, 332 ( 0 . Edd. resolduedly). B e t a r t , subst. visits paid by way of intercourse and converse: kept severely from r. of men, Gent. Ill, I , 108. our houses of r. Meas. I, 2, 104, i. e. onr brothels; cf. Per. IT, 6, 86. the cause of my son's r. thither, W i n t . IV, 2, 57. forbid him her r. Tim. I, 1, 127. what men to-night have had r. to you, Caes. II, 1, 276. she should lock herself from his r. Hml.11,2,143. Peculiar passage: of all the fair r. of gentlemen that every day with parle encounter me, in thy opinion which is worthiest lovet Gent. I, 2, 4 (cf. the German Besuch for Besucher). R e s a r t , vb. to betake one's self, to repair by way of intercourse and connexion: merry fools to mock at him r. Lucr. 989. thou makest faults graces that to thee r. Sonn. 96, 4. I would r. to her by night, Gent. Ill, 1, 110. doth this Sir Proteus often r. unto this gentlewoman t IT, 2,74. to walk where any honest men r. Err. T, 28. men of great worth —ed to this forest, A s T,4,161. what men of name r. to himt R3 IV,5,8. where at some hours in the night spirits r. Rom. IV, 3,44. R e M r t e r , one that frequents: that your —s stand upon sound legs, Per. IV, 6, 27. R e M a m d , vb. to send back sonnd, to reverberate: V e n . 268. Mcb. IV, 3, 6. = to be echoed back: how sighs r. through heartless ground, Pilgr. 278. B e s p e a k , to repeat, to echo: —ing earthly thunder, Hml. I, 2, 128. R e s p e c t , snbst. 1) the act of seeing, contemplation , view; in my r. — in my eyes: you in my r. are all the world, Mids. II, 1,224. his meanest garment is dearer in my r. than all the hairs above thee, Cymb. II, 3, 140. 2) deliberation, reflection, thought in reference to something: full of —s, yet nought at all respecting, Ven. 911. r. and reason, wait on wrinkled age, Lucr. 275; cf. reason and r. make livers pale, Troil. II, 2, 49. in our two loves there is but one r., though in our lives a separable spite, Sonn. 36, 5. what poor duty cannot do, noble r. takes it in might, not merit, Mids. V, 91. more devout than this in our —s have we not been, L L L V, 2, 792. when perchance it frowns more upon humour than advised r. John IT, 2, 214. on both sides more r. Cor. Ill, 1, 181. never learned the icy precepts of r. Tim. IT, 3, 258. With of or on: you hold too heinous a r. of grief, John 111,4, 90. ( = you heinously think too much o f your grief), you have too much r. upon the world, Merch. 1, 1, 74. 3) consideration, reason or motive in reference to something: called to that audit by advised — s , Sonn. 49, 4. if it were not for one trifling r., I could come to such honour, W i v . II, 1, 45. I would have daffed all other —s and made her half my self, A d o II, 3, 176. my —s are better than they seem, All's II, 5, 71. when such profound—s do pull you on, John III, 1, 318. what a noble combat hast thou fought between compulsion and a brave r. T, 2, 44. the love of him, and this r. besides, for that my grandsire was an Englishman, awakes my conscience, T, 4, 41. the gain proposed choked the r. of likely peril feared, H4B I, 1,184. an ancient tradition, begun upon an honourable r. H5 T, 1, 75. this argues conscience in your grace, but the —s thereof are nice and trivial, E3 ill, 7, 175.

in one r. I'll thy assistant be, Rom. II, 3, 90 ( = for one consideration). there's the r. that makes calamity of so long life, Hml. Ill, 1,68. the instances that second marriage move are base—s of thrift, 111,2,193. mingled with —s that stand aloof from the entire point, Lr. I, 1, 242 ( F f regards), —s of fortune, are his love, 251. in r. - in consideration: she is not to be kissed fasting, in r. of her breath, Gent. Ill, 1, 327. in r. that it is a shepherds life, it is naught, A s III, 2, 14. I could be well contented to be there, in r. of the love I bear your house, H 4 A I I , 3,2. minister the potion of imprisonment to me in r. of poverty, H 4 B 1, 2, 146. in that r., then, like a loving child, shed yet some small drops, T i t T, 3,166. and yet but yaw neither, in r. of his quick sail, Hml. T, 2, 120. in r. of that I would fain think it were not, Lr. I, 2, 69. our general's wife is now the general: I may say so in this r.,for that he hath devoted and given up himself to the contemplation of her parts, Oth. II, 3, 321. 4) relation, regard, point of view; in r. of — a) with regard to, as t o : that in some —s makes a beast a man, W i v . V, 5, 5. misgraffed in r. of years, Mids. I, 1, 137. in r. of itself it is a good life. A s III, 2, 13. 1 speak in r. — , A l l ' s II, 3, 32. my uncle's will in this r. is mine, John II, 510. in some —s 1 grant 1 cannot go, I I 4 B I, 2, 189. she will be ruled in all —s by me, Rom. Ill, 4, 14. nature's above art in that r. L r . IT, 6, 86. b ) in comparison with; t o : but a night-gown in r. of yours, A d o III, 4,19. Hector was but a Troyan in r. of this, L L L V, 2, 639. thou worms-meat in r. of a good piece of flesh, A s 111,2,68. he was a man, this in r. a child, H6C T, 5, 56. he does deny him, in r. of his, what charitable men afford to beggars, T i m . Ill, 2, 81. in r. of a fine workman I am but a cobbler, Caes.

I, 1, 10. 5) attention, notice, care: to show me worthy of thy sweet r. Sonn. 26, 12. shall we serve heaven with less r. than we do minister to our gross selves f Meas. II, 2, 86. he is not for your lordship's r. All's III, 6, 109. is there no r. of place, persons, nor time in you f T w . II, 3, 98. so it be new, there's no r. how vile, R2 11,1,25 ( = he cares not), if you vouchsafe me hearing and r. H 4 A IV,3,31. without observance or r. of any, Troil. II, 3, 175. I do love my country's good with a r. more tender than mine own life, Cor. Ill, 3,112. have r. to mine honour, that you may believe, Caes. Ill, 2, 15 (take care o f , look to, my honour), the malevolence of fortune nothing takes from his high r. Mcb. Ill, 6, 29. you shall do small r., show too bold malice against my master, L r . II, 2, 137 ( F f —s). returned me .... expectations and comforts of sudden r. and acquaintance, Oth. IT,2,192. she held the very garment of Posthumus in more r. than my person, Cymb. ill, 5, 139. not a man hath r. with him but he, Per. II, 4, 18. who (my child) shall not be more dear to my r. than yours, III, 3, 33. cf. Sonn. 36, 5 and Mids. T, 91 sub def. 2 ; and Merch. T, 99: nothing is good, I see, without r., i. e. without notice taken and attention bestowed; according to others, = without consideration of circumstances. 6) esteem, regard, reverence: r. to your great place! Meas. V, 294. a place of high r. with me, Mids. II, 1, 209. I attend them with all r. and duty, As I, 2, 177. if your lordship find him not a hilding, hold me no more in your r. All's III, 6, 4. she uses me with a more exalted r. T w . II, 5, 31. to tread down fair r. of

969

R sovereignty, J o h n III, 1, 58. what good r. I have of thee, 111, 3, 28. throw away r. R2 111, 2, 172. that title of r. which the proud soul ne'er pays but to the proud, H4A I, 3, 8. he hold* your temper in a high r. Ill, 1, 170. out of the great r. they bear to beauty, H8 I, 4, 69. a thousand pounds a year for pure r. II. 3, 95. should find r. for what they have been, V, 3, 75. out of dear r. 119. you know me dutiful; therefore, dear sir, let m< not shame r., but give me leave to take that course, Troil. V, 3,73. with courtesy and with r. enough, Caes. IV, 2,15. with all r. and riles of burial, V, 5, 77. that from their coldest neglect my love should kindle to inflamed r. Lr. I, 1, 258. to do upon r. such violent outrage, II, 4, 24. hi* worthiness does challenge much r., Oth. II, 1, 213. 7) state of deserving or being treated with regard; honour, respectability (of persons); high value, importance (of things): true valour still a true r. should have, Lncr. 201. his true r. will prison false desire, 642. such offers of our peace as we with honour and r. may take, John V, 7,85. many of the best r. in Rome, Caes. I, 2, 59. thou art a fellow of a good r. V, 5, 45. this ring, whose high r. and rich validity did lack a parallel, All's V, 3, 192. he shall our commission bring to you, with such things else of quality and r. as doth import you, Oth. 1, 3, 283. 8) modest and becoming deportment, decency: such harmless creatures have a true r. to talk in deeds, Lucr. 1347. I never heard a man of his place, gravity and learning, so wide of his own r. Wiv. Ill, 1, 58. if I do not put on a sober habit, talk with r. and swear but now and then, Merch. II, 2, 200. there's a letter for you. Delivered with good r. H4B II, 2, 109. Respect, vb. 1) to consider: respicefinem, r. your end, Err. IV, 4, 43. —ing = considering: there is none worthy —ing her that's gone, Wint. V, 1, 35 (cf. in r. of in Respect, snbst. 4.b). —ing what a rancorous mind he bears, H6B III, 1, 24. whether our daughter were legitimate, —ing this our marriage with the dowager, H8 II, 4, 180. With as: she —s me as her only son, Mids. 1,1,160. I do r. thee as my soul, H4A V, 4, 20. With for: the service of Ike foot, being once gangrened, is not then —ed for what before it was, Cor. Ill, 1, 307. 2) to care for, to take notice of: like the proceedings of a drunken brain, full of respects, yet nought at all—ing, Ven.911 (cf. well — ed i n H 4 A l V , 3 , 1 0 ) . nor children's tears, nor mothers' groans —ing, Lncr. 431. then others for the breath of words r. Sonn. 85, 13. what merit do I in myself r. 149,9. if your, them (the papers) best to take them up, Gent. I, 2, 134. win her with gifts, if she r. not words, 111, 1, 89. though you r. not aught your servant doth, V, 4, 20. in love who —s Jriendt 54. since she —s my mistress' love so much, IV, 4, 187. what should it be that he —s in her, 199. and six or seven winters more r. than a perpetualhonour, Meas. Ill, 1, 76. do you persuade yourself that IT. youf IV, 1, 53 ( = am interested for you). the passado he —s not, L L L I, 2, 185. that more than all the world I didr. her, V,2,437. lain mean indeed, —ing you, Shr. V, 2, 32. thou —est not spilling Edwards blood, R2 II, 1, 131 (doest not care to spill, i. e. spillest without remorse), what doth she sayt Nothing that I r. R3 I, 3, 296. spoke like a tall fellow that —s his reputation, 1,4,157. as you r. the common good, H8 111, 2, 290. only their ends you have —ed,

Cor. V, 3, 5. when we banished him, we —ed not them (the gods), and he returning to break our necks, they r. not us, V, 4, 35. 37. it is my will, the which if thou r., show a fair presence, Rom. I, 5, 74 they pass by me as the idle wind, which I r. not, Caes. IV, 3, 69. he hath a court he little cares for and a daughter who he not —s at all, Cymb. I, 6, 155. as jewels lose their glory if neglected, so princes their renowns if not — ed, Per. II, 2, 13. 3) to regard with reverence: well, well, my lords, r. him, H8 V, 3, 153. learn me how to r. you, Oth. I, 3, 184. 4) Misapplied by Elbow and Pompey: the house is a —ed house, this is a —ed fellow, and his mistress is a —ed woman, Meas. II, 1, 169—172. the time is yet to come that she was ever —ed with man, woman, or child, 176. she was —ed with him before he married with her, 177. 183. 184 (for ill reputed). Respective, 1) caring for, regardful: you should have been r. and have kept it, Merch. V, 156. 'tis too r. and too sociable for your conversion, John I, 188. away to heaven, r. lenity, Rom. Ill, 1, 128. 2) worthy of being cared for: what should it be that he respects in her but I can make r. in myself, G e n t IV, 4, 200. cf. Unrespective. Respectively, regardfully, with careful notice taken: you are very r. welcome, Tim. Ill, 1, 8. Respite, subst. delay, time granted: to make you understand this, J crave but four days' r. Meas. IV, 2, 170. ourself ... after some r. will return to Calais, H6A IV, 1,170. this All-Souls' day to my fearful soul is the determined r. of my wrongs, R3V, 1,19 ( = term; cf. the German frisi). the bishop did require a r. H8 II, 4, 177. 181. R e s p i t e , vb. to grant delay for a limited time: injurious love, that —s me a life, Meas. II, 3,41. forty days longer we do r. you, Per. 1, 1, 116. Responsive, correspondent, suited: r. to the hilts, Hml. V, 2, 159. Beat, subst. 1) cessation from motion or disturbance, repose: Lucr. 757 (repose and r.). Meas. Ill, 1, 17. L L L V, 2, 824. Merch. Ill, 2. 329. John IV, 2, 55. H4B I, 2, 243. IV, 5, 212. Troil. V, 6, 17. Tit. IV, 2, 64 (God give her good r). Rom. II, 3, 43. Caes. II, 1, 86. V, 5,80. Hml. II, 2,84 (go to your r.). Ant. I, 3, 53. full ofr. == refreshed by rest: H4A IV, 3, 27. Caes. IV, 3, 202. to take r.: Ven. 647. 1185. Tp. V, 301. here will I set up my everlasting r. Rom. V, 3, 110. thought to set my r. on her kind nursery, Lr.l, 1,125 (an expression probably originating in the use of the other word of the same form. cf. Lodge's Rosalind, ed. Collier, p. 45: Aliena resolved there to set up her r.). = sleep: Ven. 784. 853. Lucr. 125. 974. Sonn. 28, 2. 61, 11. 73, 8 Pilgr. 195. Err. V, 83. LLL V, 2, 91. H5 IV, 1, 287. H6B III, 2, 256. R3 1,2, 112. IV, 1, 82 (Qq sleep). IV, 4, 401. Rom. I, 5, 129. V, 3, 189. Caes. IV, 3, 228. 262. Lr. Ill, 6,105. Cymb. II, 2, 12. Per. II, 3, 115. at r. = abed: Mcb. II, 1, 12; cf. John V, 7, 82. one that thinks a man always going to bed and says: God give you good r. Err. IV, 3, 33. R3 I, 4, 75. V, 3, 43. cf. Mids. II, 2, 64. to take r. or one's r.: Tp. II, 1, 197. Wint. II, 3, 10. H6C II, 5, 32. IV, 3, 5. good r. (as a kind wish): Pilgr. 181. 182. Gent. IV, 2, 133. = the repose of death: John V, 7, 24. H6C 11. 1, 76. R3 II, 2, 46 62*

970

R

(Qq perpetual r., F f ne'er-changing night). Tit. 1,133. Hml. V, 1, 260. V, 2, 371. = quiet, ease, peace of the mind: Meas. II, 4, 187. Merch. II, 5, 17. Wint. II, 1, 191. II, 3, 1. 8. John III, 4, 134. R3 IV, 1, 95. IV, 2, 74. Bom. II, 2, 123 (repose and r.). Mcb. V, 3, 39. Lr. II, 4, 293. »et ¡/our heart at r. Midi. II, 1, 121 ( = do not trouble yourself about it), and I... to do you r., a thousand deaths would die, Tw. V, 136. 2) stay, abode: vouchsafe your r. here in our court some little time, Hml. II, 2, 13. that in Tarsus was not best longer for him to make his r. Per. II Prol. 26. 3) a pause in music: ny restless discord loves no stops nor — s , Laer. 1124. to steal at a minute's r. Wiv. I, 3, 31. he rests his minum r. Rom. II, 4, 23. •eat, subst 1) that which is left, the remainder: Sonn. 115, 12. Tp. I, 2, 226. 232. 344. IV, 247. Meas. II, 1, 105. L L L I, 1, 53. 132. Mids. I, 1, 191. V, 150. Merch. Ill, 1, 70. Shr. I, 1, 169. All's II, 3, 83. lS5. Tw. Ill, 2, 67. V, 246. H6A V, 4, 141. H6B I, 4, 66. II, 2, 43. H6CIII,3,92 (for the r. = moreover, German übrigens). Cymb. I, 6, 28 etc. etc. above the r. = above all: wherein it finds a joy above the r. Sonn. 91,6. therefore, above the r., we parley to you, Gent. IV, 1, 60. above the r. be gone, Lr. IV, 1, 50. to set up one's r. (a phrase taken from gaming) = to have fnlly made up one's mind, to be resolved: he that sets up his r. to do more exploits with his mace than a morris-pike, Err. IV, 3, 27. I have set upmyr. to run away, Merch. II, 2, 110. since you set up your r. 'gainst remedy, All's II, 1, 138. the County Paris hath set up his r. that you shall rest but little, Rom. IV, 5, 6. cf. that is my r., that is the rendezvous of it, H5 II, 1 , 1 7 ; and see in the preceding article Rom. V, 3, 110 and Lr. I, 1, 125. 2) the others: Lucr.1844. Arg. 13. Tp. II, 1, 287. V, 256. Gent. 1, 2, 20. 27. 28. Wiv. IV, 2, 34. Meas. 1, 2, 13. LLL II, 55. V, 1, 149. Mids. I, 2, 30. V, 250. Merch. II, 2, 214. II, 6, 62. Ill, 2, 42. As V, 4, 57. H6A II, 5, 90. Ill, 2, 65 etc. etc. above the r. = above all others: H6B II, 1, 6. Troil. I, 2, 200. Oj omitted after it: all the r. revolted faction, R2 11, 2, 57 (Ff and the later Qq all the r. of the revolted faction). Passage not understood: outfacing faults in love with love's ill r. Pilgr. 8; cf. Sonn. 138, 8. •eat, vb. 1) intr. a) to cease from labour, to indulge in repose: Tp. Ill, 3, 6. Gent. II, 7, 37. LLL V, 2,831. Mids. II, 2 , 8 . Merch. II, 2, 111. R2 V, 1 , 5 . 6. H6C I, 2, 32. II, 3, 5. IV, 8, 33. H8 IV, 1, 66. Troil. V, 8, 4. Caes. V, 5, 1. Hml. 1, 5, 182. Cymb IV, 2, 43. V, 4, 97. = to sleep: Mids. V, 427. H8 I, 4, 12. Rom. II, 2, 188. IV, 3, 13. IV, 5, 7. Lr. Ill, 6, 36. 87. Per. V, 1, 236. to repose in death: Phoen. 58. H6C V, 2, 48. H8 IV, 2, 31. Tit. I, 150. 349. Caes. V, 5, 41. Lr. V, 3, 150. Per. 11,4,30. = to enjoy quiet, not to be disturbed: you should not r. between the elements of air and earth, Tw. I, 5, 293. my lord shall never r. Oth. Ill, 3, 22. b) to lie, to stay, to abide: what nobleman is that that with the king here —eth in his tentt H6C IV, 3, 10. at Northampton they do r. to-night, R3 II, 4, 1 (Qq they lay at N.). devise with thee where thou shall r. Cor. IV, 1, 39. c) to make a pause, to cease: there r. in your foolery, Err. IV, 3, 34. you have too courtly a wit for me:

I'll r. As 111, 2,73. —s his minum rest, Rom. II, 4, 22. and not—ing here, accuses him of letters, Ant. Ill, 5,10. d) to lie, to be in the power of; with tn: it — ed in your grace to unloose this tied-up justice, Meas. I, 3, 31. to strive for that which —eth in my choice, Shr. III, 1, 17. what service wilt thou do met What you command, that —s in me to do, H6C 111, 2,45. never hopes more heaven than — s in thee, T i t II, 3,41. Similarly : the Mortimers, in whom the title —ed, H6A 11, 5, 92. Without tn: this inundation of mistempered humour — s by you only to be qualified, John V, 1, 13 ( = it rests, lies id you to qualify). e) to lean, to depend: r. on my word, Tit. I, 267. that spirit upon whose weal depend and r. the lives of many, Hml. Ill, 3, 14. f) to pass, to be no longer spoken of; in the phrase let it r.: but let it r. Shr. Ill, 1, 56. let the mustard r. IV, 3, 26. let that r. H6A II, 5, 119. IV, 1, 180. let her r. H6B I, 3, 95. R3 III, 1, 157. IV, 2, 88 ( Qq pass), let her r. in her unrest awhile, Tit. IV, 2, 31. 2) trans, to place at rest, to give repose to: to r. thy weary head, Lucr. 1621. Mids. II, 2, 40. H4A III, 1, 215. the man that, when gentlemen are tired, gives them a sob and —s them, Err. IV, 3, 25 (punning), r. your minds in peace, H6A I, 1, 44. r. thy unrest on England's lawful earth, R3 IV, 4, 29. then would I hide my bones, not r. them here, 33. Refl.: set it down and r. you, Tp. Ill, 1, 18. r. yourself, 2 0 . 1 needs must r. me, III, 3, 4. my herald thoughts in thy pure bosom r. them, Gent. Ill, 1, 144. we'll r. us, Mids. II, 2, 37. III, 2, 418. 446. As II, 4, 73. H6A II, 5, 2. R3 1, 2, 32. Lr. IV, 6, 260. Per. I, 4, 1. Used in kind wishes for departed souls: is my boy, God r. his soul! alive or deadt Merch. II, 2, 75. God r. all Christian souls I Rom. I, 3,18. heaven r. them now! Mcb. IV, 3, 227. r. her soul, Hml. V, 1, 147. For a salutation in meeting, and oftener in parting (the word God mostly omitted): God r. you merry, As V, 1, 65. r. you well, Meas. IV, 3, 186. r. you fair, good signior, Merch. I, 3, 60. ye say honestly: r. you merry, Rom. I, 2, 65. 86. r. you happy. Ant. I, 1, 62. Rest, vb. to remain; 1) to be left: nought —s for me but to make open proclamation, H6A I, 3, 70. there —s no other shifi but this, II, 1, 75. 2) to continue to be: I r. thy secret friend, Lucr. 526. so should my shame still r. upon record, 1643. there r. Meas. II, 3, 36 ( = continue in this mind), r. debtor for the first, Merch. I, 1, 152. will thou r. damnedt As III, 2, 74. to whom we all r. generally beholding, Shr. I, 2, 274. may both breed thee and still r. thine, Wint. Ill, 3, 49. to r. without a spot for evermore, John V, 7, 107. if England to itself do r. but true, 118. these differences shall all r. under gage, R2 IV, 86. this festered joint cut o f f , the rest r. sound, V, 3, 85. let it r. where it began at first, H6A IV, 1, 121. till you do return, J r. perplexed, V, 5, 95. I hold it cowardice to r. mistrustful, H6C IV, 2, 8. there shall I r. secure from force, IV, 4, 33. my sovereign shall r. in London, IV, 8, 22. —ing — not subject to motion or change: the northern star, whose true-fixed and —ing quality, Caes. Ill, 1,61. 3) to be to be done: and here it —s that you 11 procure the vicar, Wiv. IV, 6, 48. one thing more —», Shr. I, 1, 250. what —eth more, but that I seek occasion how to risef IIGC I, 2, 44. and now what —s but . . . , IV, 2, 13. V, 7, 42. what thent what —st Hml. Ill, 3, 64. 4) Used almost as a mere copula, = to be.

R of whose soft grace for the like loss I have her sovereign aid and r. myself content, Tp. V, 144. which with ourselves all r. at thy dispose, Gent. IV, 1, 76. now, thus it —s, Wiv. IV, 6, 34 (thus it is, thus matters stand). I r. much bounden to you, As I, 2, 298. but r. unquestioned welcome and undoubted blest, All's II, 1, 210. Ir. your servant, H8 V, 1, 55. —ing well assured they ne'er did service for it, Cor. Ill, 1, 121. that / may r. assured whether yond troops are friend or enemy, Cues. V, 3, 17. the affairs of men r. still incertain, V, 1, 96. we r. your hermits, Mcb. I, 6, 20. you shall close prisoner r. Oth. V, 2, 335. till then r. your debtor, Per. II, 1, 149. Rest, vb. = arrest (M. Edd. 'rest): Err. IV, 2, 42. 45. IV, 3, 25. IV, 4, 3. Re-stem, to force back, to retrace: now they do r. their backward course, Oth. I, 3, 37. Restful, quiet, peaceful: Sonn. 66, 1. R2IV, 12. Restitution, reparation, indemnification: Wiv. V, 5, 33 (he makes r.). H6B 111, 1, 118. Cor. Ill, ], 16. Oth. V, 1, 15. Restive, writing of some M. Edd. for resty, q.v., of O. Edd. in Sonn. 100,9. Restless, never resting: Lncr. 974. 1124. Meas. III, 1,125. H5 III, 6, 30. R3 I, 4, 81. Mcb.111,2,22. • e i t s r s t l s n , recovery, convalescence: Lr. IV, 7, 26. Restorative, an efficacious medicine: Rom. V, 3, 166. Per. Prol. 8 (read it for —s). Restore, 1) to give back to the owner: myself I'll forfeit, so that other mine thou wilt r. Sonn. 134, 4. Tp. V, 134. LLLII, 138. R2 III, 3, 41. R3 1, 4, 144. With to: r. them to the owner, Ado II, 1, 210. As V, 4, 170. Tit. I, 210. 296. Hence =•= to make amends for, to compensate: all losses are — d , Sonn. 30, 14. And even: Robin shall r. amends, Mids. V, 445. 2) to bring back, to renew: our —d love and amity, H4B IV, 2, 65. I can again thy former light r. Oth. V, 2, 9. 3) to bring back to a former and better state; a) from dishonour or degradation: she that you wronged, look you r. Meas. V, 531. till thou be —d, thou art a yeoman, H6A II, 4, 95. With to: —d again to all his lands, R3 IV, 88. H4B IV, 1, 110. —d to my blood, H6A II, 5, 128. Ill, 1, 159. —d me to my honours, 118 II, 1, 114. With into: r. yourselves into the good thoughts of the world again, H4A I, 3, 181. b) to recover from disease, to enre, to heal: his (tears) poisoned me, and mins did him r. Compl. 301. their senses I'll r. Tp. V, 31. to see your wit — d, Shr. Ind. 2, 79. All's II, 3, 154. Tw. Ill, 4, 51. IV, 2, 104. H6B II, 1, 76. H8 II, 2, 30. Hml. HI, 1, 147. Lr. IV, 4, 9. Ant. Ill, 13, 199. Cymb. I, 1, 148. Per. Ill, 2, 45. With to: God r. you to health, Ado V, 1, 333. Shr. Ind. 1, 121. All's II, 3, 70. which to his former strength may be —d, H4B III, 1, 42. could r. this cripple to his legs again, H6B II, 1, 133. Restrain, 1) to strain, to draw tight: a headstall of sheep's leather which, being —ed to keep him from stumbling, hath been often burst, Shr. Ill, 2, 59. 2) to check, to binder from motion, to confine: the is resolved no longer to r. him, Yen. 579. immured, —ed, captivated, bound, LLL III, 126. you have —ed yourself within the list of too cold an adieu, All's II, 1, 52. none of this could r. the stiff-borne action, H4B

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I, 1, 176. my little stomach to the war and your great love to me —s you thus, Troil. Ill, 3, 221. should have kept short, — ed and out of haunt, this mad young man, Hml. IV, 1, 18. should have him thus —ed, Lr. II, 2, 154. With from: hoxes honesty behind, —ing from course required, Wint. I, 2, 244. With of: me of my lawful pleasure she —ed, Cymb II, 5, 9. 3) to suppress, to repress, to oppress: his eye, which late this mutiny —s, Lncr. 426. when men r. their breath on some great sudden hest, H4A II, 3, 64. to chain up and r. the poor, Cor. I, 1, 87. if they should by the cormorant belly be —ed, 125. r. in me the cursed thoughts, Mcb. II, 1, 8. if she have —ed the riots of your followers, Lr. II, 4, 145. 4) to keep back, to withhold: they would r. the one (your lands), distain the other, R3 V, 3, 322 (withhold them from yon and keep them to themselves, cf. restraint in Err. Ill, 1, 97). With from: —est from me the duty which to a mother's part belongs, Cor. V, 3, 167. With to: —ing aid to Jvnon, Tim. V, 1, 151. —ed= prohibited: to put metal in —ed meant, Meas. II, 4, 48. Restraint, 1) the keeping a check on a p.: wishing a more strict r. upon the sisterhood, Meas. I, 4, 4. from curbed license plucks the muzzle ofr. H4B IV, 5, 132. put upon you what r. and grievance the law will give him cable, Oth. 1, 2, 15. throwing r. on us, IV, 3, 91. 2) confinement, detention: whence comes this r.1 Meas. I, 2, 128. 132. a r. to a determined scope, III, 1, 68. whose r. John IV, 2, 52. lock up your r. Cymb. I, 1, 74. 3) the act of withholding, of keeping back: to know the reason of this strange r. Err. Ill, 1, 97 (of shutting ont the master of the house; cf. restrain in R3 V, 3, 322). Hence = abstinence, reserve: puts it off to a compelled r. All's II, 4, 44. madding my eagerness with her r. V, 3, 213. my love, without retention or r. Tw. V, 84. Resty, stiff with too mnch rest, torpid (cf. Restystiffin Edward 3 111, 3): rise, r. Muse, Sonn. 100, 9 (some M. Edd. restive), who in this dull and longcontinued truce is r. grown, Troil. I, 3,263 (Ffand M. Edd. rusty), when r. sloth finds the down pillow hard, Cymb. Ill, 6, 34. Resume, 1) to take again, to take back: Cor. IV, 1, 16. Lr. I, 4, 331. Cymb. Ill, 1, 15. V, 3, 75. 2) to take: nor —* no care of what is to continue, Tim. II, 2, 4 (O. Edd. r. no care), cf. rebate for bate, redeliver for deliver, regreet for greet, repast for past, reprisal for prize etc. Resurrectlen, revival from death: Wiv. I, 1, 54 (Evans' speech). ResorTey, to read and examine again: Sonn 32,3. H5 V, 2, 81. Retail, 1) to tell: he is furnished with no certainties more than he haply may r. from me, H4B I, 1, 32. the truth should live from age to age, as 'twere —ed to all posterity, R3 III, 1, 77. to whom 1 will r. my conquest won, IV, 4, 335. 2) to sell at second hand and in small quantities: he is wit's pedlar and —s his wares at wakes and wassails, LLL V, 2, 317. Retain, 1) to keep, not to lose or lay aside: Tp. IV, 185. Err. 1,1,66. 129. John V, 4,23. H6A V, 4,136. Rom. II, 2,46. Hml. Ill, 3, 56. Lr. I, 1,137. Ill, 6,62.

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2) to take into service, to hire: being my sworn tenant, ike duke —td him hit, H8 1, 2, 192. Retainers, attendants, servants: mounted where power» are your r. H8 II, 4, 113. Retell, to tell again: Oth. I, 3, 372. Partic. retold: H4A I, 1, 46. I, 3, 73. R e t e n t i o n , the power of keeping or confining, as well as that which keeps or confincs; 1) the power or means of preserving impressions: that poor r. (viz a table-book) could not so much hold, Soon. 122, 9. no woman's heart so big to hold so much; they lack r. Tw. II, 4, 99. 2) reserve, restraint: my love, without r. or restraint, Tw. V, 84. 3) confinement, custody: to send the king to some r. and appointed guard, Lr. V,3,47. R e t e n t i v e , confining, restraining: must my house be my r. enemy, my gaolt Tim. 111,4, 82. nor strong links of iron can be r. to the strength of spirit, Caes. I, 3, 95. R e t i n a e , persons attending a prince: H4B IV, 3, 121. Lr. I, 4, 221. Retire, snbst. 1) retreat in war: Lacr. 174. J o h n II, 326. V, 5, 4. H4A II, 3, 54. H5 IV, 3, 86 (make). H6C II, 1, 150. Troil. V, 3, 53. V, 4, 21. V, 8, 15 (Ff retreat). Cor. 1, 6, 3. Cymb. V, 3, 40. 2) return: that to his borrowed bed he make r. Lacr. 573. with a blessed and unvexedr. we will bear home that lusty blood again, John II, 253. 3) repair: all his behaviours did make their r. to the court of his eye, L L L II, 234. Hetlre, vb. 1) trans, to draw back, to lead back: each (lock), by him enforced, —d his ward, Lucr. 303. that he might have —d his power, R2 II, 2, 46. 2) refl. a) to withdraw from a public to a more private place: and thence r. me to my Milan, where every third thought shall be my grave, Tp. V, 310. you must r. yourself into some covert, Wint. IV, 4, 663. R2 IV, 96. Cor. I, 3, 30. Tim. II, 2, 171. Oth. II, 3, 386. b) to retreat from battle: the French fight coldly and r. themselves, John V, 13. 3) intr. (forming its perfect with to be) a ) to withdraw from action, or from a public to a more private place: Tp. IV, 161. Wint. IV, 2, 36. 1MB IV, 1, 13. H5 III, 3,56. Cor. Ill, 1, 11. Rom. Ill, 1, 1. Tim. V, 1, 62. Mcb. II, 2, 66. Lr. I, 2, 183. Ant. IV, 4, 35. — d = withdrawn from society, living in private: Tp. 1, 2, 91. Wint. IV, 4, 62. Cymb. Ill, 5, 36. cf. Wint. IV, 2, 36 and Tim. V, 1, 62. b) to retreat from battle or danger: Lucr. 641. 1441. Wiv. Ill, 4, 86. John V, 4, 53. H5 III, 6, 99. H6A I, 1, 111. 1, 5, 2. 33. IV, 2, 21. H6B IV, 4, 39. IV, 9, 9. H6C 1, 4, 14. II, 1, 188. II, 5, 8. Cor. I, 4, 28. I, 6, 50. Oth. V, 2, 271. Ant. IV, 7, 1. 8. c) to return: this way she runs, and now she will no further, but back — s, Ven. 906. one poor — ing minute in an age toould purchase thee a thousandfriends, Lucr. 962. he'll say in Troy when he —s, the Grecian dames are sunburnt, Troil. I, 3, 281. whose icy current and compulsive course ne'er feels —ing ebb, Oth. Ill, 3,455. = to return, even in the sense of to answer (?): with an accent tuned in selfsame key —s to chiding fortune, Troil. I, 3, 54 (M. Edd. retorts, or returns). R e t i r e m e n t , 1) the act of withdrawing from company or from action: certain words he spake against your grace in your r. Meas. V, 130 (— during

your absence), make up, lest your r. do amaze your friends, H4A V, 4, 6 (your absence from the battle). the king is in his r. marvellous distempered, Iiml. Ill, 2, 312. 2) a private way of life: H5 I, 1, 58. 3) retreat, refnge: a comfort of r. lives in this, H4A IV, 1, 56. Retort, subst. reply to an incivility: this is called the r. courteous, As V, 4, 76. 96. Retort, vb. to throw back: the duke's unjust, thus to r. your manifest appeal, Meas. V, 303 ( = to reject, not to accept). I do r. the solus in thy bowels, 115 II, 1, 54. his virtues shining upon others heat them, and they r. that heat again to the first giver, Troil. Ill, 3, 101. with one hand beats cold death aside, and with the other sends it back to Tybalt, whose dexterity —s it, Rom. Ill, 1, 169. In Troil. I, 3, 54 some M. Edd. —s, O. Edd. retires; in Wiv. II, 2, 4 some M. Edd., after the surreptitious Qq: I will r. the sum in equipage. Ff. om. Retract, to disavow, to wish undone: Pari% should ne'er r. what he hath done, Troil. II, 2, 141. R e t r a l t e , retreat, flight: and for a r . ; how swiftly will this Feeble run o f f ! H4B III, 2, 286 (the later Ff and M. Edd. retreat). • • t r e a t , subst. the act of retiring in war: All's IV, 3, 323. H4B III, 2, 286 (the earlier O. Edd. retraite). H6C I, 1, 5. Troil. V, 8, 15 (Q retire), to make r. As III, 2,170. II4B IV, 3, 78. to sound r. H4A V, 4, 163. H5 III, 2, 94. H6A II, 2, 3. HOB IV, 8, 4. Retrograde, moving backward, retreating; and (in astronomy) seeming to move contrary to the succession of the signs: born under Slurs. When he was predominant. When he was r . , I think, rather, All's I, 1, 212. With to, = contrary, counteracting: it is most r. to our desire, Iiml, I, 2, 114. R e t u r n , subst. 1) the act of coming or going back: Sonn. 56, 12. Tp. II, 1, 73. Meas. IV, 2, 211. IV, 3, 143. V, 3. Merch. II, 8, 38. Ill, 4, 26. All's IV, 5, 75 (wasupon his r. home). Tw. 111,4,282. John III, 1, 321. R2 IV, 17. IMA IV, 3, 109 (again). I14B II, 4, 303. 115 III, 6, 72. H8 II, 1, 45. Tit. I, 76. Hml. III, 2, 329. IV, 7, 48. Lr. 1, 4, 363. IV, 3, 6. Ant. Ill, 6, 60. Cymb. I, 4, 155. II, 4, 31. Ill, 2, 66. Ill, 4, 110. IV, 2, 186. IV, 3, 15. Per. II, 4, 52. our home r. Err. I, 1, 60. R2 I, 3, 267. to make r. Gent. II, 7, 14. Meas. IV, 3, 107. Tw. I, 4, 22. H6B 1, 2, 83. H6C IV, 1, 5. Lr. II, 4, 153. 2) repayment, requital: no gift to him but breeds the giver a r. exceeding all use of quittance, Tim. I, 1, 290. I'll pawn my honours to you upon his good —s, 111, 5, 82. as rich men deal gifts, expecting in r. twenty for one, IV, 3, 517. 1 have been bold to them to use your signet and your name; but they do shake their heads, and 1 am here no richer in r. II, 2, 212 ( - = for it? or no richer in returning than in going?), most fair r. of greetings and desires, Hnil. II, 2, 60. Hencc = answer: if my father render fair r. H5 11,4, 127. 3) reimbursement: a month before this bond expires, I do expect r. of thrice three times the value, Merch. 1, 3, 159. Return, vb. 1) intr. a) to come or go back: Ven. 704. Lncr. 321. 641. 961. 1359. Sonn. 28, 1. 45, 10. 51, 4. Tp. IV, 98. V, 102. Gent. II, 2, 3. IV, 4, 65. Meas. Ill, 1, 198. 111,2,164. 174. 183. 189. Err. I, 2, 14. 42. 64. II, 1, 1. 111,2, 156. IV, 1,44. IV, 4,

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17. Ado I, 1, 30. 37. 205. 303. L L L 111, 70. Mids. III,2, 172. Merch. I, 2, 111. II, 5, 52. II, 6, 17. V, 34. 116. 272. As II, 7, 134. V, 4, 180 (our -ed fortune). Shr. IV, 1, 85. All's 1, 2, 34. Tw. Ill, 4, 63. H6A I, 4, 23. H8 111, 2, 64. Cor. Ill, 2, 135. V, 1, 42. Tit. I, 33. Mcb. I, 7, 9. Lr. II, 4, 16(* 210. 214. Oth. IV, 3, 8 (I will be — ed forthwith) etc. etc. to r. again: Meas. Ill, 2, 183. Mids. II, 1, 133. As IV, 3, 100. Tw. Ill, 4, 264 etc. to r. back again: R2 I, 3, 120. b) to speak again of a subject lost out of sight: but to r. to the verses, L L L IV, 2, 156. but now r. we to the false Duke Humphrey, H6B III, 1, 322. c) to come back to a former, and usually a better state: r., forgetful Muse, and straight redeem in gentle numbers time so idly spent, Sonn. 100, 5 if I have ranged, like him that travels f r . again, 109, 6. so lr. rebuked to my content, 119, 13. r . , r . , and make thy lave amends, Gent. IV, 2, 99. r. thee therefore with a flood of tears, H6A III, 3, 56 (thee for thou). come, come, r., r., thou wandering lord, 76. the worst —s to laughter, Lr. IV, 1, 6. In a bad sense: to what base uses we may r. Hml. V, 1, 223. Alexander —eth into dust, 232. d) to fall to, to become the share of: had his necessity made use of me, I would have put my wealth into donation, and the best half should have —ed to him, Tim. Ill, 2, 91. which had —ed to the inheritance of Fortinbras, had he been vanquisher, Hml. I, 1, 91. your servants ever have theirs, themselves and what u theirs, in compt, to make their audit at your highness' pleasure, still to r. your own, Mcb. I, 6, 28. 2) trans, a) to send back: she —s this ring to you, Tw. II, 2, 5. say that Marcius r. me unheard, Cor. V, 1, 42. that 1 —ed you an empty messenger, Tim. Ill, 6,40. b) to bring back: r. him here again, Meas. V, 384. and this thou didst r. from him, that he did buffet thee, Krr. II, 2, 159. I might not be admitted, but from her handmaid do r. this answer, Tw. 1,1, 25. shall I r. this answer to the kingt H4A IV, 3, 106. —ed my letter back, Rom. V, 3, 252. c) to give back: see it be — e d , Qent. I, 2, 46. send for your ring, I will r. it home, All's V, 3, 223. it should be so —ed, Tw. II, 2, 15. r. the precedent to these lords again, J o h n V, 2, 3. r. an injury, H5 IV, 7, 189. these moral laws speak aloud to have her back — ed, Troil. II, 2, 186. till ail these mischiejs be —ed again even in their throats, Tit. Ill, 1, 274. I do r. those talents, Tim. I, 2, fi. if she will r. me my jewels, Oth. IV, 2, 201. if you borrow one another's love for the instant, you may r. it again, Ant. II, 2, 105. d) to give in reply or in recompense or retribution : until it had —ed these terms of treason doubled down his throat, R2 I, 1, 56. that thou —est no greeting to thy friends, I, 3, 254. caves shall r. your mock in second accent of his ordnance, H5 II, 4, 125. tell her I r. great thanks. H6A II, 2, 51. answer was —ed that he will come, II, 5, 20. who — ed her thanks, H8 V, 1, 64. I r. the lie, Per. II, 5, 57. which never —s us thanks, All's I, 1, 200 ( = yields, brings in). prayers and wishes are all I can r. H8 II, 3, 70. when for some trifling present you have bid me r. so much, Tim. II, 2, 146. she hath received them and —ed me expectations and comforts, Oth. IV, 2, 191. I r. those duties back as are right fit, Lr. I, 1, 99.

e) to a n y c r : say thus the king —s, R2 III, 3, 121. the Dauphin —s us that his powers are yet not ready, B5 III, 3, 46. f ) to announce, to make known to: while we r. these dukes what we decree, R2 I, 3, 122. r. them we are ready, Per. II, 2, 4. H e n n l t e d , joined again: by the which marriage the line of Charles the Great was r. to the crown of France, H5 I, 2, 85. BctkI , to disclose, to discover, to lay open: Lucr. Arg. 20. Lucr. 1086. Tw. V, 157. H6A V, 3, 100. H6B II, 3, 105. Tit. IV, 1, 36. Hml. I, 5, 119. Per. V, 1, 245. Refl.: r. yourself to him, Meas. V, 28 (expound your case to him), we still see them r. themselves, All's IV, 3, 27 (betray themselves), in complete glory she ed herself, H6A I, 2, 83. never —ed myself unto him, Lr. V, 3, 192. Revel, subst. festivity, merry-making: Wiv. IV, 4, 58. John V, 2, 132. Hml. 1, 4, 17. Oth. II, 3, 293. Ant. I, 4, 5. Plur. —s: Ven. 123 (keep). Tp. IV, 148. L L L IV, 3, 379. Mids. II, 1, 18 (keep). 141. V, 36. 377. Tw. I, 3, 121. 145. H8 I, 4, 72. Rom. I, 4, 109. Oth. II, 2 , 6 . II, 3, 45. Ant. V, 2, 218. Per. II, 3,93. Bevel, vb. 1) to feast, to make merry: Lucr. Arg. 11. Ado I, 1, 322. Mids. I, 1, 19. Shr. 111,2,226. H4B IV, 5, 126. B 5 I, 2, 253. Rom. Ill, 4, 26. Caes. II, 2, 116. With a superfluous it: r. and feast it at my house, Err. IV, 4, 65. and r. it as bravely as the best, Shr. IV, 3, 54. H6C III, 3, 225. IV, 1, 95. 2) to indulge one's inclination or caprice, to wanton, to do at pleasure: there it (desire) —s, Lucr. 713. who all this while hath —ed in the night, R2 III, 2, 48. —ing like lords till all be gone, H6B I, 1, 224. — ed in our parliament, HCC I, 4, 71. his father - ed in the heart of France, II, 2, 150. to r. in the entrails of my lambs, R3 IV, 4, 228. and r. all with him, Cor. IV, 5, 227. and r. in Lavinia's treasury, Tit. II, 1, 131. where joy most —s, Hml. Ill, 2, 208. H e v e l l e r , one who feasts and makes merry: Wiv. V, 5, 42. Ado II, 1, 87. Caes. V, 1, 62. Cymb. 1, 6,61. • e v e l r y , a merry-making: As V, 4, 183. I « t ( M « i subst. return of an injury, retaliation, vengeance: Lucr. 1823. Wiv. I, 3, 99. IV, 2, 222. Ado V, 1, 281. 301. Merch. Ill, 1, 56. 72. 74. 98. As HI, 1, 4. IV, 3, 129. Tw. V, 374. Wint. Ill, 2, 124. John IV, 3, 38. H6A III, 2, 31. H6B IV, 1, 41. H6C I, 1, 190. I, 3, 26. II, 1, 86. R3 V, 1, 9. Tit. III, 1, 271. Cymb. IV, 2, 157 etc. in r. = by way of retaliation: Lucr. 236. 1736. Gent. 1,2,110. 11,4, 133. Mids. II, 1, 89. H6A II, 2, 11; cf. 1, 5, 35. H6B III, 2, 127. H6C I, 3, 41. his r. sometimes = the act of revenging him: Lucr. Arg. 20. H6A I, 5, 35. II6B III, 2, 127. cf. my death's r. H6A1V,6,39. With for : prophesied r.for it, R 3 1, 3, 186. With on: Lucr. 1180. Sonn. 149, 8. J o h n II, 172. H6C 1,1, 55. Ill, 3, 265. H8 1, 2, 138. Tit. I, 137. Ill, 1, 117. Tim. V, 4, 37. Plur. —s, in the same sense: Meas. IV, 3, 140. All's V, 3, 10. Tw. V, 385. Wint. I, 2, 456. II, 3, 19. Cor. IV, 5, 143. V, 2, 44. V, 3, 85. Tim. V, 4, 32. 37. Mcb. V, 2, 3. Lr. Ill, 7, 7. Cymb. II, 5, 24. IV, 2, 159. to have ones r. or — s: Lr. II, 4, 282. Ill, 5, 1. to render vengeance and r. R2 IV, 67 (cf. Render), to take r. or —si Meas. IV, 4, 33. Tit. Ill, 1, 117. Tim. V, 4, 37. Lr. Ill, 7, 7. S e v e n s « , vb. to take vengeance; absol.: Wiv.

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I, 3, 100. Merch. Ill, 1, 69. H5 V, 1, 4%. H6B IV, 1, 97. H 6 C II, 3, 19. T i t IV, ] , 128. Mcb. Ill, 3, 18. L r . II, 1, 47. W i t h for: r., ye heavens, for old Andronicus, Tit. IV, 1, 129. cf. Lucr. 1683. Shr. V, 1, 139. Hml. IV, 5, 135. With upon: a bird that will r. upon you all, H6C I, 4, 36. Trans., the injury or injared person being the object: Lucr. 1841. Mida 111,2,420. R 2 I, 2, 40. I, 3, 58. I I 4 A I, 3, 183. V, 3, 12. H 6 A III, 2, 49. IV, 5, 18. IV, 6, 30. H6B IV, 1, 26. 146. H 6 0 I, 1,100. II, 3, 19. Cymb. I, 6, 135. V, 4, 34 etc. With on: r. it on him, T p . Ill, 2. 62. Per. Ill, 3, 24. Refl.: lest I r. What, myself upon myself 1 R 3 V, 3, 186. B8 II, ] , 162. Caes. IV, 3, 94. Passively; a) the injury as snbject: these injuries will be —d home, Lr. Ill, 3, 13. 'twill be — d, Cymb. IV, 2, 154. b ) the injared person as subject; to be — d = to take vengeance: Lucr. 1194. A d o II, 1, 217. Shr. II, 29. H 6 A I, 4, 58. 105. H6C III, 3, 212. T i t . V, 2, 196. Caes. Ill, 2, 207. Hml. Ill, 3, 75. IV, 5, 135. Cymb. I, 6, 126. 129. 132. II, 3, 160. With on: Lucr. 1683. Gent. V, 2, 51. W i v . II, 1, 30. 31. 66. 96. II, 2, 326. Ill, 1, 122. V, 1, 30. T w . V, 386. H 4 A I, 3, 291. H6C 1, 1, 57. 266. I, 3, 20. R 3 I, 2, 133. 135. I, 3, 333. H8 III, 2, 9. Tit. Ill, 1, 301. V, 2, 95. Ant. IV, 12, 16. Cymb. III, 5, 79. Of for on: I 'll be —d of her, H4B II, 4, 167 (Pistol's speech. F f on). On for for: live to be — d on her death, Lucr. 1778. Revengeful, vindictive: Lucr. 1693. R2 IV, 50. V, 3, 42. H6C II, 1, 164. R 3 I, 2, 174. H8 I, 1, 109. Cor. IV, 5, 95. Tit. IV, 3, 32. Hml. Ill, 1, 126. Revengement, vengeance, punishment: out of my blood He'll breed r. and a scourge for me, H 4 A III, 2, 7. Revenger, one who takes vengeance: Ant. II, 6, I I . Ill, 1, 3. Revengtngly, vindictively: Cymb. V, 2, 4. Revenue (rivenue or revenue), income: T p . I, 2, 98. Mids. I, 1, 6. 158. A s III, 2, 397. V, 2, 12. Wint. IV, 3, 28. John III, 1, 169. R 2 I, 4, 46. 11, 1, 226. R3 III, 7, 158. Troil. II, 2, 206. II, 3, 31. Hml. III, 2, 63. Lr. I, 1, 139. I, 2, 56. 79. Ant. Ill, 6, 30. Cymb. II, 3, 148. Plnr. — s: Sonn. 142, 8. A s I, 1, 107. R2II, 1,161. IV,212. H6B 1,3, 83. L r . l l , 1,102. Reverb, to reverberate, to resound: whose low sound —s no hollowness, L r . I, 1, 156. Reverberate, to resound; trans, and intr.: a drum is ready braced that shall r. all as loud as thine, John V, 2, 170. who, like an arch, —s the voice again, Troil. Ill, 3, 120. Reverberate, adj.reverberant,resounding: halloo your name to the r. hills, T w . I, 5, 291. Reverence, subst. 1) high respect, veneration: R2 I, 4, 27. Ill, 2, 172. H4B IV, 2, 6. H 6 A II, 3, 71. H6B III, 2, 207. H8 IV, 2, 101. Troil. I, 3, 227. Caes. Ill, 1, 176. Lr. II, 2, 75. Cymb. IV, 2, 247. With of: the fair r. of your highness curbs me, R2 I, 1, 54. this policy and r. of age makes the world bitter, L r . I, 2, 48. in the due r. of a sacred vow, Oth. Ill, 3, 461. With to: all r. set apart to him, John 111, 1, 159. for r. to some alive, R3 111, 7, 193. r. to your calling makes me modest, H8 V, 3, 69. to do a p. r.: Merch. I, 1, 13. Caes. Ill, 2, 125. to have in r.: Tit. V, 1, 83. 2) a character entitled to particular regard: I have as much of my father in me as you, albeit your coming before me is nearer to his r. As 1, 1, 54 (i. e. your

being older than I gives you a nearer claim to the respect which was due to him), settlest admired r. in a slave, Tim. V, 1, 54. that 1 thus would play and trifle with your r. Oth. 1,1,133. Applied to venerable age: knavery cannot hide himself in such r. A d o II, 3, 125. ' / am forced to lay my r. by, V, 1, 64 (i. e. the privilege of my age), in thy r. and thy chair-days, H6B V, 2, 48. a gracious aged man, whose r. even the head-lugged bear would lick, Lr. IV, 2,42. those violent harms that my two sisters have in thy r. made, IV, 7, 29. T o clerical persons: trust not my age, my r. A d o IV, 1, 170. I charge thee (the priest) by thy r. T w . V, 154. the r. of the grave wearers, Wint. HI, 1, 5. a clergyman of holy r. R2 III, 3, 29. you misuse the r. of your place, H4B IV, 2, 23. what your r. shall incite us to, 115 I, 2, 20. Saving your r., a phrase used to introduce an offensive or indecent expression: Meas.ll, 1,92. A d o III,4,32. Merch. II, 2, 27. 139. H 4 A II, 4, 515. the rather — saving r. of the word — for 'tis said a woman's fitness comes by fits, Cymb. IV, 1,5. save your r., in the same sense: we'll draw you from the mire or, save your r., love, Rom. I, 4, 42. Corrupted to sir r.: a very reverent body, ay, such a one as a man may not speak of without he say Sir r. Err. Ill, 2, 93. In Rom. I, 4, 42 the surreptitious Q l and M. Edd. from the mire of this sir r. love. 3) bow, obeisance: and with a low submissive r. say, Shr. Ind. 1, 53. cf. to do r. in Merch. I, 1, 13 and Caes. Ill, 2, 125. Reverence, vb. to regard with high respect and veneration: H 6 A 111, 3, 15. V, 4, 140. Cymb. IV, 2, 95. Per. II, 3, 40. Reverend or Reverent (the two forms used indiscriminately in O. Edd.) 1) entitled to bigh respect, venerable; a ) reverend: Conipl. 57. W i v . Ill, 1, 52. Err. V, 134. A d o V, 1, 325. V, 4, 125. Merch. IV, I, 226. Shr. IV, 5, 48. 60. T w . Ill, 4, 80. W i n t IV, 4, 73. H4B III, 2, 181. H5 III, 3, 37. Troil. I, 3, 61. IV, 5, 204. Cor. II, 1, 66. II, 2, 46. Tim. Ill, 5, 80. V, 1, 132. 185 (reverends, i. e. reverend'st). Oth. I, I, 93. I, 3, 33. 76. Per. V, 1, 14. V, 3, 18. 61. 93. b) reverent: Err. Ill, 2, 91. V, 5. R3 IV, 4, 35. Tit. II, 3, 296 ( M . Edd. reverend). Ill, 1, 23 (M. Edd. reverend). V, 3, 137 (M. Edd. reverend), c ) Different spelling in O. Edd.; F f reverend, Qq reverent: R2 V, 6, 25. H 4 A II, 4, 499. R 3 IV, 1, 31. Hml. II, 2, 501. F f reverent, Qq reverend -. H 4 A III, 2, 104. T h e earlier F f reverent, the later reverend: Err. V, 124. H 6 A III, 1, 49. H8 III, 1, 26. Applied to ecclesiastics and religious institutions: John III, 1, 224. R2 V, 6, 25 (some r. room). H4A III, 2, 104. H4B IV, 1, 38. H6B I, 1, 8. R 3 III, 5, 100. Ill, 7, 61. H8 1, 1, 51. 100. II, 2, 77. II, 4, 58. 205. 220. Ill, 1, 26. 103. 181. IV, 1, 26. 99. IV, 2. 18. Rom. IV, 2, 31. Nearly equivalent to old: as you are old and r., you should be wise, L r . I, 4, 261. you r. braggart, II, 2,133 (Qq unreverent, F f reverent, M. Edd. reverend). 2) testifying veneration, humble; a ) reverend: Lucr. 90. Merch. IV, 1, 163. Shr. IV, 1, 207. H4B I, 2, 113. H 6 A V, 3, 47. b) reverent: L L L IV, 2, 1. H6B III, 1, 34. Reverently, with respectful regard, with vene-. ration: H4B IV, 4, 37. H 6 A I, 2, 145. H6C II, 2, 109 (I hold thee r.J.

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Reverse, subst. a back-banded stroke in fencing H6B III, 1, 63. IV, 1, 87. Troil. V, 2, 144. Ant. 1, (cf. Punto reverso): thy punto, thy stock, thy r. Wiv. 4, 52. 2) to desert, to fall off, to go over to the enemy: if II, 3, 27. R e v e r s e , vb. to repeal, to annnl: B3 II, 1, 86. gold wiU corrupt him to r. All's IV,3,310. the commons Tit III, 1, 24. Rom. Ill, 3, 59. Lr. 1, 1, 151 (Qq. r. will r. on Hereford's side, R2 II, 2, 89 ( = go over to Hereford). —ed Mortimer, H4A I, 3, 92. 93. doth thy doom, Ff reserve thy state), cf. Unreversed. R t i e n l m , right or hope of future possession or my uncle Burgundy r.t H6A IV, 1,64. the stout Parienjoyment: as were our England in r. his, R21,4,35. sians do r. and turn again unto the warlike French, V, II, 2, 38. now remains a sweet r. H4A IV, 1, 53. no 2, 2. the king is merciful, if you r. H6B IV, 2, 133 perfection in r. shall have a praise in present, Troil. (i. e. if you fall off from Cade), thou wilt r. and fly to him, R3 IV,4,478. IV,5,4. were he upon my party, III, 2, 100. * I'ld r. Cor. I, 1, 238. all the regions do smilingly r. Revere*, see Punto and Reverse snbst. R e v e r t , to turn back: (France) armed and —ed, IV, 6, 103. the kings that have —ed, Ant. IV, 5, 4. making war against her heir, Err. Ill, 2,126 (perhaps, plant those that have —ed in the van, IV, 6, 9. 12. IV, with a pun, = fallen to, devolved on, another pro- 9, 8. now my thoughts r. Per. I, 1, 78 (fall off), —ed prietor). my arrow would have —ed to my bow again, tapsters, H4A IV, 2, 31 (having left their masters without leave-taking). With from: doth r. from his Hml. IV, 7, 23. • • v i e w , vb. to see again, to see: when thou —est allegiance, John III, 1, 174. r. from him, III, 4, 165. this, thou dost r. the very part was consecrate to thee, France is —edfrom the English, H6A I, 1, 90. H6C 1, 1, 151. Tit. IV, 4, 80. Rom. II, 3, 20. Sonn. 74, 5. I shall r. Sicilia, Wint. IV, 4, 680. 3) to be faithless: you are love's firm votary and • • v i l e , to vilify, to treat with contumely: did not she r. me theret Err. IV, 4, 75. 76. his eye —d cannot soon r. Gent III, 2, 59. —ed wives, Wiv. Ill, 2, 40. Wint. I, 2, 199. —edfair, Troil. V, 2, 186. me as his abject object, H8 I, 1, 126. R e v e l n t l e n , change produced by time: that I Revisit, to visit again: Hml. I, 4, 53. Revive, 1) intr. to return to life: Ven. 338.464. might see what the old world could say to this composed Mean. 11, 4, 26. H6A I, 1, 18. H6B 111, 2, 36. Rom. wonder of your frame; whether we are mended, or IV, 5, 20. V, 1, 9. Lr. IV, 6, 47. Cymb. I, 5, 42. V, whether better they, or whether r. be the same, Sonn. 59,12 (whether change be identity, i. e. no change). 4, 142. V, 5, 456. 2) tr. to bring again to life, to reanimate: Ven. see the r. of the times make mountains level, H4B III, 977. All's IV, 4, 34 (time —* us; viz as summer does I,46. here's fine r., an we had the trick to see't, Hml. briars, cf. v. 32). John IV, 1, 112. H4B IV, 1, 114. V, 1, 98. the present pleasure, by r. lowering, does 200. H6A III, 2, 97. IV, 5, 3. H6C I, 1, 163. Ill, 3, become the opposite of itself, Ant. 1,2,129. Apparently 21. Rom. 111,3,165. Caes. II, 2, 88. Cymb. V, 5, 120. = any change: full of forms, figures, shapes, objects, Reveke, to repeal, to reverse: H6Cll,6,46. Cor. ideas, apprehensions, motions, — s , LLL IV, 2, 70 (Holofernes' speech). II, 3, 226. 258. Lr. I, 1, 167. 182. R e v s k e m e n t , repeal, revocation: H8 I, 2, 106. Revel ve, to consider deeply, to meditate; absol.: Revel*, snbst 1) rebellion: Wiv. 1,3, 111. John Tw. II, 5, 155. Trans.: Lucr. 127. H6A V, 5, 101. III, 4, 167. IV, 2, 6. H4B IV, 5, 66. Troil. V, 2,146. R3IV, 4,123. Troil. 11,3,198. With a clause: Cymb. Cor. Ill, 1, 126. Tim. IV, 3, 91 (make r. = cause III, 3, 14. cf. Deep-revolving. rebellion). Mcb. 1, 2, 2. R e w a r d , subst. recompense: As I, 1, 87. All's 2) desertion, going over to the enemy: to corrupt II, 1, 150. Win*. Ill, 2, 165. H4A V, 4, 166 (I'U him to a r. All's IV, 3, 204. let not him be slandered follow, as they say, for r.). H4B IV, 3, 35. H6A III, with r. H4A I, 3, 112. seek a plaster by contemned r. 4, 22. H6B I, 2, 85. I, 4, 81. II, 3, 108 (follow us John V, 2, 13. more and less have given him the r. for thy r.). IV, 8, 70. V, 1, 79. H6C II, 1, 134. II, Mcb. V, 4, 12. V, 2, 18. Ant. IV, 9, 19. With to: 3, 52. Ill, 3, 233. V, 5, 10. R3 I, 4, 126. 129. 133. gravity's r. to wantonness, LLL V, 2, 74 ( = falling IV, 4, 518. H8 111, 2, 245. Tit. II, 3, 271. IV, 3, 112. into wantonness). Tim. I, 2, 197. Hml. Ill, 2, 72. IV, 2, 17. Ant. Ill, 3) gross departure from duty: this r. of thine is 13, 123. Cymb. V, 5, 13. As a vox media, = punishlike another fall of man, H5 II, 2, 141. images of r. ment: I desire nothing but the r. of a villain, Ado V, and flying o f f , Lr. II, 4, 91. your daughter hath made I, 250. take thy r. Lr. I, 1, 175. sin had his r. Per. a gross r. Oth. I, 1, 135. Especially faithlessness in II,4,15. of monstrous lust the due and just r. V, 3,86. R e w a r d , vb. to recompense, to requite; in a good love, inconstancy: my life on thy r. doth lie, Sonn. 92, 10. their love may be called appetite, no motion of a well as a bad sense: r. not hospitality with such black the liver, but the palate, that suffer surfeit, cloyment payment, Lucr. 575. which heaven and fortune still —s and r. Tw. 11,4,102. 0 foul r. of French inconstancy, with plagues, Gent IV, 3,31. they are but lightly—ed, John 111, 1, 322. ere my true heart with treacherous r. LLL I, 2, 157. - ing my dependents, III, 134. H4A turn to another, Rom. IV, 1, 58. the smallest fear or III, 3, 54. V, 4, 153. 167. H6B III, 2, 9. IV, 3, 7. doubt of her r. Oth III, 3, 188. that all the plagues of R3 I, 4, 236. IV, 2, 123 (Ff repays). H8 III, 1, 133. hell should at one time encounter such r. Cymb. I, 6, Cor. I, 9, 26. II, 2, 131. Tit. 1, 82. Tim. I, 1, 130. 112. thy r. Ill, 4, 57. Lr. Ill, 6, 5. Oth. II, 1, 317. Ant. IV, 7, 14. 4) deserter: you degenerate, you ingrate — s, John R e w a r d e r , one who recompenses: R3 I, 3, 124. V, 2, 151. lead me to the —s of England here, V, 4, R e - w e r d , 1) to repeat in the same words: bring 7. receive us for barbarous and unnatural —s, Cymb. me to the test, and I the matter will r. Hml. Ill, 4,143. IV, 4, 6. 2) to re-echo: a hill whose concave womb —eiJ a Revel*, vb. 1) to rebel: John III, 1, 257. V, 1, plaintful story, Compl. 1. 8. R2 II, 2, 57. Ill, 2, 100. Ill, 3, 163. H6A 1, 1, 4. R e y n a l d e (Ff Reynoldo) name in Hinl.ll, 1.3. 15.

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R e y n e l d , writing of 0 . Edd. in IT6A I, 1, 94; 2) verses, poetry: Lucr. 524. Sonn 16,4. 17,14 M. Edd. Reignier. 32, 7. 55, 2. 106, 3. 107, 11. Gent. I, 2, 79. Ill, 2 Rhapsedy, a cento: tuck a deed as from the body 69. W i v . V, 5, 95. L L L I, 2, 190. IV, 3, 15. 58. 139 of contraction plucks the very soul, and sweet religion 181. V, 2, 6. 64. 405. Mids. I, 1, 28. As III, 2, 417 makes ar.of words, Hml. Ill, 4, 48. All's IV, 3,263. John IV,2,150. H5 V, 2, 167. Troil B k e i m i (O. Edd. Rheimes or Rhemes) French 111, 2, 181. IV, 4, 22. Bom. 1, 5, 144. Per. Prol. 12 town: Shr. II, 81. H 6 A I, 1, 60. 92. IV Prol. 48. Rhenish, adj. pertaining to the town of Rheims? R h y m e , vb. 1) to use words corresponding in or to the river Rhine? Probably the latter: a deep sound: A d o V, 2,40. A s 111, 2, 101. Caes. IV, 3, 133 glass of R. wine, Merch. I, 2, 104. more difference Hml. Ill, 2, 296. Cymb. V, 3, 55. between your bloods than there is between red wine and 2 ) to maki verges: Gent II, 1, 149. L L L IV, 3. R. Ill, 1,44. Substantively: his draughts of R. Hml. 14. H5 V , 2, 164. 1, 4, 10. a flagon of R. V, 1, 197. R h y m e r , a poetaster: those old nine which —$ Rhesus, a Thracian king who came to the assist- invocate, Sonn. 38,10. scald —s ballad us out o' tune. ance of Troy, but was slaughtered at night by Ulysses Ant. V, 2 , 215. and Diomedes: H6C IT, 2, 20. R l a l t w , that part of Venice where the exchange R h e t o r i c , the science of oratory, the art of speak- was: upon the R. Merch. I, 3, 20. 39. Ill, 1, 1. 48 ing: Sonn. 82, 10. Pilgr. 29. L L L II, 229. Ill, 64. in the R. I , 3, 108. IV, 3, 60. 239. As V, 1, 45. Shr. 1, 1, 35. R i b , subst. 1) a bone forming part of the frame R h e u m , 1) rheumatism, morbid defluxion of of the th'Orax: L L L I, 1, 27 (dainty bits make rich hnmonrs: curse the gout, serpigo, and the r. Meas. Ill, the —s). Merch. II, 2, 114. As I, 2, 136. 147. John 1, 31. is he not stupid with age and altering —sf III, 3, 9 (the fat —s of peace). H 4 A IV, 2, 80 (three Wint. IV, 4, 410. I have a r. in mine eyes, Troil. V, fingers om the —s, i. e. very fat). Troil. I, 3, 177. 3, 105. that year he was troubled with a r. Ant. Ill, Mcb. I, 3, 136. Oth. I, 2, 5. Falstaff called — s by 2, 57. the prince, i. e. a fat rib-piece: H 4 A II, 4, 125; cf 2) humid matter secreted from the eyes, mouth, the similiar names goodman Bones, Chops, Fatguts. or noBe; a) tears: an hour in clamour and a quarter Jackanapes, Pots, Thicklips etc. in r. Ado V, 2,85. why holds thine eye that lamentable 2) thie timber which forms and strengthens the r. Johnlll, 1,22. how now, foolish r. IV,1,33. villany side of a ship: Merch. I, 1, 28. 11,6,18. Oth. II,1,8. is not without such r. IV, 3, 108. the north-east wind 3 ) Figuratively, that which encloses and protect awaked the sleeping r. and so by chance did grace our or snstaims a thing: that is stronger made which was hollow parting with a tear, R2 I, 4, 8. a few drops of before batrred up with —s of iron, Ado IV, 1, 153. thi women's r. Cor. V, 6, 46. threatening the flames with flinty —s of this contemptuous city, John II, 384. gn bisson r. Hml. II, 2, 529. b) saliva: you that did void to the rude —s of that ancient castle, R2 III. 3, 32 your r. upon my beard, Merch. 1,3,118. cf. the valleys V, 5, 20. join you with them like ar. of steel, 1111! II. whose low vassal seat the Alps doth spit and void his 3, 54. cf- Thick-ribbed. r. upon, H5 III, 5, 52. c) moisture from the nose: I R i b , vb. to enclose and protect from injury: •/ guess it stood in her chin, by the salt r. that ran between (lead) weire too gross to r. her cerecloth in the obscure France and it, Err. Ill, 2,131. I have a salt and sorry grave, Merch. II, 7, 51. as Neptune's park, —ed and r. offends me, Oth. Ill, 4, 51. paled in uvith rocks, Cymb. Ill, 1, 19. R h e u m a t i c , affected with rheumatism, causing R i b a l d s but that the busy day, waked by the lark, rheumatism, or pertaining to it: o'erworn, despised, hath rousted the r. crows, Troil. IV, 2, 9 (base, rudely r. and cold, Ven. 135. this raw r. day, Wiv.lll, 1,47. obstrepenous, in contradistinction to the lark?). that r. diseases do abound, Mids. II, 1, 105. R i b a n d , (cf. Ribbon) a long and narrow web ol Misapplied by Mrs Quickly: you are both as r. as silk, worn for ornament: Wiv. IV, 6, 42. Rom. III. two dry toasts, II4B II, 4, 62. but then he was r. and 1, 32. Hnnl. IV, 7, 79. talked of the whore of Babylon, H5 II, 3, 40. R l b a a d r e d , lewd, profligate: yon r. nag of Egypt. R h e u m y , causing rheumatism: tempt the r. and Ant. Ill, HO, 10 (some M. Edd. ribald nag, ribald unpurged air to add unto his sickness, Caes. II, 1,266. hag etc.). R h l n s c e r e s , the animal Rhinoceros: Mcb. Ill, Rlbban, riband (q. v.): L L L 111, 146. Mids. IV. 2, 37. W i n t . IV, 4, 205. 236. 609. 4, 101. R i b - b r e a k i n g , breaking of ribs: As I, 2, 151. R h e d e * , the island of Rhodus: Oth. I, 1, 29. I, Ribs, see Rib subst. 3, 14. 22. 96. 34. Rice, the seed of Oryza sativa: Wint.IV,3,41.42 R h e d e p e , a famous courtezan, who acquired riches enough by her trade to build one of the most Rice a p Themaa, name in R3 IV, 5, 12. beautiful Egyptian pyramids: H6A I, 6, 22. Rich, adj. 1) opnlent, wealthy: Ven. 1150. Sonn Rhubarb, tbe plant Rheum, used as a purgative: 52, 1. 91, 10. Tp. IV, 75. Gent. I, 2, 12. Ill, 1, 64 Mcb. V, 3, 55. Wiv. I, 3, 95. II, 1, 117. Meas. Ill, 1, 25. 36. Ill, 2. R h y m e , subst. 1) correspondence of sound in the 10. Ado II, 3, 32. Ill, 3, 120. 121. IV, 2, 86. L L L terminating words of verses: Ado V, 2, 37. 38. 39. V, 2, 1. Merch. I, 1, 10. II, 2, 130. Wint. Ill, 2. Rom. II, 1, 9. Cymb. V, 3, 63. r. and reason (origi- 171 etc. etc. Used of eyes, = having seen much: t< nally = number and sense) joined: in despite of the have seen much and to have nothing, is to have r. eye• teeth of all r. and reason, Wiv. V, 5, 133 (i. e. quite and poor hands, As IV, 1, 24. a wife whose beauty absurdly). Err. II, 2, 49. neither r. nor reason can did astonrish the survey of —est eyes. All's V, 3, 17 express how much, A s III, 2, 418. cf. Oent. II, 1, 149. With in, — a) enriched by: / as rich in having sueI L L L I, 1, 99. I, 2, 112. H5 V, 2, 164. a jewel, Gent. 11,4,169. most r. in Timon's nod, Tim

R I, 1, 62. r. in his father's honour, Ant. 1, 3, 50. b) having in plenty: sets you most r. in youth before my sight, Sonn. 15, 10. more r. in hope, 29, 5. r. in will, 135, 11. make your garden r. in giUyvors, Wint. IV, 4, 98. V, 1, 214. John II, 491. Troil. I, 3, 30. Rom 1, 1, 221. II, 6, 30. V, 1, 11. Tim. Ill, 5, 109. IV, 2, 29. Cymb V, 5, 384. With with, = a) enriched by: her womb then r. with my young squire, Mids. II, 1,131. b) having in plenty: r. with merchandise, 134. make her chronicle as r. with praise as is the bottom of the sea with sunken wreck, H5 I, 2, 163. 2) abundant,plentiful; copious,luxuriant,fruitful: this r. praise, that you alone are you, Sonn. 84, 2. thy r. leas, Tp. IV, 60. dainty bits make r. the ribs, but bankrupt quite the wits, L L L I, 1, 27. our duty is so r., so infinite, V, 2, 199. in your r. wisdom, 742. your love, to r. within his soul, Mids. Ill, 2, 229. a ship of r. lading, Merch. Ill, 1, 3. r. honesty dwells in a poor house, As V, 4, 62. a goodly dwelling and a r. H4B V, 3, 7. our r. fields, H5 111, 5, 25. the r. stream of lords and ladies, H8 IV, 1, 62. something not worth in me such r. beholding as they have often given, Troil. III, 3, 91. r. conceit taught thee to make vast Neptune weep, Tim. V, 4, 77. your wisdom should show itself more —er, Hml. Ill, 2,317. the r. crop of sea and land, Cymb. I, 6, 33. 3) precious: r. caparisons, Ven. 286. his lips' r. treasure, 552. r. preys make true men thieves, 724. r. gems, Sonn. 21,6. those tears are pearl which thy love sheds, and they are r. and ransom all ill deeds, 34, 14. the r. proud cost of outworn buried age, 64,2. that love is merchandized whose r. esteeming the owner's tongue doth publish every where, 102,3. within be fed, without be r. no more, 146,12. spirits of—est coat, Compl.236. r. garments, Tp. 1,2,164. something r. and strange, 401. most poor matters point to r. ends, III, 1, 4. my r. giß, IV, 1, 8. r. scarf, 82. r. embroidery, Wiv. V, 5, 75. stones whose rates are either r. or poor, Meas.11,2,150. this r. and precious gift, Ado IV, 1, 29. the r. worth of your virginity, Mids. II, 1,219. love's stories written in love's —est book, II, 2, 122. two r. and precious stones, Merch. II, 8, 20. gifts of r. value, II, 9, 91. 'tis the mind that makes the body r. Shr. IV, 3, 174 (i. e. not ornaments), this ring he holds tn most r. choice, All's III, 7, 26. the r. golden shaft, Tw. I, 1, 35. r. jewel, II, 5, 67. a cipher standing in r. place, Wint. I, 2, 7. when the r. blood of kings is set on fire, John II, 351. whose veins bound —er blood than Lady Blanch f 431. the r. advantage of good exercise, IV, 2, 60. so r. advantage of a promised glory, Troil. II, 2, 204. her —est lockram, Cor. II, 1, 225. your r. opinion, Oth. II, 3, 195 (good fame), with admirable r. words, Cymb. II, 3, 19. I am —er than to hang by the walls (like a garment) III, 4, 54. with r. and constant pen, Per. IV Prol. 28 etc. 4) delightful: love-thoughts lie r. when canopied with bowers, Tw. I, 1 , 4 1 (cf. All's I, 2, 49 and Rom. V,3,303). doth think it r. to hear the wooden dialogue and sound 'twixt his stretched footing and the scaffoldage, Troil. I, 3, 154. let r. music's tongue unfold the happiness, Rom. II, 6, 27. R i c h a r d , name of 1) King R. I. Coeur de L i o n : John 1, 90. 253. 274. II, 3. 2) King R II: R2 I, 3, 32 etc. V,6,33 (R. of Bordeaux). H 4 A I , 3 , 1 4 6 etc. 111,2,94. H 4 B I , 1,205. I, 3, 98. 101 etc. H5 IV, 1, 312, 319. H6A II, 5, 71. H6B II, 2, 19. 27. R3

977

III, 3, 12. 3) King R. HI: H6B V, 3, 16. HCC I, 1, 17 etc. R3 I, 1, 52 etc. H8 1, 2, 196. II, 1, 108. 4) R. Earl of Cambridge, son of Edmund of York, executed under Henry V: H5 II Chor. 23. H6A II, 4, 90. II, 5, 84. H6B II, 2, 45. 5) R. Plantagenet, his son, afterwards Duke of York: H6A II, 4, 114. II, 5, 18. 26. Ill, 1, 150 etc. H6B I, 3, 186 etc. H6C I, 1, 83 etc. 6) the second son of Edward IV: R3 III, 1, 96 etc. 7' Sir R. Plantagenet, bastard of Richard I: John I, 162. 185 etc. 8) Sir R. Vernon: H4A V, 2, 1. 9) Sir R. Ketly: H5 IV, 8, 109. 10) Sir R. Grey: H6C III, 2, 2. 11) Sir R. Ratcliff: R3 II, 1, 45 (not in Qq). 111,3,2.12) Imaginary persons: R. Conqueror, Shr. Ind. 1,4 (for William. Sly'sspeech). R.du Champ, Cymb. IV, 2, 377. H l e h - b u l l t , built in a magnificent style: r. Ilion, Lucr. 1524. i n c h e d , enriched: with shadowy forests and with champains r. Lr. I, 1, 65. R l c h - e m h r e l d e r e d , adorned with rich embroidery: H6C II, 5, 44 (O. Edd. without hyphen). R i c h e s , wealth, great store, opulence (from the Fr. richesse): Sonn. 94, 6. Tp. II, 1, 150. Ill, 2, 150. IV, 106. G e n t IV, 1, 13. Wiv. HI, 4, 17. Meas. Ill, 1, 27. 38. Shr. II, 16. H6B IV, 7, 67. R3 IV, 4, 319. H8 II, 3, 35. Troil. Ill, 3, 82. Tim. I, 2, 107. Per. Ill, 2, 28. As a plural noun: since r. point to misery and contempt, Tim. IV, 2, 32. my r. to the earth, from whence they came, Per. I, 1, 52. Often as a singular: for that r. where is my deservingP Sonn. 87, 6. with too much r. it confounds itself, R2 III, 4, 60. that's all the r. I got in his service, H5 II, 3, 46. the r. of the ship is come on shore, Oth. II, 1, 83. r. fineless is as poor as winter, III, 3,173. thy master is not there, who was indeed the r. of it, Cymb. Ill, 4, 73. Personified as a fem.: r. strewed herself even in the streets, Per. 1, 4, 23. B l c h - J e w e l l e d , adorned with precious jewels: H6A I, 6, 25. R i c h - l e f t , inheriting great wealth: Cymb. IV, 2, 226. R i c h l y , 1) with riches, wealthily: a lady r. left, Merch. I, 1, 161 ( = rich-left in Cymb. IV, 2, 226). three of your argosies are r. come to harbour, V, 277. a vessel r. fraught, II, 8, 30. 2) in a costly manner, splendidly: comments of your praise, r. compiled, Sonn. 85, 2. r. suited, All's I, 1, 170. cased as r. Per. V, 1, 112. 3) abundantly, copiously, amply: paid me r. Ado V, 1,255. Ant. IV, 14,37. Cymb. I, 5, 74. r. furnished with plate, Shr. II, .149. whose worth and honesty is r. noted, Wint. V, 3, 145. r. in both, R2 II, 1, 227. see away their shilling r. in two hours, H8 Prol. 13. the poor soldier that so r. fought, Cymb. V, 5, 3. R i c h m o n d , name of an English earldom: John II, 552. Henry Earl of R., afterwards King Henry VII: H6C IV, 6, 67. 93. 100. R3 IV, 1, 43 etc. His mother, the Countess R., married to Lord Stanley: R31, 3, 20. R i d , vb. (partic. rid, impf. not used), 1) to make away with, to dispatch, to destroy: kill me outright with looks and r. my pain, Sonn. 139, 14. the red plague r. you, Tp. I, 2,364. lam the king's friend and will r. his foe, R2 V, 4,11. willingness —s way, H6C V, 3, 21 ( = annihilates), as you have r. this prince, V, 5, 67. 2) With from or o f , = to free, to clear, to deliver:

978

R

to r. us from the /ear, H6B III, 1, 234. R3 IV, 2, 78. IV, 4, 31, = he maintains himself against it, is not to r. her from this second marriage, Bom. V, 3, 241. driven off by it. r. me these villains from your companies, Tim. V, 1, c) to be supported, to lean, to rest, to depend in 104. to r. me of this shame, Lucr. 1031. r. the house moving : if life did r. upon a diats point, H 4 A V, 2, of her, Shr. 1,1,150. till the father r. his hands of her, 84. the axletree on which heaven — » , Troil I, 3, 67; 186. R 2 IT, 325. T, 4, 2. H4B I, 2, 226. A n t II, 6, cf. II, 3, 141. 36. V, 2, 42. f ) to move or drive in a triumphant manner: perPartic. rid, adjectively, with of, = clear of, free mit the basest clouds to r. with ugly rack on his celestial from, having a thing or person off one's hands: Meas. face, Sonn. 33, 5. disdain and scorn r. sparkling in Ill, 1, 174. Ado III, 3, 31. Shr. IV, 2,49. T w . IV, 2, her eyes, A d o III, 1, 51. move these eyest or whether, 73. Wint. Ill, 3, 15. R2 III, 2, 96. H6A IV, 7, 94. — ing on the balls of mine, seem they in motion 1 Merch. B3IV, 1,87. Troil. IV, 5,164. Tim. IV, 3, 323. Caes. Ill, 2, 118. let thy dauntless mind still r. in triumph Ill, 2, 75. Lr. V, 1, 64. Per. IV, 6, 5. r. on'/, Mcb. over all mischance, H6C 111, 3, 18. and there r. on the Ill, 1, 114. Per. IV, 6, 16. Of omitted: this Gloster pants triumphing, A n t IV, 8, 16. cf. Sonn. 80, 10 and should be quickly r. the world, H6B III, 1, 233. L L L IV, 3, 35. Riddance, a getting rid of, deliverance, disencumg ) to have free play, to practise at will : they r. brance: a gentle r. Merch. II, 7, 78. a good r. Troil. up and down on her (the commonwealth) H4A II, I, 90. on whose foolish honesty my practices r. easy, Lr. II, 1, 132. R i d d l e , subst. an enigma: Wiv. I, 1, 209 (the I, 2, 198. Book of—s). Meas. Ill, 2, 242. L L L III, 72. All's 2) trans, a) to sit on, to mount and manage: you V, 3, 304. T w . II, 5, 119. H6C V, 5, 26. R3 IV, 4, may r. us with one soft lciss a thousand furlongs ere 460. Mcb. Ill, 5, 5. Lr, V, 1, 37. to tell a r. = to with spur we heat an acre, Wint. 1,2,94. I will r. thee solve it: Per. Prol. 38. o' nights like the mare, H4B 11,1,83. —s the wild-mare R i d d l e , vb. to speak enigmatically: Mids. II, 2, with the boys, II, 4, 268 ( = plays at see-saw), cf. the 53. H 6 A II, 3, 57. Rom. II, 3, 56. quibbling expressions in Err. II, 2, 202 ; Mids. V, 119 and T w . Ill, 4,319. = to break in (a horse) : the horses R i d d l e - l i k e , like an enigma: All's I, 3, 223. Ride, (impf. rode; partic. rid: Mids. V, 119. Caes. I saw well chosen, ridden and furnished, H8 II, 2, 3. III, 2, 274. rode: H4B V, 3, 98. H5 IV, 3, 2. ridden: = to be supported by, to be mounted on : her levelled W i v . V, 5, 145. H8 II, 2, 3. Rid and rode used in eyes their carriage r., as they did battery to the spheres the active, ridden in the passive voice) 1) intr. a) to intend, Compl. 22. sit on a horse and manage it; to go on horseback: b) to treat at will, to tease, to make a fool o f : am Compl. 106. Meas. I, 2, 164. Ado III, 5, 40. Shr. I ridden with a Welsh goat toot W i v . V, 5, 145 (with Ind. 2, 43. Shr. IV, 1, 69. T w . I, 3, 94. John I, 217. - by), she —s me (like an ass) and / long for grass, R2 I, 3, 251. V, 2, 22. 115. V, 5, 78. 81. H4A I, 2, Err. II, 2, 202. he hath rid his prologue like a rough 141.179. 11,3,103. 11,4,379. 111,3,222. IV, 1,125. coll, Mids. V, 119. I'll r. your horse as well as I r. H4B I, 1, 55. 58. V, 3, 98. 137. V, 5, 21. H5 III, 7, you, T w . Ill, 4, 319. R i d e r , one who rides: Ven. 40. 283. 300. Sonn. 39. 56. 60. IV, 3, 2. IV, 7, 60. H6A IV, 1, 9. H6B 1, 2, 57. 59. IV, 7, 51. 144. R3 III, 2, 85. V, 3, 340. 50, 8. Compl. 107. L L L II, 121 (with a pun; cf. Troil. IV, 4, 144. Rom. V, 3, 77. Tim. I, 2, 218. V, Ride 2b). IV, 2, 131. R2 1, 2, 52. V, 2, 9. H5 111, 7, 2, 9. Caes. Ill, 2, 274. V, 2, 1. 6. Mcb. I, 6, 22. Ill, 24. Cymb. IV, 4, 39. = one who breaks in horses: 1, 19. 24. Lr. 1, 4, 34. 134. Ill, 4, 57. 142. Cymb. they are taught their manage, and to that end —s dearly I, 1, 110. Ill, 2, 69. 72. 73. 78. hired, As I, 1, 14. b ) to be mounted on any thing, to sit astraddle: R i d g e , the top of a long and narrow elevation : to r. on the curled clouds, Tp. I, 2, 191. r. upon their the wild waves, whose —s with the meeting clouds (the surges') backs, II, 1, 115. the devil —s upon a contend, Ven. 820. Lucr. 1439 cf. Enridged). the fiddlestick, H 4 A II, 4, 534. the air whereon they r. frozen —s of the Alps, K2 I, 1, 64. in as high a flow Mcb. IV, 1, 138. as the r. of the gallows, H 4 A I, 2,43. leads filled and c ) to drive (in a carriage): thou shinest in every —s (of roofs) horsed, Cor. II, 1, 227. tear that 1 do weep: no drop but as a coach doth carry R i d i c a t e l i * , 1) worthy of being laughed at: Ven. thee; so —st thou triumphing in my woe, L L L IV,3,35. 988. Tp. II, 2, 169. L L L V, 1, 13. V, 2, 306. 769. that erst did follow thy proud chariot-wheels, when thou As II, 4, 30. Ill, 2, 47. T w . Ill, 4, 40. John 111, 1, didst r. in triumph through the streets, H6B II, 4, 14. 150. IV, 2, 16. H5 IV Chor. 51. H8 I, 3, 3. Troil. I, d) to be borne along in any manner: you leaden 3, 149. Cor. Il, 1, 94. messengers that r. upon the violent speed of fire, All's 2) risible, inclined to laughter: the heaving of my I I I , 2,112. upon my tongues continual slanders r. H4B lungs provokes me to r. smiling, L L L III, 78 (Armado's Ind. 6. the venomed vengeance r. upon our swords, speech), in this spleen r. appears, to check their folly, Troil. V, 3, 47. whose (slanders') breath —s on the passion's solemn tears, V, 2, 117. posting winds, Cymb. HI, 4, 38. Especially = to be R l d i n g - r e b e , a robe to ride in: John I, 217. borne, or to drive, on the sea: whilst he upon your H l d l n g - r e d , a switch: John I, 140. soundless deep doth r. Sonn. 80, 10. anchored in the Rldlng-aalt, a suit to ride in: Cymb. Ill, 2, 78. bay where all men r. 137, 6. a vessel —s fast by, R i f e , prevailing, in fashion(?): there is a brief Wint. IV,4,512. on the western coast —th a puissant how many sports are r. Mids. V, 42 (Ql ripe). navy, R3IV, 4,434. as if the passage and whole carriage R i f l e , vb. to rob, to strip:. Gent. IV, 1, 4. With of this action rode on his tide, Troil. II, 3, 141. seeing of: Lucr. 692. 1050. this goodly vessel r. before us, Per. V, 1, 18. 'gainst R i f t , subst. a fissure, a rent: Tp. I, 2, 277. Ant. whose shore —ing, V, 3, 11. he —s it (a tempest) out, Ill, 4, 32.

R

979

B i r t , vb. 1 ) tr. to cleave, to split: and—td I, 1, 166. IV, 1, 69. Tit. 1,203 etc. do me r. ( = satisfaction by combat) Ado V, 1, 149. now you have Jove's stout oak with his own bolt, Tp. V, 45. 2) intr. to burst, to be split: I'Id shriek, that even done me r. (by drinking after me, pledging me) 11415 V, 3, 76. 77. your ears should r. to hear me, Wint. V, 1, 66. 4) that which is conformable to reason and tmth: Big, to fit with tackling: Tp. 1, 2, 146. V, 224. Nym, thou hast spoke the r. H5 II, 1, 129 (Pistol's Tim. V, 1, 53. Ant. II, 6, 20. Ill, 5, 20. M u l s h , wanton, lewd, unchaste: the holy priests speech), to be in the r. — not to be wrong: Meas. II, I, 100. 167. Shr. IV, 3, 157. Tw. II, 3, 128. R3 V, bless her when she is r. Ant. II, 2, 245. B i g h t , sabst. 1 ) that which is conformable to 3, 275. Hml. I, 5, 126. II, 2, 429. Ant. Ill, 7, 68. justice and natnral or human law: the rough beast Sometimes - to take the right way: thou'rt f the r., that knows no gentle r. Lncr. 545. heaven prosper the girl; more o' that, Meas. II, 2, 129 i = well done I). r. Wiv. Ill, 1, 30; cf. God defend the r. L L L 1, 1, I will beseech the virtuous Desdemona to undertake You are in the r. Oth. II, 3, 339. 216. R2 I, 3, 101. H6B II, 3, 55. Lr. V, 2, 2. hooking for me Bight, adj. 1) accordant to the standard of truth both r. and wrong to the appetite, Meas. II, 4, 176. whom r. and wrong have chose as umpire, L L L I, 1, or to that of justice: it may be r. Meas. V, 86. a r. 169. to do a great r., do a little wrong, Merch. IV, 1, description, L L L V, 2, 522. 'tis r. 572. Cor. II, 1, 262. 216. I should have been a woman by r. As IV, 3, 177. 'tis r.; thus misery doth part the flux of company, As something about, a little from the r. John I, 170. on II, 1, 51. as thy cause is r. R2 I, 3, 55. our most just our actions set the name of r. V, 2, 87. heaven still and r. desires, H4B IV, 2, 40. plain and r. must my guards the r. R2 III, 2, 62. of no r., nor colour like to possession be, IV, 5, 223. shall yield the other in the r. r., he doth Jill fields, H4A III, 2, 100. may 1 with r. opinion, H6AII, 4, 42. be thy title r. or wrong, H6C and conscience make this claimt H5 I, 2, 96. he held I, 1, 159. I am glad your grace has made that r. use the r. H6A II, 4, 38. which they hold by force and not of it, H8 III, 2, 386. when every case in law is r. Lr. by r. H6B II, 2, 30. thou hast prevailed in r. II, 3, 102. III, 2, 85. you might quickly make it r. Oth. IV, 3, 83. 2) not erring, not mistaken: none else to me, nor draw thy sword in r. H6C II, 2, 62. did ever fence the r. Ill, 3, 98. the sorrow that I have by r. is yours, R3 I to none alive, that my steeled sense or changes r. or I, 3, 172 etc. etc. = law: by alt our country's —s in wrong, Sonn. 112, 8 (that may make an impression on me, whether I be guided by truth or misled by Rome maintained, Lncr. 1838. 2) title, just claim: that posterity which by the —s error), the base is r. Shr. Ill, 1, 47. you are r. H4B of time thou needs must have, Ven. 759. thou art the V, 2, 102. you are not r. Cor. II, 3, 54. 3) true, real, not spurious, not only pretended or next of blood, and'tis thy r. 1184. proving their r. Lncr. 67. your true —s be termed a poet's rage, Sonn. supposed: who hath got the r. Annet Wiv. V, 5, 225. 17, 11. my heart (would bar) mine eye the freedom call up the r. master constable, Ado III, 3,178. an it of that r. 46, 4. 14. your own dear-purchased r. 117, be the r. husband and the r. wife, III, 4, 36. thou hast 6. the r. of sepulchres, 68, 6. Phoen 34. Mids. I, 1, frighted the word out of his r. sense, V, 2, 56. choose 92. 105. Merch. 11, 1, 16. Ill, 2, 19. John I, 39. 40. the r. casket, Merch. I, 2, 100. II, 7, 10. II, 9, 12. II, 105. V, 2, 21. H5 I, 2, 16. H6A II, 1, 35. IV, 2, my r. Rosalind, As IV, 1, 109. the r. Vincentio, Shr. 55. H6B I, 1, 244. V, 1, 1. B3 I, 3, 206 etc. With IV, 2, 70. IV, 4, 12. V, 1, 118. read T thy r. wits. So in:you had in him no r. Err. IV, 2, 7. L L L II, 140. I do, but to read his r. wits is to read thus, Tw. V, Mids. Ill, 2, 336. John II, 22. Hml. V, 2, 400. With 305. 306. its r. father, Wint. Ill, 3,46. you stars that of, in the same sense: all my r. of her I do estate unto move in your r. spheres, John V, 7, 74. being in his Demetrius, Mids. I, 1, 97. my treasures and my —s r. wits, H5 IV, 7, 49. 'tis the r. ring, H8 V, 3, 103. of thee, H4A II, 3, 48. in r. of or in the r. of — in I will make thee do thy r. nature, Tim. IV, 3,44. this support of the claim of: John II, 153. 268. 548. Ill, courtesy is not j>f the r. breed, Hml. Ill, 2, 327. put 4, 142. H5 I, 2, 247. H6A 111, 1, 150. Cor. Ill, 3, your bonnet to his r. use, V, 2, 95. 4) truly deserving the name, being exactly what 14. In the same sense: upon the r. and party of her the word implies: and r. perfection wrongfully disson, John I, 34. upon the r. of him it holds, II, 237. 3) that which is due to a person or thing: to wrong graced, Sonn. 66, 7. thou hast the r. arched beauty of the wronger till he render r. Lucr. 943 (make satis- the brow that becomes the ship-tire, Wiv. Ill, 3, 59. faction). for thy r. myself will bear all wrong, Sonn. they sparkle still the r. Promethean fire, L L L IV, 3, 88, 14. lest the requiem lack his*r. Phoen. 16. it is 351. I am a r. maid for my cowardice, Mids. Ill, 2, the r. of it, it must be so, Meas. HI, 2, 61. 'tis his r. 302. how many things by season seasoned are to their 71. give her the r. you should have given her cousin, r. praise and true perfection, Merch. V, 108. it is the Ado V, 1, 300. to see like r. bereft, Err. II, 1, 40. la- r. butterwomen's rank to market, As III, 2, 103. that's mentation is the r. of the dead, All's I, 1, 64. if justice the r. virtue of the medlar, 127. I answer you r. painthad her r. R2 II, 1, 227. shall we divide our r. ac- ed cloth, 290. awful rule and r. supremacy, Shr. V, 2, cording to our threefold order ta'enl H4A III, 1, 70. 109. this is the r. fencing grace, H4B II, 1, 206. being let me have r., and let desert ratiinf, B4B IV, 3, 60. r. the r. idea of your father, R3 HI, 7, 13. like a r. gipsy, for r. hath dimmed your infant morn to aged night, R3 Ant. IV, 12, 28. IV, 4, 15 etc. to do a person r. = to gire him his 5) not left, but on the other side: r. hand, Ven. due, to do him justice, to satisfy him: this helpless 158. Gent. V, 4, 67. Ado I, 3, 51. Merch. II, 2,42. smoke of words doth me no r. Lucr. 1027. do him r. As IV, 3, 81. Wint. IV, 4, 856. John II, 236. H6C II, Meas. II, 2, 103. do me the common r. to let me see 1, 152. II, 6, 80. Caes. V, 1, 18 etc. this the cranny them, II, 3, 5. Err. IV, 2, 8. Ado I, 1, 246. As II, 7, is, r. and sinister, Mids. V, 164. his r. cheek, All's IV 84. All's II, 3, 167. IV, 2, 17. Tw. V, 317. John II, 5, 103. Cymb. IV, 2, 211. on his r. side, H6C III. 1, 18. Ill, 1, 185. R2 II, 3, 138. H6A 111, 1, 154. H6C 44. his r. arm, Tim. 111. fi. 78

980 B i g h t , adv. 1) in a straight line, directly: sometimes they do extend their view r. on, Compl. 26. if (your nose) stands too r. L L L V, 2, 568 (Alexander used to hold his head inclined to the left side). I only speak r. on, Caes. Ill, 2, 227. 2) truly, correctly, not erroneously: you say not r., old man, Ado V, 1, 73. I could teach you how to choose r. Merch. 111,2, 11. then think you r.: I am not what I am, T w . Ill, 1, 153. he is not his crafts master, he doth not do it r. H4B 111, 2, 298. 'tis r. Cor. II, 1, 252. you say r., sir, Hml. II, 2, 406. thou hast spoken r. LT. V , 3 , 1 7 3 . Elliptically: r., sir, Err. Ill, 1, 39. Meas. V, 85. Ado V, 1, 163. As 111, 3, 54. Shr. V, 2, 31. All's II, 3, 15. B2 II, 1, 145. Tit. IV, 2,24. Rom. II, 4 , 6 3 . Tim. 1,1,195. Hml. I, 5, 126 etc. 3) not wrongly, not with a false aim, in order and to the purpose: when once our grace we have forgot, nothing goes r. Meas. IV, 4, 37. that it {a clock) may still go r. L L L III, 195. I then do most go r. Wint. IV, 3, 18. if all things fall out r. H6A II, 3, 4. I know a way, if it take r., in spite of fortune will bring me off again, H8 HI, 2, 219. ever r. Cor. II, 1, 208 ( = ever the nail hit on the head). I hit it r. Rom. II, 3 , 4 1 . this hits r. Tim. Ill, 1, 6. that ever 1 was born to set it r. Hml. I, 5, 189. it fails r. IV, 7, 71. 4) exactly, just: here begins his morning story r. Err. V, 356. I will tell you every thing, r. as it fell out, Mids. IV, 2, 31. came he r. now to sing a raven's note, H6B III, 2, 40. he is kind. R. as snow in harvest, R3 I, 4, 248. 'tis Nestor r. Troil. I, 3, 170. 5) in a manner deserving the name: I'll smoke your skin-coat, an 1 catch you r. John II, 139 (according to my wish; so that I would call it catching indeed). there is no tongue hath power to curse him r. III, 1, 183. I do see the cruel pavgs of death r. in thine eye, V, 4, 60 (German: ich sehe recht die Todesqual in deinem Auge). if thou tellest the heavy story r., the hearers will shed tears, H6C I, 4, 160. With out: and be a boy r. out, Tp. IV, 101. 6) Before adjectives and adverbs, = highly, very, most: to the r. honorable, Ven. Ded. Lucr. Ded. shall will in others seem r. gracious, Sonn. 135, 7. in things r. true my heart and eyes have erred, 137, 13. the better angel is a man r. fair, 144, 3. I am r. glad that he's so out of hope, Tp. Ill, 3,11. O plague r. well prevented, Ado III, 2, 136. and buy it with your goldr. suddenly, As II, 4, 100. Ado I, 1, 84. L L L V, 2, 879. Merch. II, 5, 16. As II, 7, 198. Shr. IV, 4, 40. Tw. V, 271. John I, 15. R2 II, 1, 120. H5 IV Chor. 51. V, 2, 9. H6A IV, 6, 23. H6C II, 1, 10. II, 5, 99. Ill, 2, 18. R3 I, 2, 245. Ill, 7, 61. 103. IV, 1, 15. Troil. Ill, 3, 21. V, 2, 39. Rom. I, 1, 124. 212. Mcb. Ill, 6, 5 (M. Edd. right-valiant). Lr. I, 1, 99. Oth. II, 3, 25. Cymb. II, 4, 135 etc. B i g h t , vb. (used only in the inf.) to do justicc to, to vindicate, to avenge: being judge in love, she cannot r. her cause, Ven. 220. knights, by their oaths, should r. poor ladies' harms, Lucr. 1694. how much might the man deserve of me that would r. her, Ado IV, 1, 264 if he could r. himself with quarrelling, V, 1, 51. I will r. myself like a soldier, LLL V, 2, 734. you scarce can r. me throughly then to say you did mistake, Wint. II, 1, 99. whom the king hath wronged, whom conscience and my kindred bids to r. R2 II, 2, 115. here's to r. our gentle-hearted king, H6C I, 4, 176. so just is God, to r. the innocent, R3 I, 3, 182. your mother's hand shall

R r. your mother's wrong, T i t II, 3, 121. swear unto my soul to r. your wrongs, III, 1, 279. to join with him and r. his heinous wrongs, V, 2, 4. B i g h t - d r a w n , drawn in a just cause: what my tongue speaks my r. sword may prove, R2 I, 1, 46. B i g h t c a n * , 1) just: this shall ye do, so help you r. God, H6A IV, 1, 8. Rome and the r. heavens be my judge, Tit. 1,426. let me be recorded by the r. gods, Tim. IV, 2, 4. 2) lawful, loyal, upright: I love your daughter in such a r. fashion, Wiv. Ill, 4, 83. they should be good men, their affairs as r. H8 III, 1, 22. seal with a r. kiss a dateless bargain, Rom. V, 3, 114. R i g h t e o u s l y , uprightly, honestly, genuinely: if the truth of thy love to me were so r. tempered as mine is to thee, As 1, 2, 14. R i g h t f u l , 1) just: no r. plea might plead for justice there, Lucr. 1649. most r. judge, Merch. IV, 1, 301. whose r. cause prevails, H6B 11, 1, 205. 2) lawful, legitimate: for the deposing of a r. king, R2 V, 1, 50. to put forth my r. hand in a well-hallowed cause, H5 I, 2, 293. to plant the r. heir, H6A II, 5, 80. IV, 1, 60. H6B I, 3, 30. 187. II, 2, 24. 61. IV, 2, 139. V, 1, 178. R i g h t f u l l y , lawfully, legitimately: which 1'gainst all the world will r. maintain, H4B IV, 5, 225. B i g h t - h a n d f i l e , the Tory party, the aristocrats: Cor. II, 1, 26. R i g h t l y , 1 ) straightly, directly, in front: perspectives , which r. gazed upon show nothing but concision, R2 II, 2, 18. 2) correctly, fitly, not erroneously: the hardest voice of her behaviour, to be Englished r. Wiv. I, 3, 52. r. reasoned, Ado V, 1, 229. will never be chosen by any r. Merch. I, 2, 35. if I heard you r. As V, 4, 186. no Christian soul that means to be saved by believing r. Tw. Ill, 2, 76. choler, my lord, if r. taken, H4A II, 4, 356. 357. I am assured, if I be measured r., your majesty hath no just cause to hate me, H-tB V, 2, 65. thy name is Gaullier, being r. sounded, HGB IV, 1, 37. few men r. temper with the stars, H6C IV, 6, 29. he tells you r. H8 III, 1, 97. that justly thinkest and hast most r. said, Lr. I, 1, 186. my parts, my title and my perfect soul shall manifest me r. Oth. I, 2, 32. 3) truly, really: they r. do inherit heaven's graces, Sonn. 94, 5. he it was that might r. say, Veni, vidi, vici, L L L IV, 1, 68. one who shall r. love, Merch. I, 2, 36. this thorn dofh to our rose of youth r. belong, All's I, 3, 136. you may be r. just, whatever I shall think, Mcb. IV, 3, 30. r. to be great, Hml. IV, 4, 53. transform you frontwhat you r. are, Lr, 1, 4, 243. thou hast been r. honest, Ant. IV, 2, 11. 4) exactly: digest things r. touching the weal o' the common, Cor. 1, 1, 154. if you consider r. of the matter, Caes. Ill, 2, 114. to-morrow I shall be furnished to inform you r. Ant. I, 4, 77. that I was shipped at sea, I well remember, but whether there delivered, I cannot r. say, Per. Ill, 4, 8. Rlgol, a circle: about the mourning and congealed face of that black blood a watery r. goes, Lucr. 1745. this golden r. (the crown) H4B IV, 5, 36. R l g a r a m , relentless: Err. I, 1 , 9 . Merch. IV, 1, 8. Cor. Ill, 1, 267. B l g a r o i u l y , relentlessly: H6A V, 4, 52. R i g o u r , relentless severity, hard - heartedness, cruelty: her best work is ruined with thy r. Ven. 954.

R in Ajax' eyes blunt rage and r. rolled, Lucr. 1398. thou canst not then use r. in my gaol, Sona. 133, 12. follows close the r. of the statute, Mens. I, 4, 67. 'tis r. and not law, Wint. Ill, 2, 115. r. of tempestuous gusts, H 6 A V, 5, 5. let him have all the r. of the lam, I I 6 B 1, 3, 199. fear of Clifford's r. who thunder* to his captives blood and death, H6C II, 1,126. let my life be sacrificed un to the r. of severest law, Bom. V, 3, 269. whom the r. of our state forced to cry out, L r . V, 1, 22. R i m , the abdomen: I will fetch thy r. out at thy throat, H5 IT, 4, 15 (Pistol's speech. O. Edd. rymme). R l n a U e , name in All's III, 4, 19. 29. the skin of vegetables, bark, hask: A s III, 2, 115. Rom. II, 3, 23. B l n g , snbst. a circle: liketothe Garter's compass, in a r. W i v . V, 5, 70. I'U fear no other thing so sore as keeping safe Nerissa's r. Merch. V,307 (quibbling). ere twice the horses of the tun shall bring their fiery torcher his diurnal r. All's II, 1, 165. when that a r. of Greeks have hemmed thee in, Troil.IV,5,193. make a r. about the corpse, Caes. Ill, 2, 162. 168. like elves and fairies in a r. Mcb. IV, 1, 42. my father with his bleeding —s (the sockets of the e y e s ) , their precious stones new lost, Lr. V, 3, 189. pray God, your voice, like a piece of uncurrent gold, be not cracked within the r. Hml. II, 2, 448. Especially the gold ornament w o m on the fingers: Compl. 6. 45. Gent. IV, 4, 76. 90. 102. 136. 141. V, 4, 89. W i v . Ill, 4, 104. Err. IV, 3, 69. 84. 96 etc. L L L V, 2, 616. Mids. I, 1, 33. Merch. Ill, 1, 123. Ill, 2, 173. 185. IV, 1, 427 etc. A s III, 2, 289. Shr. Ind. 1, 38. II, 325. IV, 3, 55. All's HI, 2, 59 etc. T w . I, 5, 320 etc. Wint. V, 2, 71. B2 11,2,92. H 4 A III, 3, 162. R3 I, 2, 202. 204. H8 V, 1, 151 etc. T i t . II, 3, 227. Rom. Ill, 2, 142 etc. Hml. Ill, 2, 162. L r . III, 1, 47. Cymb. I, 4, 98 etc. Per. V, 3,39. Proverb: he that runs fastest gets the r. Shr. 1,1, 145 (a ring being one of the prizes given in running and wrestling matches). R i n g , vb. to encircle ( c f . Enring): and r. these fingers with thy household worms, John III, 4, 31. — e d about with bold adversity, H 6 A IV, 4, 14. H l n f , vb. (impf. and partic. rung), 1 ) intr. to sound: this dismal cry — s sadly in her ear, Ven. 889. thy old groans r. yet in mine ancient ears, Rom. II, 3, 74. Dsed especially of the sound of metal, and more especially of bells: L u c r 1494. Pilgr. 326. Meas. IV, 2, 78. Err. IV, 2, 51. A d o V, 2, 81. H4B IV, 5, 112. H 6 A I, 6, 11 (r. out). H6B V, 1, 3. Rom. IV, 4, 4. 2 ) trans, to cause to sound: r. a hunter's peal, T i t . II, 2, 5. 14. Especially applied to bells; absol.: with —in^ in the king's affairs upon his coronation-day, H4B III, 2, 194. thy friends shall r. for thee, 198. With a superfluous it: I'U r. it, Shr. I, 2, 16 (punning upon wring). With an accus., denoting a ) the bell set in motion: John II, 312. H 6 A III, 2, 16. Mcb. II, 3, 79. 85. V, 5, 51. Oth. II, 3, 160. b ) the sound produced: then little strength —s out the doleful knell, Lucr. 1495. my wether's bell —s doleful knell, P i l g r . 272. Tp. I, 2, 402. Merch. Ill, 2, 70. H8 II, 1, 32. hath rung night's yawning peal, Mcb. Ill, 2, 43. c ) the cause of sounding: the Dauphin's drum, a warning bell, sings heavy music, and mine shall r. thy dire departure out, H 6 A IV, 2, 41. no mournful bell shall r. her burial, Tit. V, 3, 197.

981

• I n c - c a i x l e r , a go-between: A l l ' s III, 5, 95. • l a g e r , writing of O. Edd. in W i v . 1,2,5 (Evans' speech); M . Edd. wringer. Ringleader, the head of a factious body: H 6 B II, 1, 170. R i n g l e t * , small circles: Tp. V, 37. Mids. II, 1, 86. R i n g - t i m e , the time of exchanging rings, o f making love: in the spring time, the only pretty r. A s V, 3, 20 ( O . Edd. rang time). R l n g w e e i , name of a dog: like Sir Actaeon he, with R. at thy heels, W i v . U, 1, 122. R i n s e , to cleanse with water: like a glass did break f the —ing, H8 I, 1, 167 ( O . Edd. wrenching). R l e t , 1 ) tumultuous disturbance of the peace: the council shall hear it, it is a r. W i v . 1, 1, 35. 36. 37. 39. on the marriage-bed of smiling peace, to march a bloody host and make a r. on the gentle brow of true sincerity, John III, 1, 247. my care could not withhold thy - s, H4B IV, 5, 135. breaking forth in rank and not to be endured — s , Lr. I, 4, 223. II, 4,145. 2 ) revel, wild and loose feasting, dissoluteness: Ven. 1147. Sonn. 41, 11. W i v . Ill, 4, 8. Mids. V, 48. B2 II, 1, 33. H 4 A I, 1, 85. H4B IV, 4, 62. IV, 5, 136. V, 5, 66. H5 I, 1, 56. T i m . II, 2, 3. IV, 1, 28. IV, 3, 256. Per. I, 4, 54. R l a t e r , one given to excessive feasting, a reveller: T i m . Ill, 5, 68. M a t i n g , revelling: Ant. II, 2, 72. B l a t a n s , 1) tumultuous, seditious: his r. youth, with dangerous sense, might have ta'en revenge, Meas. IV, 4, 32. shall it charm thy r. tongue, H6B IV, 1, 64. slew a r. gentleman, R 3 II, 1, 100. Laertes, in a r. head, o'er bears your officers, Hml. IV, 5, 101. his knights grow r. Lr. I, 3, 6. 2 ) dissolute: Tim. II, 2, 168. Lr.1,4,265. II, 1,96. 3) excessive, knowing no restraint: goes to it with a more r. appetite, L r . IV, 6, 125. r. madness, to be entangled with those mouth-made vows, Ant. I, 3, 29. R i p , 1) to cut open: to know our enemies' minds, we'ld r. their hearts, Lr. IV, 6, 265. I must be —ed (like a garment1 Cymb. Ill, 4, 55. I'U r. thy heart to find it, 111, 5, 86. With up: —ing up the womb of your dear mother England, John V, 2, 152. 2 ) to take out by cutting: Macduff was from his mothers womb untimely —ed, Mcb. V, 8, 16. Cymb. V, 4, 45. R i p e , adj. brought to perfection in growth, mature: Sonn. I, 3. L L L IV, 2, 4. Mids. II, 2, 117. A s III, 2, 127. IV, 3, 88. R2 II, 1, 153. H5 III, 6, 130. Cor. Ill, 2, 79. V, 4, 18. Oth. II, 3, 383. Used of lips ( = full and red): Mids. Ill, 2, 139. AB 111, 5, 121. L r . IV, 3, 22. Figurative use: Sonn. 86, 3. 102, 8. T p . V, 279 (reeling r. = in a state of intoxication sufficiently advanced for reeling). Qent. II, 4, 70. W i v . IV, 6, 43. Mids. V, 42 (how many sports are r., i. e. in due preparation; Qa F f rife). Merch. I, 3, 64 (the r. wants of my friend, i. e. arrived at a point where they must be supplied). As V, 1, 22. T w . V, 132 (my thoughts are r. in mischief). 157. Wint. I, 2, 332 (without r. moving to it). John IV, 2, 79. R 2 I, 2, 7. II, 2, 10. H 4 A I, 3, 294. H4B IV, 5, 97. H5 I, 2, 121. R 3 I, 3, 219. Ill, 7, 158 (as my r. revenue and due of birth). H8 IV, 2, 51. Troil. V, 5, 24. Cor. IV, 3, 23. Rom. I, 2, 11. Tim. IV, 1, 23. Caes. IV, 3, 215. Mcb. IV, 3, 238. Hml. IV, 7, 65. Per. Prol. 12. IV Prol. 17. cf. Sinking-ripe.

982

R

R i p e , vb. 1) tr. to make ripe, to mature: no sun a holy prophetess new —n up, H6A I, 4, 102. early to r. the bloom, John 11,472. to r. his growing fortunes, to-morrow will we r., and hence, Caes. IV, 3, 230. till the wood of Birnam r. Mcb. IV, 1, 98. Applied to a H 4 B IV, 1, 13. 2) to grow ripe, to be matured: so I, being young, beginning tempest: now begins a second storm to r. till now r. not to reason, Mids. II, 2, 118. stay the very H6C 111, 3, 47. To the sun appearing above the hori—ing of tie tune, Merch. II, 8, 40. we r. and r. As zon: Wint. IV, 4, 105. Troil. I, 2, 8. V, 10, 25. Tit. V, 2, 56. Figuratively: their ——ing senses begin to II, 7, 26. H l p e l y , pressirgly, urgently (the time being fully chase the ignorant fumes ( a s the sun does vapours) ripe): it Jits us therefore r. our chariots and our horse- Tp. V, 66. shall see us —ing in our throne, the east, B2 III, 2, 50. cf H5 I, 2, 278. men be m readiness, Cymb. Ill, 5, 22. 3) to increase: the humour —s, Wiv. I, 3, 63. since BIpcM, 1) trans, to make ripe, to mature; absol.: summer's—ing breath. Bom. II, 2, 121. With a n o b j . : the price of oats rose, I14A II, 1, 14. our griefs arc R2 II, 3, 43. T i t 1, 227. Partic. — ed: Meas. V, 116. —n to the top, Per. II, 4, 23. 4) to thrive, to be promoted, to become great: Ado III, 1, 8. H6A II, 4, 99. R3 II, 3, 14. 2) intr. to grow ripe, to be matured: R2 II, 3, 48. some r. by sin, Meas. II, 1, 38. it shall strew the footH4B IT, 2,12. H51,1,61. H8 III, 2,357. Ant. II, 7,103. steps of my —ing, John I, 216. that r. thus nimbly by R i p e n e s s , maturity: H8 V, 5, 21. r. is all, Lr. a true king's fall, B2 IV, 318. fearing he would r. H8 II, 2, 128. found thee a way to r. in, III, 2, 438. (the V, 2, 11 (cf. the readiness is all, Hml. V, 2, 234). university of Oxford) so excellent in art and still so R i p e - r e d , ripe and red: Ven, 1103. R i t e , subst. the appearance of the sun in the —ing, IV, 2, 62. who's like to r. Cor. I, 1, 196. the morning, the beginning of day: the morning r. doth younger —s, when the old doth fall, Lr. Ill, 3, 26. cite each moving sense from idle rest, Filgr. 194. from whose fortunes shall r. higher, Ant. II, 3, 16. this day I II r. Per. II, 1, 172. the r. to set, H5 IT, 1, 289. 5) to get up for action, to be ready for combat: RIM, vb. (impf. rose; partic. risen) 1) to ascend, to mount from a lower to a higher place: round —ing that, if it chance the one of us do fail, the other yet hillocks, Ven. 237; cf. meet with me upon the —ing may r. against their force, H6A II, 1, 52. the scattered of the mountain-foot, Gent. V, 2, 46. flesh, —ing at foe that hopes to r. again, H6C II, 6, 93. Especially thy name, Sonn. 151, 9. (choughs) —ing and cawing = to rebel: H4B I, 1, 204. H6B III, 1, 240. H6C at the gun's report, Mids. Ill, 2, 22. r.from the ground I, I, 141. I, 2, 41. 45. Cor. I, I, 48. Caes. HI, 2, 21. like feathered Mercury, H4A IT, 1, 106. I will r. 234. Mcb. IV, 1, 97. With up: H6B IV, 1, 93. R i t e , solemn observance, ceremony: Tp. IT, 1, there with so full a glory (like the sun) H5 I, 2, 278. from the —ing of the lark to the lodging of the lamb, 17. Ado II, 1, 373. T, 4, 68. Mids. IT, 1, 138 (O.Edd. III, 7, 34. he —s on the toe / and r. of the fair state, Hml. Ill, 1,160. takes off the ir. from the fair forehead of an innocent love, III, 4 , 4 2 . . he wears the r. of youth upon him, Ant. III, 13, 20 (cf.. W i n t . IV, 4, 115). Fond compellation: save thou, my • r. Sonn. 109, 14. my sweet R., my dear R. As I, 2, 214. O r. of May, dear maid, Hml. IV, 5, 157. cf. R2 W , 1, 8 and H 4 A I, 3, 175. Name of aa house: the duke being at the R., within the parish Saiint Lawrence Poultney, H8 I, 2, 152. • • a e - c h e e e k e d , having red cheeks: Ven. 3. Tim. IV, 3, 86. B a a e d , crrimsoned, red: a maid yet r. over with the virgin crimsom of modesty, H5 V, 2, 323. thy r. lips, Tit. II, 4, 24.. R*se-llpH>ed, having red lips: Oth. IV, 2, 63. • • • e m a r r y , the plant Rosmarinus: Lr. II, 3, 16. my dish of chaastity with r. and bays, Per. IV, 6, 160 ("Anciently imany dishes were served up with this garniture, durring the season of Christmas". Steevens). Symbol of remnembrance, particularly used at weddings and funerals: for you there's r. and rue, ... grace and

R

987

remembrance be to you both, Wint. IV, 4, 74. doth not Bete; by r. = by heart, by memory, without r. and Romeo begin both with a letter'! Bom. 11,4,219. book: rehearse your song by r. Mids. V, 404. they the hath the prettiest sententious of it, of you and r. will learn you by r. where services were done, H5 111, 226. stick your r. on this fair corse, IV, 5, 79. there's 6, 75. thy love did read by r. and could not spell, Bom. r., that's for remembrance, Hml. IV, 5, 175. II, 3, 88 (consisted of phrases learned by heart, but H a t e n e r a n t x , (Ff Rosincrance or Rosincrane, knew nothing of the true characters of love), conned Qq Rosencraus), name in Hml. II, 2, 1. 33. 34. 229. by r. Caes. IV, 3, 98. IV, 6, 28. V, 2, 56. 382. B a t e d , learned by heart, not coming from the H « i e - m t e r , water distilled from roses: Shr. Ind. heart: nor by the matter which your heart prompts you, 1, 56. but with such words that are but r. in your tongue, Cor. • • M e , name: B211,2,54. II, 3,10. Mcb. I, 2,45. III, 2, 55 ( 0 . Edd. roated, some M. Edd. rooted). • • M i l l , name in H4A I, 2, 182; M. Edd. Peto. • e t h e r , an ox; only by conjecture in Tim. IV, 3, B e a r , resembling a rose, blooming, red: Lncr. 12 j O. Edd. brother's. 386. Sonn. 116, 9. Cymb. II, 5, 11. V, 5, 121. B e t t e a , see Rot. Bet, subst. putrefaction: I will not kiss thee; then Bettemseas, putrefaction: John III, 4,26. Cymb. the r. returns to thine own lips again, Tim. IV, 3, 64. 1, 6, 125. Bet, vb. (impf. not used; partic. ed: Lncr. 823. B e t a n d l t y , roundness, spherical form: Lr. Ill, Mids. II, 1,95. Tit IV,4,93. ordinarily rotten) l ) t r . 2, 7. to make pntrid, to bring to corruption: I would my Bemen (O. Edd. Roan), town in Normandy: H5 tongue could r. them (your hands) o f f , Tim. IV, 3, 370. III, 5, 54. 64. H6A I, 1, 65. Ill, 2,1. 11. 17. 19. 27. Befl. = to become pntrid: the fat weed that —s itself 91. 124 (fern.). 133. Ill, 3, 2. in ease on Lethe wharf, Hml. 1, 5, 33 (Qq roots), like B e u g e m e a t , name of the castle of Exeter: B3 to a vagabond flag upon a stream, goes to and back to IV, 2, 108. r. itself with motion, Ant. 1,4, 47. = to confound, to B e n c h , 1) rugged, not smooth: r. uneven ways, destroy in general: the other (a sheep) —ed with deli- B2 n, 3, 4. r. cradle, B3 IV, 1,101. r. quarries, Oth. cious food (honey-stalks) Tit. IV, 4, 93. vengeance r. I, 3, 141. = thorny: brakes obscure and r. Ven. 237. you all, Tit. V, 1, 58. the south-fog r. him, Cymb. II, r. thistles, H5 V, 2, 52. the r. brake that virtue must 3, 136. go through, H8I,2,75. = hairy, shaggy : till new-born Partic. —en = a) pntrid, corrupted, decayed: chins be r. Tp. II, 1,250. thou wantest a r. posh, Wint. —en death, Lucr. 1767. when I in earth am —en. I, 2, 128. you are r. and hairy, IV, 4, 744. his beard Sonn. 81, 2. a —en carcass of a butt, Tp. I, 2, 146. made r. and rugged, H6B III, 2, 175. Figuratively: —en lungs, II, 1, 47. a jealous - en bell-wether, Wiv. beauty's princely majesty is such, confounds the tongue III, 5, 111. Meas. IV, 3, 184. Ado IV, 1, 33. LLL V, and makes the senses r. H6A V, 3, 71 (disturbs them 2, 666. Merch. I, 3, 102. As III, 2, 126. Shr. 1,1,139. like a troubled water, ruffles them). All's IV, 3, 189. Wint. II, 3, 89. Ill, 3, 82. John II, 2) harsh and grating to the senses: r. winter, Lucr. 456. H5 III, 7,155. II6C I, 3, 28. R3IV, 4, 2. Troil. 1255. r. winds do shake the buds of May, Sonn. 18,3. V, 1,21. Bom.V,3,47. Cor.V,6, 96(—ene.VJfc). Hml.V, make r. winter, Gent. II, 4, 163. r. weather, As II, 5, I, 180. Lr. V, 3, 285. Ant. Ill, 7, 63. Per. IV, 2, 9. 8. a lullaby too r. Wint. Ill, 3,55. we shall be winnowed Used of unwholesome vapours: —en damps, Lucr. with sor. a wind, H4B IV, 1, 194. H6C V, 4, 22. that 778. their —en smoke, Sonn. 34, 4. —en dews, Cor. r. touch, Bom. I, 5,98. time and the hour runs through II, 3, 35. reek o' the —en fens, III, 3, 121. —en the —est day, Mcb. 1, 3, 147. 'twas a r. night, II, 3, humidity, Tim.IV,3,2. b) unsound, corrupt, perverse: 66. the tyranny of the open night's too r. for nature to —en parchment bonds, B2 II, 1, 64. base and—en endure, Lr. Ill, 4, 2. the r. seams of the waters, Per. policy, H4Ai,3,108. a —en case abides no handling, II, 1, 155. —- grating to the taste, soar, bitter: thy H4B IV, 1, 161. the unguided days and —en times palate then did deign the —est berry, Ant. 1,4, 64. to that you shall look upon, IV, 4, 60. to raze out —en the ear : the r. and woeful music that we have, cause it opinion who hath writ me down after my seeming, V, 2, to sound, Per. Ill, 2, 88 (?). 128. their —en privilege and custom, Cor. I, 10, 23. 3) harsh, not soft and gentle, but ragged of temper hence, —en thing, III, 1, 179. something is —en in the and manners: this r. magic I here abjure, Tp. V, 50. state of Denmark, Hml. I, 4, 90. ill-favoured r. things, Wiv. I, 1, 311. she's too r. for 2) intr. to be decomposed and corrupted, to putrify: me, Shr. I, 1, 55. 1, 2, 73. I am r. and woo not like a to lie in cold obstruction and to r. Meas. Ill, 1, 119. babe, II, 138. 245. in these parts, which to a stranger the green corn hath —ed ere his youth attained a beard, often prove r. and unhospitable, Tw. Ill, 3, 11. the Mids. II, 1, 95. festered members r. but by degrees, grappling vigour and r. frown of war, John III, 1,104. H6A III, 1, 192. Troil. II, 3, 130. Hml. V, 1, 179. what need you be so boisterous r. IV, 1,76. r. chastiseLr. V, 2, 8. Cymb. IV, 2, 246. Used in cursing: go r. ment, B2 I, 1, 106. so r. a course to come by her own, Wint. I, 2, 324. may my hands r. o f f , B2 IV, 49. thy H4B II, 1, 89. in robustious and r. coming on, H5 III, lips r. o f f , Tim. IV, 3, 63. let her r. and perish, Oth. 7, 159. our tongue is r. V, 2, 313. Suffolk's imperial IV, 1, 191. may his pernicious soul r. half a grain a tongue is stern and r. H6B IV, 1, 121. be not too r. in day, V, 3, 156. their tongues r. A n t III, 7, 16. terms, IV, 9, 44. you have been too r. Cor. Ill, 2, 25. Applied to plants, = to fade, to wither: flowers his nature, never known before but to be r., unswayable r. and consume themselves in little time, Ven. 132. the and free, V, 6, 26. do not take his —er accents for branches of another root are —ed, Lucr. 823. shall malicious sounds, 111,3, 55. my so r. usage, Cymb. IV, thy love-springs r.f Err. Ill, 2, 3. thou prunest a —en 1,22. Adverbially: so I did (reprehend, him). Ay, but tree, As II, 3, 63. from hour to hour we ripe and ripe, not r. enough, Err. V, 58. and then, from hour to hour, we r. and r. II, 7, 27. 4) not mild and peaceful, bnt stern and requiring

988

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• • a n d , subst. 1) a circle: fairest mover on this energy and severity: had a —er task in hand, Ado I, 1, 301. give even way unto my r. affairs, H4B 11,3,2. mortal r. Ven. 368. turn the giddy r. of Fortune's wheel, Lucr. 952. with —s of waxen tapers on their enforced by the r. torrent of occasion, IV, 1, 72. 5) kard, unfeeling, cruel: the r. beast that knows heads, Wiv. IV, 4, 50. the golden r. (the crown) Mcb. no genie right, Lucr. 545. a fiend, a fury, pitiless and 1, 5, 29. wears upon his baby-brow the r. and top o/ r. Err. IV, 2, 35. brassy bosoms and r. hearts of flint, sovereignty, IV, 1, 88. 2) performance in a circle: I'll lead you about a Merch. IV, 1, 31. the fleshed soldier, r. and hard of heart, H5 111, 3, 11. r. deeds of rage, H6A IV, 7, 8. r. Mids. Ill, 1, 109. = a dance in a circle: if you stern, tbdurate, flinty, r., remorseless, H6C I, 4, 142. will patiently dance in our r. Mids. II, 1, 140. while Ven. 854. Mida. V, 225. As 1, 2, 253. All's V, 3, 107. you perform your antic r. Mcb. IV, 1, 130. Csed of a Tw. Ill, 4, 124. B2 111, 2, 54. H6C 1,4, 27. II, 1,63. curveting horse: what —s, what bounds, what course, Rom. 1, 1, 176. I, 4, 25. 27. Tim. IV, 3, 446. Lr. I, what stop he makes, Compl. 109. 3) the step of a ladder: when he once attains the 2, 142. Per. II, 1, 137. II, 3, 84. Ill, 2, 79. 6) «npolished, rude, gross, coarse: their r. carriage upmost r. Caes. II, 1, 24. • • a n d , adv. 1) circularly; a) turning on the axis: so riditulous, L L L V, 2, 306. if it be not too r. for some, Wint. IV, 4, 337. those r. rug-headed kerns, he that is giddy thinks the world turns r. Shr. V, 2, 20. R2 II, 1, 156. with r. and all unable pen, H5 Epil. 1. I am giddy, expectation whirls me r. Troil. Ill, 2, 19. I have, in this r. work, shaped out a man, Tim. 1,1,44. cup us till the world go r. Ant. II, 7, 124. does the 7) wild, boisterous: he hath rid his prologue like world go r.t Cymb. V, 5, 232. b) standing or moving a r. col, Mids. V, 119. as r., their royal blood enchafed, in an orb: nineteen zodiacs have gone r. Meas. I, 2, 172. a health! let it go r. H8 I, 4, 97. Tim. I, 2, 54. as the rudest wind, Cymb. IV, 2, 173. • • o s h - e a a t , a kind of plaster mixed with pebbles: time is come r. Caes. V, 3, 23. Followed by about: Lucr. 1586. Wiv. IV, 4, 31. V, 5, 79. 83. Meas. Ill, Mids. ill, 1, 71. V, 132. 162. R a n c h - B r a w n , grown so as to have a surface 1,125. Ado V, 3, 15. Mids. II, 1, 175. Tit. Ill, 1,123. rongh ¿nd full of inequalities: in men, as in a r. grove, Mcb. IV, 1, 4. 2) on every side, or in every direction: r. underremain cave-keeping evils that obscurely sleep, Lucr. borne with a bluish tinsel, Ado III, 4, 21. hang it r. 1249. B«Deb-hew, to give the first rude form to: there's with all my wanton pictures, Shr. Ind. 1, 47. r. ena divmty that shapes our ends, r. them how we will, compassed, H6A I, 1, 114. r. engirt with misery, H6B 111, 1, 200. V, 1, 99. H6C II, 1, 15. Ill, 2, 171. Caes. Hml. T, 2, 11. • « n g h l y , harshly, rudely: Err. V,59. 88 (r., rude III, 2, 168. Hml. V, 2, 29. Oth. II, 1, 87. Per. Ill and utfdly; the suffix ly belonging to all the three Prol. 35 (the regions r.). r. about: empale him with words'. Tw. Ill, 4, 124. H4B V, 2, 70. Troil. IV, 4, your weapons r. about, Troil. V, 7, 5. Caes. V, 3, 28. 36. Hml. I, 2, 142. V, 2, 243. Oth.III,3,464. the noise is r. about us, Cymb.IV,4,1. B N l h i i e i i , harshness, asperity: doth affect a 3) in every part, everywhere within a certain losaucy '• Lr. II, 2, 103. cality: she throws her eyes about the painting r. Lucr. B«on4, adj. 1) circular: r. enchanting pits, Ven. 1499. water once a day her chamber r. with eye-offend247. t great r. beard, Wiv. I, 4, 20. at the r. table, ing brine, T w . I, 1, 29. Followed by about: the gentle H4B t, 1, 95. the r. nave, Hml. II, 2, 518. her face day ... r. about dapples the drowsy east with spots of ... is'tlong or r.f Ant. Ill, 3, 32. 33. grey, Ado V, 3,26. a scroll, and written r. about, Tit. 2)spherical: r. rising hillocks (the breasts) Ven. IV, 2, 18. proclaim it r. about the city, Meas. V, 514. 237; ;f. Lucr. 441. these six dry, r., old, withered look r. about the wicked streets of Rome, Tit. V, 2, 98. 4) roundly, straightforwardly and without much knighe (viz applc-johns) H4B II, 4, 8. a r. little worm, Rom. I, 4, 65. the r. world, Ant. V, I, 15. Used of ceremony: I went r. to work, Hml. II, 2, 139. B « o n d , prepos. circularly about: gone r. Neptears, Jrops of blood, and pearls: Ven. 1170. Lucr. tune's salt wash and Tellus' orbed ground, Hml. Ill, 2, 1553. Mids. IV, 1, 59. As II, 1, 38. 3) big, bulky (of things); corpulent, fleshy, plump 165. Following its noun: we'll drink a measure the (of mm and animals): a r. hose, Gent. II, 7, 55. he table r. Mcb. HI, 4, 12. = on every side, about: bought his r. hose in France, Merch. 1, 2, 80 (round skirr the country r. Mcb. V, 3, 35. B c u n d , vb. 1 ) tr. to surround, to encompass: swellitg breeches, trunk hose). I'll wear a boot, to make t (my leg) somewhat —er, Gent. V, 2, 6. their she his hairy temples then had —ed with coronet of r. hauiches, As II, 1, 25. the justice, in fair r. belly, fresh and fragrant flowers, Mids. IV, 1, 56. the may11,7, 154. H4B I, 2, 212. you whoreson r. man, H4A coloured Iris —s thine eye, All's I, 3, 158. the hollow II, 4, ]55 (Qq round-man). crown that —s the mortal temples of a king, 112 111, 2, 4) full, large: 'tis a good r. sum, Merch. I, 3, 104. 161. R3 IV, 1, 60. — ed in with danger, Troil. I, 3, I'll on your heads clap r. fines, H8 V, 4, 84. 196. Peculiar passage: we are such stuff as dreams 5) plain, fair, honest: I will a r. unvarnished tale are made .on, and our little life is —ed with a sleep, delivet, Oth. 1, 3, 90. but in our orbs we'll live so r. Tp. IV, 158 (the whole round or course of life has its and >vith up, = to stir up: would r. up your spirits, H8 II, 1, 114. thou art the —s of the noblest man, Caes. Ill, 1, 256. Caes. II, 2, 232. B a i n , vb. to demolish, to destroy, to subvert; 2) intr. to be noisy; a) to rustle: to deck thy body with hi —ing treasure, Shr. IV, 3, 60. b) to be tur- absol.: Sonn. 125, 4 (—ing = ruin). H8 IV, 2, 40. bulenUnd boisterous: one fit to bandy with thy lawless Trans.: Ven. 954. Sonn. 73, 4. 119, 11. R2 III, 4, sons, Ur. in the commonwealth of Rome, Tit. I, 313. 45. H4A III, 2, 37. H5 IV Chor. 29. H8 II, 1, 54. the bleik winds do sorely r. Lr. II, 4, 304 (Qq russet). III, 2, 382. 440. Cor. Ill, 2, 69. Tin). IV, 2, 16. Lr. BiSbr, name of a servant in Wiv. I, 4, 1. 41 etc. IV, 6, 137. Ant. V, 2, 51. — ed = ruinous: send the R K I « i , rough, bristling, shaggy: his well pro- breath of parley into his —ed ears, R2 III, 3, 34. Peportiomd Leard made rough and r. H6B 111, 2, 175. the culiar expression: what ruins are in me that can be r. Russian bear, Mcb. 111,4,100. the r. Pyrrhus, like found, by him not —edt Err. II, 1, 97 (cf. worth the the Hycanian beast (cf. what follows) Hull II, 2, 472. want that you have wanted, Lr. I, 1, 282. our love, 474. Ised of looks sleek o'er your r. looks, Mcb. Ill, which, left unshown, is often left unloved. Ant. Ill, 6, 52. to mend the hurt that his unkindness marred, Ven. 2, 27 ( = disturbed, uneasy). B i s - h e a d e d , having shaggy hair: those rough 478. cf. honoured (Ff) in Troil. Ill, 3, 81). R u i n a t e , vb. to ruin, to bring to decay, r. kern, B2 II, 1, 156. cf. H6B III, 1, 367. B d n , subst. 1) decay: r. hath taught me thus to to demolish: to r. proud buildings with thy hours, ruminde, Sonn. 64, 11. let it presage the r. of your Lucr. 944. seeking that beauteous roof to r. which to love, March. Ill, 2, 175. repair thy wit, or it will fall repair should be thy chief desire, Sonn. 10, 7. / will to curdess r. IV, 1, 142. buildings fall to r. Per. II, not r. my father's house, H6C V, 1, 83. to order well 4, 37. time's r. = the decay caused by time: Lucr. the state, that like events may ne'er it r. Tit. V, 3, 204. 1451. if. the chaff and r. of the times, Merch. II, 9, 48. Partic. r..- Err. Ill, 2, 4; M. Edd. for the sake of the 2) all, overthrow, destruction, perdition: by your rhyme ruinous.

R

993

R a i n e d = ruinous: R2 III, 3, 34; see Ruin, vb. rative: be —d by me, Ven. 673. Wiv. I, 1, 72. Meas. Hainan«, 1) decayed: Gent. V, 4, 9. Err. Ill, 2, IV, 6, 4. Err. lil, 1, 94. John II, 377. B2 1,1, 152. 4 (O. Edd. ruinate';. Troil. V, 1, 32. Tit. V, 1, 21. H6A I, 4, 5. Troil. II, 3, 268. Cor. Ill, 2, >0. Tit. yond despised and r. man ... full of decay and failing, I, 442. Bom. I, 1, 231. Hml. I, 4, 81. Oth. II, 1, 270. Tim. IV, 3, 465. Per. II, 5, 83. B a l e r , one that has the supreme commtnd and 2) pernicious: machinations, hollowness, treachery, power: H6A V, 5, 30. H6B III, 1, 291. V, 1, 105. and all r. disorders, Lr. I, 2, 123. Hole, subst 1) an instrument by Iwhich straight With of: H6B I, 1, 189. II, 4, 43. Ill, 2, 29C. With lines are drawn, a ruler (or a square?): where is thy over: H6A III, 2, 11. • a m h l e , to make a low and heavy sounc: r. thy leather apron andthyr.t Caes. 1,1, 7. Ant. V, 2, 210. Hence - standard: so long as out of limit and true bellyful (viz the thunder) Lr. Ill, 2, 14. r. you stand against anointed majesty, H4A IV, 3, • a m l n a t e , 1) intr. to mnse, to meditate, to pon39. to square the general sex by Cressids r. Troil. V, der: Gent I, 2, 49. Wiv. II, 2, 321. Troil. 111,3, 252. 2, 133. I have not kept my square, but that to come Oth. Ill, 3, 132. With on: H8 I, 2, 180. Witl a subshall all be done by the r. Ant. II, 3, 7. ordinate clause: Sonn. 64, 11. 2) tr. to muse on, to meditate over and ovei again: 2) canon, principle, maxim: I durst have denied that. By what r.t Err. II, 2, 69. 70. to change true H4A I, 3, 274. H5 IV Chor. 24. H6A V, 5, 101. —s for old inventions, Shr. HI, 1, 81. in military —s, Troil. II, 3, 198. Tit. V, 2, 6. Ant. II, 2, 14L B a m l n a t l e n , meditation: As IV, 1, 19. H4B II, 3, 30. if your own r. be true, H4B IV, 2, 86. • u n n * | t , spelling of some M. Edd. for roH5 IV, 1, 157. B3 II, 4, 20. Caes. V, 1, 101. Lr. V, 3,145. Hence — law, precept: 'gainst r., 'gainst tense, mage, q. v. 'gainst shame, Compl. 271. 'tis against the r. of naH a m e a r , snbst. 1) popular report: All's III, 2, ture, All's I, 1, 148. creatures that by a r. in nature 130. Wint. I, 2, 270. John IV, 2, 123. 145. H4B teach the act of order to a peopled kingdom, H5 I, 2, Ind. 2. 11. 15. 22. 39. HI, 1, 97. B3 I, 3,46. H8 188. you know no —s of charity, B3 I, 2, 68. if there II, 1, 152. Cor. Ill, 3, 125. Tim. HI, 2, 6. V, 1, 4. be r. in unity itself, Troil. V, 2, 141. against all —s of Mcb. IV, 2, 19. IV, 3, 182. A n t IV, 3, 5. nature, Oth. I, 3, 101. 2) fame: great is the r. of this dreadful knight, 3) course of proceeding, line of conduct: of a H6A II, 3, 7. 3) a confused and indistinct noise: bear tie hence strange nature is the suit you follow, yet in such r. thai the Venetian law cannot impugn you, Merch. IV, 1, from forth the noise and r. of the field, John t, 4, 45. 178. you would not give means for this uncivil r. Tw. I heard a bustling r., like a fray, Caes. II, 4,18. II, 3, 132. cf. Night-rule. R o m e o r , vb. to spread abroad, to tell among the 4) dominion, sway: Shr. V, 2, 109. 163. H6B I, people: this have I —ed through the peasant towns, I, 259. H6C III, 3, 76 (sway the r.). V, 2, 27. H8 H4B Ind. 33. r. it abroad, B3IV, 2,51. it is —id, Cor. II, 1, 92. Troil. 1, 3, 78. Tit. I, 19. 191. Mcb. V, 2, 1, 2, 11. 16. Hml. Ill, 4, 99. Lr. 1,1, 50. Per. 1, 2, 109. With • a m e a r e r , a spreader of reports: see this r. of: Wiv. I, 3, 59. With over: Tw. V, 313. whipped, Cor. IV, 6, 47. • a l e , vb. 1) intr. a) to have command, to exer• a m p , the buttocks: how the devil Luxury, with cise supreme authority: H6A IV, 1, 111. II6B II, 4, his fat r. and potato-finger, tickles these together, Troil. 44. V, 1, 6. B3 11, 3, 29. Cor. Ill, 1, 40. Lr. V, 3, V, 2, 56. 320. Oth. V, 2, 332. Per. II, 4, 38. With over: H5 Hump-fed, according to Steevens, = fei on ofI, 2, 226. B6B IV, 4, 16. V, 1, 104. fals (flaps, kidneys, rumps, and other scraps,having b) to prevail, to decide, to give the casting vote: been among the low perquisites of the kitchm given let senses r. H5 II, 3, 51. away with scrupulous will away to the poor); more probably, accoiling to now arms must r. H6C IV, 7, 61. if Cassius might have Nares, = fat-bottomed, fed or fattened in th< rump: —d, Caes. V, 1, 47. aroint thee, witch I the r. ronyon cries, Mcb. 1,3, 6. 2) tr. a) to command, to govern, to have dominion In, subst. a distance passed over, a passage over: there be that can r. Naples as well as he, Tp. from one place to another: thou mayst slide jrom my II, 1, 262. we'll do thee homage and be —d by thee, shoulder to my heel with no greater a r. but ny head Gent. IV, 1, 66. Merch. II, 2,23. 26. H6A V, 5,107. and my neck, Shr. IV, 1, 16 ,as if the distant were 108. H6B 1, 1, 109 (cf. Roast). V, 1, 94. B3 I, 1, 62. no greater than from my head to my ncck). II, 3, 29. Caes. II, 1,147. Lr.11,4,150. Oth. 11,3,205. • a n , vb.(impf. usually ran; sometimes run.- Pilgr. b) to control, to bridle, to restrain: never woman 156; Shr. Ind. 2, 67; Mcb. II, 3, 117; in H4A II, 4, yet could r. them (tongues) both, Ven. 1008. let reason 287 Ff ran, Qq run. Partic. run; the perf. sonetimes r. things worthy blame, Pilgr. 301. canst not r. her, formed with to be, where to have would hive been Wint. II, S, 46. 50. canst not r. a traitor, H6B V, 1, expected, as in H8 I, 2, 110 and Caes. V, 3,25; cf. 95. an army cannot r. 'em, H8 V, 4, 81. you being Be), 1) intr. a) to move by leaps or quick step>: Ven. their mouths, why r. you not their teetht Cor. Ill, 1, 36. 304. 685. 813. 871. 905. Sonn. 51,14.143, 1 Gent. 41. close delations working from the heart that passion HI, 1, 188. 387. Meas. Ill, 1, 13. Err. Ill, 2,72. IV, cannot r. Oth. Ill, 3, 124. 2, 30. Ado HI, 1, 1. Mids. V, 271. Merch. I, 2, 9. c) to prevail on, to persuade; used only passively; As HI, 2, 9. Shr. I, 1, 145. V, 2, 53. II4A 11,4, 287. to be —d = to follow another's advice: I trust you III, 3, 43. H5 11, 4, 71. H6A I, 4, 19 Bom.ll, 1, 5. will be — d by your father, Adoll, 1,54. would thouldst Ill, 1, 142 etc. etc. to r. away: Pilgr. 156. Viv. IV, be —d by me, Tw. IV, 1, 68. had they been —d by me, 5, 67. Merch. II, 2, 6. V, 9. All's III, 2, 25.42 etc. H4B IV, 3, 72. H6A III, 3, 8. H6C HI, 2, 30. Bom. he ran in here, Wiv. 1, 4, 38. Err. V, 257. t> r. on, III, 4, 13. Hml. IV, 7, 60. 69. Oftenest in the impe- B2 V, 5, 59 etc. - to flee: Lucr. 742. Tp. 11, 2, 21.

994

R

John III, 4, 5. Troil. II, 1,6. to r. away, in the same sense: All's III, 2, 42. H4A II, 4, 349. to r. from = to moke haste to get away from: Err. Ill, 2,98. 149. IV, 4, 152. Mids. II, 1,227. Merch. II, 2, 2. = to flee from: as from a bear a man would r. for life, Err. Ill, 2, 159. r.from the pretence of the tun, Mids. V, 390. sheep r. from the wolf, H6A I, 5, 30. Cor. I, 4, 35. II, 3, 59. Lr. IV, 6, 161. to r. before = to flee before: thou —est before me, Mids. Ill, 2, 423. Used as a term of huntsmen: he ran upon the boar, Ven. 1112. when night-dogs r., all torts of deer are chased, Wiv. V, 5, 252. a hound that —t counter, Err. IV, 2, 39. Metaphorical use: Invert ever r. before the clock, Merch. 11, 6, 4 (are before their honr). a woman's thought —t before her actions, As IV, 1, 141. those (thoughts) to God that r. before our butinett, H5 I, 2, 303. my detiret r. not before mine honour, Wint. IV, 4, 34. I r. before my horse to market, E3 I, 1, 160. use and liberty, which have for long r. by the hideous law, as mice by lions, Meas. I, 4, 63. a woman would r. through fire and water for such a kind heart, Wiv. III, 4, 107. and r. through fire I will for thy tweet sake, Mids. II, 2, 103. time and the hour —s through the roughest day, Mcb. I, 3, 147; cf. Cymb. V, 5, 128. this tongue that —t to roundly in thy head, R2 II, 1, 122; cf. LLL V, 2, 664. a —ing banquet = a hasty refreshment: tome of these should find a —ing banquet, ere they rested, H8 I, 4, 12. besides the —ing banquet of two beadles, V, 4, 69 (cf. Banquet). b) to flow, to more as a fluid: in Simois' reedy bankt the red blood ran, Lucr. 1437. a river —ing from a fount, Compl. 283. his tears r. down hit beard, Tp. V, 16. the talt rheum that ran between France and it, Err. Ill, 2, 131. the courte of true love never did r. smooth, Mids. I, 1, 134. all the wealth I had ran in my veins, Merch. Ill, 2, 258. the - ing brooks, As II, 1,16. Shr. Ind. 2, 52. as fast as you pour affection in, it —t out, As IV, 1, 215. what relish is in this? how —s the stream? Tw. IV, 1, 64. shall the current of our right r. on? John II, 335 (Fl rome). which (blood) else —s tickling up and down the veins, III, 3, 44. calmly r. on to our ocean, V, 4, 56. who (Severn) ran fearfully among the trembling reeds, H4A I, 3, 105. the silver Trent shall r. in a new channel, III, 1, 102. 108. 114. H4B IV, 1, 70. the blood... —s in your veins, H5 I, 2, 119. smooth —t the water where the brook it deep, H6B III, 1, 53. till it (the liquor) r. o'er, H8 I, 1, 144. her eyes ran o'er, Troil. I, 2, 157. 161. those boils did r. II, 1,5. my mother's blood —t on the dexter cheek, IV, 5, 128. all the tears may r. into that sink, Tit. Ill, 2, 19. through all thy vein« shall r. cold and drowsy humour, Rom. IV, 1, 95. it (grief) —s over at his eyes, Caes. V, 5, 14. from the which my current —s, Oth. IV, 2, 59. the fresh streams ran by her, IV, 3, 45. that tub both filled and —ing, Cymb. I, 6, 49. it would have r. all out, II, 1, 10. Figuratively: whose names r. smoothly in the even road of a blank verse, Ado V, 2, 33. Applied to the sand in an hour-glass: I should not see the sandy hour-glass r. Merch I, 1, 25. the —ing of one glass, Wint. I, 2, 306. the glass that now begins to r. I16A IV, 2, 35. our sands are almost r. Per. V, 2, 1. Hence: to see the minutes how they r. H6C II, 5,25. c) Used of any kind of quick motion; = to ride: to r. upon the sharp wind of the north, Tp. 1, 2, 254;

cf. H4A II, 4, 377. H4B I, 1, 47. = to turn, to roll: well run, dice! LLL V, 2, 233. thus the bowl thould r. Shr. IV, 5, 24. the world, made to r. even, John II, 576. my fortune —t against the biat, R2 III, 4, 5. when a great wheel —t down a hill, Lr. II, 4, 73. Figuratively: much upon this riddle —I the wisdom of the world, Meas. Ill, 2, 242 ( = turns). = to rush, to fall: whilst Ir.on it (the sword) Caes. V, 5,28. 48. 65. d) Equivalent to to pass, to go: lest the deceiving harmony should r. into the quiet cloture of my breast, Ven. 781. ebbing men most often do so near the bottom r. Tp. II, 1, 227. makes him r. through all the tint, Gent. V, 4, 112. —t not thit speech like iron through your blood f Ado V, 1, 252; cf. in thit place ran Catsiut' dagger through, Caes. Ill, 2, 178 and V, 3, 42. I mutt rather give it (my tongue) the rein, for it —s against Hector, LLL V,2, 664; cf. R2 II, 1, 122. the prettiest last that ever ran on the greentward, Wint. IV, 4, 157. even to must I r. on, and even to ttop, John V, 7, 67. where he did r. reeking o'er the lives of men, Cor. II, 2, 123. where the flight so —t against all reason, Mcb. IV, 2, 14. our wills and fates do so contrary r. Hml. Ill, 2, 221. so —s the world away, 285. lei the time r. on to good or bad, Cymb. V, 5, 128. to r. through = to go through, to pursue in thought: I ran it through, Oth. I, 3, 132. to r. over = to think over, to call to mind: which you now were — ing o'er, H8 III, 2, 139. e) With into or to, = to come or get into a state: r. into no further danger, Tp. Ill, 2, 76. such disgrace at he shall r. into, As I, 1,141. the slightest folly that ever love did make thee r. into, II, 4, 35. lovers r. into strange capers, 55. to r. into my lord's displeasure, All's II, 5, 37. have I r. into this danger, IV, 3, 334. the commonwealth hath daily r. to wreck, H6B 1,3,127. would r. to these and these extremities, Caes. II, 1,31. In for into: is r. in your displeasure, H8 I, 2, 110. to r. mad = to become mad: Lucr. 997. Ado I, 1, 88. 93. Tw. II, 5, 212. Wint. Ill, 2, 184. H4A III, 1, 145. 212. H8 II, 2, 130. Troil. V, 1, 54. Tit. IV, 1, 21. Rom. II, 4, 5. IV, 3, 48. IV, 5, 76. Oth. Ill, 3, 317. f ) to be reported, to be spread, to go: volumes of report r. with these false and most contrarious quests upon thy doings, Meas. IV, 1, 62. there ran a rumour, Mcb. IV, 3, 182. g) to have a tenor or purport: thus —t the bill, H5 I, 1, 19. to r. the conditiont, H8 I, 3; 24. 2) trans, a) to drive: toe r. ourselves aground, Tp. I, 1, 4. you r. this humour out of breath, Er. IV, 1, 57. beggars mounted r. their horse to death, H6C I, 4, 127. r. on the dashing rockt thy weary bark, Rom. V, 3,117. b) to let flow, to emit: the pissing-conduit r. nothing but claret wine, H6B IV, 6, 4. which ... did r. pure blood, Caes. II, 2, 78. Ill, 2, 193. c) to strike, to pierce, to stab: I'll r. him up to the hilts, H5 II, 1, 68 (Bardolph's speech), r. through the ear with a love-song, Rom. II, 4, 14 (the surreptitious Ql and most M. Edd. shot). d) to bring to a state, to make, to get: this tongue that —s so roundly in thy head, should r. thy head from thy irreverent shoulders, R2 II, 1, 123. e) to take, to pursue (a course), to perform: this course which you are —ing here, H8 II, 4, 217. when he has r. his course and sleeps in blessings, III, 2, 398. when he doth r. hit courte, Caes. I, 2, 4. you thall r.

R a certain course, Lr. I, 2, 88. full merrily hath Ms brave manage, this career, been r. LLL V, 2, 482. r. a tilt at death, H6A III, 2, 51. thou ran'st a tilt in honour of my love, H6B 1,3,54. r. the wild-goose chase, Rom. II, 4, 75. lads more like to r. the country base, Cymb. V,3,19. how brief the life of man —s his erring pilgrimage, As III, 2, 138. my life is r. his compass, Caes. V,3,25. In the language of Nym, to r. humours = what he else calls to pass humours: Wiv. 1,1,171. 1,3, 85. H5 II, 1, 127. R u n a g a t e , a vagabond: Richmond is on the seas. White-livered r . , what doth he there f R3 IV, 4, 465. where that same banished r. doth live, Rom. Ill, 5, 90. I cannot find those —s, Cymb. IV, 2,62. With to: that r. to your bed, Cymb. I, 6, 137, = bed-swerver, q. v. R u n a w a y , 1) one that runs away or flies: thou r . , thou coward, art thou fledl Mids. Ill, 2, 405. the close night doth play the r. Merch. 11,6,47 (will quickly pass), to bring again these foolish—», A s l l , 2 , 2 1 . we are most lofty — s, H5 111, 5, 35. 2) one who runs a-ways, i. e. in the ways, one who roves and rambles about, a vagabond: a sort of vagabonds, rascals and — s , R3 V, 3,316. spread thy dose curtain, love-performing night, that runaways' eyes may wink, and Romeo leap to these arms, untalked of and unseen, Rom. Ill, 2, 6 (eavesdroppers rambling about the streets at night, to spy oat the doings of others). B a n n e r , 1) a racer: forspent with toil, as —* with a race, H6C II, 3, 1. 2) a fugitive: 'tis sport to maul a r. Ant. IV, 7, 14. R u p t u r e , 1) a breach, a gap, an injury: it is a r. that you may easily heal, Mens III, 1,244. 2) breaking (of the sea): spite of all the r. of the sea, this jewel holds his building on my arm, Per.II, 1,161. 3) hernia: the guts-griping — s , Troil. V, 1, 22. Substituted for rapture by M. Edd. in Cor. II, 1, 223. S u r a l , existing or living in the country, rustic: if ever henceforth thou these r. latches to his entrance open, W i n t IV, 4, 449. here is a r. fellow, Ant. V, 2, 233. R u s h , subst a plant of the genus Juncus; used, before the introduction of carpets, to strow the floors of apartments: he takes it from the —es where A lies, Lucr.318. —es strewed, Shr. IV, 1,48. on the wanton —es lay you down, H4A III, 1, 214. more —es, H4B V, 5, 1 (to be scattered on the pavement for the procession of the king), tickle the senseless —es with their heels, Rom. I, 4, 36. our Tarquin thus did softly press the —es, Cymb. II, 2,13. Used to make rings as provisional emblems of marriage: as fit as Tib's r. for Tom's forefinger, All's II, 2, 24. Proverbial for a trifle: a r., a hair, a drop of blood, a pin. Err. IV, 3, 73. spurns the r. that lies before him, A n t III, 5, 18. Symbol of weakness and inefficiency: in which cage of —es (love) I am sure you are not prisoner, As III, 2, 389. lean but upon a r., the cicatrice thy palm some moment keeps, III, 5, 22. a r. will be a beam to hang thee on, J o h n IV, 3, 129. hews down oaks with —es, Cor. 1,1,185. our gates we have but pinned with —es, I, 4, 18. man but a r. against Othello's breast, and he retires, Oth. V, 2, 270 (cf. Straui). R a s h , vb. to move with suddenness and eager impetuosity: Ven. 630. Lucr. 373. Wiv. IV, 4, 53. Err. IV, 3, 95. V, 143. H6A I, 1, 129. IV, 7, 42. Rom. Ill, 1, 172. Caes. Ill, 2, 183. Mcb. II, 3, 128. Ant. IV, 15, 81. to r. by, Troil. Ill, 3, 159. to r. forth,

995

Ven. 262. John IV, 1, 3. to r. in, Shr. Ill, 2, 93. to r. on — to attack: to r. upon your peace, J o h n II, 221. what a tide of woe comes —ing on this woeful land, R2 II, 2, 99. the king should so with civil and uncivil arms be —ed upon, III, 3, 103. Ho HI, 5, 50. H6A 1, 2 , 1 8 . 2 8 . T i t V, 1,37. Caea. Ill, 1, 93. «= to bear upon, to overwhelm: this great sea of joys —ing upon me, Per. V, 1, 194. to r. to pieces = to be shattered by the violence of the motion and the ensuing shock: and I , like a poor bark, r. all to pieces on thy rocky bosom, R3 IV, 4, 234. Metaphorically: many an error ... will r. into the state, Merch. IV, 1, 222. something rare even then will r. to knowledge, W i n t III, 1, 21. the prince hath —ed aside the law, Rom. Ill, 3 , 2 6 (has openly and with partial eagerness eluded the law; cf. have run by the hideous law, Meas. 1, 4, 63). Rush-candle, a candle made of a rush dipped in tallow: Shr. IV, 5, 14. Buahle, Mrs. Quickly's word for rustle: so —ing in ti!k and gold, Wiv. II, 2, 68. Baahy, full of rushes: by r. brook, Mids. II, 1,84. Russet, 1) red, reddish: the morn, in r. mantle clad, Hml. I, 1, 166. 2) coarse, homespun: in r. yeas and honest kersey noes, L L L V, 2, 413. Russet-pated, having reddish heads: r. choughs, Mids. Ill, 2, 21. R u s s i a , the country in the East of Europe: this will last out a night in R. Meas. II, 1,139. the Emperor of R. Ill, 2, 94. Wint. Ill, 2, 120. R u s s i a n , subst. a native of Russia: L L L V, 2, 121. 361. 443. B u s a l a n , adj. pertaining to Russia: L L L V, 2, 368 (FlRussia). 401. H5III, 7, 154. Mcb. Ill, 4, 100. B a s t , subst. the o x j d forming a rough coat on the surface of metals: foul cankering r. the hidden treasure frets, Ven. 767. John IV, 1, 65. R2 III, 3, 116. H4B 1, 2, 246 (O. Edd. with a r., most M. Edd. with r.). Figuratively: how he glisters thorough my r. Wint. Ill, 2, 172. B a s t , vb. 1) intr. to gather rust: L L L I, 2, 187. All's IV, 3, 373. H5 V, 2, 46. H6B III, 2 , 1 9 8 . H6C 1,3,51 (this thy son's blood shall r. upon my weapon). Rom. V, 3, 170. Per. II, 2, 54. 2) tr. to make rusty: this peace is nothing, but to r. iron, Cor. IV, 5, 234. the dew will r. them, Oth. I, 2, 59. B u s t l e , adj. rural; existing or practised in the country: fall into our r. revelry, As V, 4, 183. of that kind our r. garden's barren, W i n t IV, 4,84. Used with contempt, = boorish: yield, r. mountaineer, Cymb. IV, 2, 100. Baatlc, subst. peasant: how now, —s! W i n t IV, 4, 735 (Autolycus' speech). Rustically, in a manner becoming a peasant: he keeps me r. at home, As I, 1, 7. R u s t l e , to make a noise like the rubbing of silk or straw: Meas. IV, 3, 38. Lr. Ill, 4, 98. Cymb. Ill, 3, 24. In Lr. II, 4, 304 Qq the winds do sorely russel, Ff ruffle. In Wiv. II, 2, 68 Mrs. Quickly rushle. Busty, covered with rust: Pilgr. 88. Shr. Ill, 2, 46. R2 III, 2,118. H4A I, 2, 68. H 5 I V , 2 , 4 4 . Troil. I, 3, 263 (Q resty). Ill, 3, 152. Hml. II, 2, 352. Per. II, 1, 125 II, 2, 50. B a t , see Rutting. B a t h , pity: looking with pretty r. upon my pain, Sonn. 132,4. a spectacle of r. Pilgr. 127. rue, even

996

S

for r., here shortly shall be teen, R 2 III, 4, 106. spur them U ruthful work, rein them from r. Troil. V,3,48. would the nobility lay aside their r. and let me use my sword, Cor. I, 1, 201. • a t h f n l , piteous: that my death would stay these T. deeds, H 6 C II, 5, 95. this r. piece of butchery, R 3 IV, 3, 5 (Qq ruthless), spur them to r. work, Troil. V, 3, 48. villanies r. to hear, Tit. V, 1, 66. B a t h l e a a , pitiless, cruel: P i l g r . 3 9 4 . Meas.lII, 2, 121. H6A V , 4 , 1 6 1 . H 6 B 11,4,34. H6C I, 4 , 3 1 . 166. II, 1, «1. V, 4, 25. 36. E 3 IV, 3, 5 (Ff ruthful). Tit. II, 1, 128. IV, 1, 53. R r t l u d , 1) the earldom granted to Edward Au-

merle, after he was deprived of his d u k e d o m : R? V, 2, 43. V, 3, 96. 2) son of Richard D u k e of York, slain by Clifford: H 6 C 1,4, 78. 88. 147. II, 1, 63 etc. R 3 1, 2, 158. I, 3, 178. IV, 4, 45. 275. B u t - t i m e , the time of the copulation of deer: Wiv. V, 5. 15. • u t t l B f , copulating, lusting like deer: Per. IV, 5, 9. • a t t l a h , lustful, lecherous: All's IV, 3, 243. • y e , the plant Secale cereale: T p . IV, 1, 61. As V, 3, 23. B y e - i t r » « , made of rye-stalks: your r. hats put on, T p . IV, 136.

s. 8 , the nineteenth letter of the alphabet; abbreviatioi of shilling: H4A 11,4,585.587. 589. of Saint: All's Bl, 4, 4. Ill, 5, 39. H 6 A IV, 2, 55. IV, 7, 68. H6B I, 2, 57 etc. 8a, (four times reiterated) an exclamation inciting to swift r u n n i n g : L r . IV, G. 207. S a b a , the queen of Sheba: S. was never more covetous of wisdom, H 8 V, 5, 24 (cf. 2 Chronicles, Chap. EX). S a b b a t h , the seventh day of the week, as kept holy Vy the J e w s : Merch. IV, 1, 36. R 3 III, 2, 113. 8 a b l e , adj. black, d a r k : tills, night, mother of dread and fear, upon the world dim darkness doth display, Lncr. 117. my s. ground of sin I will not paint, 1074. s. curls all silvered o'er with white, Sonn. J 2 , 4 . thou treble-dated crow, that thy s. gender makest with tie breath thou givest and takest, Phoen. 18. whose s. arm, black as his purpose, did the night resemble, Ilml. II, 2, 474. his banners s. Per. V Prol. 19. Scbstantively: a s. silvered, Hml. I, 2, 242. Plur. —s (rf. Blacks): let the devil wear black, for I'll have a suit of—s, III, 2, 137 (with a p a n ; cf. Sables). S a b l e - c a l o n r e d , black: s. melancholy, L L L I, 1, 233 (Armado's letter). 8»bles, the fur of Mustela zibellina: for youth no less bicomes the light and careless livery that it wears than settled age his s. and his weeds, Hml. IV, 7, 81. QuibUing in III, 2, 137. S a c k , subst. the generic name of Spanish and Canaiy wines: T p . II, 2, 126. Ill, 2, 15. 31. 88. Wiv. II, 1 , ) . II, 2, 153. Ill, 5, 3. 22. V, 5, 167. Shr. Ind. 2, 2. i . H4A I, 2, 8. II, 2, 49. II, 4, 129. 132. 137. 140. J45. 497. 501. 587. 592. Ill, 3, 50. IV, 2, 2. V, 4, 16». H4B II, 2, 147. II, 4, 121. 194. 196. IV, 3, 124.135. V,3,15. H 5 I I , 3 , 2 9 . H 6 B II, 3, 60. Sherris s. H43 IV, 3, 104. old s. H4A I, 2, 3. H 4 B I, 2, 222. s. and sugar, H4A I, 2, 125. II, 4, 516. burnt s. Wiv. II, 1, 223. Ill, 1, 112. T w . II, 3, 206. brew me a pottle of s. Wiv. Ill, 5, 30. Hack, subst. a large bag: L L L IV, 3, 81 (more —s to the mill!). H 4 B V, 1, 25. H6A III, 2, 10. S a c k , subst. storm and plunder of a town: the s. of Oreans, H 6 A II, 2, 15. S a c k , vb. to s t o r m , destroy and pillage: Lucr. 1170.1740. All's I, 3, 75. H 4 A V, 3, 56. H6A 111, 2, 10. V, 1, 62. Cor. Ill, 1, 316. Rom. Ill, 3, 107. Tim. V, 1, 174.

S a c k b u t , the trombone, a kind of trumpet: Cor. V, 4, 52. S a c k - c l a t h , coarse cloth worn in mourning and mortification: H 4 B 1 , 2 , 2 2 2 . P e r . IV,4,29. cf. Esther IV, 1. S a c k e r a a i i , name of a large bear at Paris-garden: Wiv. I, 1, 307. S a c r a m e n t , the Eucharist: ere I last received the s. I did confess it, R 2 1 , 1 , 1 3 9 . Vows made and oaths taken on the sacrament; hence to receive the s. = to take an onth: thou didst receive the holy s. to fight in quarrel of the house of Lancaster, R 3 1,4,208. to take the s.: All's IV, 3, 156. J o h n V, 2, 6. R2 IV, 328. V, 2, 97. H 6 A IV, 2, 28. R 3 V, 5, 18. S a c r e d , such as must be kept holy, entitled to awe and veneration: Lucr. 1172. Compl. 260. Wiv. IV, 4, 59. V, 5, 61. Meas. IV, 3, 149. V, 410. Merch. I, 3, 49. As II, 7, 123. W i n t . II, 1, 183. II, 3, 84. Ill, 3, 7. V, 3, 122. J o h n III, 1, 229. H 6 A I, 2, 114. IV, 1, 40. H 6 B I, 3, 61. Tit. I, 92. 242. II, 1, 120 (our empress with her s. wit to villany and vengeance consecrate; Aaron's speech). Tim. I. 1, 82. Caes. Ill, 2, 138. Mcb. II, 4, 34. Hml. Ill, 2, 170. L r . I, 1, 111. Oth. Ill, 3, 461. Ant. 1, 3, 63. II, 2, 85. P e r . V, 1, 74. Epithet of royalty: serving with looks his (the sun's) s. majesty, Sonn. 7, 4. justice, most s. duke, Err. V, 133. 0 my most s. lady, Wint. 1,2,76. whose person, so s. as it is, V, I, 172. a s. king, J o h n III, 1, 148. our s. blood, R 2 1, 1, 119. 1, 2, 17. Ill, 3, 9. IV, 209. V, 2, 30. V, 6, 6. H 5 I, 2, 7. H 8 II, 4, 41. Ill, 2, 173. V, 5, 46. Troil. IV, 5, 134 (thy mother, my s. aunt). Per. I, 2, 33. Applied by enthusiastic lovers to the objects of their affection: tan s. beauty, Sonn. 115, 7. no Valentine for s. Silvia, Gent. Ill, 1, 211. s. and sweet was all I saw in her, Shr. I, 1, 181. S a c r l f l c e , subst. 1) the act of offering any thing to G o d : W i n t . Ill, I, 6. Troil. IV, 2, 66. Cor. I, 10, 21. Tit. II, 3, 164. Oth. V, 2, 65. Cymb. V, 5, 398. to do s. Caes. II, 2, 5. Per. V, 1, 242. V, 2, 12. give you thankful s. Cor. I, 6, 9. Ant. I, 2, 167. 2) that which is offered or immolated: Merch. Ill, 2, 57. J o h n II, 420. H 4 A IV, 1,113. H5 IV Chor. 23. H 8 II, 1, 77. Troil. I, 2, 308. V, 3, 18. Tit. I, 124. L r . V, 3, 20. Cymb. I, 2, 3. 3) that which is destroyed for the sake of something else: the back is s. to the load, H8 I, 2, 50. poor —* of our enmity, Rom. V, 3, 304.

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for r., here shortly shall be teen, R 2 III, 4, 106. spur them U ruthful work, rein them from r. Troil. V,3,48. would the nobility lay aside their r. and let me use my sword, Cor. I, 1, 201. • a t h f n l , piteous: that my death would stay these T. deeds, H 6 C II, 5, 95. this r. piece of butchery, R 3 IV, 3, 5 (Qq ruthless), spur them to r. work, Troil. V, 3, 48. villanies r. to hear, Tit. V, 1, 66. B a t h l e a a , pitiless, cruel: P i l g r . 3 9 4 . Meas.lII, 2, 121. H6A V , 4 , 1 6 1 . H 6 B 11,4,34. H6C I, 4 , 3 1 . 166. II, 1, «1. V, 4, 25. 36. E 3 IV, 3, 5 (Ff ruthful). Tit. II, 1, 128. IV, 1, 53. R r t l u d , 1) the earldom granted to Edward Au-

merle, after he was deprived of his d u k e d o m : R? V, 2, 43. V, 3, 96. 2) son of Richard D u k e of York, slain by Clifford: H 6 C 1,4, 78. 88. 147. II, 1, 63 etc. R 3 1, 2, 158. I, 3, 178. IV, 4, 45. 275. B u t - t i m e , the time of the copulation of deer: Wiv. V, 5. 15. • u t t l B f , copulating, lusting like deer: Per. IV, 5, 9. • a t t l a h , lustful, lecherous: All's IV, 3, 243. • y e , the plant Secale cereale: T p . IV, 1, 61. As V, 3, 23. B y e - i t r » « , made of rye-stalks: your r. hats put on, T p . IV, 136.

s. 8 , the nineteenth letter of the alphabet; abbreviatioi of shilling: H4A 11,4,585.587. 589. of Saint: All's Bl, 4, 4. Ill, 5, 39. H 6 A IV, 2, 55. IV, 7, 68. H6B I, 2, 57 etc. 8a, (four times reiterated) an exclamation inciting to swift r u n n i n g : L r . IV, G. 207. S a b a , the queen of Sheba: S. was never more covetous of wisdom, H 8 V, 5, 24 (cf. 2 Chronicles, Chap. EX). S a b b a t h , the seventh day of the week, as kept holy Vy the J e w s : Merch. IV, 1, 36. R 3 III, 2, 113. 8 a b l e , adj. black, d a r k : tills, night, mother of dread and fear, upon the world dim darkness doth display, Lncr. 117. my s. ground of sin I will not paint, 1074. s. curls all silvered o'er with white, Sonn. J 2 , 4 . thou treble-dated crow, that thy s. gender makest with tie breath thou givest and takest, Phoen. 18. whose s. arm, black as his purpose, did the night resemble, Ilml. II, 2, 474. his banners s. Per. V Prol. 19. Scbstantively: a s. silvered, Hml. I, 2, 242. Plur. —s (rf. Blacks): let the devil wear black, for I'll have a suit of—s, III, 2, 137 (with a p a n ; cf. Sables). S a b l e - c a l o n r e d , black: s. melancholy, L L L I, 1, 233 (Armado's letter). 8»bles, the fur of Mustela zibellina: for youth no less bicomes the light and careless livery that it wears than settled age his s. and his weeds, Hml. IV, 7, 81. QuibUing in III, 2, 137. S a c k , subst. the generic name of Spanish and Canaiy wines: T p . II, 2, 126. Ill, 2, 15. 31. 88. Wiv. II, 1 , ) . II, 2, 153. Ill, 5, 3. 22. V, 5, 167. Shr. Ind. 2, 2. i . H4A I, 2, 8. II, 2, 49. II, 4, 129. 132. 137. 140. J45. 497. 501. 587. 592. Ill, 3, 50. IV, 2, 2. V, 4, 16». H4B II, 2, 147. II, 4, 121. 194. 196. IV, 3, 124.135. V,3,15. H 5 I I , 3 , 2 9 . H 6 B II, 3, 60. Sherris s. H43 IV, 3, 104. old s. H4A I, 2, 3. H 4 B I, 2, 222. s. and sugar, H4A I, 2, 125. II, 4, 516. burnt s. Wiv. II, 1, 223. Ill, 1, 112. T w . II, 3, 206. brew me a pottle of s. Wiv. Ill, 5, 30. Hack, subst. a large bag: L L L IV, 3, 81 (more —s to the mill!). H 4 B V, 1, 25. H6A III, 2, 10. S a c k , subst. storm and plunder of a town: the s. of Oreans, H 6 A II, 2, 15. S a c k , vb. to s t o r m , destroy and pillage: Lucr. 1170.1740. All's I, 3, 75. H 4 A V, 3, 56. H6A 111, 2, 10. V, 1, 62. Cor. Ill, 1, 316. Rom. Ill, 3, 107. Tim. V, 1, 174.

S a c k b u t , the trombone, a kind of trumpet: Cor. V, 4, 52. S a c k - c l a t h , coarse cloth worn in mourning and mortification: H 4 B 1 , 2 , 2 2 2 . P e r . IV,4,29. cf. Esther IV, 1. S a c k e r a a i i , name of a large bear at Paris-garden: Wiv. I, 1, 307. S a c r a m e n t , the Eucharist: ere I last received the s. I did confess it, R 2 1 , 1 , 1 3 9 . Vows made and oaths taken on the sacrament; hence to receive the s. = to take an onth: thou didst receive the holy s. to fight in quarrel of the house of Lancaster, R 3 1,4,208. to take the s.: All's IV, 3, 156. J o h n V, 2, 6. R2 IV, 328. V, 2, 97. H 6 A IV, 2, 28. R 3 V, 5, 18. S a c r e d , such as must be kept holy, entitled to awe and veneration: Lucr. 1172. Compl. 260. Wiv. IV, 4, 59. V, 5, 61. Meas. IV, 3, 149. V, 410. Merch. I, 3, 49. As II, 7, 123. W i n t . II, 1, 183. II, 3, 84. Ill, 3, 7. V, 3, 122. J o h n III, 1, 229. H 6 A I, 2, 114. IV, 1, 40. H 6 B I, 3, 61. Tit. I, 92. 242. II, 1, 120 (our empress with her s. wit to villany and vengeance consecrate; Aaron's speech). Tim. I. 1, 82. Caes. Ill, 2, 138. Mcb. II, 4, 34. Hml. Ill, 2, 170. L r . I, 1, 111. Oth. Ill, 3, 461. Ant. 1, 3, 63. II, 2, 85. P e r . V, 1, 74. Epithet of royalty: serving with looks his (the sun's) s. majesty, Sonn. 7, 4. justice, most s. duke, Err. V, 133. 0 my most s. lady, Wint. 1,2,76. whose person, so s. as it is, V, I, 172. a s. king, J o h n III, 1, 148. our s. blood, R 2 1, 1, 119. 1, 2, 17. Ill, 3, 9. IV, 209. V, 2, 30. V, 6, 6. H 5 I, 2, 7. H 8 II, 4, 41. Ill, 2, 173. V, 5, 46. Troil. IV, 5, 134 (thy mother, my s. aunt). Per. I, 2, 33. Applied by enthusiastic lovers to the objects of their affection: tan s. beauty, Sonn. 115, 7. no Valentine for s. Silvia, Gent. Ill, 1, 211. s. and sweet was all I saw in her, Shr. I, 1, 181. S a c r l f l c e , subst. 1) the act of offering any thing to G o d : W i n t . Ill, I, 6. Troil. IV, 2, 66. Cor. I, 10, 21. Tit. II, 3, 164. Oth. V, 2, 65. Cymb. V, 5, 398. to do s. Caes. II, 2, 5. Per. V, 1, 242. V, 2, 12. give you thankful s. Cor. I, 6, 9. Ant. I, 2, 167. 2) that which is offered or immolated: Merch. Ill, 2, 57. J o h n II, 420. H 4 A IV, 1,113. H5 IV Chor. 23. H 8 II, 1, 77. Troil. I, 2, 308. V, 3, 18. Tit. I, 124. L r . V, 3, 20. Cymb. I, 2, 3. 3) that which is destroyed for the sake of something else: the back is s. to the load, H8 I, 2, 50. poor —* of our enmity, Rom. V, 3, 304.

s

997

Saerlflee, vb. 1) to offer up to heaven (or to what IV, 2, 4. H4A V, 2, 12 (the suffix ly belonging to is compared with it): Gent. Ill, 2, 74. R2 I, 1, 104. both words). H6C V, 1, 91. T i t I, 98. 144 (th« —ing fire — the 2) gravely, serionsly, in earnest: this can be no fire of sacrifice). trick; the conference was s. borne, Ado II, 3, 229. my 2) to destroy or give np for the sake of something father is gone wild into his grave, for in his tomb lie else: Merch. IV, 1, 286. Tw. V, 133. Rom. V, 3, 268. my affections, and with his spirit s. I survive, to mock Saerlfleer, one that bring an offering to the gods: the expectation of the world, H4B V, 2, 125. but*. teU me who, Rom. I, 1, 207. Caes. II, 1, 166. Sacrlllelal, made as to a god in sacrificing, fall S a d a e u , 1) sorrow, grief, dejection of mind: of devotion: rain s. whisperings in his ear, Tim. I, Ado I, 3, 4. LLL I, 2, 4. 7. Merch. I, 1, 6. I, 2, 54. 1, 81. As I, 1, 5. IV, 1, 20. Shr. Ind. 2, 34. John II, 546. SacrllegleiM, violating sacred things: Mcb. II, H4B V, 2, 46. Troil. I, 1, 40. Rom. I, 1, 169. Hml. II, 2, 147. Cymb. I, 6, 62. V, 4, 162. 3, 72. Cymb. V, 5, 220. 8aering bell, the little bell rang at mass to give 2) seriousness: this merry inclination accords not notice that the elements are consecrated: H8 III, 2,295. with the s. of my suit, H6C III, 2, 77. in s. or in good 8*4, (comp. —er: Gent. IT, 2, 54. Ado III, 2,16. s. = in earnest: therefore, in s., now I will away, Shr. Ill, 2, 101. Snperl. —est: Mids. II, 1, 51. H6C Ven. 807. in good s., I am sorry that far my sake you II, 1, 67) 1) sorry, sorrowful, melancholy; used of have suffered all this, Wiv. Ill, 5, 125. ay, in good »., things as well as persons: Yen. 929. Lncr. 262. 556. is he, IV, 2, 93. now, in good »., son Petrvchio, I think 1386. 1591. Sonn. 153, 12. Tp. I, 2, 224. Gent. II, thou hast the veriest shrew of all, Shr. V. 2,63. in good 4, 8. Ill, 1, 230. IV, 2,54. IV, 4, 94. Meas. Ill, 2, 54. s., I do not know, All's IV, 3, 230. tell me in s. who Err. I, 1, 121. IV, 2, 4. V, 45. Ado 1,3, 2. Ill, 2, 20. is that you love, Rom. I, 1, 205. V, 1, 292. LLL I, 2, 3. Mids. II, 1, 51. Merch. I, 1, S a d - i e t , writing of M. Edd. in Lncr. 1662; not 1. 22. 37. 40. 45.47. 79. As IV, 1, 8. Shr. Ill, 2,100. hyphened in 0 . Edd.; see Set. 101. John II, 544. H6A 1, 8, 48. H6C II, 1, 8. 67. S a d - t n n e d , of a sad sound and purport: to list Ant. I, 3, 3 etc. etc. the s. tale, Compl. 4. 2) grave, serious: s. paiue and deep regard beseem Safe, adj. and adv. 1) sound, right, good: nor do the sage, Lncr. 277. what s. talk teas that, Gent. I, 3, I think the man of s. discretion, Meas. I, 1, 72. on a I. you're s. Err. Ill, 1, 19. speak you this with a s. —r judgment all revoke your ignorant election, Cor. brow? Ado I, 1, 185. in s. conference, I, 3, 62. she is II, 3, 226. a trade that I may use with a s. conscience, never s. but when she sleeps, II, 1, 358. you are — er, Caes. I, 1, 14. the —r sense will ne'er accommodate III, 2, 16. counterfeit s. looks, make mouths upon me his master thus, Lr. IV, 6, 81. what s. and nicely I when I turn my tack, Mids. Ill, 2,237. then, my queen, might well delay, V, 3, 144. my blood begins my —r in silence s. trip we after the night's shade, IV, 1,100. guides to rule, Oth. II, 3, 205. are his wits s.f IV, 1, wellstudiedin a s. ostent to please his grandam, Merch. 280. in all s. reason he must have some attendants, II, 2, 205. s. Lucretia's modesty, As III, 2, 156. s. Cymb. IV, 2,131. in our orbs we'U live so round and s., brow and true maid, 227. he is s. and civil, Tw. Ill, that time of both this truth shall ne'er convince, thou 4, 5. I sent for thee upon a s. occasion, 20. 21. a s. showedst a subject's shine, I a true prince, Per. 1,2,122. face, a reverend carriage, 80. in s. talk, Wint. IV, 4, 2) in good condition, without damage, nnhnrt, 316. a jest with a s. brow, H4B V, 1, 92. the s. and uninjured: are they s.t Not a hair perished, Tp. I, 2, solemn priests, H5 IV, 1, 318. the widow likes it not, 217. heaven keep your honour s. Meas. II, 2, 157. and for she looks very s., H6C III, 2, 110. = surly: that soon and s. arrived, Err. I, 1, 49. IV, 4, 125. 154 (s. s. dog that brings me food, R2 V, 5, 70. and sound). R2 II, 2,50. H4A IV, 3,109. H5 II Chor. 8 u l - > t t e B 4 l i i | , (not hyph. in O. Edd.) sadly 37. 111,6,5. IV, 3, 21. R3V,3, 320. Troil. 1,3, 381. listening: Tit. V, 3, 82. Tit. I, 176. 221. Mcb. Ill, 2, 6. V, 8, 35. Lr. Ill, 6, Sad-fcehaMln«, looking sad? (cf. Per. V, 1,224): 121. Oth.II, 1,33. Ant IV,14,36. Cymb. 111,5,105. which when her s. husband raw, Lncr. 1590. Per. II Chor. 32. Saddle, snbst. the seat pnt on a horse's back for 3) free from danger: Angela perceives he's s. Meas. the rider: Shr. Ill, 2,49. IV, 1, 59. H4AII, 1,6. H4B V, 499. my money is not s. Err. I, 2, 105. thou liest II, 1, 29. H5 V, 2, 143. warm at home, secure and s. Shr. V, 2, 151. live —st Saddle, vb. to pnt a saddle on, to cover with a in shame, All's IV, 3,374. nor shall you be —r, Wint. saddle: R2 V, 2, 74. H4B V, 3, 127. R3 V, 3,64. Lr. I, 2, 444. thou mayst hold a fasting tiger —r by the 1, 4, 274. tooth, John III, 1, 260. Ill, 4, 161. R2 III, 2, 80. H5 Saddle-hew, the crooked pieces of wood which IV, 1, 182. HCA V, 3, 169. H6B I, 4, 39. 71. H6C form the skeleton of a saddle: Ven. 14. I, 1, 241. IV, 1, 40. 41. R3 I, 1, 70. Ill, 2, 68. IV, Saddler, one whose trade is to make saddles: 4, 213. V, 5, 10. Troil. Ill, 2, 77. IV, 4, 117. Cor. Err. 1, 2, 66. IV, 6, 37. Tit. II, 1, 2. IV, 2, 131. Caes. V, 4, 20. Sad-ered, grave-looking: H5 I, 2, 202. Mcb. V, 4, 2. Lr. V, 3, 144 (cf. Safely). Ant. IV, 15, Sad-faced, looking sad: Tit. V, 3, 67. 26. Cymb. I, 4, 138. to keep s. = a) to protect, to Sad-hearted, sad, fnll of grief: H6C II, 5, 123. secure from danger: H6A III, 2, 100. H6C IV, 1,81. Sadly, 1) sorrowfully, mournfully: Ven. 889.917. Cor. I, 2, 37. Tit. IV, 2,110. Caes. V, 4,27. Mcb. II, Lucr. 561. 736. 1212. Sonn. 8, 1. Compl. 47. Tp. 3, 145. Hml. Ill, 3, 9. b) to gnard well: the doors be I, 2, 235. Gent. II, 1, 31. All's III, 5, 70. John III, locked and keys kept s. Gent. Ill, 1, 111. that you I, 20. R2 V, 6, 51. H6C V, 5, 7. R3 V, 3. 287. Tim. keep Costard s. LLL 1, 2, 133. keeping s. Nerissa's II, 2, 106. Hml. II, 2, 168. Oth. II, 1, 32. Cymb. V, ring, Merch. V, 307. let this be copied out and keep it 6, 23. 160. sad or merrily for sadly or merrily: Err. s. John V, 2, 2. I'll keep this door s. Tit. I, 288. it

998

S

shall s. be kept, Cymb. I, 6, 209. Similarly: the gold it laid up t. at the Centaur, Err. II, 2, 2. one he bade me store up, at a triple eye, —r than mine own two, All's II, 1,112. my horte it tied up i. Cymb. IV, 1,24. 4) affording security and safety: with —it distance I mine honour shielded, Compl. 151. in what t. place you have bettowed my money, Err. I, 2, 78. dispatch you with your —tt haste and get you from our court, As I, 3, 4 3 (i. e. with baste, wbich is the best means to save yourself), devise the fittest time and —tt way to hide ut, 137. 'tit —r to avoid what't grown, Wint. I, 2, 432. convey them with t. conduct, H5 I, 2, 297; cf. Troil. Ill, 3, 277. 288. where it the bett and —tt pottage in, H6A III, 2,22. by what t. meant the crown may be recovered, H6C IT, 7, 52. a ture and t. one (way) H8 1(1, 2, 439. their mother t bedchamber thould not be t. for thete bad bondmen, T i t IV, 1, 108. if Aaron now be wise, then it all t. IT, 4, 38. good for their meat, and —r for their lives, Tim. 1,2,46. which do but what they thould by doing every thing t. toward your love and honour, Mcb. I, 4, 27 (every thing that is snre to show yon lore and honour? Or every thing consistent with the love and hononr we bear you? An expression undoubtedly strained and obscure on purpose). our —tt way is to avoid the aim, 11,3,148. nor ttands it t. with us to let hit madness range, Hml. Ill, 3, 1. to have found a t. redress, Lr. I, 4, 225. 'tis politic and t. to let him keep a hundred knights, 346. — r than tryst too far, 351. opinion throws a more —r voice on you, Oth. I, 3, 226. to take the —st occasion by the front, III, 1 152. to be direct and honest is not s. III,3,378. to have them in s. stowage, Cymb. 1,6,192. 5) no longer dangerous, not able to do harm: he's t. for thete three hourt, Tp. Ill, 1, 21. Baptitta it t., talking with the deceiving father of a deceitful ton, Shr. IV, 4, 82. villain, I'll make thee s. R2 V, 3, 41. tee him t. i 'the Tower, H8 V,3,97. but Banquo's s.f Ay, my good lord, t. in a ditch he bides, Mcb. Ill, 4, 25. S a f e , vb. 1) to render safe, to conduct safely: best you —d the bringer out of the host, Ant. IV, 6, 26. 2) to justify: that which most with you should s. my going, is Fulvia's death, Ant. I, 3, 55. S a f e - c o n d u c t (not hyphened in 0 . Edd.) a warrant of security, or a guard through an enemy's territory: H5 I, 2, 297. Troil. Ill, 3, 277. 288. B a f e - c e n d o c M n s , attending and conducting by way of protection: s. the rebels from their thipt, B3 IV, 4, 483. S a f e g u a r d , snbst. 1) defence, protection: to the t. of your honour, Meas. V, 424. doves will peck in t. of their brood, H6C II, 2, 18. fight in t. of your wives, B3 V, 3, 259. for the inheritance of their loves and s. of what that want might ruin, Cor. Ill, 2, 68. 2) safe-conduct: on ». he came to me, Cor.Ill, 1,9. S a f e g u a r d , vb. to guard, to protect, to secure: to t. thine own life, R2 I, 2, 35. we have locks to t. necessaries, H5 I, 2, 176. S a f e l y , 1) without injury, fortunately, happily: t. in harbour is the king's thip, Tp. I, 2,226. we have s. found our king and company, V, 221. my thipt are t. come to road, Merch.V,288. God, and not we, hath t. fought, H4B IV, 2, 121 (without any bloodshed . see them guarded and t. brought to Dover, H6A V, 1, 49. H6B IV, 1, 114. God s. quit her of her burthen, H8 V, 1, 70. that my teaching and the strong course of my authority might go one way, and t. V, 3,36 (both

nndamagetd). hat clucked thee to the war, and t. home, Cor. V, 3, 163. letting go t. by the divine Desdemona, Oth. II, 1,. 72. that the gods would s. deliver me from this place,, Per. IV, 6, 191. 2) witthout danger; or rather without fear of danger or loffence, securely (German: ruhig): go s. on to teek thy/ son, Tp. 11, 1, 327. running out, that wat t. within, L L L III, 117. I wat thinking with what mannert r might t. be admitted, All's IV, 5, 94. how can tyrantu t. govern home, unless abroad they purchase great altimncel H6CII1,3,69. then reaton t. with you, Cor. 1,9,5)8. if Brutus will vouchtafe that Antony may s. come to him, Caes. Ill, 1,131. to be t. thus, Mcb. Ill, I, 49. go s. on, Hml. IV, 4, 8 (German: marschirt nur ruhig vormirtt. Qq tofily). what tafe and nicely I might well delay, Lr. V,3,144 (the gnffix ly belonging to both wrords). can we with mannert aik what wat the difference1 S., I think, Cymb. I, 4, 58. and might so s. (have; staked the ring) had it been all the worth ..., V, 5, 190.. 3) so ats to prevent danger or escape, carefully, closely: U have with such provision in mine art to t. ordered, TTp. 1,2,29. I'll keep him dark and t. locked, All's IV, 1., 104. to keep him t. till hit day of trial, R2 IV, 153. ¡had all your quarters been at t. kept, H6A II, 1, 63. 4». stowed, Hml. IV,2,1. placed it s. V, 2,52. In botlh words, safe and safely, the line of demarcation bettween adjective and adverb scarcely discernible; see If. i. Tp. V, 221. L L L III, 117. Cor. V, 3, 163. Oth.. II, 1, 72. cf. Appendix. S a f e t j y (trisyll. in Hml. I, 3, 21; Ff sanctity); 1) state otf being unhurt or uninjured: as this is true, let me in ss. raise me from my knees, Meas. V, 231. nor (love no nnan) further in sport neither than with t. of a pure bluish thou mayst in honour come off again, As I, 2, 30 (with no other hurt than a mere blush), my arrival amd my wife's in t. Wint. V, 1, 167. hath patted in t. through the narrow seas, H6C IV, 8, 3. the worthy/ Leonatus is in t. and greett your highness dearly, Cjymb. I, 6, 12 ( = is well). Hence; sometimes = welfare, good fortune, success: the ¡gods give t. to your purpotet, Meas. I, 1, 74. I will praiy for your fair s. John III, 3, 16. your s.. for the wlhich myself and them bend their best studies, IV, 2, 50.. tendering the precious s. of my prince, B2 1,1,32. fior hit s. there I'll bett devite, H6AI, 1,172. wishes touoards you honour and plenteous t. H8 I, I, 104. promide for thine own future t. Ill, 2, 422. the godt with s. stand about thee, Troil. V, 3, 94. 2) fretedom from danger: Tp. II, 1,198. Meas. IV, 3, 94. Errr. I, 1, 77. Mids. V, 427. As 1, 2, 189. All's 1, 1, 217. Tw. Ill, 4, 273. IV, 2, 76. V, 218. Wint. III, 2, 21.. John III, 1, 120. 111,2, 8. 111,4, 147. 148. IV, 3, 12.. V, 2, 142. H4A II, 3, 11. Ill, 2, 117. IV, 3, 103. W, 1, 65. V, 5, 11. H4B Ind. 10. I, 1, 124. 213. IV, 22, 35. IV, 5 , 3 1 . V, 2, 88. H5 II, 2, 175. Ill, 2, 14. IV., 7, 85. H6B III, 1, 277. V, 3, 23. H6C I, 1, 241. I1II, 3, 211. IV, 1, 46. IT, 7, 18. R3 1, 1, 44. Ill, 5, 45.. IT, 4, 214. H8 T, 5, 34. Cor. Ill, 3, 34. Tit. IT, 2;, 134. IT, 4, 105. Tim. II, 1, 13. IT, 3, 345. Caes. Ill, 1, 289. Mcb. Ill, 1, 54. IT, 3, 30 ( — e t ) . Hml. I, 3„ 21 (Ff sanctity). 43. II, 2, 79. IT, 3, 42. IT, 7, 8. ILr. I, 1, 159. T, 3, 44. Oth. I, 1, 150. II, 3, 216. Ant.. II, 6, 96. IT, 15, 46. Cymb. I, 6, 194. 3) cusitody, ward: deliver him to s. J o h n IT, 2,158. hold him iin s. Rom. T, 3, 183.

s

990

Saffken, the plant Crocns sativus; used to colour paste: vhose vittanous t. would have made all the unbaked and doughy youth of a nation in hit colour, All's IV, 5, 2 (perhaps with an allnsion to the fashionable custom of wearing yellow). I mutt have s. to colour the warden pies, Wint. IV, 3, 48. Adjectively, = deep yellow: with thy (Iris') i. wing», Tp. IV, 78. this companion with the s. face, Err. IV, 4, 64. S a f , to sink, to droop, to flag: shall never s. with doubt nor shake with fear, Mcb. V, 3, 10 8 g r a v e and wise: Lucr. 222. 277. Tw. Ill, 4, 413. H4B IV, 5, 121. R3 III, 7, 227. Per. IV, 6, 102. In Hml. V, 1, 260 Ff s. requiem, Qq a requiem. S a g l t t a i r , 1) a Centaur who came to the assistance of the Trojans: Troil. V, 5, 14. 2) a public building in Venice: Oth. I, 1, 159. I, 3, 115. S a i l , snbst. 1) the sheet which catches the wind and carries the vessel on: Tp. I, 2, 147. V, 315. Err. I, 1, 117. Merch. I, 1, 9. John IV, 2, 23. H6C II, 6, 35. Hml. I, 3, 56. IV, 6,17. V, 2,120. Oth. II, 1, 78. under s. = sailing: L L L V, 2, 549. Mids. I, 1, 174. Merch. II, 6, 68. II, 8, 1. 6. Cor. II, 2, 110. to hoist s. — to draw up and set the sail: Sonn. 117, 7. Err. V, 21. Tw. 1, 5, 215. B3 IV, 4, 629. Ant. Ill, 10,15. to strike s., i. e. to lower the sail, = to humble one's self: H4B V, 2, 18. H6C III, 3, 5. bear so low a «., to strike to thee, V, 1, 52. Metaphorically: the proud full s. of his great verse, Sonn. 86, 1. be like a Icing and show my s. of greatness, H5 1, 2, 274. Plur. —s: Tp. Epil.ll. Wiv.11,2,142. Mids. II, 1, 128. Merch. II, 6, 18. R2 II, 1, 265. H5 III Chor. 10. R3 IV, 4, 233. Troil. II, 2, 74. Rom. 1,4,113. Ant. II, 2,198. III, 11, 55. IV, 12,4. Cymb. II, 4, 28. Per. V, 1, 256. V, 2, 15. Pars pro toto, ». = a ship: Sonn. 80, 6. Rom. II, 4,108. Oth. II, 1,4.51.54.93. Cymb. 1,3,2. Per.III Prol. 20. Plnr. —t: Ant. II, 6, 24. Ill, 7, 50. Plur. *..- John III, 4, 2. Oth. I, 3, 37. 2) voyage by sea, sailing: my butt and very seamark of my utmost s. Oth. V, 2, 268. 3) fleet, squadron: we have descried-a portly s. of ships make hitherward, Per. I, 4, 61. S a i l , vb. 1) intr. to be conveyed in a vessel, to pass by water: Wiv. I, 3, 89. Err. I, 1, 63. Ado III, 4, 58. Mids. II, 1,132. Tw. Ill, 2, 28. John V, 7, 63. H6C V, 1, 53. Troil. 1, 1, 106. I, 3, 35. II, 3, 277. Rom. 11,2,32. 111,5, 135. Mcb. I, 3, 8. Oth. 11,3,65. Cymb. I, 3, 13. 2) to pass through in a vessel: s. seas in cockles, Per. IV, 4, 2. S a i l - M a k e r , one whose trade is to make sails: Shr. V, 1, 80. Sailer, a common mariner: Tp. I, 2, 270. II, 1, 4. II, 2, 53. 127. Err. I, 1, 77. Merch. I, 3, 23. Ill, I, 109. Tw. I, 2, 5. Ill, 2, 18. H6C III, 2, 186. V, 4,5. R31II,4,101. Troil. II, 1,43. Mcb. I, 3,4. Hml. IV, 6, 2. IV, 7, 39. Cymb. IV, 2, 56. Per. IV, 1, 54. S a l a , = said; used by Arm ado for the sake of the rhyme: LLL 111, 83. cf. Say. Saint, subst. a person sanctified and canonized, or deserving to be so: Lucr. 85. Sonn. 144, 7. Gent. II, 4, 145. Meas. I, 4, 37. II, 2,127. 180. IV, 2, 192. V, 243. Err. Ill, 2, 14. IV, 4, 60. Merch. I, 2, 143. II, 7, 40. Shr. Ill, 2, 28. All's V, 3, 108. John III, l , 177. R2 HI, 3, 152. H4A I, 2, 102. II, 1, 88. H6A

1, 6, 29. Ill, 3, 15. H6B I, 3, 63. R3 1, 2, 49. I, 3. 338. IV, 1, 70. IV, 4, 75. V, 3, 241. H8 V, 5, 61. Rom. I, 5,101. 103. 105. 107. II, 2, 55. 61. Ill, 2,79. Tim. V,1,55. Oth.II, 1,112. Before names: S. Anne, Tw. II, 3, 126. Alban, H6B I, 2, 57. Betmet, Tw. V, 42. Charity, Hml. IV, 5,58. Clare, Meas. 1,4,5. Colme, Mcb. I, 2, 61. Davy, H5 IV, 1, 55. Dennis, LLL V, 2, 87. H6A I, 6, 28. III, 2, 18. Edmundsbury, John IV, 3,11. George, LLL V, 2, 620. John II, 288. H6A 1, 1, 154. IV, 2, 55. IV, 7, 68. Gregory, Gent. IV, 2, 84. Jaques, All's III, 4, 4. IV, 3, 58. Jamy, Shr. Ill, 2, 84. Katharine, H6A I, 2, 100. Lambert, R2 I, 1, 199. Luke, Meas. Ill, 1, 276. Magnus, H6B IV, 8, 1. Martin, H6A I, 2,131. Mary, John II, 538. Michael, H6A IV, 7, 69. Nicholas, Gent. Ill, 1, 300. H4A II, 1, 67. Paul, R3 I, 1, 138. Peter, Ado II, 1, 50. Oth. IV, 2, 91. Philip, H6A I, 2,143. Valentine, Mids. IV, I,144. Hml.IV,5,48. cf. theresp. names. Jocularly: S. Cupid, LLL IV, 3, 366. V, 2, 87. S a i n t , vb. to play the saint: think women still to strive with men, to sin and never for to s. Pilgr. 342. S a i n t e d , sanctified, holy: Meas. I, 4, 34. Ill, 1, 89 (M. Edd. outward-sainted). All's III, 4, 7. Wint. V, 1, 57. Mcb. IV, 3, 109. Salnt-llke, like a saint: Lucr. 1519. Wint V, 1, 2. H8 II, 4, 138. IV, 1, 83. S a l n t - a e t a c l n g , seducing a saint: Rom. 1,1,220. Sake, cause, interest; always preceded by /or (by from only in Evans' language: Wiv. Ill, 1,42), = in behalf, on account: what I should do again for such a s. Compl. 322. With of : for the s. of them thou sorrowest for, Err. I, 1, 122. for the s. of merit, Ant. II, 7, 61. for the s. of it, Per. Ill, 1, 21. Usually with an Anglosaxon genitive: Lucr. 533. Pilgr. 120.Gent. II, 2, 5. Ill, 1, 17. Ill, 2, 63. IV, 4, 182. 207. V, 4, 149. Meas. V, 408. Err. I, 2, 93. II, 1, 77. II, 2, 24. ID, 2, 6. LLL IV, 1, 32. IV, 3, 357. 358. 369. 360. Merch. II, 4, 35. IV, 1, 379. As I, 2, 293. Shr. Ind. 2,1. All's 1,1, 24.1,3,43. Tw. Ill, 3,34. 4,336. H6A II, 5, 51. R3 I, 4, 216 etc. Proverbial phrases: can you tell for whose s.t Err. Ill, 1, 57. are now lfor the Lord's s'. Meas. IV, 3,21. will lend nothing for God s s. Ado V, 1,322. The s of the genitive omitted; after sibilants: for praise s. LLL IV, 1, 37. for alliance s. H6A II, 5, 53. for goodness s. H8 Prol. 23. for their poor mistress f. Ill, 1, 47. for Venus s. Troil. IV, 5, 49. for conscience s. Cor. II, 3, 36. for Brutus s. Caes. Ill, 2, 70. for justice s. IV, 3, 19. After other letters: for fashion s. As III, 2, 271. for's oath s. Tw. III,4,326. for heaven s. John IV, 1,78. for recreation s. H4A I, 2, 174. for sport s. II, 1, 78. for their own credit s. 80. for safety s. V, 1,65. for your health and your digestion s. Troil. II, 3,120. With personal pronouns: for my s. Ven. 105. Sonn. 42,7. 111,1. Gent. II, 1, 136. Wiv. in, 5,126. Ado IV, 1, 321. V, 2, 70. Merch. I, 1, 185 etc. for thy s. Gent. II, 2, 10. V, 4, 70. All's II, 3,245. H6A V,4,19.29. R3I,2,146 etc. for his s. Meas. Ill, 1, 238. V, 495. Ado IV, 1, 320. Mids. II, 2, 29. All's I, 1,110. Tw. V, 85 etc. for her s. Sonn. 145, 3. LLL IV, 3,134. Mids. II, 1,136.137. As II, 4, 76 etc. for your s. Tp. Ill, 1, 66. Gent. IV, 2, 23. Wiv. I, 1, 268. Merch. IV, 1,426 etc. for their s. H5 Epil. 13 (rhyming). With an adjective before it: for whose dear s. Gent. V, 4, 47. Rom. Ill, 3, 136. for your lovely s. Meas. V, 496. for your own s. Ado II, 1, 105. As I, 2, 189. All's II, 3, 96. cf. Gent. IV, 64

S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. 2. E* V, 142. Wint. Ill, 3, 66. thy jealous Jits have —d thy the gleaners), the troops are all —ed, All's IV, 3,152. husband from the use of wits, Err. V, 86. —d my old cakes of roses were thinly —ed, Rom. V, 1, 48. choughs from the chaff, Wint. IV, 4, 630. Rom. Y, 3, c) to strew: his plausive words he —ed not in ears, 261. the spirit of wantonness is —d out of him, Wiv. but grafted them, All's 1,2,54. he dives into the king's IV, 2, 224. s. Troy out of itself, Troil. V, 10, 21. —d soul and there —* dangers, doubts, H8 II, 2, 27. the cockle of rebellion, which ice ourselves have ploughed out of his wits, Lr. IV, 1, 59. Scare-crew (O. Edd. scar-crow), a figure set op for, sowed and —ed, Cor. Ill, 1,71. the seedsman upon to frighten the birds from the field; or what resembles the slime and ooze —s his grain, Ant. II, 7, 25. d) to disunite, to distract: from France there comes it: Meas. II, 1, 1. H4A IV, 2, 41. H6A 1,4, 43. Scarf, subst. a silken ornament hong loosely on a power into this —ed kingdom, Lr. Ill, 1, 31. 2) intr. to go dispersedly, to straggle; and hence the shoulders or any part of the dress: rich s. to my proud earth (viz the rainbow) Tp. IV, 82. under your to go at random and without a certain aim: the comarm, like a lieutenant's s. Ado II, 1,198. the beauteous mons, like an angry hive of bees that want their leader, s. veiling an Indian beauty, Merch. Ill, 2, 98. to see s. up and down and care not who they sting in his rethee wear thy heart in a s. It is my arm, As V, 2, 23. venge, H6B III, 2, 126. nor build yourself a trouble with —* and fans and double change of bravery, Shr. out of his —ing and unsure observance, Oth. Ill, IV, 3, 57. the —s and the bannerets about thee, All's 3, 151. Scene, 1) a stage, a theatre; or the place repreII, 3, 214. bound in thy s. 238. that jackanapes with —s, III, 5,88. had the whole theorie of war in the knot sented by the stage: forsook his s. and entered m a of his s. IV, 3,163. you are undone, all but your s. 359. brake, Mids. Ill, 2, 15. the s. is now transported to matrons flung gloves, ladies and maids their —i and Southampton; there is the playhouse now, H5 II Prol. handkerchers upon him, Cor. II, 1, 280. Cupid hood- 34. 42. woe's s. R3 IV, 4,27 (so the duchess of York winked with a s. Rom. 1,4,4. pulling —s off Caesar's calls herself). a queen in jest, only to fill the s. 91. in images, Cues. I, 2, 289. Troy there lies the s. Troil. Prol. 1. when he might act Scarf, vb. to put on loosely like a scarf: my sea- the woman in the s. Cor. II, 2, 100. where we lay our gown —ed about me, Hml. V, 2, 13. With up, = to s. Rom. I Prol. 2. cover as with a scarf, to blindfold (cf. Rom. 1,4,4): 2) part of an act; so much of a play as passes seeling night, s. up the tender eye of pitiful day, Mcb. between the same persons in the same place: last s. of aU is second childishness, As II, 7, 163. they gape III, 2, 47. Scarfed, famished, adorned with flags: the s. and point at your industrious —* and acts of death, bark, Merch. II, 6, 15. John II, 376. a breath, a little s. B2 III, 2, 164. H6C Scarlet, bright-red: their (the lips') s. ornaments, V, 6,10. R3II, 2,38. Hml. II, 2,460. 111,2,81. Ant. Sonn. 142, 6. a s. cloak, Shr. V, 1, 69. R2 III, 3, 99. 1, 3, 78. H4A II, 4, 17. H 6 A I, 3, 42. Rom. II, 1, 18. Tim. 3) an action exhibited to spectators, a play, a IV, 3,422. = dressed in red robes: his s. hist came spectacle: as Chorus to their tragic s. Phoen. 52. fat evidence to swear, Lncr. 1650. s. hypocrite, H6A I, 3, FaUtaff hath a great s. Wiv. IV, 6, 17. that's tie s. 56 (nllading to the red soutaine of the cardinal), thou that I would see, Ado II, 3, 225. what as. of foolery s. sin, H8 III, 2, 255; cf. H6A I, 8, 42 and H8 III, have I seen, L L L IV, 3, 163. the s. begins to eltud, 2, 280. V, 2, 730. a tedious brief s. of young Pyramus, Mids. Substantively: jaded by a piece of s. H8111,2,280. V, 56. more woeful pageants than the s. wherein we they (thy cheeks) will be its. straight, Rom. II, 5,73. play in, As II, 7, 138. Wint. IV, 1, 16. IV, 4, (04. Name of one of Robin Hood's companions: Robin R2 V, 3, 79. H4B I, 1, 159. IV, 5, 198. H51 Ckor. Hood, S. and John, H4B V, 3, 107. Bardolph called 4. Ill Chor. 1. IV Chor. 48. H8 Prol. 4. Troil. I, 3, S. and John on accomit of his red face: Wiv. 1,1,177. 173. Cor. V, 3,184. Rom. IV, 3, 19. Caes. Ill, l , Scaire, a broken precipice; a word used in an 112. Hml. II, 3, 418. 619. Per. IV Prol. 6. IV, 4, 7. unintelligible and probably corrupt passage: I see that Scent, subst. the smell of game: picked out the men make ropes in such a s. that we'llforsake ourselves,dullest s. Shr. Ind. I, 24. at a cold s. Tw. II, 5,134 All's IV, 2, 38. (i. e. at fault; cf. Cold). Scathe, snbst. injury, damage: to do offence and Sceat, vb. to smell, to perceive by the nose: I s. s. in Christendom, John II, 75. aU these could not pro- the morning air, Hml. I, 5, 58. cure me any s. H6B II, 4, 62. to pray for them that Scented, in Rank-scented, q. •. have done s. to us, R3 I, 3, 317. wherein Rome hath Scent-«nulling, perceiving by the nose the tack done you any s. Tit. V, 1,7. of the game': s. hounds, Yen. 692. Scathe, vb. to injure: this trick may chance to s. Sceptre, the staff borne as an ensign of royalty: you, Bom. I, 5, 86. Lucr. 217. Merch. IV, 1, 190. All's II, 1,195. Wint Seathtal, doing damage, pernicious: with which IV, 4, 430. V, 1, 146. John III, 4, 135. R2 1,1, 118. such s. grapple did he make, Tw. V, 59. II, 1, 294. Ill, 3, 80. 151. IV, 109. 205. H4A II, 4, ' Scatter, 1) tr. a) to disperse: Lucr. 136. Merch. 416. Ill, 2, 97. H5 II, 4, 27. IV, 1, 277. H6A IT, 1, I, 1, 33. Shr. I, 2, 50. John II, 304. Ill, 4, 3. H4A 192. V, 3, 118. H6B I, 1, 245. V, 1, 9. 10. 98. 102. II, 2, 112. H4B IV, 2, 120. H5 IV, 6, 36. H6C II, 6, H6C I, 4, 17. II, 1, 154. HI, 1, 16. IV, 6, 73. H8 I, 93. B3 I, 4, 28. 33. H8 V, 4, 14. Tit. V, 3, 69. 71. 2, 135. IV, 1, 38. Troil. 1, 3, 107. Tit. I, 199. Neb. Per. IV, 2, 121. —ed and dispersed, H6A II, 1, 76. III,1,62. IV, 1,131. Ant. 111,6,76. IV, 15,76. Cymb. to s. and disperse the giddy Goths, Tit. V, 2, 78. dis- IV, 2, 268. persed and —ed, R3 IV, 4, 513. Sceptred, bearing a sceptre, royal: this i. suay,

1010

s

Scheelfellew, one bred at the same school: Hml. Ill, 4, 202. Scheellnf, see School, vb. Scheel-malds, girls at school: Meas. I, 4, 47. Scheelmaater, 1) one who presides and teaches in a public school: LLL IV, 2, 87. V, 2, 531. 2) a private teacher: here have I, thy s., made thee more profit, Tp. I, 2, 172. —s will I keep within my house, Shr. I, 1, 94. to get her cunning —s, 192. you will be s. and undertake the teaching of the maid, 196. a s. welt seen in music, I, 2,133.167. Ill, 2, 140. Cor. 1,3,61. Lr. 1,4, 195. II, 4, 307 (the injuries that they themselves procure must be their —s). Ant.Ill, 11,71. Ill, 12, 2. Per. II, 5, 40. Sciatica, a painful affection of the hip; con154. ZJLL IV, 2, 9 . M e r c h . I, 2, 124. A s IV, 1, 10. sidered as a symptom of syphilis: Meas. I, 2, 59. Sbr. 1,2, 159. II, 79. Tw. II, 3, 13. IV, 2, 12. H5 I, Troil. V, 1, 25. Tim. IV, 1, 23 (colds.). 1,32. H6B IV, 4, 36. H8 II, 2, 113. IV, 2, 51. Hml. Science, 1) knowledge, learning: your own s. 1, 5, 1H. Ill, 1, 159. Oth. II, 1, 167. I would to God exceed» the lists of all advice, Meas. I, 1, 5. Piutus some s would conjure her, Ado II, 1, 264. thou art a himself hath not in nature's mystery more s. All's V, s., spetk to it, Hml.1,1,42 (Latin being the language 3, 103. of coqnrers and exorcists). 2) an object of study, a branch of knowledge: to Stfcelarly, like a man of letters and learning: instruct her fully in those —s, Shr. II, 57. do not learn speaks, and wisely, Wiv. I, 3, 2. the —s that should become our country, H5 V, 2, 58. Stheel, snbst. 1) an establishment for the inScimitar, a sword: Merch. II, 1, 24. Troil. V, strnctbn of youth: Lucr. 615. 617. 1018. Ado V, 2, 1,2. he dies upon my —'s sharp point, Tit. IV, 2, 91 39. ILL IV, 2, 32. Shr. Ill, 1, 18. Tw. Ill, 2, 81. (consequently not a sabre with a convex edge). II4B l\2,104. IV, 3,20 (I have a whole s. of tongues Sclen, a small twig taken from one tree and inin this belly of mine). H6B IV, 7, 37 (a grammar »._). grafted in another: Wint. IV, 4, 93. H5 111, 5, 7. Troil.l, 3, 104. Tim. V, 4, 25. Oth. Ill, 3, 24. In Oth. I, 3, 337. Mcb. I 7, 6 O. Edd. upon this bank and s. of time; SelMars, an instrument consisting of two cutting M. Edl. shoal, cf. Bank. blades; used for cutting the hair: Err.V, 175. cf. Un2) the instrnction given in snch a place: no s. to scissared. day? vViv. IV, 1, 10. I have discontinued s. above a Sceff, subst. raillery, mockery, ridicule: LLL V, twelvemonth, Merch. Ill, 4, 75. at s. As I, 1, 6. from 2, 263. H6A I, 4, 39. Ill, 2, 113. B3 I, 3, 104 s. Shr III, 2, 152. to s. Wiv. IV, 1, 8. Mids. Ill, 2, ScelT, vb. to mock, to ridicule; trans.: —ing his 324. is II, 7, 147. Caes. I, 2, 300. V, 5, 26. Hml. I, state, R2 111, 2, 163. absol.: s. on, vile fiend, II6A 2, 113 toward s. Rom. II, 2, 158. to set to s. = to III, 2, 45. ScelTer, a mocker: As III, 5, 62. teach,to instruct: Lncr. 1820. H6C HI, 2, 193. we'll Scagan, see Skogan. set the to s. to an ant, Lr. II, 4,68 ( = we'll give thee Scald, subst. a wrangling fonl-mouthed woman: an ant for thy teacher). 3) learning: hath wisdom's warrant and the help Shr. I, 2, 188. John II, 191. H6C V, 5, 29. Scald, vb. intr. to wrangle, to brawl, to be claofs. ILL V, 2, 71. 4) a sect adhering to a system of doctrine: the morous: Wiv. II, 1, 240. Ado II, 1, 249 (s. with her). — s, evbowelled of their doctrine, have left off the dangerShr.1,1,177. 1,2, 100.109.254. All's II, 2, 27. H6C to itseF, All's 1,3,246. Perhaps corrupt in the follow- V, 5, 30. Cor. V, 6, 106. Tim. IV, 3, 156 (—s against ing pssage: black is the badge of hell, the hue of the quality offlesh). Caes. I, 3, 5 (the —ing winds). dungeas and the s. of night, LLLIV, 3,255 (cf. Night. Ant. I, 1, 32. With an accus. denoting the effect: / Theobild scowl, Hanmer stole, Thirlby soul, Dyce will have more, or s. it out of him, H8 V, 1, 175. soil, Ctmbr. Edd. suit). Scence, subst. 1) a fortification, bulwark: at such Scieel, vb. 1) to teach, to instruct, to train: a s., at such a breach, H5 III, 6, 76. Applied in jest never —ed and yet learned, As I, 1, 173. here comes to a covering for the head: an you use these blows long, your try; 'twere good he were —ed, Shr. IV, 4, 9. ill I must get a s. for my head, Err. II, 2, 37. —ed ii bolted language, Cor. Ill, 1, 321. 2) the head; in contempt: I shall break that merry 2) o set to rights, to reprimand: / have some pri- s. of yours, Err. I, 2, 79. II, 2, 34. 35. must I go show vate —ing for you both, Mids. I, 1, 116. tcell, I am them my unbarbed s.t Cor. Ill, 2, 99. to knock him —ed, 14A III, 1, 190. I pray you, s. yourself, Mcb. about the s. with a dirty shovel, Hml. V, 1, 110. IV, 2,15. Scence, vb. = ensconce; only by conjecture in Scieelfcer, a boy that is in his rudiments at Hml. Ill, 4, 4; 0 . Edd. silence. school Gent. II, 1,22. Ado II, 1, 229. LLL V, 2, 403. Scene, the place where the Scottish kings were As 11,7, 145. Wint. II, 1, 103. H6A I, 1, 36. Cor. crowned: Mcb. II, 4, 31. 35. V, 8, 75. Ill, 2,116. Rom. II, 2, 156. Caes. V, 1, 61. Scepe, 1) aim, intention, drift: whose worthiness SclMl-l>ri, the age in which youth are sent to gives s., being had, to triumph, being lacked, to hope, school boyhood, girlhood: Mids. Ill, 2, 202. Merch. Sonn. 52, 13. to find out shames and idle hours in me, 1, 1, 14. R3 IV, 4, 169. the s. and tenour of thy jealousy, 61,8. his coming f k l M l d , see School, vb. hither hath no further s. than for his lineal royalties,

Merch IT, 1,193. this s. isle, R2II, 1,40. the s. office of yovr ancestors, B3 III, 7, 119. SAednle, (O. Edd. mostly Scedule) a piece of paper written on: Lncr. 1312 (a letter). Compl. 43. LLL I 1, 18. Merch. II, 9, 55. Tw. 1,5, 263 (== inventorv). H4B IV, 1, 168. Caes. Ill, 1, 3. cf. Enschedded. Sdhelar, 1) a schoolboy: I anno breeching s. in the scbols, Shr. Ill, 1, 18. 2) one who learns of a teacher, a pupil, disciple: he is I better s. than I thought, Wir. IV, 1, 82. my coiuin William is become a good s. H4B III, 2, 11. thy master dies thy s. Ant. IV, 14, 102. Per. II, 3, 17. II, 5,31.39. IV, 6, 198. 3)a man of letters: Wir. II, 2, 186. Mens. Ill, 2,

s

1011

R2 III, 3, 112. curbi himself even of his natural ». H4B 111,2, 52. Followed by of: Tp. V, 174 H4B II4A III, 1, 171. 'if* conceived to *. Tinn. I, 1, 72 ( = III, 2, 55. 56. R3 I, 2, 257. Tim. Ill, 6, 87. Cymb. to the purpose). III,2,69. Of omitted: Shr. I, 2, 111. II, 360 H4A 2) the space within which one's aiims and inten- II, 4, 5. tions are bounded: a restraint, though all the world's Scare, vb. 1) to notch, to cnt, to chip: kt u* *. vaatidity you had, to a determined s. Mieas. Ill, 1, 70. their backs, Ant. IV, 7, 12. an she agree, within her s. of choice lies my consent, 2) to mark or set down for an account; absol.; Rom. 1,2,18. making your wills the s. offjustice, Tim. after he —*, he never pays the s. All's IV, 3,253. here's V, 4, 5. an anchor s cheer in prison be imy s. Hml. Ill, no —ing but upon the pate, H4A V, 3, 31. trais.: nor 2, 229. need I tallies thy dear love to s. Sonn. 122,10. ¡he utill 3) room to move in, free play, vemt: (my Muse) t. your fault upon my pate, Err. 1, 2, 65. *. nu up for have such a *. to show her pride, Sonn. 103, 2. three the lyingest knave in Christendom, Shr. Ind. 2,25. *. themes in one, which wondrous s. affords„ 105,12. now a pint of bastard, H4A II, 4, 29. have you —d met give me the s. of justice, Meas. V, 234. the fated sky Oth. IV, 1, 130 (i. e. made my reckoning. Ql ¡tared). gives us free *. All's 1,1,233. no naturad exhalation in Scern, subst 1)contempt, disdain: to lovet cheek the sky, no s. of nature, no distempered dlay, no common that smiles at thee in s. Ven. 252. in my death ¡murder wind, no customed event, hut they will pluck away his shameful s. Lucr. 1189. place my merit in ihteye of natural cause, John III, 4, 154 (no effect produced t. Sonn. 88, 2. twice desire, ere it be day, tha which within the regalar limits of nature. Most M. Edd. pre- with s. she put away, Pilgr. 316. to be in love where posterously scape), and as you answer, I do know the s. is bought withgroans, Gent.1,1,29. *. atfirsmalces s. and warrant limited unto my tongue, V, 2, 122. I'll after-love the more, III, 1, 95. the red glow ofs. and give thee (the heart) *. to beat, since foem have s. to beat proud disdain, Aslll,4,57. if the s. ofyour brufit eyne both thee and me, R2 III, 3, 140. 141. being moody, have power to raise such love in mine, IV, 3, 5i. H4B give him line and s. H4B IV, 4, 39. antd the offender IV, 2,37. H5 II, 4, 117. H6A II, 4, 77 (—*). IV, 7, granted s. of speech, H6B III, 1, 176. that my pent 39. R3 I, 2, 172. Troil. I, 3, 371. Rom. Ill, I, 166. heart may have some s. to beat, R3 IT, I , 35. let them Hml. Ill, 1, 70 (—>). Oth. IV, 3, 52. to takes, and (words) have s. IV, 4, 130. be angry wlhen you will, it to think *. = to disdain: take thou no s. to wear tie horn. shall have s. Caes. IV, 3,108. in what particular thought As IV, 2, 14. and take foul s. to fawn on him, H6A to work / know not, but in the gross and s:. of my opinion IV, 4, 35. your majesty takes no ». to wear tie leek, this bodes some strange eruption to our ¡state, Hml. I, H5 IV, 7, 107. I think s. to sigh, LLL I, 2,16. by 1, 68. giving to you no further persontal power more moonshine did these lovers think no s. to meet atNinus' than the s. of these delated articles allotw, I, 2, 37. let tomb, Mids.V, 138. the nobility think s. to go Meather his disposition have that s. that dotage gjivet it, Lr. 1, aprons, H6BIV, 2,13. their blood thinks s. till iifiy out 4, 314. and show them princes born, Cymb. IV, 4, 53 ( to enforce or 2) mockery, scoff, derision: at my parting lid the qualify the laws as to your soul seems good, Meas. I, smile, in s. or friendship, nill I construe whether, Pilgr. 1, 65. 188. become the argument of hit own s. by fating in 5) liberty, license: as surfeit is the jfather of much love, Ado II, 3, 12. have to oft encountered himwith s. fast, so every t. by the immoderate use turns to restraint, 133. Ill, 1, 51. 108. V, 2, 38. bruise me with & LLL Meas. I, 2, 131. 'twas my fault to gives the people s. V, 3, 397. if sickly ears will hear your idle —s, 875. I, 3, 35. token at your hands did I deserve thit t.t Mi A. II, 2, Search, to bnrn on the surface, to parch: his hot 124. why should you think that I should woo int. t S. heart, which fond desire doth t. Lncr. 314. the appetite and derision never come in tears, III, 2 , 1 2 2 . 1 3 . 126. of her eye did seem to t. me up like a ¡burning-glass, 222. All's I, 2, 34. Tw. I, 5, 187. Ill, 1, 157. John Wiv. I, 3, 74. to s. your face, Err. V, 1183. within the I, 243. H4A III, 2, 64. H5 I, 2, 288. H6A 1,4, 39. — ed veins of one new-burned, John IDI, 1, 278. thy H6CII, 1, 64. IV, 1,24. R31,3, 176. Ill, 1,133(give). burning ear never had —ed the earth, IH6C II, 6, 13. Troil. U, 3, 123. IV, 5, 30. Cor. II, 3, 176. Oit. Ill, In Mcb. Ill, 2, 13 O. Edd. -ed, M. Edd. scotched. 1, 238. Rom. I, 1, 119. Oth. IV, 1, 83. IV, 2, >4 (see Scare, snbst. 1) a notch made on a (tally: our fore- Time). Cymb. V, 2, 7 (cf. Of). V, 4, 125 (but 0 s.t fathers had no other books than the s. and ¡the tally, H6 A = O mockery 1). a-scorn = in scorn (?): I lave, at IV, 7, 38. when the sun doth light a-s., buried this sigh fn irinlcle Edd. 2) an account kept by notches, and Ihence account of a smile, Troil. I, 1, 37 (Fi.a and Qq a *., or reckoning generally: I am not fourteten pence on the a storm), in s. of = in defiance of, vying nth: a s. Shr. Ind. 2, 25. he's an infinitive thiing upon my s. thousand lamentable objects there, in t. of natue, art H4B II, 1, 26. eat and drink on my s. E 6 B IV, 2, 80. gave lifeless life, Lucr. 1374. in those holes where he never pays the s. All's IV, 3, 253. sttrikes some —* eyes did once inhabit, there were crept, as 'twee in t. away from the great compt, V, 3, 56. As parted well of eyes, reflecting gems, R3 1, 4, 31. to laugh 6 s.— and paid his t. Mcb. V, 8, 52. strike off mis t. of ab- to deride, to make a mock of: Ven. 4. Err. 11,2,207. As IV, 2, 19. H6A IV, 7, 18. Mcb. IV, 1, 79. 5,3. sence, Oth. Ill, 4, 179. 3) (cf. Threescore, Fourscore etc.)) a number of V, 7, 12. Similarly: let Paris bleed: 'tis but a tear to twenty: Rom. II, 4, 145. Lr. I, 4, 140.. Cymb. Ill, 2, s. Troil. I, 1, 114 (cf. To). 70. eight s. Oth. Ill, 4, 174. 175. as easy as a cannon 3) an object of derision: to make a loathsene abwill shoot point-blank twelve t. (viz yarcBs) Wiv. Ill, 2, ject s. of me, Err. IV, 4,106. these oaths and lacs toilI 34. his death will be a march of twelve• s. H4A II, 4, prove an idle *. LLL 1,1,311. thai is honour's s, which 598. a would have clapped i the clomt at twelve s. I challenges itself as honour's born and is not like be sire,

1012

S

AIl'i 113,140. to be shame's s. and subject of misehance, 3) causing contempt and derision, disgraceful: thy H6A I*, 6,49. (ton earnest not tote made a s. in Rome, surviving husband shall remain the s. mark of every T i t 1,265. to become the geek and i. o' th' other's vil- open eye, Lucr. 520. lany, Cymb. V, 4, 67. g e a n i r u l l j r , disdainfully, contemptuously: Ven. Pesuliar expression: to show virtue her own feature, 275. Lucr. 187. H5 IV, 2, 42. Cor. II, 3, 171. s. htriwn image, Hml. Ill, 2, 26 (mockery, satire? or S c t r f l n , the animal Scorpio; proverbial for disdait, pride?). its venomous sting: seek not a — s' nest, H6B III, 2, 8«*ra, Tb. 1) trans, a) to disdain, to refuse or lay 86. full of—s is my mind, Mcb. Ill, 2,36. your daughter aside n t h contempt: —ing hit churlish drum, Ven. was as a s. to her sight, Cymb. V, 5, 45. 107. punts at his love and —s the heat he feels, 311. Scat, a native of Scotland: H4A I, 1, 54. 68. I, the sun doth s. you and the wind doth hiss you, 1084. 3, 212. 214. 215. II, 4, 116. 377. IV, 1, 1. IV, 3, 12. she dil s. a present that I sent her, Gent. Ill, 1, 92. a V,3,11. 15. V, 4, 39. 114. V , 5 , 1 7 . H4BI, 1,126. woman sometime —s what but contents her, 93. if thou IV, 4, 98. H 5 I , 2 , 1 3 8 . 144. 148. 161. 170. HCAIV, s. our zourtesy, thou diest, IT, 1, 68. Ado IT, 1, 304. 1, 157. Mids.HI, 2, 331. As II, 4, 22. All's V, 3, 50. John teat a n d ! • » , taxes, contributions: or that hot 111, 4,^2. H5 II, 1, 32. H6A I, 4, 32. B3 I, 2, 165. termagant Scot had paid me scot and lot too, H4A V, Rom. II, 1,123. Tim. I, 2, 38. Cymb. V, 5,106. Per. 4, 115. Seateh, subst. slight cut, shallow incision: I have 1, 1, 51- Is. that with my heels. Ado III, 4, 50. s. running wth thy heels, Merch. II, 2,9 (cf. Ven. 312). Dat. yet room for six -- es more, Ant. IV, 7, 10. Bcateh, vb. to cut with shallow incisions: he and aicns. following: law shall s. him further trial, COT. II, 1, 268. With an inf.: Is. to change my state —ed him and notched him like a carbonado, Cor. IV, with kngs, Sonn. 29, 14. Shr. IV, 2, 18. All's T, 3, 5, 198. we have —ed the snake, Mcb. Ill, 2, 13 (O. 18. R IV, 9. H5 III, 2, 40. R3 III, 4, 85. Tit. IV, Edd. scorched). S c a t c h , adj. pertaining to Scotland: a S. jig, 2, 100 With a clause: yet sometimes falls an orient drop kside, which her cheek melts, as —ing it should Ado II, 1, 77. 8 e a t l a n 4 , the country to the north of England: pass, P wash the foul face of the sluttish ground, Ven. 982. dl those eyes adored them ere their fall s. now where S.t I found it by the barrenness, Ett. Ill, 2, 122. H4A I, 3, 262. 265. 280. Ill, 1, 45. Ill, 2, 164. IV, their land should give them burial, Per. II, 4, 12. b)to despise: so should my papers be —ed Wee old 1,85. H4B II, 3, 50. 67. IV, 1,14. H5I,2,168. H6C men ojltss truth than tongue, Sonn. 17, 10. Is. you, III, 1, 13. Ill, 3, 26. 34. 151. R3 III, 7, 15. Mcb. I, 2, scurvycompanion, H4BII,4,132.322. Is. thy strength, 28. IV, 3, 7.88. 100. 113. 164. 186. 233. V, 8,59. 63. H6A I 5, 15. Is. thee and thy fashion, II, 4, 76. our Beats = Scotch, native of Scotland: the S. cap nobititt will s. the match, V, 3, 96. in her heart she tain, B5 III, 2, 79. —s ovpoverty, H6B I, 3, 84. H6C I, 1, 101. I, 4, Scottish, pertaining to Scotland: Merch. I, 2, 83 38. K I, 3, 297. Tim. IV, 3, 6. V, 4, 76. Caes. II, (Ff other). H4A I, 3, 259. Ill, 1, 85. 1, 26. Per. I, 4, 30. S c a n n d r e l , a rascal, a villain: they are —s and c) o scoff, to make a mock of, to laugh at: so substractors that say so of him, Tw. I, 3, 36. mild, bat patience seemed to s. his woes, Lucr. 1505. Seaor, 1) to rub hard: the chairs of order s. with all f e f f s s. I, Pilgr. 264. if he should s. me so appa-juice of balm, Wiv. V, 5, 65. to be —ed to nothing with rently. Err. IV, 1, 78. did not her kitchen-maid rail, perpetual motion, H4B I, 2, 246. taunt tnd t. met IV, 4, 77. 78. he'll s. it (her love), 2) to rub for the purpose of cleaning, to cleanse; for th man hath a contemptible spirit, Ado II, 3, 186. absol.: she can wash and s. Gent. Ill, 1, 313. Wiv. I, to join with men in —ing your poor friend, Mids. Ill, 4, 101. trans.: Gent III, 1, 315. H5 II, 1, 60. H6B 2,216.221.247. mocked at my gains, —ed my nation, I, 3, 195. Ill, 2, 199. Per. II, 2, 55. Merch III, 1, 58. do not s. me, As III, 5, 1. dare he 3) to remove for the purpose of cleaning, to sweep presune to s. us in this manner, H6C III, 3, 178. to be away, to pnrge: which (blood), washed away, shall s. thus tainted, —ed and baited at, R3 1, 3, 109. dallies my shame with it, H4A III, 2, 137. never came reforwith tie wind and —s the sun, 265. to s. his corse, II, mation in a flood, with such a heady currance, —ing 1,80. to taunt and s. you thus opprobriously, 111, 1,153. faults, H5 I, 1, 34. what rhubarb would s. these Englaughd at, —ed, H8 III, 1, 107. this Troyan —s us, lish hence t Mcb. V, 3, 56. Troil.,3,233. does the cuckold a. met III, 3, 64. how S e a a r , to run swiftly, to scamper: never saw I in his uit he —ed you, Cor. II, 3,230. as if he mocked men s. so on their way, W i n t II, 1, 35. fearful —ing himselj and —ed his spirit, Caes. 1,2,206. spurn fate, doth choke the air with dust, Tim. V, 2, 15. s. ded, Mcb. Ill, 5, 30. Fortune knows we s. her most Seanrce, subst. a whip, a lash; used as the symwhen uut she offers blows, A n t III, 11, 74. bol of punishment and vindictive affliction: H4A I, 2)lntr. to mock, to scoff: how will he s.l how will 3, 11. Ill, 2, 7. H6A I, 2, 129. II, 3, 15. IV, 2, 16. IV, he sped his wit, L L L IV, 3, 147. you s. Per. V, 1, 7, 77. H6B V, 1, 118. R3 I, 4, 50. Cor. II, 3, 97. Rom. 168. Vith at: —ed at me, As III, 5, 131. why - est V, 3, 292. Hml. Ill, 4, 175. IV, 3, 6. thou a Sir Robertt John I, 228. one that —ed at me, Seanrge, vb. to whip, to lash: I am whipped and R3 IV.4, 102. to fleer and s. at our solemnity. Bom. —d with rods, H4A 1, 3, 239. with them (tresses) s. I, 5, 5». 65. the bad revolting stars, H6A 1,1, 4. = to chastise, to 8 0 r n f b l , 1) disdainful: Ven. 501. Shr. V, 2, afflict: H4A V, 2, 40. H6A II, 4, 102. Lr. I, 2, 115. 137. ill's II, 3, 158. V, 3, 48. Lr. II, 4, 168. V, 3, 171 (Ff plague). A n t II, 6, 22. 2)derisive, mocking, jeering: sing a s. rhyme, §eaut, subst. one sent to reconnoitre the enemy: Wiv. \ 5, 95. s. Lysander, Mids. I, 1, 95. thou s. L L L V, 2,88. H6A IV, 3 , 1 . V, 2,10. H6C II, 1, 116. page, here lie thy part, Cymb. V, 5, 228. IV, 2, 18. V, 1, 19.

s

1013

Seent, vb. to be on the look-out: s. me for him Scrlhhle, to write without skill or care,toicrawl: at the corner of the orchard Wee a bum-baUy, Tw. Ill, I am a —d form, drawn with a pen upon a parchment, 4, 193. John V, 7, 32. that parchment, being — d o'er, should Scent, vb. to sneer at: flout 'em and s. 'em and undo a man, H6B IV, 2, 88. s. 'em and flout 'em, Tp. Ill, 2, 130 (Stephano's song). Scribe, one writing, one penning down someScewl, to look sullen: another sadly — ing, Yen. thing: that my master, being s., to himself should write 917. he —* and hates himself for his offence, Lucr. the letter, Gent. II, 1, 146. if thy stumps will let thee 738. men's eyes did s. on gentle Richard, R2 V, 2, 28. play the s. T i t II, 4, 4. hearts, tongues, flgurtu, — how with signs and tokens she can s. Tit. II, 4, 5 ( Q q bards, poets, cannot think, speak, cast, writt, sing, number his love to Antony, Ant. Ill, 2, 16. scrawl), glad at the thing they s. at, Cymb. I, 1, 15. Scrlmer, a fencer: Hml. IV, 7, 101. Scrap, used only in the plur. — i , n pieces of Scrip, a small writing, a schedule: to ail them food, fragments and relics of a banqnet: disdain to him disdained —s to give, Lncr. 987. they have been generally, man by man, according to the s. Midt. 1,2,3. at a great feast of languages and stolen the —s, L L L Scrip, a small bag, a wallet: with >• ana scripV, 1, 40. those —s are good deeds past, Troil. Ill, 3, page, As III, 2, 171. 148. the fragments, —s, the bits tad greasy relics, V, Serlppage, the contents of a scrip: As III.2,171. 2, 159. one bred ojf alms and fathered with cold dishes, Scripture, 1) any writing: the —s of th< loyal with —s o' the court, Cymb. II, 3, 120. Leonatus, all turned to heresy, Cymb. Ill, 4, 8i, Scrape, tb. 1) to clean by robbing with some2) sacred writing, the bible: Merch. I, 3,19. R3 thing bard: nor s. trencher, Tp. II, 2, 187 (Caliban's I, 3, 334. Hml. V, 1, 41. song), he s. a trencher 1 Rom. I, 5, 2 (the servant's Scrivener, one who draws contracts: fhr. IV, speech). 4, 59. 2) with from or out of, = to take away by nibbing Screll, a paper written on, a schedule, a letter, hard; to erase: the blood of King Richard, —d from a list: receives the *. Lncr. 1340 (a letter), hey is the Pomfret stones, H4B I, 1, 205. to s. the figures out of s. of every man's name, Mids. I, 2,4. 16. withit whose your husband's brains, Wiv. IV, 2, 231. —d one (com- empty eye there is a written s. Merch. II, 7, 64. here's mandment) out of tht ttibky Mc&s. I) 2, 9. jfou will b& the s., the continent and summary of my fortune III, 2, —d out of the painted cloth, L L L V, 2, 579. 130. 140. the s. that tells of this war's loss, Jbhn II, 3) to gather riches by small gains and savings: 348. do you set down your nam» in the s. o]youth, H4B I, 2, 202. accept this s. which in the ight of their —ing fathers, B2 V, 3, 69. Scratch, sabst. a slight incision in the surface Richard Ptantagenet we do exhibit to your Majesty, made with something sharp: H4A V, 4, 11. Cor. Ill, H6A 111, 1, 149. give him from me this most n«dful s. R3 V, 3, 41 (Ff note), give the king this fatal-pitted s. 3, 51. Rom. Ill, 1, 96. Scratch, vb. to rob, or wound slightly, with some- Tit. II, 3, 47. a «., and written round about, IV 2, 18. thisAnt. thing sharp: Ven. 705. 924. Lncr. 1035. Tp. II, IV, 4,16. do not exceed the prescript of 2, 55. Qent. I, 2, 58. Ado 1,1, 136. 137. L L L V, 1, Ill, 8, 5. 32 (Priscian a little — ed, i. e. offended by so gross Screep, name: R2 HI, 2, 192. Ill, 3, 28 H4A a mistake). Mids. 1Y, 1, 7. 25. 28. As III, 5,21. Shr. I, 3, 271. IV, 4, 3. V, 5, 37. H4BIV, 4, 84. H5 II Ind. 2, 60. All's V, 2,29. 33. Wint. IV, 4,436. 728. Chor. 24. II, 2, 58. 67. 94. H8 V, 4, 9. Troil. II, 1, 30. IV, 2, 113. Cor. II, 2, Scrawl, unintelligible reading of Qq inTit. II, 79. Bom. Ill, 1,104. Caes. II, 1, 243. Ilml. IV, 7,147. 4, 5; Ff scowl A n t 1,2, 54. to s. out = to tear out with the nails: Screyles, scabby fellows, rascals: John I, 373. «. out the angry «yes, Lncr. 1469. Gent. IV, 4,209. Scrubbed, paltry: a little s. boy, no higkr than Scream, sabst. a shrill cry, a shriek: strange —* thyself, Merch. V, 162.261 (Coles, Lat. and Engl. of death, Mcb. 11,3,61. Dictionary: a scrub, homo misellus, and tcubbed, Scream, vb. to ntter a shrill cry, to shriek: I heard squalidus). the owl s. Mcb. II, 2, 16. Scrapie, subst 1) the third part of a draa; proScreech ( F f Ql seriteh), to cry as a night-owl: verbially a very small quantity: Meas. 1,1,3i. Ado whilst the screech-owl, —ing loud, Mids. V, 383. V, 1, 93. Merch. IV, 1, 330. All's II, 3, 234. Tw. II, Sereech-ewl, an owl hooting at night, and sup- 5, 2. Tw. Ill, 4, 87 (punning). Troil. IV, 1, 7). posed to be ominons of evil: Mids. V, 383 (Ff Qa 2) donbt: no dram of a s., no s. of a s. Tw III, 4, scritch-owl). H6B I, 4, 21. Ill, 2, 327. H6CII, 6, 56. 87. 88. how I should be your patient to follm your Troil. V, 10, 16. prescriptions, the wise may make some dram 0 / 1 s., or Screen, snbst anything that separates or con- indeed a s. itself, H4B I, 2, 149. made s. of his praise, ceals : to have no s. between this part he played and Cymb. V, 5, 182. him he played it far, Tp. 1, 2, 107. your leafy —s 3) doubtful perplexity, cause of indetenniiation: throw down, Mcb. V, 6, 1. Wiv. V, 5, 157. Meas. 1, 1, 65. John II, 370. iv, 1, Screen, vb. (cf. Bescreen) to protect by being 7. R2 V, 5, 13. H6A V, 3, 93. H8 II, 158 II, 2, between: that your grace hath —ed and stood between 88. II, 4, 150. 171. IV, 1, 31. Troil. IV, 1, % (not much heat and him, Hml. Ill, 4, 3. making any s. of her soilure = taking no offnee at Screw, vb. 1) to fasten as with a screw: that's her soilure). Mcb. 11,3,135. IV,3,116. Hml. 1\4,40. riveted, —ed to my memory, Cymb. II, 2, 44. Serupuleaa, full of doubt and perplexif, too 2) to wrest, to wrench, to force: the instrument nice in determinations of conscience: away rith s. that —s me from my true place in your favour, Tw. V, wit! now arms must rule, H6C IV, 7, 61. equility of 126. s. your courage to the sticking-place, Mcb. I, two domestic powers breed s. faction, Ant. i 3, 48 7, 60. (prying too nicely into the merits of either caise).

S

1014

8«nd, to ran swiftly: sometime he —t far off and there I* lore*, Ven. 301. S t o n e , a close fight hand to hand: in the —t of great fights, Ant. 1, 1, 7. S t a l l , the cranium, see Slcull. S t a l l , a shoal, a multitude o f f i s h : like scaled —s btfort the belching whale, Troil. V, 5, 22. S t a l l i M , the lowest domestic servant, that washes the kfttles and dishes in the kitchen; used as a term of coitempt: H4B II, 1, 65. Hml. II, 2, 616. 8«Blp> in Insculped, q. v. B t a a * the impurities rising to the surface of liquors >n boiling; and hcnce the dross, refuse: Wiv. 1, l , 167. H4B IV, 5, 124. H6B IV, 2, 130. R3 V, 3, 31'S t a r r i l e , grossly jocose, becoming a buffoon: breah s. jests, Troil. I, 3, 148. S t a n i l l t y , meaif buffoonery, broad jokes: L L L IV, 2,55. V, 1, 4. S t o r H l a o s , the same as scurrile: Wint. IV, 4,215. S t a r r y , scabby, vile, contemptible: T p . II, 2, 46. 57. Ii9. Ill, 2, 71. WW. I, 4, 115. II, 3, 65. Ill, 1, 123. Mess. V, 136. All's II, 3, 250. V, 3, 324. Tw. III, 4 , 1 6 a H4B II, 4, 132. 296. H5 V, 1, 19. 23. Troil II, 1, 49. 56. V, 4, 4. 30. Bom. II, 4 , 1 6 1 . Lr. IV, 6,175. Oth. I, 2, 7. IV, 2, 140. 196. ' » d m , subst excuse: Merch. IV, 1, 444. Oth. IV,1,80. S«at, the tail of a deer: my doe with the black s. Wiv. V, 5. 20. S i a t c h e a n , a shield with armorial ensigns: L L L V, 2, >67. H4A V, 1, 143. Ant. V, 2, 135. SiyUa, a rock in the straits of Sicily dangerous to seamtfi: Kerch. Ill, 5,19 (allnding to the well-known verse.Inddis in Scyllam cupiens vitare Charyhdim). Siythe, subst the instrument used to mow grass and 0>rn: H 5 V, 2, 50. Attribute of time and death: Sonn. 12,13. 60, 12. 100, 14. 123, 14. L L L I, 1, 6. Ait. H, 13, 194. Siytke, vb. to cut off as with a scythe: time had not —d oM that youth begun, Compl. 12. Siytfcla, a country in the east of Europe, part of thepresent Russia: was ever S. half so barbaroust Tit. I 131. 132. SiytWan, a native of Scythia: H6A II, 3 , 6 . the barba-ousis.

L r . I, 1,

118.

'SleaMi, corrupted from God's death; an exclamaticn expressive of impatience: Cor. I, 1, 221. Sw, the ocean, or a branch of i t (used as a fem. in Tpil. I, 3, 34): Ven. 389. Lucr. 652. Sonn. 113, 11. 1p. L I , 17. 1,2,4. 11. 149. 155. 301.11, 1, 62. 92. II, 2.15. Ill, 3, 9. 71. 74. V, 43. Gent. I, 2, 122. IV, 3,33. Mids. II, 1, 152. R2 I, 1, 19. H5 IV, 1, 156. V Cior. 9. HGA IV, 1, 89. H6C II, 6, 89. 97. R3 IV, 2, 47. Hml. IV, 1, 7. Oth. II, 1, 7. V, 2, 362. Ant. H, 10, 25 etc. etc. Metaphorically: hulling in the wld sia of my conscience, H8 II, 4, 200. I have ventuied n a s. of glory, but far beyond my depth, III, 2, 36'. fbat upon a wild and violent s. Mcb. IV, 2, 21. iymlol of insatiable avidity: the never surfeited s. T p HI, 3, 55. thy capacity receiveth as the s. Tw. I, 1 , 1 . is hungry as the s. II, 4, 103. Denoting any great quaitity: drenched in a s. of care, Lucr. 1100. as. if mdting pearl (i. e. tears) Gent. Ill, 1, 224. in thai s of blood, H6A IV, 7, 14. shed —s of tears, H6C I, 5. 106. to weep-s, Troil. Ill, 2, 84. in a

wide s. of wax, Tim. I, 1 , 4 7 ( c f . Wax), we must all part into this s. of air, IV, 2, 22. to take arms against a s. of troubles, Hml. Ill, 1, 59. lest this great s. of joy o'erbear the shores of my mortality, Per. V, 1, 194. Proverbially rich: Gent. II, 4, 170. Wint. IV, 4, 501. H5 1, 2, 164. R3 1, 4, 28. Troil. II, 2, 92. Oth. I, 2, 28. Cymb. I, 6, 34. Representing the element of water in general: thus have I shunned the fire and drenched me in the s. Gent. I, 3, 79. in earth, in «., in sky, Err. II, 1, 17. whether in s. or fire, in earth or air, the extravagant and erring spirit hits to his confine, Hml. I, 1, 153. earth, s. and air, Per. I, 4, 34. Used without the article, in general contradistinction to the land: a thousand furlongs of s. Tp. I, 1, 70. by wreck of s. Err. V, 49. one foot in s, and one on shore, Ado II, 3, 66. Publicola and Caelius are for s. A n t III, 7, 74 ( = are to fight at sea), order for s. is given, IV, 10, 6. at s.: Gent. Ill, 1, 282. Meas. Ill, 1, 218. 225. Err. V, 359. Merch. I, 1, 24. 177. Ill, 1, 45. H6A III, 4, 28. H8 IV, 1, 72. Hml. IV, 6, 15. Oth. II, 1, 1. 28. Ant. I, 4, 36. II, 6, 25. 87. Ill, 7, 40. Ill, 8, 4. Cymb. Ill, 4, 192. Per. Ill, 1, 51. Ill, 3, 13. Ill, 4, 5. IV, 6, 49. V, 1, 158. 198. 245. V, 3, 5. by s.: Ant. II, 2, 165. II, 6, 96. Ill, 7, 29. 41. 62. IV, 10, 1. by s. and land: Shr. V, 2, 149. Wint. Ill, 3, 84. Caes. I, 3, 87. Ant. I, 4, 78. Ill, 6, 54. IV, 2, 5. to Tp. I, 1, 53. I, 2, 145. II, 2, 44. 56. Wiv. II, 1, 96. Meas. I, 2, 8. Err. IV, 1, 33. H5 II, 2,192. Per. Ill Prol. 44. IV, 4, 2 9 . p u t to s.: Err. V, 21. Tw. II, 4, 78. Wint. IV, 4, 509. At the s. instead of at s. only in Per. I, 3, 29 and V, 3, 47. to —s for to s. only in Pter. II Prol. 27 (rhyming). Plur. —s for the sing.: though the —s threaten, they are merciful, Tp. V, 178. promise you calm —s, 314. the —s waxed calm, Err. I, 1, 92. lords of the wide world and wide watery —s, II, 1, 21. in the narrow —s that part the French and English, Merch. II, 8, 28. Ill, 1, 4. the swelling Adriatic —s, Shr. I, 2, 74. II, 331. R2 III, 2, 3. H5 II Chor. 38. H6A III, 1, 180. V, 3, 193. V, 5, 90. H6B I, 3, 128. IV, 8, 45. H6C I, 1, 239. Ill, 3, 235. IV, 7, 5. IV, 8, 3. R3 IV, 1, 42. IV, 4, 463. 464. 474 (Qq sea). Cymb. I, 6, 202 etc. Bea-hank, coast: Merch. V, 11. Oth. IV, 1, 138. Sea-kay, a ship-boy: H4B III, 1, 27. Sea-cap, a cap worn at sea: Tw. Ill, 4, 364. Sea-change, a change wrought by the sea: Tp. I, 2, 400. S e a - e a a l , p i t - c o a l : a s.fire, Wiv. I, 4, 9. H4B II, 1, 95. Name in Ado III, 3, 12. 13. Ill, 5, 63. Sea-farer, a traveller by sea: Per. Ill, 1, 41. S e a - f a r i n g , following the business of seamen: s. men, Err. I, 1, 81. Hml. IV, 6, 2 (Ff sailors). Sea-light, a battle at sea: Tw. Ill, 3, 26. Hml. V, 2, 54. Sea-gawn, a garment worn at sea: Hml. V, 2,13. Seal, subst. 1) a stamp engraved with some device or inscription, to be imprinted on wax: R3 II, 4, 71. H8 111, 2, 245. Hml. V, 2, 50. the great s. (the principal seal of the kingdom): H8 III, 2, 229. 319. 347. Figuratively: pure lips, sweet —s in my soft lips imprinted, Ven. 511. set thy s. manual on my wax-red lips, 516. Nature carved thee for her s. and meant thereby thou shouldstprint more, Sonn. 11, 13. although my s. be stamped in his face, Tit. IV, 2, 127.

s 2) the impression thus made in wax and nsed as a testimony: Meas. IT, 2,208. Mercfa. IV, 1,139. Tw. V, 341. R2 V, 2, 56. Cor. V, 6, 83. Caes. HI, 2, 133. here is your hand and s.for what I did, John IV, 2, 215. proceeded under your hands and — s , H8 II, 4, 222. here is the will, and under Caesar's s. Caes. Ill, 2, 245. to break the s. ( = to open a sealed letter^: Gent. Ill, 1, 139. Wint. Ill, 2, 130. 132. Figuratively: %e empress sends it (the child) thee, thy stamp, thy s. Tit. IV, 2, 70. 0, could this kiss be printed in thy hand, that thou mightst think upon these by the s. H6B III, 2, 344. 3) token, proof, testimony: to stamp the s. of time in aged things, Lucr. 941. it is the show and s. of nature's truth. All's I, 3, 138. there is my gage, the manual s. of death, that marks thee out for htU, R2 IV, 25. a form indeed, where every god did seem to set his s. Hml. 111,4,61. all —* and symbols of redeemed sin, Oth. II, 3, 350. 4) ratification, confirmation, sanction, pledge: my kisses, —s of lavs, Meas. IV, 1, 6. my observations, which with experimental s. doth warrant the tenour of my book, Ado IV, 1,168. let me kiss (yonr hand) this princess of pure white, this s. of bliss, Mids. Ill, 2, 144. this zealous kiss, a* s. to this indenture of my love, John II, 20. that you should seal this lawless bloody book offorged rebellion with a s. divine, H4B IV, 1, 92. beguiling virgins with the broken —s of perjury, H5 IV, 1, 172. whom after under the confession's s. he solemnly had sworn that what he spoke my chaplain to no creature living should utter, H8 I, 2, 164. to shame the s. of my petition to you in praising her, Troil. IV, 4, 124 ( = to disgrace yonr granting what I ask by praising her and thus showing that it is not my request hot other motives that cause yonr complaisance. Most M. Edd. preposterously zeal), how in my words soever she be shent, to give them —s never, my soul, consent, Hml. HI, 2, 417 (i. e. performance), this kingly s. andplighter of high hearts (Cleopatra's hand) Ant. Ill, 13, 125. Heal, vb. 1) to imprint as with a stamp; figuratively: seals of love, but —ed tn vain, Meas. IV, 1,6. upon his will I —ed my hard consent, Hml. 1, 2, 60. 2) to mark with a stamp, either by way of evidence and testimony, or in order to shut and close (as letters, bags of money); absol.: he was fain to s. on Qtpid's name, L L L V, 2 , 9 . the Frenchman became his surety and —ed under for another, Merch. I, 2, 89. her Lucrece, with which she uses to s. Tw. II, 5, 104. H4A III, 1, 270. H4B IV, 3, 142. Ant. Ill, 2, 3. Figuratively: Ven. 512. With to: I'll s. to such a bond, Merch. I, 3, 153. 155. 172. I did but s. once to a thing, H6B IV, 2, 90. Transitively: her letter now is —ed, Lncr. 1331. a - ed compact, Hml. I, 1, 86. CompL. 49. Wiv. Ill, 4, 16. Merch. I, 3, 145. II, 6, 6. II, 8, 18. Shr. Ind. 2, 90 (—ed quarts, i. e. quartmeasures officially stamped to show that they held the proper quantity). H4A III, 1, 81. IV, 4, 1. Mcb. V, 1, 8. Hml. Ill, 4, 202. V, 2, 47. Ant. II, 6, 60. Per. I, 3, 13. With up, — to close with a seal: this —ed up counsel, L L L III, 170. the oracle, thus by Apollo's great divine —ed up, W i n t III, 1, 19.* this —ed up oracle, III, 2, 128. this paper, thus —ed up, Caes. II, 1,37. 3) to close, to shut (cf. seel, with which it is sometimes confounded): for —ing the injury of tongues, S c h m i d t , ShaketpeHre Lexicon. J. EUk«, likely to keep the sea: our severe! n a r j too have knit again and fleet, threatening most s Ant III, 13, 171. 8 e a l l n g - 4 a y , see Seal, vb. S e a l - m a n n a l , see Seal and Manual. Seal-ring, ® ring containing a seal: H4Alil, 3, 94. 117. Scam, snbst grease, lard: the proud lad that 65

1016 baste» his arrogance with hi» own s. Troil. II, 3, 195 (cf. Eueamed). S e t m , subst. suture: 'twas we that made up this garmett through the rough —» of the waters, Per. II, 1, 156 (the fisherman's speech). S e t - m a i d , mermaid, siren: Meas. Ill, 2, 115. Mids. [I, 1, 154 (v. 150 mermaid). S o m a n , a mariner: Ven. 454. John HI, 1, 92. Per. II, 1, 8. IT, 1, 54. S v m t r i « , shore: Tp. IV, 1, 69. 8 » - m a r k , an object serving for a direction to mariners: stick C the wars like a great ». Cor. V, 3, 74. here is my butt and vert/ ». of my utmost sail, Oth. V, 2, 568. Sn, confidence: Bolingbroke through our s. grows string, R2 III, 2, 34. that's mercy, but too much s. U5 II, 2, 44. s. gives way to conspiracy, Caes. 11, 3, 8. s. is mortal's chiefest enemy, Mcb. Ill, 5, 32. 2) safety from danger: thus have we swept suspicion from our seat and made our footstool of s. Hmb. V, time and means may Jit us to our s. Llml. IV, 7, 151 5, 346. Shapeless, 1) not shaped into a regula' form, (for our form of proceeding). I'll move the king to any s. of thy preferment, Cymb. 1,5,71. nature's own s. of formless: who wears a garment s. and unfiiishedf Ven. 415. wear out thy youth with s. idleness, Gent. I, bud, bird etc. Per. V Prol. 6. Used of the form of living beings, especially of 1, 8 (like a stone unwronght). to set a form ujon that men: Ven. 294. Lucr. 597. 1529. Sonn. 24, 10 G2, indigest which he hath left so s. and so rude, ¿olin V, 6. 113, 6. Tp. 1, 2, 284. 303. 478. Ill, 1, 56. Ill, 3, 7, 27. 2) deformed, ugly: a hideous s. devil, Luir. 973. 31. 37. IV, 185. V, 291. Gent. IV, 1, 56. V, 4, 109. Wiv. IV, 4, 60. Meas. II, 1, 3. Err. II, 2, 199. Ado ill faced, worse bodied, s. every where, Err. IV 2, 20. 111, 1, 96. LLL II, 59. 60. V, 2, 288. Mids.II, 1,32. disguised like Muscovites, in s. gear, LLL V, }, 303. 66. 111,1, 142. Merch. Ill, 2, 278. AsV,4,126. All's cf. Featureless and Sightless. 1, 1, 71. Tw. I, 5, 280. Wint. IV, 4, 27. John I, 138. S h a r d - b e r n e , borne through the air b* scaly 144. B2 V, 1, 26. H6A II, 3, 69. V, 3, 35. 36. 38. wings or ratlier wing-cases: the s. beetle, Mcb. 11,2,42. H6B V, 1,158. H6C 111, 2,192. R3 IV, 4, 286. Troil. Sharped, the same: the s. beetle, Cymb. II, 3,20. I, 2, 275. I, 3, 179. Cor. I, 4, 35. Rom. 1, 4, 55. Ill, S h a r d s , li fragments of pottery, potsheids: «., 3, 122. 125. 126. 130. Caes. II, 1, 253. Mcb. Ill, 4, flints and pebbles should be thrown on her, Xml. V, 102. Hml. Ill, 2, 394. Lr. I, 2, 8. IV, 2, 67. Ant. IV, I, 254. 8, 26. IV, 14, 14. to worship shadows and adore false 2) the scaly wing-cases of beetles: they are his s. —s, Gent. IV, 2, 131. and he their beetle, Ant. Ill, 2, 20. 2) external appearance, semblance: you in every 8 h a r e , snbst. portion allotted to one in a comblessed s. we know, Sonn. 53,12. I would my husband pany: Pilgr. 181. I16B IV, 1, 14. Troil. II, J, 230. would meet him in this s. Wiv. IV, 2, 87. IV, 4, 44. V, Hml. Ill, 2, 290. With in: I shall have s. in the most 1, 22. she cannot love, nor take no s. nor project of happy wreck, Tw. V, 273. H4A II, 1, 101. With of: affection, Ado HI, 1, 55. in the s. of two countries at Shr. V, 1, 146. H5 IV, 3, 22. H6C I, 4, 129. once. III, 2, 34. if commotion appeared in his true s. S h a r e , vb. 1) to divide in portions: let us i. 114A H4B IV, 1, 37. H5 IV, 8, 56. H6B III, 1, 79. R3 II, II, 2, 104. II, 4, 199. while all is —d and all i borne 2, 27. H8 I, 1, 196. Tim. II, 2, 119. Ill, 2, 80. IV, away, H6B I, I, 228. B3 I, 3, 159. the latest of my 3, 430. Hml. I, 4, 43. I, 5, 54. II, 2, 629. Lr. I, 4, wealth I'll s. amongst you, Tim. IV, 2, 23. 331. II, 3, 7. 2) to partake of, to enjoy or suffer in cimmon 3) any thing bodied forth by the imagination: full with others; absol.: didst not thou s.t Wiv. 11,2, 14. of forms, figures, —s, LLL IV, 2, 69. V, 2, 773. the Trans.: Sonn. 47, 8. Wiv. Ill, 2, 40. Mids 111,2,198. poet's pen turns them to —s, Mids. V, 16. so full of As V, 4,180. All's 11,1,3. B2 II, 1,273. Rom. 1,3,93. —s is fancy, Tw.1,1,14. find —s of grief, more than Tim. I. 1, 263 (we'll s. a bounteous lime in plemures). himself, to wail, R2 II, 2, 22. full of nimble fiery and Cues. IV, 1,15. Mcb. IV, 3,198. to s. sth. with = ti enjoy detectable —s, H4B IV, 3, 108. — s and Jorms of or suffer in common with: such gifts that heavn shall slaughter, Troil. V, 3, 12. imagination to give them s. with you, Mens. II, 2, 147. Troil. I, 3, 368. II, 3, s. Hml. Ill, 1, 129. in forgery of —s and tricks, IV, 178. Oth. Ill, 4, 95. Intr., with in: every one Aall t. in the gains, Mcb. IV, 1, 40. there is an art ufiich m 7, 90. S h a p e , vb. (impf. and partic. —d), 1) trans, a) their piedness —s with great creating nature, Wilt. IV, to mould, to form; absol.: let time s. H4B III, 2, 358. 4, 87 (which contributes as much as nature to make With an accus.: to the forge with it, s. it, Wiv. IV, 2, them pied). 240. some pastime, such as the shortness of the time 3) to receive as one's portion, to experience, to can s. LLL IV, 3, 378. all the other gijts appertinent enjoy or suffer: many Trojan mothers, —ing joj to see to man, as the malice of this age —s them, H4B I, 2, their youthful sons bright weapons wield, Lucr. 1431. 195. to s. my legs of an unequal she, H6C III, 2,159. my part of death, no one so true did s. it, Tw. 11,4,59. V, 6, 78. R3 I, 1, 14. that —s man better. Cor. IV, G, the least of you shall s his part thereof, R3 V, J, 268. 92. nor age nor honour shall s. privilege, Tit. IV, 4,57. that book in many's eyes doth s. the glory, that h gold a divinity that —s our ends, Hml. V, 2,10. he'll s. his clasps locks in the golden story, Rom. I, 3, 91. With old course in a country new, Lr. I, 1, 190. it is —d from, = to receive from, to gain from or at he exlike itself, Ant. II, 7, 47. With to, = to adjust, to pense of: I would not lose so great an honour is one make conformable: —s her sorrow to the beldams man more would s.from me, H5 IV, 3, 32. who. glory woes, Lucr. 1458. it —s them to your feature, Sonn. our Achilles —s from Hector, Troil. 1,3,367. Ibsol., 113, 12. and s. his service wholly to my hests, LLL with with, = to go even with, to be as great as, to V, 2, 65. thou thy silence to my wit, Tw. I, 2, 61. equal: and thy goodness s. with thy birthright, All's I, b) to image, to body forth; absol.: such —ing 1, 73. think not to s. with me in glory any more H4A fantasies, Mids. V, 5. With an accus.: when I do s V, 4, 64. cf. Wint. IV, 4, 87. in forms imaginary the unguided days, H4B IV, 4, 58. Shark, subst. the fish Squalus: Mcb. IV, 1, 24. it is the weakness of mine eyes that —s this monstrous S h a r k , vb., with up, = to pick up, to colect in apparition, Caes. IV, 3, 277. my hopes do s. him for n dishonest and illegal manner: young Fortinbres hath the governor, Oth. II, 1, 55. my jealousy —s faults in the skirts of Norway here and there —ed up a list that are not, 111,3,148. With a double accus.: s. every of lawless resolutes, Hml. I, 1, 98.

1044

S

S h a r p , adj. 1) keen, baring a vcrv tliin edge or fine point: Yen. 663. 1112. Lucr. 543! 1138. Pilgr. 134. Tp. IT, 180. V, 138. Meai. II, 2, 115. All's III, 4, 18. IT, 4, 33. W i n t II, 3, 86 (cf. Cymb. Ill, 4,36). John IT, 3, 82. R2 I, 3, 9. H6A I, 1, 117. 11,4, 70. H6B III, 1, 347. H8 I, 1, 110. II, 4, 224. Tit. IT, 2, 91. Lr. II, 1, 40. Ant. T, 2, 307. Cymb. Ill, 4, 36 (cf. W i n t II, 3, 86). Per. IT Prol. 23. IT, 2, 159. 2) very thin, lean: hi* nose was as t. as a pen, H5 II, 3, 17. strike their s. shims and mar men's spurring, Tim. IT, 3,152. till the diminution of space had pointed him s. asmy needle, Cymb. I, 3. 19. 3) pinching, biting, rough: s. air, Ven. 1085. the s. wind of the north, Tp. 1,2,254. thy (the sky'a) sting is not so s. As II, 7, 188. 4) acrid, acid, bitter: it it a most s. sauce, Bom. II, 4, 84. s. physic is the last, Per. I, 1, 72. cf. some joy too fine, tuned too s. in sweetness, Troil. Ill, 2, 25. 5) keen, pungent, sarcastic, acrimonious: what he gets more of her than s. words, Wiv. II, 1, 191. these s. mocks, LLL T, 2,251. thrust thy s. wit quite through my ignorance, 398. s. Buckingham unburihens with his tongue the envious load that lies upon his heart, HGB III, 1, 156. thy woes will make them (thy words) s. R3 IV, 4, 125. 6) harsh, severe, afflicting, painful: to keep thy s. woes waking, Lacr. 1136. in sorrow's s. sustaining, 1573. a groan, more s. to me than spurring to his side, Sonn. 50, 12. to that place the s. Athenian law cannot pursue us, Mids. I, ], 162. the — est death, Wint. IV, 4, 809. bend your —est deeds of malice on this town, John II, 380. shall feel this day as s. to them as thorn, R2IV, 323. I feel such s. dissension in my breast, H6A V, 5, 84. this one bloody trial of s. war, R3 T, 2, 16. give me up to the —est kind of justice, H8 II, 4, 44. whet hit anger at him; s. enough, III, 2, 92. you are a little too s. V, 3, 74. our s. wars are ended, Troil. V, 9, 10. opportunity of s. revenge, Tit. I, 137. we'll be as s. with you, 410. «. misery had worn him to the bones, Rom. T, 1,41. —er than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child, Lr. I, 4, 310. necessity's s. pinch, 11, 4, 214. do not please s. fate to grace it with your sorrows, Ant. IV, 14, 135. there cannot be a pinch in death more s. Cymb. I, 1, 131. you that have a —er (life) known, III, 3, 31. forbear s. speeches to her, 111, 5, 39. we'U enforce it from thee by a s. torture, IT, 3, 12. I wait the—est blow, Per. I, 1, 55. 7) eager, keen: an empty eagle, s. by fast, Ven. 55. s. hunger by the conquest satisfied, Lncr. 422. blunt the —est intents, Sonn. 115, 7. you are not s. enough, Gent 111,2,67. fit thy consent to my s. appetite, Mess II, 4, 161. how fiery and how s. he looks, Err. IT, 4, 53. thy s. envy, Merch. IV, 1, 126. myjalcon now is s. and passing empty, Shr. IV, 1, 193. roared with s. constraint of hunger, All's III, 2, 121. goaded rcith most s. occasions, T, 1, 14. my desire, more s. than filed steel, Tw. Ill, 3, 5. with spirit of honour edged more —er than your swords, H5 III, 5, 39. let him greet England with our s. defiance, 37. though you bite so s. at reasons, Troil. II, 2, 33. his great love, s. as his spur, Mcb. I, 6, 23. though inclination be as s. as will, Hml. Ill, 3, 39. so s. are hunger's teeth, Per. I, 4, 45. 8) subtle, witty, nice, acute: voluble and s. discourse, Err. II, 1, 92. a good s. fellow, Ado I, 2, 19. a s. wit matched with too blunt a will, LLL II, 49 (cf.

V, 2, 398). your reasons have been s. and sententious, L L L T, 1, 3. these met s. quillets of the law, H6A II, 4, 17. alleged many s. reason», H8 II, 1, 14. 9) shrill: it (this tone) is too s. Gent. I, 2, 91. cf. T r o a i n , 2, 25. Adverbially: Err. IT, 4, 63. H5 111, 5,39. R8 III, 2, 98. Troil. II, 2, 33. see above. Sharp, snbst an acute and shrill sound: the lark, straining harsh discords and unpleasing —s, Rom. Ill, 5, 28. Sharp«*, to make more keen and eager: (appetite) —ed ta his former might, Sonn. 56, 4. now she —s: well said, whetstonel Troil. T, 2, 75. s. with cloyless sauce his appetite, Ant. II, 1,25. it pierces and —s the stomach, Per. IT, 1, 29. Sliarp-graand, whetted: Rom. Ill, 3, 44. S h a r p - l e e h l a s , emaciated, lean (?) or looking hungry ( ? ) : a needy, hollow-eyed, s. wretch, a living deadman, Err. T, 240. Sharply, 1) keenly, pungently: for s. he did think to reprehend her, Ven. 470. relish all as s., passion as they, Tp. V, 23. my greatest grief, though little he do feel it, set down s. All's III, 4, 33. feel the treason s. Cymb. HI, 4, 88. 2) in a quick and cutting manner: a terrible oath, with a swaggering accent s. twanged o f f , Tw. 111,4,198. Sharpness, severity, harshness: contempt nor bitterness were in his pride or s. All's I, 2, 37. the best quarrels are cursed by those that feel their s. Lr. T, 3, 57. thou must not take my former s. ill, Ant. Ill, 3, 38. S h a r p - p a i n t e d , having a sharp point: R3 I, 2, 176. Sharp-prevlded (not hyphened in O. Edd.), see Provide. S h a r p • «allied, having sharp qniUs: H6B III, I, 363. S h a r p - t e e t h e d , having sharp teeth: s. uukindness, Lr. II, 4, 137. S h a t t e r , to crack, to split, to break into pieces: a sigh so piteous and profound that it did seem to s. all his bulk and end his being, Hml. II, 1,95. Shave (partic. —d; attributively —n), 1) to strip of the hair or beard: s. the head, Meas. IV, 2,187. the - n Hercules, Ado III, 3, 145. Bardolph was —d, H4A III, 3, 68. I'll s. your crown, H6B II, 1, 51. 2) to cnt off with a razor: were I the wearer of Antonius' beard, I would not s. it, Ant. II, 2, 8. Shaw, name of a clergyman in R3 111, 5, 103. She (apostrophized in John III, 1, 56: sh' adulterates hourly; M. Edd. she adulterates'), fem. pers. pron.; obj. case her: Ven. 7. 25. 35. 38. 40. 41 etc. 29. 53. 264. 307 etc. poor she, Lncr. 1674. Demonstratively: mastering her that foiled the god of fight, Ven. 114. where is she so fair whose womb disdains thy husbandry t Sonn. 3, 5. she that you gaze on so, Gent. II, 1, 46. she that hath love's wings to fly, II, 7, II, I come to her in white, Wiv. V, 2, 6. V, 5, 209. fetch forth the lazar kite of Cressid1 s kind, Doll Tearsheet she by name, H5 II, 1,81. cast from her his dearest one, Cymb. V, 4, 61 etc. Reflexively: my Muse holds her still, Sonn. 85,1. she opposes her against my will, Gent. Ill, 2, 26. there will she hide her, Ado III, 1, 11. bid Bianca make her ready, Shr. IT, 4, 63. arms her with the boldness of a wife, Wint. 1, 2,184. bowed her to the people, H8 IT, 1, 85. doth she not count her blest, Rom. Ill, 5, 144 etc. she for her: for

s

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the that was thy Lucrece, Lucr 1C82. Tp. 111,2, 109. up in general: whole tushes never —d he whfttsth still, delest mytelf alio as well as the, Meu.II, 1,76 (Elbow"» Yen. 617. her eyet had —d their light, Lucr. 397. t. speech), the should this Angelo have married, III, 1, thy impatience, Wiv. 11,3,88 (the host's speed). Espe221. but the I can hook to me, Wint. II, 3, 6. JOT thecially applied to weapons plunged into a penon's that scorned at me, now ti-orned of me, R3 IV, 4, 102body: —d the tutk in his groin, Ven. 1116. she —d (Qq one), praite him that got thee, the that ¡fave theein her breast a knife, Lucr. 1723. John. IT, 3, 80. tuck, Troil. II, 3, 262. the earth hath twallowed all myH6C V. 5, 70. H8 I, 2, 210. Tit. II, 1, 54. T, 3,112. hopes but the, Rom. 1, 2,14. you have teen Cassio and 2) to furnish with a scabbard: Waiter t dagger the together, Otb. IT, 2, 3. to saucy irith the hand ofwat not com« from —ing, Shr. IV, 1, 138. the here, Ant. Ill, 13, 98. her for the J her I love now Sheaved, made of straw: her t. hat, Conpl.31. doth grace fur grace and love for love allow, Rom. II, Sheha, see Saba. 3, 85 (bat perbape who omitted before doth). She-hear, female bear: Merch. II, 1, 29. She-beggar, female beggar: Tim. IV, 3, 273. Substantively, = 1) woman: I think mg love at rare at any the belied with false compare, Sonn. 130, She*, vb. (impf. and part thed) 1) to let fal, to 14. you are the cruellest the alive, Tw. I, 5, 259. if Iscatter, to cast: the teededpride must or now be trapped, or, —ing, breed a nursery of like evil, Trail. I, »pared any that had a head to hit, either young or old, he or the, cuckold or cuckold-maker, 118 V, 4, 25. that3,319. the beloved knows nought that knows not (Ait, Troil. 2) to suffer or cause to flow out, to pour a torn1, 2, 314. that the wat never yet that ever knew lovebard that would t. hit liquor, Tp. II, 2, 22. a we nth got to tweet at when detire did tue, 316. the thet of that t. her milk, All's IT, 3, 124. Oftenest used of Italy thould not betray mine interett, Cymb. I, 3, 29. blood and tears; of blood: Ven. 665. Merch. IT, 1, 309. 325. John II, 49. R2 I, 3, 57. H4A 1,3,134. apet and monkeys 'twixt two such thet would chatter this way, I, 6, 40. Doctor She, All's II, 1, 82. 1 loveH5 IT, 3, 61. H6A IT, 6, 19. H6B I, 1, l i t . II, 2, 227. IV, 1, 52. H6C V, 5, 53. R3 1,4,195. T, 5,25. thee not ajar o'the clock behind what lady the her lord, Wint. I, 2, 44 (i. e. a woman that is a lady). 2) mis- Cor. I, 6, 57. Ill, 1, 76. IT, 5, 76. T,3,117. Th.HI, tress: the ladies did change favourt, and then we, fol-1,4. Rom. Ill, 1, 154. Ill, 2, 71. Caes. 11L 1,258. Mcb. Ill, 4, 75. Oth. V, 2, 3. Per. I, 2, 88. Of tears: lowing the tignt, wooed but the sign of the, L L L V, 2, Lucr. 683. 1376. 1549. Sonn. 34, 13. Gent. I, 3, 469. the fair, the chaste and unexprestive the, As III, 2, 10. I wat wont to load my the with Icnackt, Wint.10. 34. Ill, 1, 230. Mids. V, 70. Merch. Ill 1,101. Shr. Ind. 1, 120. 2, 66. All's I, 1, 92. Witt. Ill, 2, IT, 4, 360. / have and I will hold the quondam Quickly 194. 240. V, 2, 156. 157. R2 1, 4, 5. I1L 3,165. for the only the, H5 II, 1, 83. Adjectively, = female: a the angel, Wint. IT, 4, H4A III, 1, 94. H6A V, 4, 19. H6B I, 1, 118. H6C 211. the the bear, Mercb. II, 1, 29. put ttuff to tome 1, 4, 161. 162. II, 5, 106. V, 6, 64. R31,2,156. IV, the beggar, Tim. IT, 3, 273. you the foxet, Lr. Ill, 6, 4, 321. H8 III, 2, 429. Tit. I, 105. 162. 3 III, 2, 9. R3 IV, 3, 56. Cor. I, 4, ! 24. I, 6, 80. V, 2, 44. T i t . IV, 1, 127. Mcb. V, 8, 33. . Ant. IV, 13, 2. IV, 14, 38. Per. II, 1, 132. 11, 2, 19. Shield, vb. 1) to guard, to protect: with sa/est i distance I mine honour — e d , Compl. 151. a woman's » shape doth s. thee, Lr. IV, 2, 67. With Jrom: to s. thee J from diseases of the world, Lr. I, 1, 177. — ed him Jrom t this smart, Cymb. V, 4,41. Optatively: God s. us! t Mids. Ill, 1, 3 l . heavens s. Lysander, III, 2, 447. Jove i s. thee well for this, V, 179. W i t h from: heaven s. your I grace jrom woe, Mcas. V, 118. H8 I, 2, 2G. Tit. II, 3, '. 70. God omitted: s. thee from Warwick's frown, H6C IIV, 5, 28. 2 ) to forefend, to forbid, to avert (optatively : I heaven s. my mother played my father fair, Meas. Ill j 1, 141 (i. e. God grant that thou wert not my father's ! son\ God s. you mean it not, All's I, 3, 174. God s. . / should disturb devotion, Rom. IV, 1,41. Shift, subst. 1) change: when Fortune in her s. < and change of mood spurns dou-n her late beloved, Tim. I I, 1, 84. 2 ) expedient, resource, contrivance, stratagem, I trick: danger deviseth —s, wit wails on fear, Ven. ( 690. a man here needs not live by —s, when in the i streets he meets such golden gifts, Err. Ill, 2, 187. the < cleanliest s. is to kiss, As IV, 1,78. I'll find a thousand - —s to get away, John IV, 3, 7. now there rests no

s

1047

other s. but this, H 6 A II, 1, 75. cttrted be that heart j| Ven. 488. Cynthia for shame obscures her silver s. that forced us to this s. Tit. IV, 1, 72. it is you that 728. if after two days' s. Athens contain thee, T i m . Ill, puts us to our —s, IV, 2, 176. dodge and palter in the 5, 101. in our orbs we'll live so round and safe, that —s of lowness, Ant. Ill, 11,63. In a bad sense, without time of both this truth shall ne'er convince, thou showany apposition: guilty of treason, forgery and —s, edst a subject's s., la true prince, Per. I, 2, 124. Lucr. 920. For s. or for a s. = to serve a torn: thou Shine, vb. (imperf. and part shone) l ) t o g i v e singest well enough for a s. A d o II, 3, 80. an onion will light by emitting rays; used of celestial bodies: V e n . do well for such a s. Shr. Ind. 1, 126. when heiras 193. 492. 861. Lucr. 786. Pilgr. 208. ErT. II, 2, 30. made a shriver, 'twas for s H6C III, 2, 108. to make L L L I, 1,90. IV, 3 , 3 0 . 91. Mids. I, 2, 38. 111,1,52. s. or to make a s. = to contrive, to devise: I hope I 56. 59. Ill, 2, 380. 432. V, 272. 278. Merch. V, 92. shall make s. to go without him, Merch. I, 2, 97. you T w . I V , 3 , 34. Wint. IV, 3, 16. H 6 A 111,2, 31. H6B hav* made s. to run into it ( m y displeasure) All's II, IV, 1, 98. H6C II, 1, 28. 40. B3 II, 2, 102. V, 3, 278. 5, 39. I'll make other s. B 4 B II, 1,169. the rest of 285. H8 V, 5, 51. T i t . II, 3, 96. 231. Caes. Ill, 1, 64. thy low countries have made a s. to eat up thy holland, L r . 11,2, 34. Cymb. Ill, 4, 139. IV, 4, 34. V, 5, 476. II, 2, 25. I will make s. for one, H6B IV, 8. 33. I to s. on sth.: Sonn. 33, 9. Pilgr. 38. Gent. Ill, 1, 156. made a s. to cast him, Mcb. II, 3, 46. W i v . I, 3, 70. L L L IV, 3, 69. V, 2, 205. Wint. IV, 4, S h i f t , vb. 1) to change; a ) trans.: what an un- 455. V, 1, 95. R2 1,3,145. H 6 A 1,2, 3. Tim. IV, 3, thrift in the world doth spend —s but his place, Sonn. 184. my stars s. darkly over me, T w . II, 1, 3. to s. 9, 10. thou runnest before me, —ing every place, Mids. bright: Merch. V, 1. Shr. IV, 5, 2. 4. 5. Wint. V, 1, III, 2, 423. 1 mean to s. my bush, Shr. V, 2, 46. like a 95. H5 V, 2, 172. to s. brightly: T i t . IV, 2, 90. to s. —ed wind, John IV, 2, 23. not to have patience to s. fair: H 4 A III, 1, 142. to s. hot: Sonn. 18, 5. H 6 C IV, me, H4B V, 5, 23 (to put on fresh clothes), unto South- 8, 60. to s. warm: Ven. 193. to s. out, R 3 1, 2, 263 ampton do we s. our scene, 115 II Chor. 42. my shame (cf. Out and Outshining). will not be —ed with my sheet, H6B II, 4, 107. he s. a Metaphorical use: thou —st in every tear, L L L trencher I he scrape a trencher! Bom. I, 5, 2. we'll s. IV, 3, 33. when his love he doth espy, let her s. as gloour ground, Hml. I, 5, 156. should we s. estates, Ant. riously as the Venus of the sky, Mids. III. 2, 106. so V, 2, 152 ( = exchange). to s. a shirt, Cymb. I, 2,1. —s a good deed in a naughty world, Merch. V, 91. C. to s. his being is to exchange one misery with another, foolery —s everywhere, T w . Ill, 1, 44. Merch. V, 94. R 2 IV, 287. H 4 A HI, 2, 80. H 6 A I, 2, 75. H6C II, I, 5, 54. b) intr. = to change, to transform, to metamor- 6, 10. H8 I, 1, 20 (the French shone down the Engphose one's self; to get or come to be by change: not lish). 1, 4, 60. Troil. Ill, 3, 100. T i m . III, 4,10. Ant. acquainted ipith — ing change, Sonn. 20,4. thy com- I, 5, 55. II, 3, 28. Cymb. I, 2, 34. plexion — s to strange effects, after the moon, Meas. 2 ) to be bright, to glitter: his eyes like glow-worms Ill, 1, 24. the sixt age —s into the lean and slippered s. when he doth fret, Ven. 621. — ing arms, Lucr. 197. pantaloon, A s II, 7, 157. taught me to s. into a mad- the —ing glory of Ilion, 1523. with —ing falchion, man's rags, L r . V, 3, 186. Hence absol., — to pass by, 1626. when to unseeing eyes thy shade —s so, Sonn. to fade away: no object but her passion's strength re- 4 3 , 8 . 55,3. 65,14. Pilgr. 170. Phoen. 33. L L L IV, news, and as one —», another straight ensues, Lncr. 3, 246. A s II, 7, 146. H 4 A I, 3, 54. H 6 A II, 4, 23. 1104. H 6 B III, 1, 229. Tit. II, 1,19. II, 3, 229. Rom. I, 2, 2 ) to contrive, to devise, to practise; absol.: in- 103. Ant. I, 3, 45. Cymb. V, 4, 89. jurious, —ing time, Lncr. 930 (cf. 920). every man s. 3) to be conspicuous: let it (desert) «. H 4 B I V , 3, for all the rest, T p . V, 256. I must cony-catch, I must 63. 64. let desert in pure election s. T i t . I, 16. signs s. W i v . I, 3, 37. s. and save yourself, Err. V, 168. W i t h of nobleness, like stars, shall s. on all deservers, Mcb. the notion of change: thou hast —ed out of thy tale I, 4, 41. as upon thee their speeches s. Ill, 1, 7. a quainto telling me of the fashion, A d o 111, 3,151 ( = con- lity wherein, they say, you s. Hml. IV, 7, 74. 4 ) to be visible: the subtle —ing secrecies writ in trived to get), let us not be dainty of leave-taking, but s. away, Mcb. II, 3, 151 (contrive to get away), cf. the glassy margents of such books, Lucr. 101. ¿hall L r . V, 3, 186. With an accus. denoting the effect: J will in others seem right gracious, and in my will no —ed him away, Oth. IV, 1, 79 (contrived to get him fair acceptance s. t Sonn. 135, 8 (rhyming); cf. Phoen. away). - In All's II, 1, 147 O. Edd. — s unintelli- 33. W i t h through: these follies are within you and s. gibly, M. Edd. fits. through you like the water in an urinal, Gent. II, 1, 40. S h i l l i n g , English coin, the twentieth part of a the lightness of his wife —s through it, H4B I, 2, 53. pound: H4B II, 4, 207. H5 IV, 8, 76. H6B IV, 7, 25. your spirits s. through you, Mcb. Ill, 1, 128. H8 Prol. 12. Plur. — s: W i v . I, 1, 205. A d o III, 3, 84. Shiny, bright: the night is s. Ant. IV, 9, 3. T w . II, 3, 20. H 4 A I, 2, 158. II, 4, 27. HI, 3, 83. Ship, subst. a large vessel made to pass over the H4B II, 1, 111. Ill, 2, 236. H5 II, 1. 98. Plur. s.: sea with sails: T p . I, 1, 50. I, 2, 196. 224. 236. V, W i v . I, 1, 160 (Slender's speech). Wint. IV, 3, 34 97. 222. 307. Gent. I, 1, 156. Err. I, 1, 78. 93. 101. (the clown's speech). 104. 113. Ill, 2, 190. IV, 1, 94. IV, 3, 35. Merch. I, Shin, the fore part of the leg: Tp. IV, 181. W i v . 3, 22. 182. II, 8, 3. 6. 11. Ill, 1, 3. 6. 19. III, 2, 317. I, 1,294. V, 5, 58. L L L III, 71. 107. 113. 118. 120. V, 287. Shr. IV, 2, 83. T w . I, 2, 9. Wint. I, 2, 451. A s U, 4, 60. Rom. I, 2, 53. Tim. IV, 3, 152. II, 1, 36. Ill, 3, 1. 93. 99. 112. IV, 4, 790. R2 II, 1, Shine, subst. ( c f . Sheen) the light emitted by a 286. H 6 A I, 2, 138. Ill, 1, 186. H6B IV, 9, 32. H6C celestial body; in a proper and a metaphorical sense: 1, 4, 4. V, 4, 10. R 3 IV, 4, 483. Troil. Prol. 3. II, as the bright sun glorifies the sky, so is her face illu- 2, 81. Hml. IV, 6, 19. Oth. II, 1, 22. 25. 79. 83. Ant. mined with her eye, whose beams upon his hairless face III, 7, 36. 39. CO. Ill, 9, 3. Ill, 11,4. 21. HI, 13,22. are fixed, as if from thence they borrowed all their s. IV, 14, 59. Cymb. I, 3, 14. IV, 2, 335. Per. 1,4,61. S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon.

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8G. 92. 100. II Prol. 31. II, 3, S4. Ill P r o l 50 111, 1, 49. IV, 4, 17. V P r o l . 18. Fein.: T p I, 2, 12. 227. V, 237. E r r . IV, 1,90. L L L V , 2 , 5 4 9 . N e u t : Gent. Ill, 1, 281. to take s. — to e m b a r k : H 5 II C b o r . 3 0 . P u n n i n g opon ship and sheep: Gent. I, 1, 73. L L L II, 219. S h i p , vb. 1) to pot on board of a ship, to e m b a r k : to tee me —ed, Gent. I, 1, 54. 72. II, 3, 37. and — ed, from thence to Flanders, H 6 C IV, 5, 21 ( F l shipt; M. Edd. ship), that I was — ed at tea, I well remember, P e r . Ill, 4, 5. W i t h Jor: the icing it not yet —ed for Ireland, R 2 II, 2 , 4 2 . there I'll t. them ail for Ireland, H6B III, 1, 329. 2) to transport in a ship: would thou wert —ed to hell, T i t . I, 206. may have —ed her hence, IV, 3, 23. we will s him hence, Hml. IV, 1, 30. hath —ed me iutil the land, V, 1, 81. In Oth. II, 1, 47 — e d , adjectively, = famished with a ship, having a ship: is he well — erf? S h l p k e a r d , preceded by prepositions, = the ship: shall I fetch your stuff from s.f Err. V, 408. to 1. get undetcried, W i n t . IV, 4, 668. S h l p h e y , a boy t h a t serves in a ship: J o h n IV. 3, 4. H 4 B 111, 1, 19. H 5 III Chor. 8. S h i p m e n , a m a r i n e r : T r o i l . V, 2, 172. Mcb. I, 3, 17. P e r . I, 3, 24. S h i p p e d , see Ship vb. S h i p p i n g , 1) ships, vessels: he lent me some s. A n t III, 6, 27. our overplus of s. Ill, 7 , 5 1 . his s., poor ignorant baubles, Cymb. Ill, 1, 26. what s. and what lading's in our haven, P e r . I, 2, 4 9 . to take s. — to take ship, to e m b a r k : H 6 A V, 5, 87. 2) n a v i g a t i o n : God send 'emgood s. Shr. V, 1, 43. S h l p - e M e ; by the s. — by the side of the ship: Wint. Ill, 3, 112 (the clown's speech). S h i p - t i r e , ft peculiar he.id-dress, perhaps resembling a ship: W i v . Ill, 3, 60. S h i p w r e c k , subst. ( O . Edd. shipwrack; cf. Wreck) the destruction of a ship by rocks or shelves: H6A V, 5, 8. T i t . II, 1, 24. P e r . II, 1, 139. II, 3, 85. S h i p w r e c k , vb. ( O . Edd. shipwrack) to throw destructively on rocks or shelves: their ed guests, Err. I, 1, 115. —ed upon a kingdom, where no pity, H 8 III, 1, 149. —ing storms, Mcb. I, 2, 26. S h i p w r i g h t , a builder of ships: Hml. I, 1, 75. V, 1, 4 7 . S h i r e , c o u n t y : H 8 I, 2, 103. S h i r l e y , n a m e in H 4 A V, 4, 41. S h i r t , a garment worn by m e n n e x t the body: Wiv. Ill, 5, 91 (— s and smocks). L L L V, 2, 704. 711. 717. H 4 A III, 3, 77. IV, 2, 46. 47. 49. H 4 B 1, 2, 234. II, 2, 20. H 6 B IV, 7, 57. R o m . II, 4, 109 (a s. and a smock = a m a n and a woman". T i m . IV, 3, 223. H m l . II, 1, 81. L r . Ill, 4, 142. Oth. V, 1, 47. 73. A n t . IV, 12, 43. Cymb. I, 2, 2. 6. S h l v e , a slice: easy it is of a cut loaf to steal a s. Tit. II, 1, 87 (proverb). S h l T e r , vb. 1) tr. to break into splinters, to dash to pieces: — ed all the beauty of my glass, Lucr. 1763. —ing shocks, Mids. 1, 2, 34. 2) intr. a) to fall into pieces: thou'dst —ed like an egg, L r . IV, 6, 51. b) t o qnake, lo tremble: I have seen them s. and look pale, Mids. V, 95. —ing cold, R 2 V, 1, 77. S h i v e r y , small f r a g m e n t s , splinters: cracked in a hundred s. R 2 IV, 289. he would pun thee into s. with hit fist, Troil. II, 1, 42. |

S h e a l , a shallow: sounded all the depths ami —s of honour. H 8 111, 2, 437. I n Mcb. I, 7, 6 M Edd. upon this bank and s. of lime; O. E d d . school. S h a c k , subst. a violent collision, a conflict, encounter: and sweetens ... the aloes of all forces, -s and fears, Compl. 273. shivering — s, M i ' K I, 2, 34. with grating s. of wrathful iron arms, R2 I, 3, 13ft. when their thundering s. at meeting tears the cloudy cheeks of heaven. Ill, 3, 56. the intestine s. and furious close of civil butchery, H 4 A I, 1, 12. in plain s. and even play of battle, H 5 IV, 8, 114. in this doubtful s. of arm», R 3 V, 3, 93. the thousand natural — s that flesh is heir to, Hml. Ill, 1, 62. S h a c k , vb. to meet with f o r c e , to encounter, to face: come the three corners of the world in arms, and we shall s. them, J o h n V, 7, 117. S h e e , subst. ( p l u r . shoes; shoon in a popular rhyme, Hml. IV, 5, 2 6 ; and in the language of Cade, H 6 B IV, 2, 195), a covering f o r the f o o t : T p . Ill, ?, 26. Gent. II, 1, 86. II, 3, 16. 17. 19. 27. Krr. Ill, 2, 104. L L L 1, 2, 173. As III, 2, 399. Shr. Ind. 2, 10 All's II, I, 31. J o h n 11, 144 (great Alcides' —s upon an ass; cf. in Gosson's School of A b u s e : Hercules' shoes on a child's feet. Most M. E d d . shows). H41J I, 2, 44. H 5 IV, 1, 47. IV, 7, 149. IV, 8, 74. 75. Cor. 1 , 1 , 2 0 0 . Rom. 1 , 4 , 1 4 . 111,1,31. Caes. I, 1, 27. 33. Hml. I, 2, 147. II, 2, 234. Ill, 2, 288. Lr. Ill, 4, 98. over — s = deeply; deep enough, though not kneedeep : more than over —s in love, Gent. I, 1, 24. a man may go over —s in the grime, Err. Ill, 2, 106. over — s in blood, Mids. Ill, 2, 48. over —s in snow, R3 V, 3, 326. S h e e , vb. to furnish with a horseshoe: Merch. I, 2, 47. H 4 B V, 1, 20. L r . IV, 6, 188. g h e e l n g - h e r n , a horn used to facilitate the entrance of the foot into a narrow shoe; emblem of one who is a subservient tool to the caprices of a n o t h e r : a thrifty s. in a chain, hanging at his brother's leg, Troil. V, 1, 61 ( a l l u d i n g , at the same t i m e , to the cuckoldom of Menelaus). S h o e m a k e r , one whose occupation is to make shoes and boots: Rom. I, 2, 39. S h e e - t l e , a riband with which women fasten their shoes: W i n t IV, 4, 611. S h e e , Nym's word for jog, = to move off, to g o : will you s. off? I would have you solus, H 5 II, 1, 47. shall we s.f the king will be gone from Southampton, II, 3 , 4 7 . S h e e n , see Shoe. S h e e t , vb. (iinpf. and partic. shot; but see Shottcn, Shoulder-shotten and Nook-sholten) 1) tr. a) to let fly, to discharge, to d a r t ; absol.: he trill s no more, T p . IV, 100. L L L IV, 1, 11. IV, 2, 59. Shr. V, 2, 51. J o h n V, 6, 1. H6C III, 1, 5. Tit. IV, 3, 70. R o m . II, twelve score, 1, 13. Hml. V, 2, 414. s. point-blank Wiv. Ill, 2, 34. — ing well, L L L IV, 1, 25. J o h n I, 174. must s. nearer, L L L l V , 1,136. s. in each other's mouth, J o h n II, 414. you have shot over, H 5 III, 7, 133. to s. against the wind, T i t . IV, 3, 57. W i t h at: Sonn. 117, 12. Ado I, 1, 260. II, 1, 254. Ill, 2, 12. All's III, 2. 110. 115. H 6 A I, 4, 3. W i t h an o b j e c t : a fine volley of words, and quickly shot o f f , Gent. II, 4, 34. to s an arrow, Merch. I, 1, 141. 148. As V, 4, 112. J o h n II, 229. H5 III, 7, 132 (a fool's holt is soon shot J. Tit. IV, 3 , 6 1 . R o m . Ill, 3, 103. Hml. V, 2 , 2 5 4 . Mcb. II, 3, 147. P e r . I, 1, 163. A ecus, and

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at: iffy join and s. their foam at Simois' banks, Lucr. pomp that beats upon the high s. of this worlo, H5 IV, 1442. L L L III, 66. H6A IV, 7, 80. Cymb. IV, 2, 300. 1,282 (i. e. the most exalted stations), darklng stand Acc. of the effect: he shot a fine shoot, H4B 111, 2, the varying s. of the world, Ant. IV, 15, 11 i. e. the 49. thou hast shot off one of Taurus' horns, Tit. IV, world itself, that part of the universe in vbich we lire). Metaphorical use: the approaching tide will 3, 69. Metaphorical use: my revenges were high bent uponshortly fill the reasonable s. Tp. V, 81. / have laboured him and watched the time to s. All's V, 3, 11. to s. to the extremest s. of my modesty, Meas. Ill, % 266. forth thunder upon these drudges, U6B IV, 1, 104; cf. 2) the bank of a river: Lucr. 1440. Wiv. Ill, 5, Lr. II, 4, 230. what a mental power his eye —s forth, 15. John II, 443. R2 III, 2, 107. H4A III, 1.76. Tit. Tim. I, 1, 32. my good stars have shot their fires into I, 88. Caea. 1,1, 52. 65. 1,2, 101. the abysm of hell, Ant. Ill, 13, 146. Share, subst see Sewer. b) to bit, strike or kill with any missile: a mark Share; Mrs S., name of the mistresi of Edmarvellous well shot, L L L IV, 1, 132. shot, by heaven! ward IV, and, after his death, of Lord Hastings: R3 IV, 3, 23. who was shot, H5 III, 6, 77. to s. me to the 1,1,73.93.98. 111, 1, 185. 111,4,73. 111,5,31. 51. heart, H6A I, 4, 56. love's bow —a buck and doe, Share, vb. to set on land: if he think tfittos. Troil. Ill, 1, 127. with sighs shot through, Per. IV, 4, them again, Wint. IV, 4, 869. 26. cf. Grief-shot. Shert, adj. 1) not long in space or exteit: Ven. c) to send out, to posh forth: 'tis one of those odd 297. 627. W i r . II, 2, 18. Ado II, 1, 25. L L L III, 57. tricks which sorrow —i out of the mind, Ant. IV, 2.14. R2 II, 3,17. V, 1, 91. V, 3,117. H4B I, 2,14. H6B 2) intr. a) to move with velocity; used of falling I, 2,12. H8 1,3, 31. Lr. I, 5, 55. IV, 7, 40. Oth. II, 1, stars: Ven. 815. Lncr. 1525. Mids. II, 1, 153. R2 284. Ant. II, 4, 7. Per. IV, 4,1. Opposed to tall: Ado 1,1,216. H4B V, 3, 36. II, 4, 19. 2) not long in time: Ven. 22. 842. Ltcr. 791. b) to germinate, to bud, to sproat: the rarest argument of wonder, that hath shot out in our latter times, 991. 1573. Sonn. 18,4. 125,4. 146,5. Mias.11,4, 40. Err. V, 309. L L L I, 1,181. V, 2, 798. Mids. I, All's II, 3, 8. Sheet, subst. 1) the discharge of a missile: end 1, 144. Wint. I, 2, 169. R2 1,4, 17. II, 1,35.223. V, :hy ill aim before thy s. be ended, Lncr. 579. where 1,80. H4A I, 3, 301. 111,1,91. V, 2, 82. 15 IV, 5, you may make the fairest s. L L L IV, 1, 10. 12. 26. 23. R3 III, 1, 94. Ill, 4, 97. IV, 1, 79. H8 Trol. 13. H4B III, 2, 49. H6C 111, 1, 7. at a s. = at one s. Cor. I, 7, 4. V, 4,9. Rom. I, 1, 170. II, 6, 5. IV, 1, 1. V, 3, 229. Tim. Ill, 4, 11. Lr. IV, 7, 2. in s. time, Hml. V, 2, 377 (Qq shot). 2) a young branch: thou wantest a rough pash and H4A IV, 3, 90. Cymb. V, 5,256. in s. space, H4A V, 1, 46. s. breath, H 4 A V, 2, 49. H4B I, 2, ¡06. fetthe —s I have, Wint. I, 2, 128. Sheeter, one who shoots: L L L I V , 1,116 (quib- ches her wind so s. Troil III, 2, 33. 36. Use4 for the sake of the rhyme, as a relative term of durtfion, = bling on suitor v. 110). Bhaetle (perhaps Shoe-lie) name in Meas. IV, 3, long: a summer's day will seem an hour bu s. Ven. 23. Peculiar passage: it must be shortly lcnoun to him 18 (Master S. the great traveller). Shep, a room where any thing is sold or made from England what is the issue of the business there. for sale, or to which customers of any kind resort: It will be i. Hml. V, 2, 73 ( = shortly? or = a diort which (your image) in my bosom's s. is hanging still, time? cf. three years.is but s. LLL I, 1, 181V 3) brief, not prolix, not tedious, not oter-eereSonn. 24, 7. a barber's s. Meas. V, 323. at your (the goldsmith's) s. Err. Ill, 1,3. IV, 1, 82. IV, 3, 7. L L L monious: this s. schedule, Lucr. 1312. s. ansver. Ado III, 18 (with your hat penthouse-like o'er the s. of your I,1,215. s. Utter, L L L V, 2, 56. we will make s. eyes). Shr. IV, 3, 91. Wint. IV, 4, 701. H6A III, 1, work, Rom. II, 6, 35. a s. farewell, Cymb. Ill 4,188. 85. Cor. I, 1,137. IV, 6, 8. Bom. V, 1, 42. 56. Tim. brief, s , quick, snap, Wiv. IV, 5, 2. to be s. Sir. V, 2, IV, 3,450. Caes. 1, 1, 31. Cymb. V, 5, 166 (a i. of 110. H8 IV, 1, 30. s. tide to make, H6C U 1,120. a s. tale to make, Hml. II, 2, 146 (cf. the quibbling in all the qualities that man loves woman for). Share, subst 1 ) the coast of the sea: Sonn. 56, Rom. II, 4, 104). to be s. with = not to male much 10. 60, 1. 64, 6. Tp. 1. 2, 180. II, 1, 120. Ill, 2, 16. ceremony with: I will be bitter with him and passing Ill, 3, 74. V, 137. 161. Wiv. I, 3, 89. Merch. Ill, 2, 97. s. As III, 5, 138. H8 V, 3, 52. Tit. I, 409. SubstanWint. Ill, 3, 90. IV, 4,578. V, 1, 164. John II, 23. tively : the s. and the long ( = the whole in few words), 338. V, 2, 36. R2 II, 1. 62. 288. H4A IV, 3, 59. 77. a phrase used by Mrs. Quickly and her equate: Wir. H5 V, 2, 378. H6B 111, 2, 87. 90. 102. IV, 1. 11. H6C II, 1, 137. II, 2, 60. Mids. IV, 2, 39. Merch. 11-2, 135. 4) deficient, inadequate: praise too s. Ath blot, 111, 2, 136. R3 IV, 4, 434. 482. 525. Troil. I, 3, 105. 112. II, 2, G4. II, 3, 260. Rom. II, 2, 83. Oth. II, 1, 11. L L L IV, 3, 241. we shall be s. in our provisim, Rom. Ant. II, 7,133. Cymb. I, 3, 1. Per. 1,4, 60. II, 1,6. IV, 2, 38. his means most s. Tim. I, 1, 96. wlose aim 111. 11,3,85. 89. 111,2,50. 111,3,35. IV, 4,43. V, seems far too s. to hit me here, Per. 1, 2, 8. tc come s. 1, 104. 257. V, 3, 23. Without the article: andmake = to fail, to be insufficient: how far a moV, 5, 14. H5 I, 2, 72. II, 4, 23. IV, 2, 17. H6B III, .1, 54. 225. R3 III, 1, 10. Ill, 5, 29. Troil. I, 3, 46. IRom. Ill, 2, 77. Mcb. I, 7, 81. Hml. Ill, 1, 45. Oth. II, 1, 52. II, 3, 358. Cymb. 1, 5, 40. V, 5, 54. Per. II, '.2, 48. II, 3, 6. IV, 4, 23. 4) any thing presented to die view, an object att t r a d i n g notice, an aspect, an external sign: and give tthe harmless s. an humble gait, Lucr. 1507 (viz the ] painted fignre of Sinon). losing her woes in —s of (discontent, 1580 (viz pictures), how would thy shadow's jform form happy s. Sonn. 43, 6. fright me with trchin — s , Tp. II, 2, 5. a snow in May's new-fanglei —», J L L L I, 1, 106 (M. Edd. mirth, for the sake of the i rhyme). a golden mind stoops not to — s of dross, i Merch. II, 7, 20. that any harm should stain so fair a ts. R2 III, 3, 71. throng our large temples with tie —s ¡of peace, Cor. Ill, 3, 36. live to be the s. and gaze o tthe time, Mcb. V, 8,24. leaving free things and happy —s behind, Lr. Ill, 6, 112. with other spritely —s of inline own kindred, Cymb. V, 5, 428. 5) a spectacle, a play: this huge stage presenteth tmought but —s, Sonn. 15, 3. swoon at tragic —s, (Compl. 308. or s. or pageant, L L L V, 1, 118. 126. W, 2, 305. 514. 541. 543. Mids. V, 116. 128. Shr. I, II, 47. H4B 111, 2, 300. H6C V, 7, 43. H8 Prol. 10. 118. Hml. Ill, 2, 149. 153. Ant. HI, 13, 30. IT, 15, '.23. Per. V, 2, 271. a dumb s. = a pantomime: Ado III, 3, 226. Merch. I, 2, 79. T i t ' l l l , 1, 131. Hiil. Ill, ¿2, 14. cf. Per. Ill Prol. 14. B h a w (impf. showed, partic. showed or shown), 11) trans, a) to exhibit to view; absol.: 6« not asiamed /to s. Hml. Ill, 2,155. With objects: Tp. I, 8, 337. II, 52, 144. 152. 164. 173. Ill, 2, 74. 150. Gent. 1,2, 31. II, 3, 80. 86. II, 3, 15. Ill, 2, 18. Meas. I, 2,12«. IV, 22, 160. L L L V, 2, 296. Mids. II, 1, 169. Merch. IV, 11. As III, 5, 20. Wint. V, 3, 59. H6B 111, 1, 15. (Cor. II, 3, 171. Ill, 2, 22. Rom. I, 2,103. Hml. Ill, 2, 1154. Ant. II, 5, 8. V, 2, 227. Cymb. V, 5,432 etc. etc. W i t h to before the dative: Troil. Ill, 3, 79. Ait. IV, 114, 112. V, 1, 38. The dative subject of the pawive: I,no such sight to be —n, Rom. 1, 2, 105 ( = to see). AWith a red. pronoun: Tp. Ill, 2, 137. Wiv. II, 1, 22. /Ado 111, 2, 133. Shr. II, 51. All's II, 5, 73. H4A II, 44, 105. Cor. I, 2, 21. Tim. Ill, 2, 51 etc. With o f f : JI like your silence, it the more —a off your winder, W i n t . V, 3, 21. With out: I must s. out a flag and isign of love, Oth. I, 1, 157. b) to let be seen, not to conceal, to betray: this i visitation —s it, Tp. Ill, 1, 32. the more it seeks to hide \ itself, the bigger bulk it —s, 111, 1,81. see it so ynsdy — n in thy behaviours, All's I, 3, 184. to one of your i receiving enough it —n, Tw. Ill, 1, 132. I have —ed t too much the rashness of a woman, Wint. Ill, 2, 221.

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s. me an iron heart, Tim. Ill, 4, S4. to s. one's head: Soim. 26, 14. Merch. Ill, 1, 47. B2 V, 6, 44. Troil. V, 6, 1. to s. one'»face: Troil. V, 5, 45. Mcb. V, 7, 14. to s. thy dangerous brow, Caes. II, 1, 78. c) to discover, to reveal, to communicate, to teach: I'Us. my mind, Gent. I, 2, 7 ( = tell my opinion), t. no colour far my extremity, Wiv. IV, 2, 168. he —s his reason for that, Meas. IV, 4, 13. where we'll s. what's yet behind, V, 544. s. me briefly how, Ado II, 2,11. all the secrets of our camp I'll s. All's IV, 1,93 (a tfrange passage in All's II, 3, 25—27). I will s. thee no reason, Tw. Ill, 4, 166. where you do remain lei paper s. R2 1,3,250. s. some reason why Somerset shoM be preferred, H6B I, 3, 116. 166. I'll s. thee wondrous things, Tit. V, 1, 55. I'll s. you how to observe a strange event, Tim. 111,4,17. to you they have —ei some truth, Mcb. II, 1, 21. with an entreaty, herein further —n, Hml.II,2,76. this hath my daughter —n me, 125. let his queen mother all alone entreat him to s. his grief, 111, 1, 191. s. me thy thought, Oth. Ill, 3, 116. d) to prove: his eye —s his hot courage, Ven. 276. by their rank thoughts my deeds must not be —n, Sonn. 121,12. that the contents will s. Gent. I, 2,36. I have to s. to the contrary, Wiv. II, 1, 38. 41. the country proterb known in your waking shall be —n, Mids. Ill, 2, 460. —ing we would not spare heaven, Meas. II, 3, 33. hast —ed thou makest some tender of my life, B4A V, 4.49. there was very little honour —ed in this, Tim. III, 2, 21. s. us to be watchers, Mcb. II, 2, 71. when I have —ed the unfitness, Lr. I, 4, 356 etc. With a double accns.: — s thee unripe, Ven. 128. Silvia —i Julia but a swarthy Ethiope, Gent. II, 6, 26. I, 2, 29. WiT. II, 3, 56. 57. Shr. V, 1, 76 etc e) to offer, to commit, to do, to bestow: s. some pity, Meas. II, 2, 99. s. justice, 100. you have —ed me that which well approves you're great in fortune, All's III, 7, 13. the fair kindness you have —ed me here, Tw. Ill, 4, 376. that souls refined should s. so heinous a deed, R2 IV, 131. you s. great mercy, H5 11, i, 50. IV, 4, 68. H8 I, 1, 223. Cor. I, 3, 5. V, 3, 55. 137. 161. Tit. II, 3, 147. Tim. IV, 3, 534. Hml. I, 2, 40. 53. Lr. II, 1, 107. Cymb. V, 4, 30 etc. f) to point oat the way to, to gnide: will you s. me to this houset Merch. IV, 2, 19. 2) intr. a) to appear, to become visible: fire in a flint, which will not s. without knocking, Troil. Ill, 3, 258. the fire i' the flint — 8 not till it be struck, Tim. I, 1,23. s., s., s ! Mcb. IV, 1, 107. With a dative witbont to: s. his eyes, and grieve his heart, Mcb. IV, 1, 110. b) to appear, to look, to have appearance, to be in appearance (joined with substantives, or adjectives, or adverbs): this beauteous combat — ed like two silver doves, Ven 366. perverse it shall be where it —s most toward, 1157. my duty would s. greater, Lncr. Ded. 5. what is vile - s like a virtuous deed. Lucr. 252. whose perftct white —ed like an April daisy, 395. in whom all il well — s, Sonn. 40, 13. the one doth shadow of your beauty s. 53, 10. to make him seem long hence as he -s now, 101, 14. 105, 2. Compl. 96. Gent. II, 7, 48. Meas. IV, 4,4. Err. Ill, 2, 31. Ado 1, 2, 8. Merch. II, 2, 193. IV, I, 196. As 1, 3, 83. All's 111, 5, 24. Wint. IV, 4, 6E3. John III, 4, 115. R2 II, 2, 15. H4A I, 2,238. 1, 3, 35. Ill, 2, 58. V, 2, 51. H4B II, 2, 7. IV, 1, 63. IV, 2, 4. IV, 3, 55. 58. H5 II, 2, 127. H6B

V, 1, 205. H8 I, 1, 22. Troil. I, 3, 84. Cor. Ill, 3, 50. IV, 5, 68. IV, 6, 114. V, 3, 13. Rom. I, 2, 104. I, 5, 50. 51. Tim. Ill, 4, 21. V, 1, 15. Mcb. 1, 3, 54. V, 6, 2. Hml. 11, 2, 391. V, 2, 113 of very soft society and great —ing; = distinguished appearance; Osrick's euphoism\ Lr. 1,4,265. 289. IV, 6,14. Oth. V, 2, 203. Ant. II, 2, 147. Ill, 3, 23. IV, 8, 7. Per. IV, 1, 89. Perhaps followed by an inf., at least one understood: they that have power to hurt, and will do none, that do not do the thing they most do s. Sonn. 94, 2 ( = they most s. to do ? But it may be explained otherwise). Shawer, snbst. a short fall of rain: Ven. 66. Sonn. 75, 2. 124, 12. Tp. IV, 79. Wiv. Ill, 2, 38. R2 II, 1, 35. H6B III, 1, 337. H6C II, 2, 156. H8 HI, 1, 7. Tit. Ill, 1, 18. Tim. II, 2, 180. Ant. 1, 2, 156 (a s. of rain). Used of any thing falling fast and thick; of tears: Lucr. 796. Shr. Ind. 1, 125. John V, 2, 50. H6C 1, 4, 145. II, 5, 85. Tit. V, 3, 161. Hml. IV, 5, 39. Ant. Ill, 2, 44. of blood: R2 111, 3, 43. of pebbles: H8 V, 4, 60. a s. of gold. Ant. II, 5, 45. in the great s. of your gifts, Tiin. V, 1, 73. made a s. and thunder with their caps and shouts. Cor. II, 1, 283. — s of oaths, Mids. 1, 1, 245. S h a w e r , vb. to rain: evermore —ingt i. e. weeping) Rom. Ill, 5, 131. = to fall down plenteously: it rained down fortune —ing on your head, H I A V, 1, 47. Trans. = to pour down plenteously: I s. a welcome on you; welcome all, H8 1,4,63. your royal graces —ed on me daily, III, 2, 167. S h e w - p l a e e : the common s. where they exercise. Ant. Ill, 6, 12; North's translation, adopted by the poet, of the Greek word yvfiraoiov in Plut. Ant. LIV. Shreds, fragments, patches: with these s. they vented their complainings, Cor. I, 1, 212. a king of s. and patches, Hml. Ill, 4, 102. S h r e w , subst. (often spelt shrow in O. Edd. and always pronounced so; cf. the rhymes in LLL V, 2, 46. Shr. IV, 1, 213. V, 2, 28. 188) a vixen, a scold: Err. IV, 1, 51. LLL V, 2, 46. Merch. V, 21. Shr. II, 315. HI, 2, 29. IV, 1, 22. 87 (he is more s. than she). 213. IV, 2, 58. V, 2, 28. 64. 188. Tw. 1, 3, 50. H4B V, 3, 36. S h r e w , vb. = beshiew (q. v.): s. my heart, you never spoke what did become you less, Wint. 1, 2, 281. s. me, if I would lose it for a revenue of any king's, Cymb. II, 3, 147. S h r e w d , 1) bad, evil, mischievous (German: boese, arg : thy eyes' s. tutor, that hard heart of thine, hath taught them scornful tricks, Ven. 500. there is s. construction made of her, Wiv. II, 2, 232. prove a s. Caesar to you, Meas. II, 1, 263. so s. of thy tongue, Ado II, 1, 20. when she's angry, she is keen and s. Mids. Ill, 2,323. there are some s. contents in yon same paper, Merch 111, 2, 216. endured s. days and nights, As V, 4, 179. her eldest sister is so curst and s. Shr. I, 1, 185. 1, 2, 60. 70. 90. this young maid might do her a s. turn, All's III, 5, 71. foul s. news, John V, 5, 14. to lift s. steel against our golden crown, R2 111, 2, 59. made a s. thrust at your belly, H4B II, 4, 228. bears so s. a maim, H6B II, 3, 41. you are too s. H3 II, 4, 35. do my Lord of Canterbury a s. turn, and he is your friend for ever, H8 V, 3,178. we shall find of him a s. contriver, Caes. II, 1, 158. 'tis a s. doubt, Oth. HI, 3, 429. this last day was a s. one to us, Ant. IV, 9, 5.

s 2) sly, cunning, artful, arch: a $. unhappy gallows (Cupid) LLL V, 2, 12. that s. and knavish sprite, Mids. II, 1, 33. a s. knave and an unhappy, All s IV, 5, 66. these women are s. tempters with their tongues, II6A I, 2, 123. a Jit or two o' the face, but they are ». ones, H8 I, 3, 7. he has a s. wit, Troil. 1, 2, 206. S h r e w d l y , in a high and mischievous degree (qnite = the German adverb arg): you apprehend patsing s. Ado II, 1, 84. he is s. vexed at something, All's III, 5, 91. you boggle s. V, 3, 232. this practice hath most s. passed upon thee, Tw. V, 360. 'tis s. ebbed, Wint. V, 1,102. your mistress s. shook your back, H5 III, 7, 52. these English are s. out of beef, 163. my fame is s. gored, Troil III, 3, 228. my misgiving still falls s. to the purpose, Caes. Ill, 1, 146. the air bites s. Hml. I, 4, 1. S k r e w i n n i , canning: Ant. II, 2, 69. S h r e w i s h , quarrelsome, vixenly: Err. HI, 1, 2. S h r e w i s h l y , tartly: Tw. I, 5, 170. N h r e w l i h n r i i , quarrelsomeness: Mids. Ill, 2, 301. S h r e w s b u r y , English town: H4A III, 1, 86. Ill, 2, 166 IV, 2, 58. IV, 4, 10. V,4, 151. H4B Ind. 24. 1, 1, 12. 24. 40. 64. 65. I, 2, 71. 116. 167. I, 3, 2C. Earl ofS. (Talbot): H6A 111, 4, 26. IV, 7, 61. S h r i e k , subst. a sharp outcry, a scream: Wint. Ill, 3, 36. Troil. II, 2, 97. Rom. IV, 3, 47. Mcb. IV, 3, 168. cf Night-shriek. S h r i e k , vb. to scream: Lucr. 307. Tp. V, 233. Wiv. I, 1, 309. Mids. I, 2, 78. Wint. V, 1, 65. Bom. V, 3, 190. Caes. II, 2, 24. Per. Ill Prol. 51. Used of the cry of the owl: Ven. 531. Phoen. 5. R2 III, 3, 183. H6C V, 6, 44. Caes. I, 3, 28. Mcb. II, 2, 3. With out: R3 I, 4, 54 (Qq squeaked). Transitively: —ing undistinguished woe, Compl.. 20. 8 b r i e v e , sheriff: All's IV, 3, | 1 3 . H4B IV, 4, 99 (Ff sheriff). S h r i f t , confession made to a priest, and the absolution consequent upon it: I will give him a present s. Meas. IV, 2, 223 (liear his confession and absolve him), the ghostly father now hath done his s. H6C 111, 2, 107. make a short s. R3 III, 4, 97. to hear true i. Rom. I, 1, 165. riddling confusion finds but riddling s. 11,3,56. to come to s. II, 4, 192. to go to«. 11,5,68. she comes from s. 1V, 2,1 d. his bed shall seem a school, his board a s. Oth. Ill, 3, 24. S h r i l l , 1) resounding, loud, clangorous: thy hounds shall make the welkin answer them and fetch s. echoes from the hollow earth, Shr. Ind. 2, 48. with this s. addition, 'anon, anon, sir', H4A II, 4, 29. a tongue —er than all the music, Caes. I, 2, 16. the s. trump, Oth. Ill, 3, 351. 2) of a high tone, not low: thy small pipe is as the maiden's organ, s and sound, Tw. I, 4, 33. hear the s. whistle, H5 III Chor. 9. S h r i l l , vb., with forth, = to utter loudly: Andromache —s her dolours forth, Troil. V, 3, 84. S h r i l l - g e r f e 4 , singing in a high tone: thes. lark, Lr. IV, 6, 58. S h r i l l - s h r i e k i n g , screaming in a high voice: H5 III, 3, 35. S h r l l l - s e a n t i n g , loud: the cock ... with his lofty and s. throat, Hml. I, 1, 151. S h r l l l - t s n c u e d , 1) having a loud and resounding voice: s. tapsters, Ven. 849. when s. Fulvia scolds. Ant I, 1, 32.

1053

2) speaking in a high tone: is she s. orlow' Ant. III, 3, 15. S h r i l l - v e l e e d , speaking londly, clamonus: what s. suppliant makes this eager cryt R2 V, 3,75. S h r i l l y , loudly: the echo ... replying s. to the well-tuned horns, Tit. II, 3, 18. nor sound lis quillets s. Tim. IV, 3, 155. S h r i m p , a dwarfish person, a m a n n i k i i : I L L V, 2, 594. H6A II, 3, 23. S h r i n e , 1) altar, or rather the place where the image of a saint is deposited: at Saint Albai's t H6B II, 1, 63. 88. 92. 2) the image of a saint: offer pure inense to so pure a s. (i. e. Lncrece) Lucr. 194. from the four corners of the earth they come, to kiss thiss., Ms aortalbreathing saint, Merch. II, 7, 40. if I profase with my unworthiest hand this holy s. Rom. 1,5,96. famitg the s. of Ven us or straight-pight Minerva, CyniU V, i, 164. S h r i n k (impf. and partic. shrunk) 1) ti contract itself, to shrivel, to dry up: wanting the priwg that those shrunk pipes the veins) had fed, Ltcr. 1455. Us shrunk shank, As II, 7, 161. a shrunk pal«/, III, 3, 89. against this fire do Is. up, John V, 7,34. Ul-ueaved ambition, how much art thou shrunk, H4A V, 4,18. in this borrowed likeness of shrunk death, Rom.IV, 1,104. Timon is shrunk indeed, Tim. Ill, 2, 68 ( = brought low), are all thy conquests ... shrunk to thislitth measuret Caes. Ill, 1, 150. cf. Custom-shrunk. Transitively, - to wither: to s. mine arm •p like a withered shrub, H6C III, 2, 156. 2 1 to shiver with cold; to shudder, to cpaki with fear: till I s. with cold, As II, 1 , 9 . to be sill hot summer's tanlings and the — ing slaves ofwiimr, Cymb. IV, 4, 30. makes me with heavy nothing font end s. R2 II, 2, 32. he shall s. under my courtesy, H4A V, 2, 75. not fearing death, nor —ing for distress, H6A IV, 1, 37. when he perceived me s. and on mi kme, IV, 7, 5. as if his foot were on brave Hector's breast, and great Troy —ing, Troil. Ill, 3, 141 ;Q shriUng, some M. Edd. shrieking', the ground —s before hii trending, Cor. V, 4, 20. 3) to recoil, to fall back with fear: the sutil,whose tender horns being hit, —s backward, Ven 1034. if there be ten, s. not, Gent. IV, 1, 2. wheniie bravest questant —s,find what you seek, All's II, 1.16. if the first hour Is. and run away, H6A IV, 5, II. at the sound it shrunk in haste away, Hml. 1,2, 219 Without away, in the same sense as in Hml.: that this sight should make so deep a wound, and yet detested tfe not s. thereat, Tit. Ill, 1, 248. 4) With from, = to forsake, to leave h dutress: friends for fear, which in his greatest need trill s. from him, R3 V, 2, 21 (Ff fly), if any mean to i firm me, V, 3, 222. will find a frieni will not s.fronhin, H8 IV, 1, 107. his estate —s from him, Tim. II, 2, 7. S h r i v e , to hear at confession and absdve 1 had rather he should s. me than wive me, Merch. I, 2, 144. he —a this woman to her smock, H6A I, 2,119. your honour hath no —ing work in hand, R3 II, 2. 116. there she shall be —d and married, Rom. II, 4. 194. not —ing time allowed, Hml. V, 2, 47. Witko/, = to hear the confession and absolve of: I'll s. ymt of a thousand idle pranks, Err. II, 2, 210. S h r i v e l , with up, = to dry up and coitract into wrinkles: Per. II, 4, 9. S b r i v e r , a confessor: H6C III, 2, 108,

1054 Shraud, aubst. 1) shelter, cover, protection: put gourtelf under his s. Ant. Ill, 13, 71. i) a winding-sheet: L L L V, 2,479. Mi da. V, 385. Tw. II, 4, 56. Wint. IV, 4, 468. Bom. IV, 1, 85. IV, 3, 4J. 52. Hml. IV, 5, 35. I) Plur. —s, : sail-ropes: John V, 7, 53. H6C V, 4,18. H8 IV, 1 , 7 2 . I h r a n d , vb. 1) to shelter, to cover, to conceal: Ihcae been closely — ed in this bush, LLL IV, 3, 137. under this brake we'll t. ourselves, H6C 111, 1, 1. to s. yourselves from enemies, IV, 3, 40. f) to dress for the grave: B3 I, 2, 2. Troil. II, 3, 36. Hml. V, 1, 103. Oth. IV, 3, 24. Per. HI, 2, 65. 1) intr. to take shelter: I will here s. till the dregs of the storm be past, Tp. II, 2, 42 (Trincnlo's speech . Shrave-tlde, the day before Lent: H4B V, 3,38. Shra»e-tue»day, the same: All's II, 2, 25. Shraw, see Shrew. Shrub, a woody plant of a size less than a tree, a bmh: Lncr. 664. Tp. II, 2, 18. H6C HI, 2, 156. V, 2, 15. Tit. IV, 3, 45. t h r o e , subst. a drawing np of the shoulders, expressive of slight contempt: Merch. I, 3, 110. Wint. II, 1,71. 74. Shrug, vb. to draw np the shonlders in contempt: Tp. I, 2, 367. Cor. 1, 9, 4. Shrupt, unintelligible reading of Q in Troil. IV, 5, 193: when that a ring of Greeks have shrupt thee in. Pf and M. Edd. hemmed. Shudder, subst. a shaking with horror: Tim. IV, 3, 117. Shudder, vb. to shake with horror: Ven. 880. Merch. Ill, 2, 110. Shuffle, to practise shifts, to play tricks: l a m fain to s., to hedge and to lurch, Wiv. II, 2, 25. 'tis like ihe forced gait of a —ing nag, H4A III, 1, 135 (viz the gait of 'mincing poetry'), 'tis not so above; there is no —ing, Hml. Ill, 3, 61. with a little ing you nay choose a sword unbated, IV, 7, 138. your life must s. for itself, Cymb. V, 5, 105. With an accus. denoting the effect: he shall likewise s. her away, Wiv. IV, 6.29. oft good turns are —d off with such uncurrent pay (thanks) Tw. 111,3,16 ( = are eluded, got rid of). when we have —d off this mortal coil, Hml. Ill, 1, 67 (have got rid, in any way, of this troublesome life). Shun, 1) to avoid, to keep far from, not to approach, to endeavour to escape: Lucr. 966. 1322. Sona 118, 4. 129,14. Compl. 155.234. Tp. IV, 116. Gent I, 3, 78. Ill, 1, 30. Wiv. V, 5, 241. Meus. Ill, 1, 12. Mids. II, 1, 142. Merch. Ill, 5, 18. As II, 5, 40. Shr. Ind. 2, 30. All's II, 3, 79. Wint. I, 2, 422. V, 3, 105. H5 III, 6, 174. H6C I, 4, 24. R3 III, 2, 18. III, 7. 155. H8 I, 1, 114. Cor. I, 3, 34. I, 6, 44. Kom. I, 1, 136. Lr. Ill, 4, 9. 21. V, 3, 210. Oth. I, 2, 67. Cymi. I, 4, 47. V, 3, 27. Per. I, 1, 136. 142. I, 2, 6. 121. H6B I, 4, 38. 70. 2) to escape: weak we are and cannot s. pursuit, H6CII, 3,13. you cannot s. yourself, Troil. Ill,2,152. Shunless, inevitable: s. destiny, Cor. II, 2, 116. Shut (imp!, and partic. shut) 1) to close so as to hinder ingress or egress; used of doors, gates and windows: As IV, 1,164. Tw. Ill, 1,103. V,404. H4B II, 4, 82. H6C IV, 7, 18. 35. Troil. II, 2, 47. Cor. I, 4, 17. Rom. IV, 1, 44. Oth. IV, 2, 28. of shops: H6A III, 1, 85. Rom. V, 1, 56. of the spring of a trunk: Cyno. II, 2, 47. of books: H4B III, 1, 56. Per. I, 1,

S 95. of eyes: Rom. Ill, 2, 49. Mcb. V, 1, 29. obf the mouth: Lr. V, 3, 154 (Qq stop . of a purse: Genbt. Ill, I,358. Followed by after: s. the door after you, Mlerch. II,5,53 (i. e. when you are in the honse). by agqainst ( = to the exclusion o f ) : his own doers being s. agqainst his entrance, Err. IV, 3, 90. 92. s. his bosom aggainst our prayers, All's III, 1, 8. Tim. I, 2, 150. Mcb. . I, 7, 15. by on or upon, = a) so as to binder egresss: let the doors be s. upon him, that he may play the : fool nowhere but ins own house, Hml III, 1, 135. b) eso as to hinder ingress: Err. IV. 4, 66. V, 156. 204. A i s III, 5, 13. H8 II, 4, 43. Tit. V, 3, 105. c) so as to > part with: s. the gates upon one wooer, Merch. I, 2, 1417. s. your gates upon's, Cor. I, 7, 6. With in and out (denoting the effect): they ¡have s. him in, Cor. I, 4, 47. were not my doors lockeed up and I s. outt Err. IV, 4, 73. fears which I would I fain s. out. All's V, 3, l l o . 1I6A I, 3, 26. 30. Lr. 1BII, 4, 18. Similarly with from: the chamber-door that t—s him from the heaven of his thought, Lucr. 338. VWith up: I wish mine eyes would, with themselves, s. upp my thoughts, Tp. II, 1, 192. sleep, that sometimes s up sorrow's eye, Mids. 111,2,435. the gates of mercy > shall be all s. up, H5 111, 3, 10. our halberds did s. u/tp his passage, H6C IV, 3, 20. —s up his windows, Romii I, 1,145. thy eyes' windows fall, like death, when hee —s up the day of life, IV, 1, 101. s. up your doors, LLr. II, 4, 307. 311. Rom. I, 2, 56. 2) to inclose, to confine: is all thy comfort : s. in Gloster's tombf H6B III, 2, 78. *. me nightly tin a charnel-house, Rom. IV, 1,81. With up: LLL t I, 2, 158. V, 2, 817. Wint. IV, I, ID. Rom. I, 2, 56. 'ITim. I, 1, 98. Oth. 111,3, 114. Figurative use: thatit we whose baser stars do s. us up in wishes, might with effects of them follow our friends, All's 1, 1, 1977 ( confine), in who>% the tempers and the minds o f f all should be s. up, Troil. I, 3, 58. were all the weattlth I have s. up in thee, I'ld give thee leave to hang it, I T i m . IV, 3, 279 ( = inclosed, summed up), and s. upp in measureless content, Mcb. II, 1, 16 (summed upp all that he had to say, in expressing his measure-elcss content), and s. myself up in some other course to; fortune's alms, Oth. Ill, 4, 121 (make up my minad by confining myself. A passage much controverted. . Qi shoot). S h u t t l e , the instrument with which the weeaver shoots the cross threads: life is a s. Wiv. V, 11, 25 (Job VII, 6: my days are swifter than a weaver's shuuttle, and are spent without hope). S h y , keeping at a distance, reserved, demunre: a s. fellow was the duke, and I believe I know the ccause of his withdrawing, Meas. Ill, 2, 138. as s., as grrave, as just, as absolute as Angelo, V, 54. S h y U c k , name of the Jew in Mcrch. 1, 3, 53 ! etc. S i b y l , one of a number ot prophetesses rennowned in the history of ancient Rome: exceeding the i nine —s oj old Rome, H6A I, 2, 56. blow these sands • like —s' leaves abroad. Tit. IV, 1, 105. as old as S. fShr. I, 2, 70. — prophetess, sorceress in general: a s. • that had numbered the sun to course two hundred compassses, Oth. Ill, 4, 70. Sibylla, the same: if I live to be as old ass S. Merch. I, 2, 116. cf. Shr. I, 2, 70. Slcil, the kingdom of Sicily: H6B I, 1, 6. / both the —s, H6C I, 4, 122 (i. e. Naples and Sicily). • the —s, V, 7, 39.

s S i c i l l a , 1) the island to the south of I t a l y : W i n t . 1, 1, 5. Ill, 2, 13. IV, 2, 23. 59. IV, 4, 522. 554. 600 (the later Ff Sicily). 680. V, 1, 139. H6B 1, 1, 48. 2) the king of i t : Wint. 1, 1, 23. I, 2, 146. 218. S i c i l i a n , pertaining to Sicily: W i n t . V, 1, 164. S i c i l i u s , name of the father of Posthumus in Cymb. I, 1, 29. V, 4, 51. S i c i l y , the island to the south of I t a l y : Wint. 1, 2, 175. IV, 4, 600 ( F l Sicilia). Tit. Ill, 1, 242. Ant. II, C, 7. 35. 46. Ill, 6, 24. S i c i n i u s , name of a tribune in Cor. I, 1, 221. S i c k , adj. (coinpar. — e r : R2 II, 1,91) 1) diseased, not in health, ill: Ven. 702. Lucr. 901. Sonn. 140, 7. 153, 11. Ado II, 1, 301. 303. 111,4, 72. V, 1, 131. L L L I, 1, 139. V, 2, 832. 861. Merch. Ill, 2, 237. IV, 1 , 1 5 1 . T w . I, 5 , 1 1 7 . 1 4 8 . J o h n IV, 1, 28. 52 [atyour s. service = to attend you in illness). IV, 2, 88. V, 4, 6. R2 I, 3, 65. I, 4, 54. II, 1, 84. V, 3, 133 (s. for fear). H 4 A IV, 1, 16. 17. 28. H 4 B I, 1, 138. I, 2, 108. II, 2, 34. 52. 11, 4, 42. IV, 3, 83. IV, 4, 102. IV, 5, 13. II5 II, 1, 86. HI, 5, 57. IV, 1, 188. 268. H 6 A III, 2, 95. 113 IV, 2, 52. H8 IV, 1, 35. V, 5, 75. Troil. II, 3, 92. Ill, 1, 98. Cor. I, 1, 182. I, 10, 20. Bom. I, 1, 186. 208. IV, 4, 7. V, 2, 7. Tim. Ill, 4, 74. IV, 3, 110. Caes. I, 2, 128. II, 1,261. 263. 310. 315. 316. 327. 328. II, 2, 65. Mcb. V, 3, 37. Hml. Ill, 2, 173. L r . 1, 3, 8. II, 4, 89. V, 3, 95. Ant. I, 3, 5. 13. Cymb. I, 6, 119. Ill, 6, 3. IV, 2, 5. 7. 8. 13. 37. 44. 50. P e r . I, 1, 47. to falls : Sonn. 118, 14. Merch. III, 4, 71. H8 IV, 2, 15. s. to death: Pilgr. 2 3 3 ; L L L IV, 3, 107. H8 IV, 2, 1. Tim. Ill, 1, 64. W i t h o / b e fore the name of the disease: Meas. V, 151. All's I, 3, 142 (on't = of it). Troil. 1, 3, 139. Cymb. V, 4, 5. s. with = ill in consequence ol': Gent. 1, 1, 69. H 6 A V, 5, 86. H 6 B III, 2, 62. Troil. Ill, 3, 238. s. and green = chlorotic, Rom. II, 2, 8 (cf. Green-sickness). my heart is s. = I feel faint, J o h n V, 3, 4. mtj s. heart, H6C V, 2, 8. 'tis bitter cold, and I am s. at heart, Hml. I, 1, 9. Applied to indispositions of the m i n d : you have somes, offence within your mind, Caes. II, 1,268. Especially to the state of being in love: Ven. 584. Pilgr. 233 and L L L IV, 3, 107. Gent. I, 1, 69. II, 4, 149. Ado III, 1, 21 (sick in love). Ill, 4, 42. L L L II, 185 (s. at the heart). V, 2, 417. As 111, 2, 377. All's IV, 2, 35. Oth. 11, 3, 53. 2) affected with nausea: I am s. when I do look on thee, Mids. II, 1, 212. 213. s. of a calm, II415 II, 4, 40. I am s. at heart, when I behold — , Mcb. V, 3, 19. s. at sea, Cymb. Ill, 4, 192. Hence = disgusted, weary: eyes s. and blunted with community, H4A III, 2, 77. with of: the commonwealth is s. of their own choice, H4B I, 3, 87. I am s. of this false world, T i m . IV, 3, 376. 3) Used of any irregular, distempered and corrupted state: after many accents and delays, untimely breathings, s. and short assays, Lucr. 1720. now my gracious numbers are decayed and my s. Muse doth give another place, Sonn. 79, 4. they are as s. that surfeit with too much as they that starve with nothing, Merch. 1,2,6. makes sound opinion s. and truth suspected, J o h n IV, 2, 26. the present time's so s. V, 1, 14. now comes the s. hour that his surfeit made, R2 II, 2, 84. though that (his immortal part) be s. H 4 B II, 2, 114. poor kingdom, s. with civil blows, IV, 5, 134. to view the s. and feeble parts of France, H 5 II, 4, 22.

1055 what we oft do best, by s. interpreters, once weak ones, is not ours, or not allowed, H8 I, 2, 82. this priest has no pride in him? Not to speak of: I would not be so s. though for his place, II, 2, 83. put my s. cause into his hands that hates me, III, 1, 118. my conscience, which I then did feel full s. II, 4, 204. the enterprise is s. Troil. I, 3 , 1 0 3 . 139. to my s. soul each toy seems prologue to some great amiss, Hml. IV, 5, 17. Used of a dim and pale light: let their breaths make s. the life, of purity, the supreme fair, Lucr. 779. this night methinks is but the daylight s.; it looks a little paler, Merch. V, 124. the moon ... s. and pale with grief, Rom. II, 2, 5 ; cf. 8. the moist star was s. almost to doomsday with eclipse, Hml. 1, 1, 120.

W i t h for, = pining f o r : as to a bed that longing have been s. for, Meas. II, 4, 103. almost s. for me, Ado V, 4, 80. s. for breathing and exploit, All's I, 2, 16. s.for one (beard) Tw. Ill, 1, 53. the young king is s. for me, H 4 B V, 3, 141. cf. I am s. till I see her, Wiv. Ill, 2, 28. W i t h in, = a) in a bad state with respect to: wherein thou liest in reputation s. R2 II, 1, 96. 5. in the world's regard, wretched and low, IN A IV, 3, 57. when we are s. in fortune, L r . I, 2, 129- l>) morbidly affected, distempered by: I am s. in displeasure to him, Ado II, 2, 5. W i t h o f , = afflicted, tainted, or corrupted by: I was not s. of any fear from thence, Sonn. 86, 12. and s. of welfare, found a kind of meetness to be diseased, 118, 7. drugs poison him that so fell s. of you, 14. you are s. of self-love, T w . I, 5, 97. I am s. and capable of fears, J o h n III, 1, 12. rank minds s. of happiness, II4B IV, 1, 64. examplcd by the first pace that is s. of his superior, Troil. I, 3, 132 ( = envious o f ) , s. of proud heart, II, 3, 93. I am s. of that grief too, Tim. Ill, 6, 19. I am s. of shame, 46. that nature, being s. of mans unkindness, should yet be hungry, IV, 3,176. I am s. of many griefs, Caes. IV, 3, 144. quietness, grown s. of rest, would purge by any desperate change, Ant. 1, 3, 53. S i c k , vb. to sicken, to fall ill: Edward—ed and died, H4B IV, 4, 128. S i c k e n , 1) intr. a) to grow sick, to fall ill: Sonn. 118, 4. As 111, 2, 25. Mcb. IV, 3, 173. In a moral sense: that his soul s. not, Meas. II, 4, 41. when love begins to s. and decay, Caes. IV, 2, 20. mine eyes did s. at the sight, Ant. Ill, 10, 17. b) to feel disgust, to become weary: whose nature —s but to speak a truth, All's V, 3, 207. that, surfeiting, the appetite may s. and so die, T w . 1,1, 3. though the treasure of nature's germens tumble all together, even till destruction s. Mcb. IV, 1, 60. 2) tr. to impair: have by this so —ed their estates, H8 I, 1, 82. S i c k - f a l l e n , sick, diseased: confusion waits, as doth a raven on a s. beast, J o h n IV, 3, 153 (cf. Caes. V, 1, 87). S i c k l e , a reaping-hook; attribute of T i m e : Sonn. 116, 10. 126, 2. S i c k l e , an ancient coin among the J e w s : with fond—s of the tested gold, Meas. II, 2, 149 (M. Iidd. shekels). S i c k l e m e n , reapers: T p . IV, 134. S i c k l i e d o'er, tainted and overspread in a sickly m a n n e r : the native hue of resolution is s. with the pale cast of thought, Hml. Ill, 1, 85. S i c k l i n e s s , illness: impute his words to wayward s. and age in him, R2 II, 1, 142,

1056

S

S i c k l y , adj. diseased, not in health (quite = sick, but usually joined to a s u b s t , whereas sick is oftener in the predicate): the uncertain s. appetite to please, Sonn. 147, 4. I am not such a s. creature, Wiv. Ill, 4, 61 ( t o make my will), if s. ears will hear your idle scorns, L L L V, 2, 873. she has raised me from my s. bed, All's II, 3, 118. hence, thou s. quoif, H 4 B I, 1, 147. H 5 III, 6, 164. IV, 2, 20. R3 I, 1, 136. II, 1, 42. Caes. 11,4, 14. V, 1, 87 (cf. J o h n IV, 3, 153). Htnl. III, 3, 96. Ill, 4, 80. L r . II, 4, 112. = disordered in general: this s. land might solace as before, R 3 II, 3, 30. the s. weal, Mcb. V, 2, 27. = d i m : in whose fresh regard weak sights their s. radiance do amend, Cotnpl. 214. S i c k l y , adv. 1) ill, not in health: who wear our health but s. in his life, Mcb. Ill, 1, 107. 2) with disgust, reluctantly: cold and s. he vented them, Ant. Ill, 4, 7. S i c k n e s s , 1 ) disease, illness: Ven. 741. Sonn. 118, 4. Err. V, 99. Ado I, 1, 251. Mids. I, 1, 112. 186. IV, 1, 178. Shr. IV, 3, 14. All s I, 2, 74. II, 1, 171. W i n t . I, 2, 384. 398. II, 3, 11. IV, 2, 2. J o h n IV, 2, 86. V, 7, 13. R2 II, I, 132 (the present s. that I have). V, 1, 77. H4A IV, 1, 26. 28. 31. 42. IV, 4, 14. H 4 B 111, 1, 106. IV, 5, 82. H 5 HI, 3, 55. I l l , 6, 154. H 6 A III, 2, 89. II6B III, 2, 370. IV, 7, 94. R 3 I, 3, 29. II, 2, 9. H8 I, 2. 184. IV, 2, 24 V, 3, 26. Troil. I, 3, 140. Tim. Ill, 1, 66. V, 1, 189 (my long s. of health and living). Caes. II, 1, 267. 321. IV, 3, 152. Ilml. II, 2, 66. Lr. V, 3, 105. A n t . I, 2, 124. II, 2, 173. Cymb. Ill, 2, 76. IV, 2, 148. it warms the very s. in my heart, that I shall live and tell him to his teeth, Hml. IV, 7, 56 ( = faintness, depressed spirits). 2) nausea, squeamishness: L L L V, 2, 280. 3) any disordered state: a great s. in his judgement, Tim. V, 1, 31. S l c k - t h o u g h t e d , full of love-thoughts: s. Venus makes amain to him, Ven. 5. S i c y o n , town in ancient G r e e c e : Ant. I, 2, 117. 118. 123. S i d e , subst. 1) the part of an animal body fortified by the ribs, between the back and the belly: his brawny — s, with hairy bristles armed, Ven. 625. plucked the knife from Lucrece' s. Lucr. 1807. more sharp to me than spurring to his s. Sonn. 50, 12. backs, shoulders, —s, Wiv. V, 5, 58. As HI, 4, 47. H 4 B I, 1, 45. H6A V, 3, 49. Mcb. I, 7, 26. and by my s. wear steel, Wiv. I, 3, 84. Ado V, 1, 126. Tit. 11, 1, 39. Hml. V, 2, 166. Cymb. I, 4, 6. draw this metal from my s. J o h n V , 2,16. spectacles on nose and pouch on s. As II, 7, 159. Used to denote immediate nearness and proximity: whose messengers are here about my s. Oth. I, 2, 89. tempteth my better angel from my s. Sonn. 144, 6. Mids. Ill, 2, 185. R2 111, 2, 80. H 6 A IV, 5, 48. IV, 7, 12. H 6 B III, 1, 191. T i m . IV, 3, 31. Oth. V, 2, 208. oft came Edward to my s. H 6 C 1 , 4 , 1 1 . Oftenest preceded by by: by Venus' s. Ven. 180. the boy that by her s. lay killed, 1165. by Lucrece's. Lucr. 3 8 1 . 4 2 5 . Sonn. 151, 12. 1 5 4 , 2 . Compl. 65. Mids. II, 1, 125. II, 2, 51. Ill, 2, 39. Merch. Ill, 2, 307. All's II, 3, 53. Shr. Ind. 2, 146. T w . V, 80. R2 I, 3, 252. H 5 IV, 6, 8. H 6 A IV, 6, 56. H 6 C 111, 3, 16. T i t . V, 1, 48. V, 2, 45. Caes. Ill, I, 271. L r . Ill, 6, 40. Oth. IV, 1, 195. V, 2, 237. A n t . 11, 3, 18. IV, 15, 36. Cymb. V, 5, 1. s. by s. H 6 A IV, 5, 54. P r e -

ceded by on: she, on his left s., craving aid, H6C III, I, 43. on his right, 44. went on each s. of the queen, 118 IV, 1, 100. Of omitted after i t : on each s. her stood pretty boys, Ant. II, 2, 206. 2) Plur. — 5 = frame of the body; in a proper and metaphorical sense: this broken music in his —s, As I, 2, 150. let nature crush the —s o' the earth together, W i n t . IV, 4, 489. breaks the —s of loyalty, H8 1, 2, 28. whose quality the —s o' the world may danger, Ant. I, 2, 199. Caesar's ambition which swelled so much that it did almost stretch the — so' the world, Cymb. Ill, 1, 51. Especially = the breast, as containing the heart or the lungs: both on one sampler, ... both warbling of one song, as if our hands, our —s, voices and minds, had been incorporate, Mids. Ill, 2 , 2 0 7 . Taurus, that's —s and heart, Tw 1,3, 148. there's no woman's —5 can bide the beating of so strong a passion, II, 4, 96. he cracks his gorge, his —s, with violent hefts, Wint. II, 1, 44. hacked one another in the —s of Caesar, Caes. V, 1, 40. O —s, you are too tough, Lr. II, 4, 200. the —s of nature will not sustain it, Ant. 1, 3, 16. as loud as his strong —s can volley, II, 7, 118. cleave, my s, IV, 14, 39. can my —s hold, Cymb. I, 6, 69. Considered as the part principally fed b y nourishment: it is the pasture lards the brother's —s, T i m . IV, 3, 12. your houseless heads and unfed —s, L r . Ill, 4, 30. As the seat of carnal desire: I will keep my —s to myself, Wiv. V, 5, 28. with Tarquin's ravishing — s , Mcb. II, 1, 55 (most M. Edd. strides). 3) Applied, after the analogy of the animal body, to other things having two principal parts or surfaces opposed to each other: (the pillow) swelling on either s. (of the h a n d ) to want his bliss, Lucr. 389. angel on the outward s. Meas. Ill, 2, 2S6. on the windy s. of care, Ado II, 1, 3 2 7 ; cf. still you keep o' the windy s. of the law, T w . Ill, 4, 181. my vessel's s. Merch. I, 1, 32. damned like an ill-roasted egg, all on one s. As III, 2, 39. our cake is dough on both — s , Shr. I, 1, 110. her head on one s. Wint. Ill, 3, 20; cf. hang my head at one s. Oth. IV, 3, 32. on this s. my hand, and on that s. yours, R2 IV, 183. V, 2, 18. H 4 A III, 1, 109. 111. 113. H 6 A I, 2, 99. II6B 111, 2, 9S. R 3 V, 3, 299. 118 I, 4, 2 0 ; cf. Mcb. Ill, 4, 10. Troil. I, 3, 43. Cor. I, 1, 48. I, 6, 51. Caes. V, 2, 2. Hml. I, 1, 85. Lr. I, 4, 205. Ill, 7, 71. A n t . Ill, 9, 1. to turn the wrong s. out =• to pervert, to distort, to derange: so turns she every man the wrong s. out, Ado III, 1, 68. how quickly the wrong s. may be turned outward, T w . Ill, 1, 14. L r . IV, 2, 9. Oth. II, 3, 54. cf. that turned your wit the seamy s. without, IV, 2, 146. Of after s. omitted: writ o' both —s the leaf, L L L V, 2, 8. upon this s. the sea, J o h n II, 488. on this s. Tiber, Caes. Ill, 2, 254. to keep one's eyes of either s. 's nose, Lr. 1, 5, 22 ( = on either side his nose; cf. Of), look out o' the other s. your monument, Ant. IV, 15, 8. cf. II, 2, 206. Hence, generally, one of two parts, or directions, or respects, placed in contradistinction to each other: this s. is Iliems, winter, this Ver, L L L V, 2, 901. Armado o'th' one s , and his page o' C other, IV, 1, 146. 149. then, on the other s., I checked my friends, R 3 III, 7, 150. my back o t' other s. Rom. II, 5, 51. = line of descent, as only from one of the two parents: brother by the mother's s. J o h n 1, 163. T i t IV, 2, 126. Ant. II, 2, 120. Oftenest = party, opposed

1057 interest, one of two at w a r : Fortune shall cull forth s. is now against the mind, J o h n V, 7, 16. the busy out of one s. her happy minion, J o h n II, 392. which fiend that lays strong s. unto this wretch's soul, H615 is the s. that I must go withal? Ill, 1, 327. we of the 111, 3, 22. to remove that s. of grief from her, R o m . offering s. H4A IV, 1, 69. both —s fiercely fought, V, 3, 237. to whom all sores lay s. T i m . IV, 3, 7. Used H 6 C II, I, 121. there is expectance here from both the of an assiduous love-suit: remove your s. from my un—s, Troil. IV, 5, 146. the one s. must have bale, Cor. yielding heart, Ven. 423. this s. that hath engirt his 1, 1, 167. these are a s. that would be glad to have marriage, Lucr. 221. to lay an amiable s. to the honesty this true, IV, 6, 151. which s. should win, V, 3, 113. of this Ford's wife, Wiv. II, 2, 243. lays down his each in either s. give the all-hail to thee, 138. damnable wanton s. before her beauty, All's III, 7, 18. she will both-sides rogue, All's IV, 3, 251. hardly shall I carry not stay the s. of loving terms, Rom. I, 1, 218. cf. whose out my s. Lr. V, I, 61 ( = be a winner in the game). love-suit hath been to me as fearful as a s. Cymb. Preceded by on: upon thy s. against myself I'll fight, 111,4,137. Sonn. 88,3. on both —s thus is simple truth suppressed, 2) seat: upon the very s. of justice, Meas. IV,2,101. 138, 8. Compl. 113. Meas. IV, 6, 6. L L L IV, 1, 76. 3) place, rank: your sum of parts did not together 77. 78. IV, 3, 8. T w . V, 69. 376. W i n t , II, 3, 191. pluck such envy from him as did that one, and that, in IV, 4, 650. J o h n III, 1, 117. 124. 335. V, 2, 8. R 2 II, my regard, of the unworthiest s. H m l . IV, 7, 77. I 2, 89. 147. H1A II, 4, 348. V, 1, 99. H 4 B 1, 1, 198. fetch my life and being from men of royal s. Oth. I, 2, I, 2, 88. H 6 A 1, 2, 3. II, 4, 20. 22. 40. 48. 51. 54. "22 (Qq height). 64. V, 1, 10. H 6 B IV, 8, 54. R3 I, 4, 272. Ill, 2, 53. 3) stool, excrement, fecal m a t t e r : how earnest thou V, 3, 94. 175. 240. V, 5, 12. H8 11,4,4 (on all - s ) . to be the s. of this moon-calf ? Tp. II, 2, 110. Troil. Prol. 21. I, 1, 93. V, 4, 10. Cor. Ill, 1, 181. S i e n n a , see Syenna. R o m . II, 4, 169. Caes. II, 4, 6. IV, 3, 4. Mcb. V, 7, S i e v e , a utensil by which the fine parts of a pul25. Hml. II, 2, 370. V, 2, 272. 315. Lr. V, 3, 49. verized substance are separafetl from the coarse: Ado Oth. I, 3, 217. Ant. Ill, 10, 9. Cymb. V, 3, 81. of for V, 1, 5. All's I, 3, 208. Mcb. I, 3, 8. I n Troil. II, 2, on: let us take the law of our — s, Rom. I, 1, 44. 54 71 Q the remainder viands we do not throw in unre(the servant's speech). Preceded by to: to train ten spective siue; F t same; the later Ff place; Johnson thousand English to their s. J o h n 111, 4, 175. fiieth to sieve, others sew or sure, i. e. sewer. his s. H 6 A I, 1, 95. S i f t , to examine minutely, to scrutinize, to sound: 4 any external part in respect to its direction or All's V, 3, 124. R2 I, 1, 12. H 6 A 111, 1, 24. Hml. situation: the blood circles her body in on every s. Lucr. II, 2, 58. 1739. whose western s. is with a vineyard backed, S i g h , subst. a deep respiration indicative of grief: Meas. IV, 1, 29. on the east s. of the grove, H6B II, Ven. 1071. Lucr. 563. 586. 1319. 1004. T p . I, 2, 1, 43. 48. pry on every s. R 3 III, 5, 6. upon the north 222. Gent. 11, 3, 60. Ill, 1, 230. H 4 A III, 1, 10. H415 s. of this pleasant chasc, Tit. II, 3, 255. puffs away I, 1, 80. Tit. Ill, 1, 228. Cymb. 111,4,5etc. especially from thence, turning his s. to the dew-dropping south, caused by love: Ven. 51. 376. 964. 966. Sonn. 47, 4. Rom. I, 4, 103 ( = turning to the side of the dew- Gent. I, 1, 30. II, 4, 132. Ill, 2, 74. Ado V, 1, 173. dropping south. T h e surreptitious Ql and M. Edd. L L L III, 177. 184. IV, 3, 164. 347. Mids. I, 1, 154. / a c e ) , as he was coming from this churchyard s. V, As V, 2, 90. All's II, 3, 82. T w . I, 5, 275. II, 4, 64. 68. W i n t . I, 2, 287 etc. to breathe a s. Mercli. Ill, 1, 3, 186. 5) margin, verge, border: close by the Thames s. 100. T w . 11,2,40. H6B1II.2,345. to raise a s. Compl. W i v . Ill, 3, 16. I would you had been by the ship s. 228. Hml. II, 1, 94. Sighs forming clouds (cf. R2 111, W i n t . Ill, 3, 112. thy cheek's s. struck o f f , H6A I, 4, 1, 2 0 ) : saw —s reek from you, L L L IV, 3, 140. with 75. on our long-boat's s. strike off his head, H 6 B IV, our —s we'll breathe the welkin dim and stain the sun 1, 68. on the forest s. H 6 C IV, 6, 83. to the water s. with fog, T i t 111, 1, 212. adding to clouds more clouds I must conduct your grace, H 8 II, 1, 95. that west- with his deep —s, Rom,1,1,139. love is a smoke raised ward rooteth from the city's s. Rom. I, 1, 129. abuts with the fume of —s, 196. the sun not yet thy —s from heaven clears, II, 3, 73 (cf. Ill, 3, 72). he furnaces the against the island's s. Per. V, 1, 52. Side, vb. 1) intr. to take one's party in a quarrel: thick —s from him, Cymb. I, 6, 67. W a s t i n g life by the nobility are vexed, whom we see have —d in his costing every one a drop of blood: consume away in behalf, Cor. IV, 2, 2. 2) trans, to take the party of, to —s, Ado III, 1, 78. sighs of love, that costs the fresh j o i n : s. factions, Cor. I, 1, 197. In Sonn. 46, 9 O. blood dear, Mids. Ill, 2, 97. blood-consuming — s , H 6 B Edd. s., M. Edd. 'cide. III, 2, 61. blood-drinking—s, 63. blood-sucking —s, S i d e - p i e r c i n g , heart-rending: 0 thou s. sight, H 6 C 1 V , 4 , 2 2 . like a spendthrift s. that hurts by easing, Hml. IV, 7, 123. cf. Ado III, 1, 78. Lr. IV, 6, 85. Sigli, vb. to suffer a deep single respiration, as in S i d e - s l e e v e s , hanging sleeves: Ado HI, 4, 21. S i d e - s t i t c h e s , stitches in the side: T p . I, 2, 326. g r i e f : Compl. 44. Pilgr. 204. Tp. I, 2, 150. A d o 111, S i e g e , 1) the act of besetting a fortified place: 2, 26. V, 3, 17. Merch. 11, 2, 203. Ill, 3, 15. Shr. V, Lucr. Arg. 5. J o h n II, 54. 213. R2 II, 1, 62. H 5 I, 2, 123. W i n t . II, 3, 34 etc. especially in pangs of 2, 152. Ill Chor. 25. Ill, 2, 70. H6A I, 1, 111. IV, love: Gent. II, 1, 22. II, 2, 10. Ado II, 3, 64. L L L 3, 11. Troil. I, 3, 12. Mcb. V, 5, 3. Oth. I, 3,. 130. I, 2, 67. Ill, 68. 206. A s l V , 1 , 2 2 2 . W i n t . 1 , 2 , 1 1 7 etc. forsake the s. H 6 A I, 2, 40. to raise the s. ( = to dis- to s.for = to be in love with: T p . I, 2, 446. L L L lodge the besiegers): H5 III, 3, 47. H6A I, 2, 13. 53. III, 202. T w . II, 5, 165. to s. to = to tell one's grief, 130. I, 4, 103. Metaphorically, = strong endeavours to complain to: to s. to the winds, T p . I, 2, 149. tt to gain entrance, assaults, attacks in general: the that I'll s. and weep, Gent. IV, 2, 123. wreckful s. of battering days,Sonn. 65, 6. war, death, Transitively, 1) with an adverb or prepositional or sickness did lay s. to it, Mids. 1,1,142. his (death's) expression, to denote an effect: may s. it off ( y o u r

1058

S

bead) Meas. I, 2, 178. s. away Sunday», Ado I, 1, 204. —ed his soul toward the Grecian tents, Merch. V, 5. 2) = to convey or express in sighs: for these dead birds s. a prayer, Plioen. 67. s. a note and sing a note, LLL III, 13. —ed forth proverbs, Cor. I, 1, 209. 3) to emit, to exhale in sighs: I'll s. celestial breath, Ven. 189. draws up her breath and —ing it again, exclaims on death, 930. —edmy English breath in foreign clouds, R2 III, 1, 20. never man —ed truer breath, Cor. IV, 5, 121. 4) to lament, to moarn: Is. the lade of many a thing, Sonn. 30, 3. Sight, 1) the sense of seeing, faculty of vision: her s. dazzling makes the wound seem three, Ven. 1064. sweets that shall the truest s. beguile, 1144. the sun bereaves our s. Lncr. 373. my soul's imaginary s. presents thy shadow to my sightless view, Sonn. 27, 9. 148, 2. 150, 3. Tp. 1, 2, 302. Err. Ill, 2, 57. Mids. III, 2, 369. As V, 4, 124. 125. 126. H4B III, 2, 336 (thick s.). IV, 4, 110. H& IV, 7, 62. H6B I, 2, 6. II, 1, 64. 71. 129. R3 IV, 4, 26. H8 IV, 2, 108. Troil. I, 2, 31. Cor. Ill, 2, 5. Tit. 11, 3, 195 (duU). Ill, 2, 84 (thy s. is young). Rom. 1, 5, 54. Caes. V, 3, 21 (t'.ick). Mcb. II, 1, 37. II, 3, 76. Hml. Ill, 4, 78. Lr. IV, 6, 20. 23. V, 3, 282 (dull). Oth. V, 2, 364. Perhaps = insight, knowledge, skill, in Troil. Ill, 3, 4; bnt the passage seems to be corrupt. 2) the eyes: his louring brows o'erwhelming his fair s. Ven. 183. the object that did feed her s. 822. nor could she moralize his wanton s. Lucr. 104. i( beguiled attention, charmed the s. 1404. sets you most rich in youth before my s. Sonn. 15, 10. if aught in me worthy perusal stand against thy s. 38, 6. shadows like to thee do mock my s. 61,4. to every place at once, and nowhere fixed, the mind and s. distractedly commixed, Coinpl. 28. weak —s their sickly radiance do amend, 214. the turtle saw his right flaming in the Phoenix's. Fhoen. 35. we must starve our s.from lover's food, Mids. I, 1, 222. take this charm from off her s. II, 1, 183. laid the love-juice on some true-love's s. Ill, 2, 89. never more abase our s. so low as to vouchsafe one glance unto the ground, H6B1, 2, 15. in s. of God and u< your guilt is great, II, 3, 2. kill the innocent gazer with thy s. Ill, 2, 53. to rob my s. of thy land's view, 105. to greet mine own land with my wishful s. II6C III, 1, 14. if I be so disgracious in your s. R3 IV, 4, 177 (Ff eye), the bleared —s are spectacled to see him, Cor. II, 1, 221. schoolboys' tears take up the glasses of my s. Ill, 2, 117. amazed my s. Mcb. V, 1, 86. looked upon this love with idle s. Hml. II, 2, 138. strike the s. of the duke, Lr. IV, 6, 283. a scorpion to her s. Cymb. V, 5, 45. why cloud they not their —s, Per. I, 1, 74. to glad the s. I, 4, 28. Hence, as eyes, -- presence: quit my s. Mcb. Ill, 4, 93. avoid my s. Lr. I, 1, 126. should transport me Jarthest Jrom your s. Sonn. 117, 8. banished from her s. Gent. Ill, 2, 2. R2 IV, 315. H6B II, 3, 103. Ill, 2, 394. Tit. Ill, 1, 284 Mcb. Ill, 1, 119. Hml. 1, 2, 220. Lr. II, 4, 190. Cymb. I, 1, 125. V, 5, 237. in my s. forbear to glance thine eye aside, Sonn. 139, 5. never come in my s. more, As IV, 1, 41. 52. Shr. II, 30. Tw. Ill, 2, 20. Ill, 4, 171. R2 1, 1, 188. 1, 2, 38. V, 2, 86. H4B IV, 1, 179. H6B I, 1, 11. IV, 2, 189. Ill, 2, 389. B6C 111, 3, 181. R3 I, 3, 164. V, 3, 96. Tit. I. 246. 111, 1,67. Rom. II, 6, 5. Lr. IV, 6, 35. 115. return no more into my s. Gent. I, 2, 47. IV, 4, 65. Mcb. I, 3, 102. durst not come near your s. H4A V, 1,

63. God keep him out of my s. Ado II, 1, 113. out of my s.l Tw. IV, 1, 53. As IV, 1, 221. John IV, 2, 242. H4A V, 1, 66. H6B III, 2, 48. R3 I, 2, 149. Lr. I, 1, 159. Oth. IV, 1, 258. bring me to the s. of Isabella, Meas. I, 4,18. you shall not be admitted to his s. IV, 3, 125. Shr. Ind.2, 76. R3 IV, 1, 25. come not within his s. Mids. II, 1, 19. 3) the act of seeing, look, view: his eyes, whose —s till then were levelled on my face, Compl. 282. at the first s. they have changed eyes, Tp. I, 2, 440. at first s. As III, 5, 82. Troil. V, 2, 9. 4) the manner of seeing: nothing else with his proud s. agrees, Ven. 288. the s. whtreof (your eye) I think you had from me, Ado V, 4, 25. none could be so abused in s. as he, As 111, 5, 80. 5) the perceiving or being perceived by the eye, view, Lat. conspectos: our sport is not in s. Ven. 124 Ccannot be seen), wear the favours most in ». LLL V, 2, 136. vanished out of s. Sonn. 63, 7. R3 III, 5, 107. lacked s. only, Wint. II, 1, 177. the dismallest object that ever eye with s. made heart lament, Tit. II, 3, 205. you know him well by s. Caes. I, 3, 15. Relatively: he fed them with his s., they him with berries, Ven. 1104. melted like a vapour from her s. 1166. each under eye doth homage to his new-appearing s. Sonn. 7, 3. to divide the conquest of thy s. 46, 2. feasting on your s. 75, 9. heart hath his hope, and eyes their wished s. Pilgr. 202. every slight occasion that could give me s. of her, Wiv. II, 2, 205. upon their s. we two will fly, IV, 4, 54. to stick it (the rod) in their children's s. Meas. I, 3, 25. in our s. they three were taken up, Err. I, 1, 111. to-morrow you shall have a s. of them (papers) LLL II, 166. to have his s. Mids. I, 1, 251. at his s. away his fellows fly, 111, 2, 24. takest true delight in the s. of thy former lady's eye, 456. I trust to take of truest Thisbe s. V, 280. good wrestling, which you have lost the s. of, As I, 2, 117. the s. of lovers feedeth those in love. III, 4, 60. Ill, 5, 4. Shr. Ind. 2, 61. I, 1, 225. Tw. I, 2, 41. Wint. II, 2, 40. Ill, 3, 139. IV, 4, 481. 522. 680. V, 3, 57. John II, 222. Ill, 1,36. IV, 2, 219. R2 II, 3, 18. Ill, 2, 52. H4A III, 2, 88. IV, 5, 230. H6A I, 1, 30. V, 3, 69. V, 4, 122. H6B I, 1, 32. IV, 4, 46. V, 1, 90. V, 2, 49. H6C I, 3, 30. II, 5, 130 (having the flying hare in s.). Cor. V, 3, 9S. Tit. V, 1, 4. Rom. Ill, 2, 56. Tim. I, 1, 255 (joyful of your —s). 262. IV, 3, 125. Ant. Ill, 10, 17. Per. V Prol. 21. V, 1, 33. 6) things seen or to be seen, show, spectacle, vision: what a s. it was, Ven. 343. doth view the s. which makes supposed terror true, Lucr. 455. daunts them with more dreadful —s, 462. to see sad — s moves more than hear them told, 1324. moan the expense of many a vanished s. Sonn. 30, 8. if we see the rudest or gentlest s. 113, 9. but dressings of a former s. 123, 4. here's a goodly s. Tp. V, 260. you may say what — s you see; I see things too, Gent. I, 2, 138. Mids. IV, 1, 51. As 111, 2, 255. All's III, 5, 2. Wint. Ill, 3, 107. 118. IV, 4, 849 (we must show our strange —s, i.e. things worth seeing; the clown's speech). V, 2, 46. H6A 1, 4, 62. H6C 11, 2, 6. R3 I, 4, 3. 23. H8 IV, 1, 11. V, 2, 20. Tit. II, 3, 216. II, 4, 53. Ill, 1, 247. 257. 262. V, 1, 52. Rom. I, 2, 105. IV, 5, 42. V, 3, 174. 206. Cues. I, 3, 138. II, 2, 16. Ill, 2, 206. V, 3, 78. Mcb. II, 2, 21. Ill, 4, 114. IV, 1, 122. 155. Hml. 1,1,25. 1,2,247. IV, 7, 100. V,2,373. 378. 412. Lr. IV, 6, 85. 208. Oth.V,2,207. 278. Ant.IV, 15,40-

s 7 ) aperture for the eyes in a helmet: their eyes of fire sparkling through —t of iteel, H4B IV, 1, 121. S i g h t e d , having eyes: s. like the basilisk, Wint. I, 2, 388. cf. Thick-sighted. S l g h t - h e l e , a chink through which one may look, a peeping-liole: stop all —», every loop from whence the eye of reason may pry in upon us, H 4 A IV, 1, 71. 8 i | h t l c i i , 1) not seeing, blind, dark: poor grooms are s. night, kings glorious day, Lncr. 1013. my soul's imaginary sight presents thy shadow to my s. view, Sonn. 27, 10. when in dead night thy shade on s. eyes doth stay, 43, 12. 2 ) not seen, invisible: wherever in your s. substances you wait on natures mischief, Mcb. I, 5, 50. the s. couriers of the air, I, 7, 23. 3) offensive to the eye, unsightly: full of unpleasing blots and s. stains, John III, 1,45. cf. Featureless and Shapeless. S i g h t l y , pleasing to the eye: John II, 143. S i g h t - o u t r u n n i n g , swifter than sight: T p . I, 2, 203. cf. Liicr. 1G68. S i g n , subst. 1) a distinguishing mark: we,following the —s, wooed but the s. of she, L L L V, 2, 469. though he does bear some —s of me, yet you have too much blood in him, Wint. II, 1, 57. leaving me no s. to show the world I am a gentleman, R2 III, 1, 25. the s. of your profession, Cacs. I, 1 , 4 . —s of nobleness, like stars, shall shine on all deservers, Mcb. I, 4, 41. render to me some corporal s. about her, Cymb. II, 4, 119. Especially a figure distinguishing a house (the custom of numbering houses being of a recent date): A d o I, 1, 256. 269. H 4 A I, 2, 9. H4B II, 4, 271. H6B III, 2, 81. V, 2, 67. R3 111, 5, 79. T i t . IV, 2,98. Per. IV, 2, 124. Figuratively = something of a deceptive semblance, not answering the promise: before these bastard — s of fair were born, Sonn. 68, 3. she's but the s. and semblance of her honour, A d o IV, 1, 34. wooed but the s. of she, L L L V, 2, 469. a s. of dignity, a garish flag, R3 IV, 4, 89. which is indeed but s. Oth. 1, 1, 158. she's a good s. Cymb. I, 2, 33. 2) that by which something is shown or perceived; a) an external proof or evidence: sawest thou not —* of fear lurk in mine eyet Ven. 644. such —s of rage they bear, Lucr. 1419. 1532. Pilgr. 429. Gent. Ill, 2, 18. A d o 11,3, 236. 111,2,41. Shr. V, 2, 117. Wint. V, 2, 95. John III, 1, 24. R2 V, 5, 65. H 6 A V, 4, 82. H6B I, 1, 18. Ill, 2, 178. 314. Ill, 3, 5. IV, 2, 22. H8 III, 1, 66. Cor. I, 9, 26 (in s. of what you are) IV, 6, 153. T i t . V, 3, 77. Cymb. Ill, 4, 128. b) a symbol: in s. whereof... we may quaff carouses, Shr. I, 2, 275. in sign whereof I pluck a white rose, H 6 A II, 4. 58. Ill, 4, 5. V, 3, 162. H6C IV, 2, 9. IV, 8, 26. R3 I, 3, 281. Ant. V, 2, 135. Hence — s of war = ensigns: H5 11, 2, 192. Caes. V, 1, 14. cf. Oth. I, 1, 157. with —s of tcar about his aged neck, R2 II, 2, 74 ( = in armonr). c) a prognostic: apparitions, - s and prodigies, Ven. 926. she at these sad — s draws up her breath, 929. L L L I, 2, 1. 3. John III, 4, 157. R2 11, 4, 15. H 4 A 111, 1, 41. H 6 A V, 3, 4. H6C V, 6, 44. Tit. II, 3, 37. Mcb. IV, 2, 62. Ant. IV, 14, 7. d ) a nod, a gesture, any motion to intimate one's meaning: Shr. IV, 4, 80. John IV, 2, 237. Tit. II, 4, 5. Ill, 1, 143. Ill, 2, 12. 36. IV, 1, 8. give —s, 61. gave s. for me to leave you, Caes. II, 1, 247. make a s. H6B III, 3, 29. Tit. Ill, 1, 121. Ill, 2, 43. e ) a signal: H 6 A II, 1, 3. Ill, 2, 8.

1059 3) a constellation in the zodiac: the twelve releitial —s, L L L V, 2, 807. Sign, vb. 1) to mark, to make distinguiehible, to set a stamp on: by the hand of nature marked quoted and —ed to do a deed of shame, John IV, 2, 2!2. you s. your place and calling, in full seeming, with neektess and humility, H8 II, 4, 108. here thy hunter: stand, — ed in thy spoil, Caes. Ill, 1, 206. 2 ) to ratify by underwriting one's name Mcas. II, 4, 152. Merch. Ill, 2, 149. IV, 1, 397. IV,2, 2. 3 ) to be a prognostic or omen it —s wel, does it notf Ant. IV, 3, 14. S i g n a l , subst. 1 ) sign, token: in s. of love to thee will I wear this rose, H 6 A II, 4, 121. hollupthy hand, make s. of thy hope, H6B III, 3, 28. the sun... gives s. of a goodly day to-morrow, R3 V, 3,21 (cf. Sign -2c). giving full trophy, s. and ostent qtite from himself to God, H5 V Chor. 21 ( = thesymbolof victory. cf. Sign 2b). 2) notice given by a sign at a distance, esjeciilly in war: John II, 265. R 2 I, 3, 116. H6C 11,2, 100. V, 4, 72. 82. Rom. V, 3, 8. Caes. V, 1, 26. S i g n e t , seal manual: Meas. IV, 2, 209. Tim. II, 2, 210. Hml. V, 2, 49. S i g n i f i c a n t , subst. something intimating one's meaning, a sign, a symbol: in dumb —s proclam your thoughts, H 6 A II, 4, 26. Armado calls a letter so: bear this s. to the country maid Jaquenetta, L L L II, 131; cf. to signify in Gent. Ill, 1, 56 and Meich. 11, 4, 11. S i g n i f y , 1) to mean, to purport, to have a certain sense: W i v . I, 1, 21. Meas. Ill, 2, 10. Mds. Ill, I , 71. Ho III, 6, 33. H6C V, 6, 54. 76. T i t . II, 3,32. Caes. II, 2, 87. 90. Mcb. V, 5, 28. 2 ) to give notice, to announce, to impart (Qjrman: melden : the tenour of them doth but s. my hedth end happy being at your court, Gent. Ill, 1, 56. s. si much, LLL II, 33. to s. the approaching of his lord, Mereh. II, 9, 88. s. within the house, your mistress is a haul, V, 51. to s. their coming, 118. to s. my success in Libya, Wint. V, 1, 165. U2 111, 3, 49. H6B 111, 1,213. III, 2, 368. R3 I, 4, 97 ( F f s. to him, Qq cetify ii> grace ) . Ill, 5, 59. Ill, 7, 70 ( F f I'll s. so muih veto him, Qq I'll tell him what you say). Troil. IV, 5, 155. Tit. V, 1, 3. Rom. Ill, 3, 170. T i m . 1, 2, 125. 111,4, 37. Hml. Ill, 2, 317. V, 2,105. Ant.Ill, 1,30. ibsol.: it (a letter) shall seem to s. Merch. II, 4, 11 (Ianneelot's speech), in such great letters as they write ''Here is good horse to hire" let them s. under my sign"litre you may see Benedick the married man," Ado I, 1, 268. S i g u i e r , a title of respect among the Ibliais: Gent. Ill, 1, 279. A d o I, 1, 30. II, 3, 2. 265. Ill, 2, 73. V, 1, 111. 113. V, 2,44. 103. V,4,19. 21. Mereh. 1, 1, 66. 73. I, 3, 41. 60. 98. Shr. I, 1, 85. Lorn. I, 2, 67. II, 4, 46. Oth. I, 1, 78. 84. 93. I, 2, 37. 60. 91. I, 3, 50. 76. 289. IV, 1, 234. Cymb. I, 4, 111 etc. Applied to people of other countries: Meas. 1,2, 64. III, 1, 49. V, 261. Err. Ill, 1, 1. 19. IV, 1, 36 L L L I, 1, 188. Ill, 135. Mids. IV, 1, 17. T w . 11,5,1. H5 IV, 4, 67. H 6 A 111, 2, 67. Per. 1, 2, 44 etc. l i e d as an appellative: like —s and rich burghers on thi flotd, Merch. I, 1, 10. S i g n e r ; , 1) principality: through all the—et it was the first, Tp. I, 2, 71. 2 ) estate, landed property of a lord; manir: you

1060 havt fed upon my —es, R2 HI, 1, 22. restored to all his lands and—es, IV, 89. H4B IV, 1, 111. 3) the aristocracy, or the grand conncil of Venice: my services which I have done the s. Oth. I, 2, 18. 4) spelling of seniory (q. v.) in O. Edd. S i l e n c e , snbst. 1) stillness, absence of sound or noiie: G e n t III, 2, 85 (dead s.). Mens. Ill, 1, 257. Mife. II, 2, 70. Merch. V, 25. 101. Tit. I, 155. Hmr. II, t, 506. 2) forbearance of speech: Sonn. 83, 9. 86, 11. 101, 10. Tp. I, 1, 23 (command these elements to s ). Ge«t. Ill, 1, 207. Meas V, 190. Ado II, 1,317. 345. Mifa. V, 100. Merch. I, 1, 111. Ill, 5, 50. As I, 3, 80. Shr. I, 1, 70. II, 29. All's I, 1, 76. Tw. II, 5, 70. Whit. II, 2, 41. V, 3, 21. H6A II, 4, 1. H6B IV, 2, 39 (command s.). R3 III, 7, 28. H8 I, 4, 45. II, 4, 2 (lets, be commanded). Troil. II, 3 , 2 1 1 . Ill, 2, 139. T i t II, 3, 33. Tim. II, 2, 222. Caes. I, 2, 290 (put to s.) Hml. V, 1, 311. V. 2, 369. Cymb. Ill, 5, 97. s., aloie, imperatively: Tp I, 1, 19. I, 2, 475. IV, 124. Wiv. V, 5, 46. Mids. IV, 1, 85. V, 170. 266. Wint. III,2, 10. J o h n I, 1, 6. IV, 1, 133. H6B IV, 2, 40 H6C 111, 2, 15. Caes. Ill, 2, 11. 59. in = without woids, not speaking: Mids. IV, 1, 100. Merch. II, 8, 32. H6A II, 4, 44. R3 III, 7, 141. Troil. IV, 1, 78. T i t I, 90. Cymb. V, 4, 29. with s., in the same sense: it (ny heart) must brent with s. R21I,1,228. the grief thai swells with s. in the tortured soul, IV, 298. H6A II, 3, 101. V, 3, 13. Abstr. pro concr.: my gracious s. Cor. II, 1, 192. 3 secrecy: Tw. 1, 2, 61. II, 5, 116. H4B II, 2, 17?. Hml. 1, 2, 248. Per. I, 2, 19. Silence, name in H4B III, 2, 4. V, 3, 4 etc. S i l e n c e , vb. to pnt to silence; 1) to oblige to hold the peace, to restrafn from speaking: Meas. V, 18!. As 1,2,95. H8III,2,447. Cor.1,9,23. II, 1,263. T i n 11,1,17. Mcb.l, 3, 93. Refl.: I'll s. me even here. Ilnl. Ill, 4 , 4 ( = I'll say no more about it, though I cotld say much. I'olonius' last words. Most M. Edd. sconce). 2) to stop in sounding: s. that bell, Oth. II, 3, 175. 3) to appease: s. those whom this vile brawl distracted, Oth. II, 3, 256. 4) to pnt nnder restraint, to restrain from liberty (euphemistically): in your power sof. —ing your ton, H4B V, 2, 97. the ambassador is —i, H8 I, 1, 97. cf. put to s. in Caes. 1, ?, 290. Silent, adj. 1) still, having no noise: LLL II, 24. R3 IV, 4, 330. V, 3, 85. Oth. V, 1, 64. 2) not speaking, dumb: Lucr. 71. 84. Sonn. 23, 13. 30, 1. Gent. Ill, 1, 90. Ado III, 1, 67. Wint. II, 1, 171. R2 IV, 290. H6B I, 2, 90. II, 2, 63. H6C IV, 2, 28. Tit. II, 4, 8. Tim. I, 2, 37. to be s.: Tp. IV, 1, 59. Ado IV, 1, 158. LLL I, 2, 169. Wint. IV, 4, 178. H6C I, 1, 122. Troil. II, 3, 241. V, 1, 16. Cor. 11,2, 34. V,3, 94. Tit 111,1,46. Caes. Ill, 2, 14. Mcb. IV, 3, 137. Lr. I, 1, 63. I, 4, 70. Ant. II, 2, 109. Cymb. II, 3, 99. V, 5, 127. S i l e n t , subst. = silence, stillness: the s. of the night, H6B I, 4, 19. Silently, without speaking: Mids. Ill, 1, 206. Slllna, name in Ant. Ill, 1, 11. 13. Silk, cloth made of the thread of Bombyx mori: Compl. 48. Wiv. II, 2, 68. IV, 4, 73. L L L III, 150. Mids. V, 348. Wint. IV, 4, 325. H4B I, 2, 222. Troil. V, 1, 35. Cor. I, 9, 45. V, 6, 96. Tim. IV, 3, 20G. Lr. III.4,108. Oth. III. 4, 73. Cymb. II, 4, 69. 111,3,24. F«r. IV Prol. 21. V Prol. 8. Plur. — s: Err. IV, 3, 8.

s Merch. I, 1, 34. Troil. II, 2, 69. Lr. Ill, 4, 98. Adjectively: s. hair, As III, 5, 46. *. stockings, H4B II, 2, 17. *. thread, Rom. II, 2. 181. a s. button, 11,4,24. S i l k e n , 1) made of silk: Compl 17. Gent. II, 7, 45. Ado V, 1, 25. Shr. IV, 3, 55. 82. V, 1, 68. Wint. IV, 4, 361. H4B I, 1, 53. H5 III Chor. 6. Tit. II, 4, 46. Ant. II, 2, 214. Per. Ill, 2, 41. Used of hair: Compl. 87. 2) smooth, soft, effeminate: taffeta phrases, s. terms precise, L L L V, 2, 406. shall a beardless boy, a cockered s. wanton, brave our fields, John V, 1, 70. s. dalliance in the wardrobe lies, FI5II Clior. 2. abused by s., sly, insinuating Jacks, R3 I, 3, 53. 811ken>eeate4, wearing coats of silk: II6B IV, 2, 136. S l l k m a n , a dealer in silks: H4B II, 1, 31. S l l l l n e u , simplicity, folly: it is s. to live when to live is torment, Oth. I, 3, 309. Silly (spelt seely in Lucr. 1812; in R2 V, 5, 25 Ft silly, Qq seely), 1) harmless, innocent, helpless: fright the s. lamb, Ven. 1098. it shall be raging mad and s. mild, 1151 (M. Edd. silly-mild), surprise the s. lambs, Lncr. 167. do no outrages on s. women, Gent. IV, 1, 72. which am a s woman, HGC I, 1, 243. shepherds looking on their s. sheep, II, 5, 43. 2) plain, simple: s. groom! God wot, it was defect of spirit, Lucr. 1345. it is s. sooth, Tw. II, 4, 47. my revenue is the s. cheat, W i n t IV, 3, 28 ( = petty thievery). here is a s. stately style indeed, H6A IV, 7,72. there was a fourth man, in a s. habit, that gave the affront with them, Cymb. V, 3, 86. 3) poor; a) as a term of pity: esteemed so as s. jeering idiots are with kings, Lucr. 1812. she, s. queen, forbade the boy he should not pass, Pilgr. 123. it was a spite unto the s. damsel, 218. one s. cross wrought all my loss, 257. s. beggars who sitting in the stocks refuge their shame, R2 V, 5, 25. the s. owner of tkgoods weeps over them, H6B 1, 1, 225. s. ducking observants that stretch their duties nicely, Lr. II, 2, 109. b) as a term of contempt, = poor, petty: a child, as. dwarf, H6AII,3,22. a s. time to make prescription, H6C III, 3, 93. or = simple, witless, foolish: the s. boy claps her pale cheek, Ven. 467. of such a weak and s. mind, 1016. a s. answer, and fitting well a sheep, Gent.l, 1,81. thy s. thought (enforces) my spleen, L L L III, 77. most s. sheep with a horn, V, 1, 53. this is the —est stuff that ever I heard, Mids. V, 212. till I be brought to such a s. pass, Shr. V, 2,124. thou s. gentleman, Oth. I, 3, 308. Silver, the metal Argentum Tp. II, 2, 31. Wiv. I, 1, 52. Ado III, 4, 20. Mcrch I, 2, 33. 1, 3, 96. 11, 7, 6. 52. II, 9, 20. J o h n 111, 3, 13. H4B I, 2, 20. Troil. I, 3, 65. Cor. 1, 5, 4. Rom II, 2, 10S. Tim. I, 2, 189. Ill, 2, 78. Ant. II, 2, 199. Cymb. II, 4, 69. 90. Ill, 6, 54. Used as a fern : what says the «. with her virgin hue f Merch. II, 7, 22. Adjectively: Merch.II,9,34. Shr.Ind. 1,55. Tim. Ill, 1, 7. Denoting bright and pure whiteness: s. doves, Ven. 3G6. 1190. s. white, Lucr. 56. s. cheeks, 61. s. down, 1012. s. skin, Mcb. 11,3, 118. whose beard the s. hand of peace had touched, H4B1V, 1,43. s. btards, H5 III, 3, 36. Troil. I. 3, 296. s. hair, H6B V, 1, 162. the s. livery of advised age, V, 2, 47. Tit. Ill, 1, 261. Caes. II, 1, 144. Applied to the pale lustre of the moon: Ven. 728. Lucr. 371. 786. LLL IV, 3, 30. Mids. I, 1,9. 210. Per. V, 1. 249. V, 3, 7. cf. the

s morning, from whose s. breast the sun ariseth, Veil. 855. T o the sea, to rivers and any limpid liquids: Ven. 969 (tears); cf. Lucr. 796; John III, 4, 63. Sonn. 35, 2. the morning's s. melting dear, Lucr. 24. s. waves, Err. III. 2, 48. Ado III, 1, 27. John II, 339. 441. R2 II, 1, 46. Ill, 2, 107. V, 3, 61. H4A III, 1, 10?. H6B IV, 1, 72. T o soft and clear sounds: Rom. IV, 5, 130. 131. 136. 142. 145 (taken from a popular rhyme and curiously commented on by Peter and the musicians). S i l v e r , a name of dogs: Tp. IV, 257. Shr. Ind. I, 19. S l l v e r - h r l c h t , bright as silver: John II, 315. S i l v e r e d , 1) covered with silver: Merch. II, 9, 69. Ant. Ill, 6, 3. 2 ) tinged with grey, hoary: sable curl», alls. o'er with white, Sonn. 12, 4. a sable s. Hml. I, 2, 242. S U v e r l y , bright as silver: this honourable dew, that s. doth progress on thy cheek}, John V, 2, 46. S U v e r - s h e M I n g , an evident misprint of 0 . Ed J , as it ought to be written in two words: sad sighs, deep groans, nor silver shedding tears, could penetrate her uncompassionale sire, Gent. Ill, 1, 230 (i. e. a silvery flow of tears; cf. silver melting in Lucr. 24). S l i v e r - s w e e t , having a delightful sound like .lilver bells: how s. sound lovers' tongues by night, Rom. II, 2, 166. S i l v e r - v a l e e d , having a soft and clear voice: Per. V, 1, 111. S i l v e r - w h i t e , white as silver: his beard, all s. Lncr. 1405. lady-smocks all s. L L L V, 2, 905. S i l v i a , female name in Gent. II, 1, 5. 45 etc. S l l v l a i , name in As 111, 5, 83 etc. and Ant. II,

1061

Salisbury and Warwick are no s. peers, H6BI, 3.77. attended by a s. guard, H6C IV, 2, 16. lying wit1 s. shells. Per. Ill, 1, 65. 3) plain, not distinguished by any excelltnce. of an average quality, common: my shallow s. shii, Gent. I, 2, 8; W i v . I, 1, 30; A d o I, 1, 168; Mids. V, 110. he's a justice of peace, s. though I stand here, Wir. I, 1, 226. not only in the s. office of love, IV, 2. 4. you have s. wits, L L L V, 2,264. doth my s. featuri i orient youf As III. 3,3. toward the education of your dnighters I here bestow a s. instrument, Shr. II, lUt. great floods have flown from s. sources, All's 11,1, 143. there's a s. putting o f f , II, 2, 43. I am a s. mid, II, 3, 72. this s. syllogism, T w . I, 5, 55. it (mite iron) is a s one, H5 II, 1,8. no s. man that sees this jarring discord, H 6 A IV, 1, 187. our s. supper ended, B6B II, 2, 2. I am a s. woman, H8 II, 4, 106. nature prompts them in s. and low things to prince it, Cymb. H; 3,85. Almost = mean, of low rank: this s. peasatt, Shr. Ind. 1, 135. we that are not s. men, Wint. IV, 4, 772. a s. countryman, Ant. V, 2, 342. 4 ) plain, artless, harmless, unaffected, mniere:Ae might be buried in a tomb so s. (us Adonis' dmpies) Ven. 244. under whose (love's) s. semblance k ( l o t ) hath ftd upon fresh beauty, 795. s. truth mscclled simplicity, Sonn. 66, 11. 138, 8. who, young and s., would not be so loveredt Compl. 320. to winesi s. virtue, Ado IV, 1, 39. this is a gift that I havi, s., s. L L L IV, 2, 67. in his s. show he harbours reaton. H6B III, 1, 54. his s. truth must be abused, 13 I. 3, 52. and —r than the infancy of truth, Troil IIL2, 177. think true lore acted s. modesty, Rom. Ill 2,16. there are no tricks in plain and s. truth, Cups IV, 2, 22. in s. and pure soul I come to you, Oth. I, 1, 107. 1, 18. S l m l l a t l a n , see Simulation. 5 ) silly, witless, weak in intellect: Gent. II 1,38. S i m i l e , a comparison (as a term of rhetoric): As Wiv. IV, 2,182. Err. Ill, 2,16. L L L IV, 1,142 Mids. II, 1, 45. Shr. V, 2, 54. H4A I, 2, 89 (Qq F l smiUs\ III, 2, 317. Merch. HI, 2, 81. Shr. V, 2, 161. Wint. Troil. Ill, 2,183. take all these —s to your command, IV, 4, 355. 607. H6B IV, 4, 10. H6C I, 2, 59. 111,1, Compl. 227 (i. e. symbolical love-tokens). In All's 83. R3 1,1,118. I, 3, 328. Ill, 2. 26 (Qq/onrf). Ran. V, 2, 26 some M. Edd. — s, O. Edd. smiles. II, 5, 38. Ill, 1, 37. Tim. V, 1, 27 ( — r ) . Hal. 1,2, S l m e l a , a Trojan river: Lucr. 1437. Shr. Ill, 97. Lr. IV, 6, 155. Oth. IV, 2, 20. Ant. V , ! , 2:3. 1,42. Cymb. Ill, 4, 135. S l m e n , Christian name of subordinate persons Simple, subst. a single ingredient in a coiqpomd, in H4B III, 2, 132 and Rom. IV, 5, 132. In H6B II, especially in a compounded medicine: the posomus 1,91 Fl.J Sytnon, Fs.4 Simon, some M. Edd. Sounder, s. sometimes is compacted in a pure compound. Lucr. others Simpcox. 530. a melancholy of mine own, compounded a many S l m e n l d e s , name of the king of Pentapclis in — s , As IV, 1, 16. collected from all —s thit heve Per. II, 1, 48. 49. 104. 105. II, 3, 20. II, 5, 1. 24. virtue, Hml. IV, 7, 145. Hence = medicinal heib: Ill Prol. 23. dere is some —s in my closet, W i v . I, 4, 65. stall Bee S l m e n y , sale of church-ofSces: H8 IV, 2, 36. Bucklersbury in s time, 111,3,79. culling of—s Rom. Slmpcex, name in H6BII, 1,124. In v. 91 0. Edd. V, 1, 40. that to provoke in him, are many —s operaSymon or Simon, some M. Edd. Simpcox. tive. Lr. IV, 4, 14. S i m p e r i n g , smiling in an affected manner: 1 S i m p l e , name in Wiv. I, 1, 136. 207. 1,4, 15. perceive by your s. none of you hates them, A s Epil. 16. III, 1, 2. yond s. dame, Lr. IV, 6, 120. S i m p l e - a n s w e r e d , making a simple ansver: be S i m p l e , adj. 1) consisting of one thing only, un- s. Lr. Ill, 7, 43 (Qq simple answerer). componnded: for compound sweet forgoing s. savour, S l m p l e n e u , 1) plainness, unrefined nnti-cnas, Sonn. 125, 7. s. were so well compounded, Phoen. 44. innocence: and never gives to truth and virtie lint with eggs, sirf S. of itself, Wiv. Ill, 5, 32. which s. and merit purchaseth. Ado III, 1, 70. n e w 2 ) mere, pure, being no more and no less than, anything can be amiss, when s. and duty tender it. Mii.s. nothing else but: she tells to your highness s. truth, V, 83. in her they are the better for their s. Alls I, 1, Err. V, 211. here's a s. line of life, Merch. II, 2, 169. 51. let me find a charter in your voice, to ass is my s. nine maids is as coming-in for one man, 171. here are Oth. I, 3, 247. s. scapes, 174. that is another s. sin in you, to bring 2) silliness, folly: what s. is thisI Rom. 111,3, 77. the etres and rams together. As III, 2, 82. whose s. S i m p l i c i t y , 1) plainness, naturalness, absoiceof touch is powerful to araise King Pepin, All's II, 1, 78. everything that seems extraordinary: grace in all t.

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S

Phom. 54. whiles others fish with crajt for great FPentecost the sum is due, IV, 1, 1. never s. the middle opinim, I with great truth catch mere s. Troil. IV, sisummer's spring met we on hill, Mids. II, 1,83. s. death 4, 1(6. ojof my dearest mother it did not speak before, Cymb. 2) plainness, artlessness, innocence: by the s. of IMV, 2, 190. Peculiar passage: s. night you loved me, Vents' doves, Mids. I, 1, 171. love and tongue-tied s. y6. you have s. misused our sex, IV, 1, 205. I am /1 was not angry s. I came to France until this instant, a sinple maid and therein wealthiest, that I protest I I Ho IV, 7, 58. With another conjunction: they have s. an a maid, All's II, 3, 73. I have the back-trick s. I been grand-jurymen s. bejore Noah was a sailor, Tw. as strong as any man in Illyria, Tw. I, 3, 132. I were I'lll, 2, 18. s. that = since: the jealous o'erworn widow s. the most active fellow in Europe, II4B IV, 3, 24. he a and herself, s. that our brother dubbed them gentlewomen, is s. the most active gentleman in France, H5 III, 7,105. a are mighty gossips in this monarchy, R3 1, 1, 82. he ii s. the rarest man »" the world, Cor. IV, 5, 1C9. 3) as, seeing t h a t ; f. i.: s. I have hemmed thee here l i m o l a r , subst. simulator, hypocritical preten- .... I'll be a park, Ven. 229. why not lips on lips, s. der:». of virtue, Lr. Ill, 2, 54 (Qq simular man). e eyes in eyest 120. 239. s. thou art dead, to, here I I l m o l t r , adj. counterfeited, false: s. man of pprophesy, 1135. 1174. s. thou dost ¡¡ive me pains, let virtve, L r . Ill, 2, 54 (Ff simular of virtue). I returned fime remember thee what thou hast promised, T p . 1,2,242. with s. proof enough, Cymb. V, 5, 200. »no matter, s. they have left their viands behind, III, 3, I l m a l a t l s n , counterfeiting, disguise: this j. is 4 40. 50. V, 168. Epil. 6. Gent. 1, 1, 9. I, 2, 55. II, 1, not ts the former, Tw. II, 5, 151 (Capell: similation). 1 129. IV, 2, 124. 130. Meas. I, 1, 5. Err. Ill, 1, 120. I l n , snbst. transgression of the divine l a w : Lucr. s s. that, in the same sense (cf. That): I force not ar93. Sonn. 62, 1. 142, 1. T p . Ill, 2, 139. III. 3, 53. ggument a straw, s. that my case is past the help of law, Gent. V, 4, 112. Wiv. Ill, 3, 226. V, 5, 35. 57. Meas. I Lncr 1022. thou canst not vex me with inconstant mind, 1, 4. 31. II, 1, 38. II, 3, 19. 28. 31. II, 4, 57. 63. 66. s s. that my life on thy revolt doth lie, Sonn. 92, 10. s. 6 8 . 5 9 . 7 1 . 111,1,149. 111,2,31. IV, 1, 73. IV, 2, 111. t that my beauty cannot please his eye, I'll weep what's Err. I, 2, 102. Ill, 2, 14. V, 52. Ado II, 1, 67. IV, 1, I left away, Err. II, 1, 114. Merch. Ill, 3, 30. As 111, 5, 37. 51. 175. 182. V, 1, 283. L L L II, 105 etc. etc. the i 94. H5 IV, 1, 321. R 3 V, 3, 202. Cor. Ill, 2, 50. V, seven deadly — s , Meas. Ill, 1,111 (pride, envy, wrath, 3 3, 98. Mcb. IV, 3, 106. Lr. I, 1, 251. 4) after that time, from then till now; f. i . : stuffs slotk, covetousness, gluttony, lechery), to do a s. Meas. Ill, 1, 134. W i n t . V, 1, 172 (against), to leave you in < and necessaries, which s. have steaded much, Tp. I, 2, your madness, 'twere my s. Cymb. 11,3,104 ( = 'twere 1 165. mine eyes, never s. at ebb, 435. I cannot abide sin in me). Personified as a masc.: Lncr. 629. 882. t the smell of hot meat s. Wiv. I, 1, 297. and s. I have 913. Abstr. pro concr.: cardinal—s and hollow hearts r not much importuned you, Err. IV, 1 , 2 . my bones bear Ifeirye, H8 III, 1, 104. thou scarlet s. Ill, 2, 255. i witness, that s. have felt the vigour of his rage, IV, 4, S i n , vb. to offend against the divine law: Lucr. t 81. my desires e'er s. pursue me, Tw. I, 1, 23. Saint G30 Sonn. 141, 14. Pilgr. 342. Tp. I, 2, 118. Gent. I George, that swinged the dragon, and e'er s. sits on his II, C, 7. Wiv. Ill, 3, 51. Meas. II, 2, 163. 183. Ado h horse, J o h n II, 288. who s. I heard to be discomfited II, 1, 266. V, 1, 283. All's III, 7, 47. Wint. I, 2, 84. I H6B V, 1, 63. is fled, as he hears s., to Burgundy, H4A I, 1, 78. H4B I, 1, 98. H6A I, 3, 35. Troil. II, I H6C IV, 6, 79. and s., methinks, I would not grow so 3, 131. Cor. I, 1, 234. Tit. IV, 1, 64. Tim. I, 2, 72. J fast, R3 II, 4, 14. which s. succeeding ages have re2 4 6 Per. I, 1, 146. I, 3, 22. With against: All's II, ti edified, III, 1, 71. and s. too, murders have been per5, ID. Cymb. II, 3,116. a man more —ed against than j formed, Mcb. Ill, 4, 77. brought up with him, and s. —itg, Lr. Ill, 2, 60. so neighboured to his youth, Hml. II, 2, 12 (Qq sith). S l n - a b s a l v e r , one who pronounces sin to be re- I I did not see him s. Ant. 1, 3, 1. mitted: Rom. III. 3, 50. 5) ago (transitional use: it is but eight years s. this S i n e « , prepos., adv. and conj.; 1) ever from the :: 1 Percy was the man nearest my soul, H4RIII,1,60. how timt of, after; f. i : not s. widow Dido's time, Tp. II, !! >• long is it s. the physician diedf All's I, 2, 70); f. i.: 1,76. s. his exile she hath despised me most, Gent. Ill, || f twelve year s. thy father was the duke of Milan, Tp. I, 2, 3. s. the mortal and intestine jars, Err. I, 1, 11. { I 2, 53. how thou hast met us here, who three hours s.

s

1063

were wrecked upon this shore, V, 136. our ship whichh, I S i n e w , vb., with together, = to knit in streigth. but three glasses «., we gave out split, 223. he promiseod | so shalt thou s. both these lands together, H6C 11,3,91. to meet me two hours s. Meas. I, 2, 76. Jive years ss. 1 cf. Insinewed. O. Edd. sinow. there teas some speech of marriage, V, 217. not haljl/ S i n e w e d , having sinews, armed with streigth: an hour s. Err. II, 2, 14. I gave it you half an hour ss. when he sees ourselves well s. to our defence, John IV, ] , 65. IV, 3, 38. but seven years s. thou knoicesst V, 7, 88. we parted, V, 320. I told your lordship a year s. Adoo Sinewy, well braced with sinews, strong: Ven. II, 2, 12. the world was very guilty of such a ballaad 99. L L L IV, 3, 308. As II, 2, 14. All's II, 1, 62. some three ages s. L L L I, 2, 117. some six months ss. Troil. II, 3, 259. O. Edd. sinnowy. All's I, 2, 71. his wife some two months s. fledfronm S i n f u l , tainted with sin, unholy, wicked: Sonn. his house, IV, 3,57. a count that died some twehemonthh 103, 9. 142, 2. 146, 1, Wiv. V, 5, 97. Merch. II, 7, s. Tw. I, 2, 37. posts are come an hour s. Wint. II, 33, 54. All's 111, 7, 47. R2 III, 1, 11. H4B II, 4, 309. 195. who half an hour s. came from the Dauphin, Johnn H6B V, 1, 183. H6C II, 3, 41. Mcb. IV, 3, 224. Per. V, 7, 83. who two hours s. I met in travel, H6A IV, 33, Prol. 31. 1, 2, 77. 35. whom I some three months s. stabbed, R3 1,2,2411. S i n f u l l y , 1) in a sinful manner: R3 II, 1,119. else had I half an hour s. brought my report, Cor. I, 6J5, 2) in a sinful state: if a son that is by his father sent 21. how long is 't s.t I, 6, 14. how long is that s.tt about merchandise do s. miscarry upon the sea, Ho IV, Hml. V, 1, 158. long s. — a) long ago: long s. thyy 1, 155. husband served me in my wars, Err. V, 161. for thie Sing (impf. and partic. sung; impf. sang oriy in service that long s. I did thee, now grant me justicee, Sonn. 73, 4 for the sake of the rhyme) 1) to titter 191. Joined to substantives, = long past: what canset melodious sounds; absol.: Ven. 1095. 1102. Sonn. thou boast of things long s. Ven. 1078. what weaUhh 73, 4. 97, 13. Tp. Ill, 2, 129. Wiv. V, 5, 69. Err. she had in days long s. Sonn. 67, 14. b) since a longg 111,2,47. Ado II, 1,239. 11,3,50.51. L L L 1,1,103. time, already a long time: and weep afresh love's longg Mids. Ill, 1, 126. Tw. I, 2, 57. II, 3, 21. 42. J o i n V, s. cancelled woe, Sonn. 30, 7. she and I , long s. c o n - 7, 12. H4B V, 5, 113. L r . I, 4,192. Ant. I, 5, 75 etc. tracted, are now so sure, Wiv. V, 5, 236. long s. wee when to the lute she sung, Per. IV Prol. 26. W i h of: were resolved of your truth, yet never have you tastedd —est of ravishment, Lucr. 1128. with to: then to Silvia our reward, H6A HI, 4, 20. let us s. Gent. IV, 2, 49. J o h n IV, 2, 150. Indiciting 6) when (after verbs denoting recollection): thouu joy: I have decreed not to s. in my cage, Ado I, i, 36. rememberest s. once I sat upon a promontory, and beardd now she —s in heaven, All's IV, 3,63. I could s., uould a mertnaid on a dolphin's back, Mids. II, 1, 149. thiss weeping do me good, R2 111, 4, 22. that I may s. and fellow I remember, t. once he played a farmer's eldestt dance, H6C I , 4 , 91. cf. Cor. I, 3, 1. IV, 6 , 8. H5 son, Shr. Ind. 1, 84. remember s. you owed no more Mo HI, 7, 17. Used of birds of any kind, even oi the time than I do now, Wint. V, 1, 219. do you rememberr owl: L L L V, 2,927 (cf. H6C11,6,57). of the endtoo: s. we lay all night in the windmill in Saint George'ss Wiv. II, 1, 127. L L L V, 2, 909. of pies: H6CV, 6, Heidi H4B 111, 2, 206. we know the time s. he wass 48. of the crow: Merch. V, 102. of the raven: Tit. Ill, 1,158. of crickets: Cymb. II, 2,11. Per. Ill Prol. mild and affable, H6B III, 1, 9. 7. of the bagpipe: Merch. IV, 1, 49. S i n c e r e (as for the accent, see Appendix Hence applied to the whistling of the wind: thnugh 1) undissembling, honest, upright: Gent. II, 7, 763. his mane and tail the high wind—s, Ven. 305. the uinds H4B I, 1, 202. H8 I, 1, 153. Lr. II, 2, 111. S i n c e r e l y , unfeignedly, from one's heart: Adoo did s. it to me, Tp. Ill, 3, 97. move the stiU-peiring air, that —s with piercing, All's 111, 2, 114. Stch a V, 1, 201. H8 11, 3, 59. Cor. I, 3, 24. S i n c e r i t y , freedom from hypocrisy, honesty off sound supposed to announce a tempest: I hear ¿(the intention, earnestness: Meus. I, 4, 36. V,451. AdoIV,', storm) s. in the wind, Tp. II, 2, 20. a man may hear 1,55. John III, 1,248. H4A II, 3, 32. Oth. II, 3, 333.-. this shower s. in the wind, Wiv. Ill, 2,38. we hear this fearful tempest s. R2 II, 1, 263. S l n - e e n c e a l l n g , hiding sins: Lucr. 767. S l n - e e n e e l v l n f , conceiving and bringing forth1) With an accus. denoting an effect: s. me now sins: thy s. womb, John II, 182. asleep, Mids. II, 2,7. Tit. V, 3,163. s. him home. As IV, S l n e l , name of Macbeth's father: Mcb. I, 3, 71. . 2,13. who had even tuned his bounty to s. happinas to S i n e w , subst. tendon: Tp. Ill, 1,26. IV, 260. H f n him, All's IV, 3,12. flights of angels s. thee to thy rest, III, 1, 7..H6A III, 1, 193. Troil. IV, 5,126. V, 3, 33.. Hml. V,2,371. she will s. the savageness out of aiear, Hml. 1,5,94. HI, 3, 71. Orpheus' lute was strung with h Oth. IV, I, 200. let us s. him to the ground, V.ymh IV, poets' —s, Gent. Ill, 2,78; cf. unless the fiddler Apollo i 2, 236. 2) trans.; a" to utter or recite melodiously: —« a get his —s to make catlings on, Troil. Ill, 3,305. Con- • sidered as the seat of strength, and hence — strength:: woeful ditty, Ven. 836. thy trespass sung by children, the portion and s. of her fortune, her marriage-dowry,, Lucr. 525. Pilgr. 383. T p . II, 2, 46. IV, 109. Cent. Meas. Ill, 1, 230. we break the —s of our plot. Tw. II,, I, 2, 80 (s. it to a tune). 83. 86. 89 (s. it out). JViv. 5, 83. knit your —s to the strength of mine, John V,, Ill, 1, 18. V, 5, 95. Ado V, 1, 294 (s. it to her botes). 2, 63. trio with them was a rated s. too, H4A IV, 4 , , LLL III, 14. 15. Mids. I, 1, 30. V, 44 (to the harp). 17. H5 I, 2, 223. II, 2, 36. H6A II, 3, 63. H6C II,, Tw. I, 5, 290. Wint. IV, 4, 190. 282. H4A II, i, 48 3, 4. Troil. I, 3, 136. 143. II, 1, 109. Ill, 1, 166. V,, (sung to filthy tunes). 111,1,210. H4B III, 2 , 3 4 0 (to). H5 IV, 8, 128. H6A 1, 6, 20. H6C II, 6, 57. Hf IV, 8, 12. Cor. V, 6, 45. Caes I, 2, 108. Confounded with nerve: a second fear through all I 1, 92. Tit. Ill, 1, 85. Per. Prol. 5 etc. to s. a sing: her —s spread, Ven. 903. this rest might yet have 1 As III, 2, 261. Wint. IV, 4, 58. H4A III, 1, 216. Ill, balmed thy broken — s , Lr. Ill, 6, 105 (but perhaps) 3, 15. H8 V, 5, 35. Per. Prol. 1. = strength. M. E., by my fay, 3 ) to hold a session, to be engaged in public buit waxes late, 128. siness: s. with my cousin, Meas. V, 21(j. let the crowner Sir-reverence, see Sir. s. o' my coz, T w . I, 5, 143. Hml. V, 1, 4. to s. with I l r i ) , see Syrup. us once more, H5 V, 2, 80. sal in the council-house(

s B6B I, 1, 90. long — ing to determine poor men'» causes, IV, 7,93. to s. about the coronation, R3 III, 1, 173. the gods s. in hourly synod about thy particular prosperity, Cor.V,2,74. 3,131. s.in council, Caes. IV, 1,45. le's s. together, Lr. I, 1, 308 (Qq hit), and in session s. with meditations lawful, Oth. Ill, 3, 140. the senatehouse of planets all did s. to knit in her their best perfections, Per. 1,1,10. we s. too long on trifles, II, 3,92. 4) to be or stay or remain in a place: and there (the snail) all smothered up, in shade doth s. Ven. 1035. in the Bunch of Grapes, where you have a delight to s. Meas. II, 1, 134. I have sat here all day, IV, 1, 20. he shows me where the bachelors s. Ado II, I, 51. the god of love that —s above, V, 2, 27. here upon thy cheek the stain doth s. of an old tear, Bom. II, 3, 75. = to be abont a sick person: J o h n IV, 1, 30. H4B IV, 5, 20. 53. cf. B3 I, 4, 73 ( F f s. by me, Qq stay by me), to s. up = not to go to bed: Rom. IV, 3, 10. 5) to have a seat, to be placed, to dwell: whether beauty, birth, or wealth or wit... entitled in their parts do crowned s. Sonn. 37, 7; cf. that cruel eye where he —s crowned, Tw. V, 131; upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny —s in grim majesty, H6B III, 2, 50. no love toward others in that bosom —s, Sonn. 9, 13; as if allegiance in their bosoms sat, H5 II, 2, 4. much more than in my verse can s. your own glass shows you, Sonn. 103, 13. the attribute to awe and majesty, wherein doth s. the dread and fear of kings, Merch. IV, 1, 192. my mother told me just how he would woo, as if she sat in his heart, All's IV, 2, 70. O, s. my husband's wrongs on Hereford's spear, R2 I, 2, 47. his treasons will s. blushing in his face, 111,2,51. every honour —ing on his helm, H4A III, 2, 142; everlasting shame —s mocking in our plumes, H5 IV, 5, 5 ; fortune and victory s. on thy helm, R3 V, 3, 79; victory —s on our helms, 351; upon your sword i. laurel victory, Ant. I, 3, 100. now —s Expectation in the air, H5 II Prol. 8. to make an envious mountain on my back, where —* deformity to mock my body, H6C 111,2, 158. within thine eye sat twenty thousand deaths, Cor. Ill, 3, 70. take our good meaning, for our judgment —s five times in that ere once in our five wits, Rom. 1, 4, 46. is there no pity —ing in the clouds, III, 5, 198. policy —s above conscience, Tim. Ill, 2, 94 (has a higher place, is above c.). he —s high in all the people's hearts, Caes. I, 3, 157. 6) to be in a situation or condition: Is. at twenty pounds a week, Wiv. 1, 3, 8. under your hard construction must 1 s. Tw. Ill, 1, 126. Some —s safe and still without him, Cor. IV, 6, 37. 7) to lie, to bear o n , to be felt: your brother's death —s at your heart, Meas. V, 394. woe doth the heavier »., where it perceives it is but faintly borne. 112 I, 3, 280. let me s. heavy on thy soul to-morrow, R3 V, 3, 118. 131. 139. amazement on thy mother — Hail. Ill, 4, 112. Peculiar expression: this accord of Hamlet — » smiling to my heart, Hml. I, 2, 124 (cf. unclog my heart of what lies heavy to't. Cor. IV, 2,48). In All's II, 1, 147 O. Edd. oft it hits where hope is coldest and despair most —s; M. Edd. fit». 8) With down, = to begin a siege: all places yield to him ere he —s down, Cor. IV, 7, 28. In All's I, 1, 129 and Ant. Ill, 13, 168 O. Edd. set, most M. Edd. sit. 9) Used of clothcs or ornaments worn: here it (the

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crown) —s, H4B IV, 5, 43. 187. The sense modified by adverbs and adjectives: how well my gaments s. upon me, Tp. II, 1, 272. O majesty, when fiou dost pinch thy bearer, thou dost s. like a rich armiur worn in heat of day, H4B IV, 5, 29. our old robes s. easier than our new, Mcb. II, 4, 38. Metaphorically: these fixed evils s. so Jit in him, All's I, 1, 113 (in = on). this new and gorgeous garment majesty —s net so easy on me as you think, H4B V, 2, 45. 10) Used of the wind, = to have a direction: — s the wind in that cornert Ado II, 3 , 1 0 2 . to know where —s the wind, Merch. I, 1, 18. we see 'he rind s. sore upon our sails, R2 II, 1, 265. the wind—sfair for news to go to Ireland, II, 2 , 1 : 3 . H5 II, 2.12. the wind - s in the shoulder of your sail, Hml.I, 3, 56. an thou canst not smile as the wind — s, Lr. 1 4,113. though my reason —s in the wind against me, A n t III, 10, 37. 11) Refl., with down, — set: would shut the book and s. him down and die, H4B III, 1, 56. here will I s. me down, H6C II, 5, 14. I sat me down, Bnl. V, 2, 31 (in Meas. V, 366. L L L I, 1, 110. 317. Jiids. IV, 1, 1. As II, 7, 124. H6C III, 3,16. IV, 1, 119. Caes. V, 5, 4 thee and you may be nominatives). 12) Transitively, = to keep the seat on: he could not s. his mule, H8 IV, 2, 16. 81th, 1) adv. since that time: being of to young days brought up with him, and s. so neighbound to his youth and haviour, Hml. II, 2, 12 (Ff since). 2) conj. since, as, seeing that: the worldvitthold thee in disdain, s. in thy pride so fair a hope is slain, Ven. 762. s. in his prime death doth my love destroy, they that love best their loves shall not enjoy, 1163. I will not, s. so prettily he couples it to his conplaming names, Gent. I, 2, 126. Wiv. 11, 2, 195. M a s . I, 3, 35. Shr. I, 1,216. H6C 1, 1, 110. I, 3, 41. Troil. I, 3, 13. V, 2, 120. Tit. I, 271. 323. IV, 3, 4S.-Hml. 11, 2, 6 (Ff since). IV, 4, 45. IV, 7, 3. Lr. 1,1, 183. Oth. Ill, 3, 380 (Qq since). 411. that, in fie same sense: Meaa. IV, 1, 74. Lr. II, 4, 242. 3) prepos. since, after: I come to tell you thirds s. then befallen, H6C II, 1, 106. g l t h e n e e , 1) adv. since or after that tine: have you informed them s.f Cor. Ill, 1, 47. 2) conj. since, as: which I held my duty speedily to acquaint you withal, s. in the loss that ma} happen it concerns you to know it, All's I, 3, 124. S i t t i n g , a being together, a meeting, a being in company: fourscore ducats at a s. Merch. III. 1, 117. the which shall point you forth at every s. vhat you must say, Wint. IV, 4, 572. cf. Cor. V, 3, 131. S i t u a t e , placed, lying: there's nothings, under heavens eye but hath his bound, Err. II, 1, 16 I know where it is s. L L L I, 2, 142. B l t n a t l a n , 1) position, site: survey the jlot of s. and the model, H4B 1, 3, 51. the — s, look you, is both alike, H5 IV, 7, 27. 2) state, condition: they would change their state and s. with those dancing chips, Sonn. 128, It. S l w a r d (O. Edd. Seyward) name in Mai. Ill, 6, 31. IV, 3, 134. V, 2, 2. 9. S i x , twice three: Tp. I, 2, 240. Wiv. I, 3, 37. Meas. II, 1, 287. Ill, 1, 76. Err. I, 1, 45. Merch. II, 5, 25. Ill, 2, 301. IV, 1, 84. 85. 86. As H, 1, 95. Shr. II, 360. Ill, 2, 61. All's I, 2, 71. IV, 3, 151 170. V, 3, 196. Wint. IV, 4, 273. R2 I, 3, 2 d . !19.

1068

S

248. 2CO. H 4 A 1!, 4, 115. 109. !V, 3, 56. H 4 B II, 4, 8. V, 1, 89. H 5 I, 1, 14. H6A 1, 1, 112. IV, 1, 20. IV, 4, 41. H6C II, I, 144. HI, 3, 96. R 3 V, 3, 10. V, 4, 11. H8 IV, 1, 27. Troil. Ill, 3, 278. Cor. II, 3, 135. IV, 1, 18. IV, 5, 174. V, 6, 130. T i m . II, 2, 30. IV, 3, 143. Caes. II, 1, 277. Hml. V, 2, 155. 157. 168. L r . Ill, 4, 142. III. 7, 16. A n t . Ill, 10, 34. IV, 7, 10. Cymb. IV, 2, 293. P e r . Ill P r o l . 31. written in eight and s. Mids. Ill, 1, 25 ( i n verses of eight and six feet, like the popular ballads), every thing is left at s. and seven, R2 II, 2, 122 ( = in disorder. Six and seven often combined: Meas. II, 1, 287. W i v . II, 3, 37. II4A II, 4, 115. 199. Caes. II, 1, 277. or seven times honoured, Troil. Ill, 3, 278).

S k e i n , a knot (of thread or silk): Shr. IV, 3, 111. Troil. V, 1, 35. S k i l f u l , 1) c u n n i n g , judicious: the s. shepherd peeled me certain wands, Merch. I, 3, 85. 2) well versed in an art, expert, dexterous: Lucr. 1367. All's 1, 1, 34. T w . Ill, 4, 245. 293. H 6 C V, 4, 20. Troil. I, 1, 7. Oth. Ill, 4, 74. S k i l f u l l y , e x p e r t l y : thou art an old love-monger and speakest s. L L L II, 254. S k i l l , 1) discernment, sagacity, mental power, wit, cunning: which ( h e r beauty) far exceeds his barren s. to show, Lucr. 81. the impression of strange kinds is formed in them by force, by fraud, or s. 1243. in the very refuse of thy deeds there is such strength and warrantise of s. that, in my mind, thy worst all best exceeds, Sonn. 150, 7. I'll show my mind according to my shallow simple s. Gent. I, 2, 8. to compass her, I'll use my s. II, 4, 214. if I read it not truly j (viz your brow) my ancient s. beguiles me, Meas. IV, 2, : 164. dart thy s. at me, L L L V, 2, 396. touching now the point of human s , reason becomes the marshal to my will, Mids. II, 2, 119. which of them both is dearest to me, I have no s. in sense to make distinction, All's

S i x - g a t e d , having six gates: Troil. Prol. 15. S i x p e n c e , half a shilling: Err. I, 2, 55. A d o II, 1, 42. Mids. IV, 2, 20. 21. T w . II, 3, 26. 32. II4A II, 4, 28. H 4 B 1, 2, 29. II, 2, 102. Oth. II, 3, 94. cf. Mill-sixpence. S i x p e n n y , the same: s. strikers, H 4 A II, 1, 82. Six-score, one hundred and twenty: Shr. 11,360. S i x t e e n , six and ten: Gent. IV, 1, 21. All's IV, 3, 98. Wint. IV, I, 6. V, 3, 31. I R A II, 4, 194. Ha IV, 8, 93. H 8 II, 3, 82. Cor. II, 2, 91. T i m . IV, 1, 13. Hml. II, 2, 567. Cymb. IV, 2, 199. Sixt ;0. Edd.) or S i x t h ( M . E d d . ) , the ordinal of six: T p . V, 4. Ado 1. 1, 2S5. V, 1, 221 (s. and lastly). L L L I, 1, 238. As II, 7, 157. IV, 4, 100. H5 Epil. 9. H 6 A IV, ], 2. IV, 7, 70. H 6 B II, 2, 16. H 6 C III, 3, 89. R 3 II, 3, 16. IV, 2, 98. V, 3, 127. H8 I, 2, 58. 94. Lr. I, 1, 178. Cvmb. 1, 3, 31. V, 4, 20 (a s. — the sixth p a r t \ P e r . II, 2, 40. S i x t l y or S i x t h l y , in the sixth placc: sixt and lastly, Ado V, 1, 221 (the suffix ly belonging to both words). Sixty, ten times s i x : Troil. P r o l . 5. A n t . Ill, 7, 50. Ill, 10, 3. Cymb. IV, 2, 199. S i z e , 1) settled portion, allowance: to scant my — s, L r . II, 4, 178. 2) proportion, dimension, s h a p e : you may know by my s. that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking, Wiv. Ill, 5, 12. a word too great for any mouth of this age's s. As III, 2, 240. to shape my legs of an unequal s. H 6 C III, 2, 159. his large and portly s. Troil. IV, 5, 162. framed of the Cyclops's. Tit. IV, 3, 46. F i g u r a tively, = measure, shape: a malice of as great s. H8 V, 1, 136. 1 have ever verified my friends with all the s. that verity would without lapsing suffer, Cor. V, 2, 18. cannot cover the monstrous bulk of this ingratitude with any s. of words, T i m . V, 1, 69. our s. of sorrow, proportioned to our cause, must be as great as that which makes it, Ant. IV, 15,4. it's past the s. of dreaming, V, 2, 97. 3) shape, f o r m : in clamours of all s., both high and low, Compl. 21. it must be an answer of most monstrous s. that must fit all demands, All's II, 2, 35. he hath songs for man and woman, of all—s, W i n t . IV, 4, 192. S i z e , a kind of glue, in O'ersized, q. v. Sized, having a particular m a g n i t u d e : as my love is s., my fear is so, Ilml. Ill, 2, 180. cf. Great-sized. S k a i n s - m a t e (originally = brother in arms, from skean or skein — sword, dagger; cf. the German Spiessgeselle) a messmate, companion: I am none of his flirt-gills, I am none of his —s, R o m . II, 4, 162 (the nurse's speech. According to S t a u n t o n , ska in is a Kentish provincialism for scape-grace).

III, 4, 39 (I cannot j u d g e by what I feel), or stupified or seeming so in s. Wint. II, 1, 166 ( = cunning). I'll so offend, to make offence a s. H 4 A I, 2, 240 (wisdom, good policy), had I sufficient s. to utter them, II6A V, 5, 13. this vile deed we must with all our majesty and s. both countenance and excuse, Hml. IV, 1, 31. all the s. I have remembers not these garments, Lr. IV, 7, 66. 'tis greater s. in a true hate, to pray they have their will, Cymb. II, 5, 33. 2) familiar knowledge of any art or science, shown by readiness and dexterity in its application to practical purposes: Lucr. 1099. 1134. 1506. 1528. Sonn. 16, 14. 24, 5. 66, 10. 91, 1. 100, 8. 106, 12. 126, 7. Compl. 125. A d o I, 2, 28. L L L IV, 1, 28. Mids. 1, 1, 195. V, 110. As 111, 3, 63. All's I, !, 21. I, 3, 249. II, 1, 187. T w . Ill, 4, 213. 254. J o h n IV, 2, 29. R2 111, 4, 103. H 6 A I, 2, 60. 63. Troil. I, 1 , 8 . V, 2, 170. Tit. II, 1, 43. R o m . 11, 6, 25. Hml. Ill, 2, 378. V, 2, 267. Cymb. II, 4, 22. V, 5, 433. Per. IV, Prol. 30. V, 1, 76. Followed by in: hath good s. in his rapier, Wiv. II, 1, 231. All's IV, 5, 22. H 4 A V, 1, 135. H4B IV, 3, 123. T i m . V, 3, 7. 3) reason, motive (or rather a thought caused by consideration and j u d g m e n t ) : you have as little s. to fear as I have purpose to put you to't, Wint. IV, 4,152. S k i l l , vb., in the phrase it skills not greatly, or it skills not much, — it makes no difference, it matters not greatly: Shr. Ill, 2, 134. T w . V, 295. H 6 B III, 1, 281. Skill-contending,', rivalling in skill: Lucr. 1018. S k i l l e d , expert, versed: Tit. IV, 1, 33. W i t h in: Gent. Ill, 2, 92. R 3 IV, 4, 116. S k i l l e s s or S k i l l l e s s , inexpert, ignorant: Troil. I, I, 12. Rom. Ill, 3, 132. W i t h in: being s. in these parts, T w . Ill, 3, 9 (unacquainted with this country). W i t h of: how features are abroad, I am s. o f , T p . Ill, 1, 53. S k i l l e t , a boiler, a kettle: Oth. I, 3, 273. S k i m , vb. to take the cream off f r o m : s. milk. Mids. II, 1, 36. such a dish of—ed milk, H4A II, 3, 36 (Qq skim milk). S k i m b l e - s k a m b l e , wandering, wild, confused: such a deal of s. s t u f f , H 4 A III, 1, 154.

s

1069

Sklm-mllk, milk from which the cream has been Yen. 153. 184. 348. 485. 815. Lncr. 12. 158; Tp. taken: H4A II, 3, 36 (Ff skim'd milk). I, 2, 3. IV, 70. Gent. V, 1, 1. Wiv. V, 5, 21. S r . II, 8 k l a , snbst. the natnral covering of the flesh: 1, 17 (in earth, in sea, in s.). LLL IV, 2, 5. IV, 3, Lncr. 419. Compl 94. Tp. IV, 233. Wiv. Ill, 1, 111. 79. Mids. Ill, 2, 23. 107. As II, 7, 184. IT, 1 149. Err. II, 2, 138. Ill, 1, 13. IT, 3, 18. Ado III, 5, 13 Wint. I, 2, 180. 294. Ill, 3, 86. John II, 397. Ill, 2, (honest as the t. between his brows; Dogberry's speech). 2. Ill, 4, 153. IT, 2, 108. R2 I, 1, 41. Ill, 2 194. Mids. II, 1, 255. As IT, 2, 12. Shr. IT, 3, 180. John H4B IT, 3, 56. H5 III, 7, 78. H6A I, 1, 3. IT, 7,21. IV, 3, 80. H4A III, 3, 3. H5 IT, 3, 93. H6B III, 1, H6B III, 2, 104. H6C II, 1, 28. R3 T, 3, 283. Troil. 77. 300. IT, 2, 25. 86. H6C III, 1, 22. T i t T, 1, 138. T, 2, 149. Tit. 1, 145. IT, 2, 89. Caes. I, 3, 39.Mcb. Rom. V, 1, 43. Mcb. II, 3, 118. Lr. Ill, 4, 7. Oth. 1, 2, 49. Lr. II, 3, 12. Ant. II, 7, 74. Cymb. V, 5, T,2,4. 146. Plur. skies, in the same sense: Ven. 696.1191. Applied to other things, = crost, bark, coat: as Lncr. 506. 1524. Mids. IV, 1,121. Shr. I, 2, 205. Jit as ie pudding to his s. All's II, 2, 29. the s. of our Wint. Ill, 3, 3. Caes. Ill, 1, 63. Lr. Ill, 2, 43. »1,4, fruit-trees, B2 III, 4, 58. the s. (of leek) is good for 107. Oth. II, 1, 92. Used in the sense of heaven: the fated s. gits us your broken coxcomb, H5 T, I, 56. Skin, vb. to cover with skin: authority, though it free scope, All's 1,1,232 (rhyming). Considered is the err hie others, hath yet a kind of medicine ni ¿self, region to which the souls of the departed rise my that —s the vice o' the top, Meas. II, 2, 136. it will but soul and body to the —es and ground, Lncr. 1191. my s. andfilm the ulcerous place, whilst rank corruption, soul is in the s. Mids. V, 308. H6A IV, 7, 21. cf they (curses) ascend the s. and there awake God's pndemining all within, infects unseen, Hml. Ill, 4, 147. S k l a - m t , a (lion's) skin osed as a coat: John tleeping peace, R3 I, 3, 287. II, 139. Sky-aspiring, high-aspiring, very ambitiois: s. thoughts, R2 I, 3, 130. • M a k e r , in Under-skinker, q. v. Skyey, pertaining to the sky (as the cause if the Sklnnjr, consisting of skin only, wanting flesh: weather): servile to all the s. influences, Meas.ll| 1,9. her s. lips, Mcb. I, 3, 45. Ship, 1) intr. to fetch quick bounds, to leap, to Skylah, being in the skies, very high: ike s head hop: Filgr. 153. Wiv. II, 1, 237. Mids. II, 1, 61. of blue Olympus, Hml. V, 1, 276. Mcrch. I, 2, 21. Tiro. IV,3,225. Lr.V,3,277. Cymb. 8 k r - p U a t e 4 , placed in the skies: the thunlerer, IV, 2, 199. Per. IV, 1,63. —ing, metaphorically, = whose bolt s. batters all rebelling coast*, Cymb. V,4,96. Slab, slabby, glutinous: make the gruel thia and thoughtless, flighty, wanton: all wanton as a child, — ing and vain, LLL V, 2, 771. allay with some cold s. Mcb. IT, 1, 32. drops of modesty thy —ing spirit, Merch. II, 2,196. to Slack, adj. remiss, backward, not eager: b> thou make one in so—ing a dialogue, Tw. 1,5,214. the—ing not s. to proffer, though she put thee back, Filgr. 333. king he ambled up and down, H4AIII,2,60. compelled I shall not be s. Shr. 1, 2, 275. if thou be s., I'll fight these —ing kerns to trust their heels, Mcb. 1, 2, 30. it out, H6A I, 1, 99. I will not be s. to play mi part 2) tr. to leap over, to miss, to pass: let not thy in Fortune's pageant, H6BI,2,66. the duke shaUknow sword s. one, Tim. IV, 3, 110. how s. thou art, R3 I, 4, 282. so s., so slow, P«r. IT, Skipper, a thoughtless And flighty fellow: »., 2, 68. to come s. of — to be remiss in: if you ame s. stand back: 'tie age that nourisheth, Shr. II, 341. of former services, Lr. I, 3, 9. Skirmish, snbst. a slight fight: Ado 1,1,64. H6A Slack, vb. 1) tr. a) to make less tight, to tosen: 1, 2, 34 (or verb?). I, 4, 69. s. the bolins there, Per. Ill, 1, 43. Shirr, to move rapidly, to scour: make them s. b) to make more slow: his rage of hut by gizing away, H5 IV, 7, 64. s. the country round, Mcb. V, 3, qualified, —ed, not suppressed, Lncr. 425. / as no35 ( = round the country). thing slow to s. hit haste, Rom. IV, 1, 3. Shirt, 1) the edge of a garment: Wiv. I, 1, 29. c) to neglect, to be remiss in: what a beastam I Ado 111, 4, 21. Shr. IV, 3, 137. cf. Foreskirt. to s. it, Wiv. 111,4,115. if then they chanced to s you, 2) edge, margin, border: As III, 2, 354. T, 4, we could control them, Lr. II, 4,248. they s. their aities, 165. Hml. I, 1, 97. Oth. IV, 3, 88. 2) intr. to languish, to flag: their negotiations all S k i r t e d , wearing a coat with (laced?) skirts: must s., wanting his manage, Troil. Ill, 3, 24. myself and s. page, Wiv. I, 3, 93. S l a e k l r , loosely; negligently: her hair .. s. S k i t t i s h , volatile, fickle: unstaid and s. in all motions else, save in the constant image of the creature braided in hose negligence, Compl. 35. so s.gua-ded, that is beloved, Tw. II, 4, 18. now expectation, tickling Cymb. I, 1, 64. s. spirits, Troil. Prol. 20. how some men creep in s. Slackness, remissness, negligence: Wint.V, 1, fortune's hall. III, 3, 134. 151. Ant. Ill, 7, 28. S l a k e , to abate, to decrease; 1) tr.: itcoudnot 8 k « ( a n (Qq Skoggin, Ff Scoggan or Schoggan) name (subject to much controversy, two notorious s. mine ire, H6C I, 3, 29. cf. Yslake. 2) intr.: no flood by raining —th, Lucr. 167?. persons of the 14th and 15th centuries, one a poet Slander, subst 1) defamation, calumny: ionn. and the other a jester, being called so): H4B1II,2,33. S k u l k , to withdraw into a close place for con- 70, 2. 131, 14. Gent. Ill, 2, 43. Meas. V, 525. Ado II, 1, 144. Ill, 1, 84. HI, 3, 169 (make). IT, 1,307. cealment: —ing in corners, Wint. I, 2, 289. Skull, the bone that encloses the head: Tp. Ill, T, 1, 68. V, 4, 66. R2 I, 1, 171. H 4 J Ind. 6. H6B 2, 98. T, 60. Merch. Ill, 2, 96. Tw. I, 5, 121. R2 III, 2, 68. R3 I, 3, 26. Troil. I, 3, 193. Rom. V, 1, IT, 69. 144. R3 I, 4, 29. Cor. II, 3, 23. Rom. IT, 1, 33 Hml. II, 2, 198. Lr. Ill, 2, 87. Oth. IT, 2,133. 83. T, 3, 126. Hml. V, 1, 83. 107. 189 190. 198. Cymb. II, 5, 26. Ill, 4, 35.41. IT, 2, 272. Misafplied Sky, the aerial region which surrounds the earth: for slanderer by Dogberry: Ado V, 1, 221.

1070

s

2) 11 r e p o r t , disreputation: and yet my nature never ii the fight, to do in s. Meas. I, 3, 4 3 perhaps = to a:t in danger of being misjudged. A passage variouiy emended by the commentators), s. lives upon succession, Err. Ill, 1, 105. change s. to remorse. A d o l V l , 213 (i. c. ill report to pity), that s. is found a truth now, H 8 II, 1, 153. you shall not find me, after the s. o'most stepmothers, evil-eyed unto you, Cymb. I, 1, 71 3J e p r o a c h , disgrace, scandal: to clear this spot by deah, at least I give a badge of fame to —livery, Lucr. D54. my blood shall wash the s. of mine til, 1207. ree from these - s and this open shame, Err. IV, 4, 7). prevents the s. of his wife, A s IV, 1, 61. he the saced honour of himself. .. betrays to s. W i n t . II, 3, 85. a partial s. sought I to avoid, R 2 I, 3, 241 ( = repoach of partiality), thou hast wrought a deed of s. upn my head, V, 6, 35. every word you speak in his behdf is s. to your royal dignity, HGB III, 2, 209. for mor. s. to thy dismal seat, R 3 HI, 3, 13. the purest of theirwives is foul as s. Oth. IV, 2, 19. Abstr. pro concr. -.till I have told this s. of his blood, R 2 1 , 1 , 1 1 3 (this digracer of his race), learn to know such —s of the age, H 5 III, 6, 84. thou s. of thy mother's heavy womb, 13 I, 3, 231. 4 ) h j u r y , offcnce done by words: I did but act, he's auhor of thy s. Ven. 1006 ( = the insult committed against thee), action of s. Meas. II, 1 , 1 9 0 (opposed to an nctim of battery), s. to the state, V, 325. there is no s. in an allowed fool, though he do nothing but rail, T w . 1, £, 101. you speak it out of fear and cold heart. Do me 10 s., Douglas, H 4 A IV, 3, 8. my reputation stainedoith Tybalt's s. Rom. Ill, 1,117. there is never a fair toman has a true face. No s., they steal hearts, A n t . II.6, 106 ( = no offence). 8 I a i d e r , vb. 1) to defame, to c a l u m n i a t e ; abs.: Ado V,l, 95. W i t h an object: Gent. Ill, 2, 38. Meas. V, 2 9 0 . 5 3 0 . A d o IV, 1, 304. 315. V, 1, 88. 243. Merch. V, 22. J o h n IV, 2, 256. H 4 A III, 3, 150. R 3 1, 4, 2H. IV, 4, 207. Cor. I, 1, 78. R o m . IV, 1, 35. Oth. Ill 3, 36S. to s. with = to reproach w i t h : to s. Valentue with falsehood, Gent. Ill, 2, 31. he -ed me nith batardy, J o h n I, 74. let not him be —ed with revolt, I4A I, 3, 112. •—s me with murder s crimson badge, 116B III, 2, 200. thy tongue that —s him with cowardce, H 6 C I, 4, 47. 2) ti disgrace: now is black beauty's successive heir, and bernty —ed with a bastard shame, S o n n . 127, 4. — ing ceation with a false esteem, 12. tax not so bad a voice o s. music any more than once, A d o II, 3, 47. I wouldnot have you so s. any moment leisure as to give words hymns, Rom. IV, 5 , , 88. a s. air, T p . V, 58. it hath in 5. synods been decreeed, Err. I, 1, 13. of whom he hath taken a s. leave, M i l ' s IV, 3, 90. mock not flesh and blood with s. reveremce, R2 III, 2, 172. here we entertain a s. peace, H 6 * A V, 4, 175. a s. vow, H6B V, I, 184. 190. H6C I, 4, 100. IV, 3, 4. a dreadful oath, sworn with a s. tonpgue, H6B III, 2,158. Tit. V, 3, 81. at thy s. feast, V, : 2, 115. Mcb. Ill, 1, 14. a s. hunting is in hand, T i t . . II, 1, 112 (arranged and execntcd 1, 20. Mcb. V, 8, 47. *. to = firmly and constantly by the emperor anad his court), we'll make a s. wager, devoted to: this attempt I am s. to, and will abide it Hml. IV, 7, 156. tooith s. march, I, 2, 201. in s. show, with a prince's courage, Cymb. Ill, 4, 186. nor let Ant. V, 2, 367. pity melt thee, but be a s. to thy purpose, Per. IV, 1, 8. 2) grave, seriooos: in s. talk, A s II, 4, 21. with a ^ • I d l e r - b r e e d e r , a woman that brings forth sol- s. earnestness, Oth.i. V, 2, 227. 3) sad, melancbholy, sullen: this s. sympathy poor dier»: H5 V, 2, 219. R a l d l e r - l l k e , fit for a soldier: a s. phrase, W i v . Venus noteth, Vena. 1057. s. night >cith slow sad gait descended to ugly hheU, Lncr. 1081. rejoice to hear the II, 1, 13. H4B III, 2, 83. H « U l e r i h l p , military character: All's I, 2, 26. s. curfew, Tp. V,440. passion'ss. tears, L L L V , 2 , 1 1 8 . III, !>, 89. IV, 3, 300. H4B I, 2, 93. Mcb. V, 4, 16. why do you bend suuch s. brows on me t John IV, 2, 90. in s. shades of endUless night, R2 I, 3, 177. suits of s. Oth. I, l , 27. Ant. II, 1, 34. Ill, 7, 42. Male, subst. 1) the bottom of the foot: A d o III, black, Hml. I, 2, '78. all s. things should answer s. accidents, Cymb. 1W, 2, 191. 2, 10. 'i the bottom of a shoe: Gent. II, 3, 19. Merch. Salemneas, seee Solemnness. IV, I, 123. Kom. I, 4, 15. II, 4, 68. Caes. I, 1, 15. S o l e m n i t y , 11) ceremony performed (especially Hml. II, 2, 234. the celebration of " nuptials; cf. solemn in Shr. Ill, 2, Hale, adj. 1) alone in its kind, nnique: on the s. 103. All's II, 3, 1187. T w . V, 392. Rom. IV, 5, 8 8 ) ; Arabian tree, Phoen. 2. though it alter not love's s. and hence, festivitity: Gent. V, 4, 161. Meas. Ill, 1, effect, Sonn. 36, 7. the s. inheritor of all perfections 224. Mids. I, 1, 111. IV, 1, 139. 190. V, 376. John that a man may owe, matchless Navarre, L L L II, 5. II, 555. Rom. I, 5,>, 59. 65. IV, 5, 61. Ant. V, 2, 369. 2) awful granddeur, stateliness, dignity: my slate, this murder, so s. and so unmatchable, John IV, 3, 52. s. singular, Rom. II, 4, 68 F f sole-singular), affecting seldom but sumptuoous, showed like a feast and won by one s. throne, without assistance, Cor. IV, 6, 32. rareness such s. H44A 111, 2, 59. 2) alone, with no others beside: that praise, s. S a l e m n l z e , tito celebrate ( a marriage): Tp. V, pure, transcends, Troil. 1, 3, 244. 309. L L L 11,42. TMerch. II, 9, 6. Ill, 2, 194. A s III, 3) only: the s. drift of my purpose doth extend not 2, 333. John II, 5539. Ill, 1, 77. H 6 A V, 3, 168. a frown further, T p . V, 29. my s. earth's heaven. Err. S a l e m n l y , gqravely, ceremoniously, formally: IN, 2, 64. s. dominator of Navarre, L L L I, 1, 222. Mids. IV, 1, 93. R i 2 IV, 319. H 4 A I, 3,228. H5 V s mperator of trotting 'paritors, III, 187. s. possessor Chor. 14. R3 I, 2,', 214. H8 I, 2, 165. of my love, H6C III, 3, 24. she shall be s. victress, R3 SalemnneiR, gravity, sadness: turn thy s. out o' IV, 4, 336. s. monarch of the earth, Rom. Ill, 2, 94. door, Cor. I, 3, 12B0. s. sir o' the world, Ant. V, 2, 120. his s. child, All's S a l l e l t , subsfet. solicitation: frame yourself to I, 1, 44. H5 I, 2, 70. H6B II, 2, 50. Hml. Ill, 3, 77 orderly —s, Cymhb. II, 3, 52 ( F l solicity; some M. ( F f f o u l ) . Cymb. I, 1, 5. 56. 138. Per. IV, 3, 39. Edd. soliciting). 4) alone, without any addition, in itself, mere: S a l l e l t , vb. 1 ) ) to move, to rouse, to stir: the part I had in Woodstocck's blood doth more s. me than your whose s. name blisters our tongues, Mcb. IV, 3, 12. ( • l e l y (O. Edd. sometimes solie or soly) adj. and exclaims, to stir aggainst the butchers of his life, R2 I, adv. l ) alone in one's kind, having no equal, unique: 2, 2. s. Henry withh her wondrous praise, H 6 A V, 3, / think him a great way fool, s. a coward, All's I, 1, 190. I am —ed, nnot by a few, that your subjects are 112. s. singular, Rom. II, 4. 69. which shall to all our in great grievance, , H8 I, 2, 18. this supernatural — ing nights and days to come give s. sovereign sway and cannot be ill, Mcb. . I, 3, 130. how he —s heaven, himmasicrdom, Mcb. I, 5, 71. self best knows, IV»', 3, 149. with the occurrents, more 2 ) alone: leave me s. Wint. II, 3, 17. to him had and less, which havve —ed, Hml. V, 2, 369. left it s. Cor. IV, 7, 16. honour's thought reigns s. in 2 to make petitition; absol.: a still —ing eye, Lr. the hrenst of every man, H5 II Clior. 4. not s. — not 1, I, 2H. if my tonngue did e'er s. Per. II, 5, 69. if you alone, not only: I am not s. led by nice direction of a bethink yourself of f any crime, ... s.for it straight, Oth. maidens eyes, Merch. II, 1, 13. V, 2, 28. Trans, i a) to apply to, to ask: having —ed H) oiily: left s. heir to all his lands, Shr. II, 118. the eternal power t/that his foul thoughts might compass Holenin, 1 religiously grave and venerable, at- his fair fair, Lucr. '. 345. we heartily s. your gracious tended with religious rites, and hence awful, ceremo- self to take on you i the charge, R3 111, 7, 130. Cor. II, nious, formal in general: therefore are feasts so s. 3, 208. Tit. IV, 3,;, 50. Oth. II, 3, 393. to s. him for and so rare, Sonn. 52, 5. the s. temples, T p . IV, 153. mercy, Cor. V, 1, 772. Used of making love for lewd sing your s hymn, A d o V. 3, 11. our s. festival, Shr. purposes: s. me noi more, Gent. V, 4, 40. if the prince " I , 2, 1C3. the s. feast, All's II, 3, 187. before the s. do s. you in 'hat kirind, you know your answer, A d o ll t priest I he e sworn, 286. a s. combination of our souls, 1, 70. how you havve been —ed by a gentleman, All's 18. Ado I, 1, 53. 300. II, 3, 20. Ill, 3, 143. L L L I, 2, 61. IV, 3, 366. V, 1,113. V, 2, 710. 735. Asll,7,149. IV, 1, 13. John I, 150. B 4 A III, 1, 195. H 6 A I, 1, 70. II, 1,2. Ill, 2, 66. IV, 7,31. H6B 1, 1, 186. Ill, 1,105. IV, 1,8. Troil. I, 3, 286. Tim. IV, 3, 416. Ant. II, 2, 108. Ill, 7, 69. IV, ?, 4 etc. etc. Opposed to captain: Ven. 893. Meas. II, 2, 131. common — « , H6C I, 1, 9. a private s. H4B III, 2,177. Emphatically: Meas. Ill, 1, 217. Ill, 2, 155. Merch. 1, 2, 124. Hml. Ill, 1, 159 etc. morn my s. John III, 1, 125. Cor. Ill, 2, 81. Ant. 1, 3, 70. as God's own s. John II, 566. H 4 A I,

s

1085

111, 5, 16. the amorous count —i / her in the unlawfulfood, Tp. I, 2, 160. that you will s. good instuction purpose, 72. —est here a lady, (Cymb. I, 6, 147. cf. give, 424. you have done yourself s. wrong, 44o lack s. gentleness, II, 1, 137. 'twixt which regions fere is Per. II, 5, 69. b) to seek by petition, to askk for: I had rather s. space, 257. I will give him s. relief, 11,2, 7>- put s. lime upon your fingers, IV, 246. s. more test of my hear you to s. that, Tw. Ill, 1, 1200. metal, Meas. I, 1, 49. that is s. good, Ado IV, J 213. Misapplied by Evans in Wiv. . I, 2, 10. Salleitatlan, illicit courtshipp: repent my unlaw- keep s. state in thy exit, L L L V, 2,598. he wouhmake s. speed of his return, Merch. II, 8, 37. intend sfear, ful s. Oth. IV, 2, 202. Soliciting, the same: has hhis —s all given to R3 III, 7, 45 etc. etc. Without a subst.: s. of heiblood mine ear, Htnl. II, 2, 126 ( F f i . ) . . cf. Mcb. I, 3," 130 still red remained, and s. looked Hack, Lucr.1742. get you t. of this distilled Carduus Benedictut Ado tjub Solicit. Salleltar, one who petitions i for another, attor- III, 4, 73. take thou s. of it, Mids. II, 1, 259. teferring to a subst.: I will pour s. ( w i n e ) in thiother ney, advocate: L L L II, 29. Otb. I III, 3, 27. S o l i d , firm: H4B 111, 1, 483. Troil. I, 3, 113. mouth, Tp. II, 2, 98. 'tis all engaged, a. (land) forfeited and gone, Tim. II, 2, 155 etc. Substantivey, = Htnl. I, 2, 129. Oth. IV, 1, 277. Salldure, a small piece of monney: Tim. Ill, 1, 46. •ometbing: let not bounty.fall where tcant crts s., Salldlty, firmness; abstr. proa concr.: this s. and but where excess begs all, Compl. 42. cf. Lr 1, 4, 218. let me see s. more, B 4 A 11,3,7. bate we ».and I compound mass, Hmt. Ill, 4, 49. will pay you s. R4B V, 5, 131. you shall hear t Cor. Salinas, name of the duke inn Err. I, 1, 1. Solitary, lonely, destitute of c company: Gent. IV, IV, 2, 14. take s.; nay, put out all your hands.Hm. 4, 94. A s III, 2, 16. IV, 2, 27. how's thist s. more; be sage, Per. IV, 6 102. Salaman, see Salomon. .3) Number; in the sing. = many a : wht had, Salaa, the sage who said thaat no man could be no doubt, t. noble creature in her, Tp. I, 2, 1 and called happy before his death: Titit. I, 177. undergoes such assaults as would take in s. nrtue, Salus, Latin for alone, a vword which causes Cymb. Ill, 2, 9. Oftener plur.: bore us s. ¡eagles to much misunderstanding between NNym and Pistol: H5 sea, Tp. I, 2, 145. s. thousands of these legs, HI, 1, II, 1, 48. 49. 50. 51. 54. 10 etc. as s. my equals did, Compl. 148. I ha» said Salve, solution: why thy odoour matcheth not thy to s. my slanders by, Troil. IV, 5, 190 ( F f titto mg show, the s. is this, that thou dost ccommon grow, Sonn. slanders by). Without a subst.: Ven. 872. 1102 Tp. 69, 14 (O. Edd. solye). II, 1, 251. Err. IV, 3, 4. Ado V, 1, 109. Mids. I, , 226 8 « l y , see Solely. (other s.). Wint. Ill, 3,20 etc. etc. Before minerals, Salyman, name of a sultan: : Merch. II, 1, 26. = about: s. sixteen months, Gent. IV, 1,21. a dsh of Same, indef. pron. used to noote an indeterminate s. three pence, Meas. II, 1,95. s. six or seven, 2£7. IV, kind or quantity or uumber; 1 ) ) kind (often almost 3,11. L L L I, 2,117. V, 2, 50. Mids. V, 61. fcerch. equivalent to the indef. article): tltheir light blown out IV, 1, 147. Shr. IV, 3, 189 (s. seven o' clock). AU's in s. mistrustful wood, Ven. 826. her fawn hid in s. I, 2, 71. HI, 7, 24. IV, 3, 56. T w . Ill, 2,48. W W . II, brake, 876. she heart s. huntsmann hollo, 973. behind 1,145. H4A II, 2, 67. Ill, 3, 119. H6C II, 1, lo4. V, s. hedge, 1094. saying, ». shape in i Sinon's was abused, I,10. R3 1,2, 241. 257 (s. score or two). 111,7, 36. Lucr. 1529. not a soul ...but plugged s. tricks of des- Rom. 1, 5, 39. HI, 4, 27. Lr. I, 2, 5. Ill, 7, 16. ith. I, peration, Tp. I, 2, 210. s. god o' the island, 389. s 3, 84 etc. Even before singular substantive* of time, sailor's wife, II, 1, 4. 5. this is a.:, monster of the isle, — about one, about a: s. hour hence, Err. Ill, 1192. II, 2, 67. s. defect tn her, III, 1, 444. s. vanity of mine Merch. II, 4, 27. s. half an hour, L L L V , J , 9(. H8 art, IV, 41. your father's in s. pasmsion that works him IV, 1,66. s. month or two, Merch. Ill, 2,9. s. uelvestrongly, 143. when thou seest s. rrare object, Gent. I, month since, T w . 1, 2, 37. s. hour before go* toJc me, 1, 13. s. love of yours hath writ too you, I, 2, 79. such II, 1, 22. s. day or two, R3 III, 1, 64. «. minute re the weeds as may beseem s. well-repute»d page, II, 7,43. s.time of her awaking, Rom. V, 3, 257. « . year rfder, merchant hath invited him, Err. II,, 1, 4. s. such strange Lr. 1,1, 20. V, 3,193. bull, Ado V, 4, 49. speak their mnind in s. other sort, Samebady, a person undetermined: Wiv.IV, 2, LLL V, 2, 589. / will s. other be,, s. Florentine, Shr. 121. Ado 111, 3, 137. Shr. V, 1, 40. H4B V, 4,11. R3 I, 1, 209 etc. etc. (S. certain, see CCertain). With one: I,3,311. V, 3, 280. Troil. 1, 1,45. Caes. II, 1,60. why should the private pleasure oj>f s. one become the Sameraet t John and Edmund Beaufort Jukes public plague of many moef Lucrr. 1478. s. one with of S., descendants of John of Gaunt, and famoui parchild by him, Meas. I, 4, 45. s. onee hath set you on, V, tisans of Henry VI during the wars of the Roses: H6A 112. s. one among us, All's IV, 1,, 5. if case s. one of II, 4, 6. 37. 68. II, 5, 46. III, 4, 34. IV, 1, 108.IV, 3, you would fly from us, H6C V, 4, 344. s. one take order, 9. 24 etc. H6B I, 1, 69. 167. I, 2, 29 (EdmtndDuke one to say, ¡Break up the senate, o] S.) etc. H6C I, 1,18. IV, 1, 27 etc. R3 IV, 4, 539. for Caes. II, 2, 97 etc. Alone, substantively, = one, some Samervllla, name in H6C V, 1, 7. one: go s. of you and Jetch a booking - glass, R2 IV, Something (sdmething and something). 1) bdef. 268. Lr. Ill, 1,37. for reverence to ss. alive (i. e. the mo- pron.; a certain thing, or a certain quantity: 'o the ther of Richard), I give a sparing rj limit to my tongue, most of praise add s. more, Sonn. 85, 10. hol< that R3 III, 7, 103. s. of = tomethinpg of, a sample of: nothing me a s. sweet to thee, 136, 12. s. ric! and what must we understand by this t S. of my shame, As strange, Tp. I, 2, 401. 111,3,94. IV, 126. Wiv.'II, 3, IV, 3, 96. s. of your function, mispress, Oth. IV, 2, 27. 75. IV, 2, 75. Meas. IV, 2, 99. Err II, 2, 52. b l 1«, — . free, Troil IV, 4, 133. stay, you imperfect —s, tell me more, Mcb. I, 3, 70. what's the newest grieff That of an hour's age doth hiss

1097

the s. IV, 3, 175. never say hereafter but J am truest s. Cymb. V, 5, 376. With of: after my death I wish no other herald, no other s. of my living actions, 6ul such an honest chronicler as Griffith, H8 IV, 2, 70. 2) an orator: a s. is but a prater, H5 V, 2, 166. a most rare s. H8 I, 2, 111. 3) the president of the parliament: to us the s. in his parliament, H4B IV, 2, 18. H6A III, 2, 60. Spear, a lance: Ven. 626.1112. Lncr. 1424. R2 I, 1,171. 1 , 2 , 4 8 . 1 , 3 , 6 0 . 1 1 9 . H4A I, 3, 193. H6A I, 1, 138. H6B IV, 7, 10. V, 1, 100. Spear-graaa, a long stiff grass: H4A II, 4, 340. S p e c i a l , 1) particular, peculiar: Sonn. 52, 11. Gent. II, 1, 18. Wiv. Ill, 3, 200. Meas. I, 1, 18. I, 2, 123. Ill, 2, 233. IV, 5, 4. V, 464. L L L I, 1, 153. II, 162. Merch. V, 292. Shr. II, 11. 129. All's II, 2, 6 {what place make you s., — specify in H6A III, 2,21). H6A I, 1, 171. Ill, 1, 66. H6C IV, 1, 87. Bom. II, 3, 18. Hml. Ill, 2 , 2 0 . IV, 7, 9. V, 2, 231. Lr. IV, 6, 219. Oth. I, 1, 183. I, 3, 72. V, 2, 322. 2) particular, uncommon, select, choice: to make some s. moment s. blest, Sonn. 52,11 (adverbially), confirm his welcome with some s. favour, Gent. II, 4, 101. a s. virtue, III, 1, 314. you have ta'en a s. stand to strike at me, Wiv. V, 5, 248. some certain s. honours it pleaseth his greatness to impart to Armado, L L L V, 1, 112. thus he his s. nothing ever prologues, All's II, 1, 95. have a s. care of him, Tw. Ill, 4, 69. R2 III, 1 , 3 9 . the king hath drawn the s. head of all the land together, H4A IV, 4, 28. 'tis my s. hope that you will clear yourself, H6B III, 1, 139. the people of Rome, for whom we stand a s. parly, Tit. I, 21. thought on s. dignities, Tim. V, 1, 145. without our s. wonder, Mcb. III, 4, 112. Special-Meat, see Special, 2. S p e c i a l l y , particularly, especially, above all: Shr. I, 1 , 2 0 . 121. S p e c i a l t y , 1) particular nature: the s. of rule hath been neglected, Troil. I, 3, 78. 2) Plnr. —es = special terms or articles of a contract : the packet where that and other —es are bound, L L L II, 165. let —es be therefore drawn between us, Shr. II, 127. S p e c i f y , to indicate particularly, to point out: how will she s. where is the best and safest passage inl H6A III, 2, 21. cf. Dogberry's speech in Ado V, 1, 264. Launcelot uses it in the sense of to tell, to expose: as my father shall s. Merch. II, 2, 131. 137. B p e e l e a t l y , in the language of Mrs. Quickly, = especially: Wiv. Ill, 4, 113. IV, 5, 114. Spectacle, l ) s h o w , sight Lucr.631. Pilgr. 127. Tp. I, 2, 26. As II, 1, 44. J o h n IV, 3, 56. H6A I, 4, 41. I16B IV, 1, 144. H6C II, 1, 67. II, 5, 73. Troil. IV, 4, 14 (a pair of - s\ Pandarus' speech). Cor. IV, 1, 25. Caes. Ill, 1, 223. Ill, 2, 202. 2) Plur. —s, = a) glasses to assist the sight: Ado I, 1, 191. As II, 7, 159. H6B V, 1, 165. Lr. I, 2, 36. b) organs of vision: and bid mine eyes be packing with my heart and called them blind and dusky —s, for losing ken of Albion's wished coast, H6B III, 2, 112. hath nature given them eyes ..., and can we not partition make with —s so precious 'twixt fair and foull Cymb. I, 6, 37. Spectacled, furnished with spectacles: the bleared sights ar'. s. to see him, Cor. II, 1, 222. Spectator, one who beholds a play or spectacle: 70»

1098

S

W i n t HI, 2, 38. IV, 1, 20. Hml. Ill, 2,46. Cymb. V, 4, 158. S p e c t e t « » h l p , the act of beholding: some death more long in «. and crueller in suffering, Cor. V, 2, 71. S p e e o l a t U a , 1) the act of looking on: though we upon Ihii mountain's basis by took standfor idle s. H5 IV, 2, 31. 2) vision, power of sight: s. turns not to itself, till it hath travelled and is married there where it may see itself, Troil. Ill, 3, 109. thou hast no s. in those eyes, Mcb. HI, 4, 95. Abstr. pro concr.: servants ... which are to France the spies and —s intelligent of our state, Lr. Ill, 1, 24 ( = speculators, observe™, watchers). Speculative, seeing, watching, prying: thoughts s. their unsure hopes relate, but certain issue strokes must arbitrate, Mcb. V, 4, 19 (i. e. the visions of the mind. Perhaps in the modern sense, = notional, theoretical), when light-winged toys of feathered Cupid seel with wanton dulness my s. and officed instruments, Oth. 1, 3, 271 (i. e. my eye. Qq speculative and active instruments). Speech, 1) speaking: in s. his beard wagged up and down, Lncr. 1405. my father's of a better nature than he appears by s. Tp. I, 2, 497. to affect s. and discourse, Meas. 1,1,4. there was some s. of marriage betwixt myself and her, V, 217. first he did praise my beauty, then my s. Err. IV, 2,15. without more s. Merch. II, 9, 7. slow in s. Shr. II, 248. be checked for silence, but never taxed for s. All's I, 1, 77. common s. gives him a worthy pass, II, 5, 57. which deserves high s. Wint. II, 1, 70. pardon should be the first word of thy s. R2 V, 3, 114. in »., in gait, in diet, H4B II, 3, 28. my lungs are wasted so that strength of s. is utterly denied me, IV, 5, 218. his deeds excee ¿alls. H6A I, 1, 15. though thy s. doth fail, I, 4, 82. her grace in s. H6B I, 1, 32. granted scope of s. Ill, 1, 176. in face, in gait, in s. 373. what was the s. among the Londoners concerning the French journey, H8 I, 2, 154. 'tis his kind of s. Cor. II, 3, 169. only fair s. Ill, 2, 96. be not a niggard of your s. Mcb. IV, 3, 180. she has no s. Oth. II, 1, 103. while I spare s., which something now offends me, II, 3, 199. to entreat your captain to soft and gentle s. Ant. II, 2, 3 etc. 2) any thing said or spoken: which to his s. did honey passage yield, Ven. 452. to blush at —es rank, Compl. 307. to utter foul —es, Tp. 11,2,96. I do bend my s. to one, Meas. I, 1, 41. with most painful feeling of thy s. 1,2,38. spoke most villanous — esof the duke, V, 265. 343. runs not this s. like iron through your blood ? Ado V, 1, 252. LLL V, 2, 110. 147. 341. 402. As II, 7, 82. Tw. I, 2, 20. V, 70. Wint. Ill, 2, 219. V, 1, 121. R2 1, 1, 30. H4B IV, 1,32. H6A III, 1, 6. H6B I, 1, 140. I, 3, 197. Ill, 2, 221. H6C IV, 1, 47. Troil. IV, 1, 8. Tit. II, 1, 55. Mcb. Ill, 1, 7. 76. Hml. IV, 2, 25. IV, 5, 91. Ant. Ill, 13, 148. Cymb. Ill, 5, 39 etc. = oration: Caes. Ill, 1, 245. 251. Ill, 2, 62 (make). — a piece of poetry or any thing else recited: Mids. Ill, 1, 77. V, 125. H4A II, 4,428. H4B Epil. 2. Horn.1,4,1. Hml.II,2,451.454. 111,2,1. Lr.1,4,128. 3) the act of speaking with another, conversation, interview: to have free s. with you, Meas. I, 1, 78. the s. we had to such a purpose, I, 2, 79. 1 would have some s. with you, III, 1, 155. helping me to the s. of Heatrice, Ado V, 2, 3. he desires some private s. with you, All's II, 5, 62. i f 1 may come to the s. of him, W i n t IV, 4,786. protract his s. H6AI,2,120. oerhear

the s. Hml. Ill, 3, 33. Lr. V, 1, 38. Oth. II, 3, 8. 225 III, 1, 29. 4) langnage, tongue: the best of them that speak this s. Tp. I, 2, 429. S p e e e k l e w , not speaking, wanting langnage, silent, dumb: Lncr. 1674. Sonn. 8, 13 (». song, i. e without words). 107, 12. Meas. I, 2,188. LLL V, 246. 861. Merch. I, 1, 164. John V, 6, 24. B2 1, 3, 172. Cor. V, 1, 67. Tit. HI, 2, 39. Caes. I, 2, 255Hml. II, 2,507 (the bold winds s., cf. Speak 9 ) . Cymb. I, 5, 52. Per. I, 1, 36. Spee4, subst 1) swiftness, celerity: s. more than s. but dull and slow she deems, Lncr. 1336. in winged s. no motion shall I know, Sonn. 51, 8. with more s. Err. I, 1, 110. the s. of your tongue, Ado I, 1, 142. ride upon the violent s. of fire, All's III, 2, 112. their s. hath been beyond account, Wint. II, 3, 197.19». this action of swift s. John II, 233. Ill, 4, 11. IV, 2, 113. rides at high s. H4A 11,4, 379. with great s. of judgement, ay, with celerity, Troil. I, 3, 329. this s. of Caesar's, Ant. Ill, 7, 75. = impetuosity, headlong violence: stop the headlong fury of his (affection's) s. Lncr.501. withhold thy »., dreadful occasion, John IV, 2,125. till the s. of his rage goes slower, Lr. 1,2,182. 2) haste: Lncr. 44. 745. 1307. LLL V, 2, 751. Merch. Ill, 4, 49. Wint IV, 4, 683. V, 1, 210. John IV, 2, 176. V, 7, 50. H4A III, 2, 162. H4B I, 1, 37. Bom. V, 2, 12. Caes. I, 2, 6. Hml. I, 2, 156. Oth. I, 3,278. withs.: Lncr. 1294. Meai. II, 2,17. 111,1,60. LLL V, 2, 804. Wint. IV, 1,23. John IV, 3,157. H4A 1, 1, 105. V, 2, 76. H4B I, 1, 214. IV, 2, 59. H5 IV, 3,68. H6C1V, 6,61. Troil. V, 10, 6. Rom. IV, 1,123. Caes. Ill, 1, 287. Hml. Ill, 1,177. IV, 3, 56. with all s.: H4A IV, 3, 48. H5 11, 4,141. II6B 1,1, 73. H6C IV, 6, 64. R3 111, 2,17. Ill, 5, 103. with all convenient s. Merch. Ill, 4, 56. with all good s B2 I, 2, 66. with what good s. All's V, 1, 34. with greatest s. H4B I, 1, 120. with sober s. H4B IV, 3, 86. with all swift s. R2 V, 1, 54. with imagined s. Merch. Ill, 4, 52 ( = with the s. of imagination), with swiftest wing of s. All's III, 2, 76. with your dearest s. H4A V, 5, 36. to make s.: his rider loved not s. being made from thee, Sonn. 50, 8. make s. from hence, Gent. Ill, 1, 169. make* s. Mids. II, 1, 233. H6C II, 5, 135. I'll make all s. Meas. IV, 3, 109. make good s. H4B III, 1, 3. to make your s. to Dover, Lr. Ill, 1, 36. he would make some s. of his return, Merch. 11,8,37. one of my fellows had the s. of him, Mcb. I, 5, 36 ( = was swifter than he, was in advance of him, had the start of him), cf. whose footing here anticipates our thoughts a se'nnight's s. Oth. II, 1, 77. 3) fortune, success: happy be thy s. Shr. II, 139. with mere conceit and fear of the queen's s. Wint. Ill; 2, 146 (=-- fear, that the queen might not succeed). this fool's s. be crossed with slowness, Cymb. Ill, 5,167 (quibbling). 4) a protecting and assisting power: Saint Nicholas be thy s. Gent. Ill, 1, 301. Hercules be thy s. As I, 2, 222. good manners be your s. H4A HI, 1, 190. Saint Dennis be my s. H5 V, 2, 194. Saint Francis be my s. Rom. V, 3,121. has had most favourable and happy s. Oth. II, 1,67 (i. e. Desdemona has been his guardian angel). Speed, vb. (impf. and partic. sped; partic. speeded = hastened in Meas. IV, 5, 10 and H4B IV, 3, 38) 1) intr. a) to make haste: and early in the morninf

s

1099

— eth atcay, Lucr. Arg. 16. your wit's too hot, it - t Spell, subst. charm, magic: Tp. IV, 127. V, 253. too fa*t, LLL II, 120. - s from me, Wint. I, 2, 373. Epil. 8. Wiv. IV, 2, 185 (by charms, by —s). Mids. we mutt s. for France, John I, 178. II, 297. H4A I, 11, 2, 17 (nor s. nor charm). Wint. V, 3, 105. H6A 3, 283. IT, 4, 35. H4B IV, 3, 38. i. thee straight, V, 3, 2. H8 I, 3, 1. Ill, 2, 20. Cor. V, 2, 102. Mcb. Cor. IV, 5, 93 (thee = thou). = to go, to travel in III, 5, 18. Oth. 1, 3, 61. Ant. IV, 12, 30 (ah, thou s.l general: thus can my low excuse the slow offence of my avaunt!). dull bearer when from thee I s. Sonn. 51, 2. not long Spell, vb. 1) to read by telling letters singly: she before your highness sped to France, H8 I, 2, 151. would s. him backward, Ado III, 1,61 (turn the wrong b) to fare, to have any fortune, good or bad: O side out, misconstrue his qualities), a, b, spelt backcruel —ingl Pilgr.269. you shall know how Is. Wiv. ward, LLLV, 1,50. thy love did read by rote and could II, 2, 278. Ill, 5. 137. how s. you with my daughtert not s. Rom. II, 3, 88 (yon knew only some phrases of Shr. II, 283. it were impossible I should s. amiss, 285. love, but not its true nature\ how I have sped among the clergymen, John IV, 2,141. 2) to charm: with —ing charms, H6A V, 3, 31 I marvel how he sped, H6A II, 1,48. Troil. Ill, 1,155. (in v. 2 charming spells . how you shatt s. in your journey's end, Cymb. V, 4,190. Spell ••topped, spell-bound, locked up by a Of things, = to fall oat: I'll prove him, s. how it will, charm: Tp. V, 61. Cor. V, 1, 61. Speneer, name in R2 V, 6, 8 (Ff Salisbury, c) to succeed; 1) applied to things: which (plot) Spencer, Blunt; Qq Oxford, Salisbury, Blunt). if it «., is wicked meaning in a lawful deed, All's III, 7, Spend, (impf. and partic. spent) 1) to afford, to 44. an honest tale —s best being plainly told, H3 IV, bestow, to lend, to employ (German: spenden): which 4, 358. have got a —ing trick to lay down ladies, B8 (blood) by him tainted shall for him be spent, and as I, 3, 40. if this letter s., Edmund the base shall top the hit due writ in my tettament, Lucr. 1182. on Ait sad legitimate, Lr. I, 2,19. 2) to persons: my rams s. not, shadow Luerece —* her eyes, 1457 (i. e. Bhe looks on Pilgr. 247 (do not thrive). I would not have him s. it), why doest thou s. upon thytelfthy beauty's legacy f Gent. IV, 4, 112. and sped you, tirl Wiv. Ill, 5, 67. Sonn. 4, 1. I have no preciout time at all to t., nor Merch. V, 115. Shr. I, 2, 247. II, 303. All's III, 6, 72. services to do, till you require, 57, 3. and in the praise Wint. 1, 2, 389. HI, 3, 46 (thee = thou). H6CIV, 1, thereof—s all his might, 80,3. all my best is dressing 58. R3 V, 3,102. T i t I, 372. II, 1,101. Tim. Ill, 2, old words new, — ing again what is already spent, 76, 69. Lr. IV, 6, 212. Oth. IV, 1, 109. A n t II, 3, 35. 12. —est thou (my Muse) thy fury on some worthiest Per. II, 3, 116. song, 100,3. in this change it my invention spent, 105, 2) trans, a) to hasten, to dispatch: the will s. her 11. why so large cost doett thou upon thy fading manfoot again, All's 111,4,37. it thall be —ed well, Meas. sion s. 146, 6. the time 'twixt six and now must by us IV, 5, 10. where it Montjoy the heraldt t. him hence, both be tpent most precioutly, Tp. I, 2, 241. tuit ill E5 III, 5, 36. tpent and labour HI bettowed, Ado III, 2, 103. —ing Partic. sped = dispatched, undone (German: ab- your wit in the praite of mine, LLL II, 19. how will gethan)-. to be gone: you are sped, Merch. II, 9, 72. he t. hit wit, IV, 3,147. t. hit prodigal witt in bootlett sped with spavins, Shr. Ill, 2,53. we three are married, rhymes, V,2,64. we number nothing that we t. for you, but you two are sped, V, 2,185. I am sped, Rom. HI, 1,94. 198. thou —ett such high-day wit in praiting him, b) to assist, to guard, to favour; used only in ex- Merch. II, 9, 98. that we with thee may t. our wonder pressing wishes; absol.: God t. B3 II, 3, 6 (only in too, All's II, 1,92. this man may help me to hit majesty's Ff). With an object: heaven to t. me in my time to ear, if he would t. hit power, V, 1, 8. t. a fawn upon come, Wiv. Ill, 4, 12. Hymen now with luckier ittue t. 'em, Cor. Ill, 2,67. and t. our JtaUeriet, to drink thote us, Ado V, 3, 32. God t. fair Helena I Mids. 1,1,180. men . . . , Tim. I, 2, 142. this night I'll t. unto a fatal Fortune t. ut, Wint. IV, 4, 681. R2 I, 4, 32. H6A III, end, Mcb. Ill, 5,20. I wore my Ufe to t. upon hit haters, 2,60. H81,1,62. Case. 1,2,88.11,4,41. Lr. IV, 6,212. Ant. V, 1, 9. hit comfort» thrive, hit trialt well are Bpeedlly, quickly, with haste: Meas. 1,4,84. Ill, spent, Cymb. V, 4, 104. in your tearch t. your ad1, 274. All's I, 3, 124. V, 3, 152. H4A HI, 1, 197. venturous worth, Per. 11, 4, 51. IV, 1, 92. 133. H6CIV, 6,102. H8 111,2, 89. Lr. Ill, To s. one's mouth, nsed of dogs, = to bark: then 7, 1. IV, 2, 80. Cymb. Ill, 5, 27. do they s. their mouths; Echo replies, Ven. 695. coward SpeedlneM, quickness, haste: Cymb. II, 4, 31. dogs most s. their mouths, H5 II, 4, 70. he will t. hit Speedy, 1) quick, hasty: Lucr. 695.1853. Gent. mouth and promite, like Brabbler the hound, Troil. V, 1, 3, 37. All's 1, 2, 7. Wint. Ill, 1, 13. John II, 554. 1, 98. cf. above: —t her eyet, Lucr. 1457. H4A 1,3,120. V, 4, 55. H6AIV, 3,1. V, 3, 5. 8. R3 Applied to words, = to utter, to speak: where III, 1, 60. Tit. II, 1, 110. Rom. IV, 5, 146. Tim. II, wordt are tcarce, they're teldom tpent in vain, R2 II, 1 2, 28. Hml. IV, 6, 33 (—er adverbially . Lr. I, 5, 4. 1, 7. I will but t. a word here in the houte, Oth. I, 2, IV, 2, 82. IV, 6, 217. V, 1, 65. Ant. V, 1, 67 {with 48. cf. we may at bootlett t. our vain command upon your —ett bring ut what the says; cf. with your earliest, the enraged toldiert, H5 III, 3, 24. and in hit botom t. Oth. II, 3, 7). my latter gasp, H6A II, 5, 38. as if I borrowed mine 2) soon to be expected, quickly approaching, near: oaths of him and might not s. them at my pleasure, God tend you a t. infirmity, Tw. I, 5, 84. hath tent Cymb. II, 1, 6. out a s. power to encounter you, H4B 1,1, 133. craves Applied to notions of passion, = to indulge, to your company for s. counsel, H6C II, 1, 208. I will vent: he did behave hit anger ere 'twat tpent, Tim. Ill, teish her s. strength, Cor. I, 3, 87. arm you to this s. 5,22. the fury spent, Wint 111,3,26. on sheep or oxen voyage, Hml. Ill, 3, 24. could I s. my fury, H6B V, 1, 27. men ne'er s. their Speken, obsol. for speak, substituted by M. Edd. fury on a child, H6C V, 5, 57. thy fury spent, Tim. for spoken of O. Edd. in Per. II Prol. 12. IV, 3, 127. to s. his fury upon himtelf, Ant. IV, 6, 10.

1100

s

cf. Sonn. 100, 3. he may icell in fretting s. hit gall, H6AI,2,16. our cannon's malice vainly shall be spent, John II, 251. what I think I utter, and i. my malice in my breath, Cor. II, 1, 58. the life and feeling of her passion she hoards, to s. when he is by to hear her, Lucr. 1318. you s. your passion on a misprised mood, Mids. Ill, 2, 74. do I not s. revenge upon myself with present moant Sonn. 149, 7. he's worth more sorrow, and that I'll s. for him, Mcb. V, 8, 51. cf. he robs himself that —s a bootless grief, Oth. I, 3, 209. 2) to part with, to give away, to lose: and gain by ill thrice more than I have spent, Sonn. 119, 14. this arm shall do it, or this life be spent, R2 1,1,108. words, life and all, old Lancaster hath spent, R2 II, 1, 150. nought's had, all's spent, where our desire is got without content, Mcb. 111,2,4. s. your rich opinion for the name of a night-brawler, Oth. 11,3,195. on either side I come to s. my breath, Cymb. V, 3, 81 ( = to lose my life). 3) to consume, to nse up: Mouldy, it is time you tcere spent, H4B 111, 2, 128. stale and hoar ere it be spent, Rom. II, 4, 140. 146. 4) to consume, to waste, to exhaust, to destroy, to finish: s. the dowry of a lawful bed, Lucr. 938. what spite hath thy fair colour spent f 1600. pitiful thrivers, in their gazing spent, Sonn. 125, 8. if Cupid have not spent all his quiver in Venice, Ado 1,1,273. you s. but time, Merch. I, 1, 153. —ing his manly marrow in her arms, All's II, 3, 298. my son and my servant x. all, Shr. V, 1,72. not to s. it (blood) so unneighbourly, Jolin V, 2, 39. he shall s. mine honour with his shame, R2 V, 3, 68. did my brother s. his youth, his valour, coin and people, in the wars f H6B 1, 1, 78. s. her strength with overmatching waves, H6CI,4,21. though we have spent our harvest of this king, R3 II, 2, 115. after so many hours, lives, speeches spent, Troil. 11,2,1. Partic. spent = exhausted: two spent swimmers, Mcb. I, 2, 8. almost spent with hunger, Cymb. Ill, 6, 63. cf. H6A II, 5, 8. Ant. IV, 15, 85. = gone, passed: foretell new storms to those already spent, Lucr. 1589. when tyrant's crests and tombs of brass are spent, Sonn. 107, 14. a beauty spent and done, Compl. 11. the time is spent, Ven. 255. the night is spent, 717. R2 I, 3, 211. II, 1, 154. H6B III, 1, 325. R3 III, 2, 91. 5) to lay ont, to expend; abso).: spare not to s. Pilgr. 324. thou hast wherewith to s. 408. H4A IV, 1, 54. With an object: Sonn. 9, 9. Gent. II, 4, 39. 41. Wiv. II, 2, 166. 241. Err. II, 2, 99. Merch. Ill, 1, 96. Tw. I, 5, 302. R2 II, 1, 180. Tim. Ill, 4, 26 (cf. Of). Mcb. V, 8, 60. Hml. V, 2, 137. Ant. V, 2, 305 etc. 6) to pass (time): Ven. 847. Lucr. 1577. Sonn. 100, 6. Gent. 1, 3, 5. 14. 66. II, 4, 63. 80. IV, 2, 104. Err. 1,1,133. L L L II, 68. IV, 3,182. V, 2,831. Mids. 11,2,112. R 2 I , 3, 219. H4A I, 1, 56. V, 2, 83. H6A 11,5,116. H6CV, 7, 42. R 3 I , 4, 5. Mcb. II, 1,23 etc. S p e n d t h r i f t , a prodigal: a s. of his tongue, Tp. II, 1, 24. Adjectively: a s. sigh, Hml. IV, 7, 123. Spenser, the celebrated English poet: Pilgr. 109. Spermaceti, see Parmaceti. Sperr, to shut; Theobald's emendation generally received by M. Edd. in Troil. Prol. 19 (O. Edd. stirre). Spet, see Spit vb. Sphere, the orbit in which a star moves: Tp. II, I, 183. Mids. II, 1, 7. 153. 111. 2, 61. As 111, 2, 3. All's 1, 1, 100. John V, 7, 74. H4A V, 4, 65. Rom. II, 2, 17. Hml. IV, 7, 15. Ant. IV, 15, 10. as they did battery to the —s intend, Compl. 23 (i. e. to the stars).

all kind of natures that labour on the bosom of this s. Tim. I, 1, 66 (the earth). The stars supposed to produce an unearthly music by their motion: discord in the s, As II, 7,6. music from the — s , Tw. Ill, 1,121. Ant. V, 2, 84. Per. V, 1, 231. — Figurative use: how have mine eyes out of their —s befitted, Sonn. 119,7. make thy two eyes, like stars, start from. their — t , Hml. I, 5, 17. to be called into a huge s., and not to be seen to move in't, Ant. II, 7, 16. S p h e r e d , 1) placed in a sphere: therefore is the glorious planet Sol in noble eminence enthroned and s. Troil. 1,3,90. — 2) round: blow, till thy s. bias cheek outncell the colic of puffed Aquilon, Troil. IV, 5, 8. S p h e r i c a l , 1) planetary: knaves, thieves, and treachers, by s. predominance, Lr. I, 2, 134. 2) globular, round: she is s. like a globe, Err. Ill, 2,116. her foot is fixed upon a s. stone, H5 III, 6, 37. S p h e r y , star-like, celestial: Hermia's s. eyne, Mids. II, 2, 99. S p h i n x , the monster of ancient fable, that proposed riddles to the passers-by: subtle as S. L L L IV, 3, 342. S p l a l , spy: writing of some M. Edd. in H6A I, 4, 8; O. Edd. espials. S p i c e , subst. an aromatic vegetable substance used for seasoning: Wint. IV, 3, 128. Plur. —*: Merch. 1,1, 33. Wint. IV, 3, 125. Rom. IV, 4 , 1 . Per. III,1,66. 111,2,66. Figuratively: thy by-gone fooleries were but —» of it, Wint. Ill, 2, 185 (served only to season it, to give it a zest), for all this s. of your hypocrisy, H8 II, 3,26 (taste, tincture), the s. and salt that season a man, Troil. 1,2,277. he hath —s of them all, not all, Cor. IV, 7, 46. Splee, vb. to season with spice, to make aromatic: Mids. II, 1, 124. Tim. IV, 3, 40. Splcery, spices, aromatic substances: in that nest of s. R3 IV, 4, 424. Spider, the insect Aranea: Meas. 111,2,289. Mids. I I , 2 , 2 0 . Merch. Ill, 2,121. Wint. II, 1, 40. 45. John IV, 3, 128. R2 III, 2, 14 (thy —s, that suck up thy venom). H6B III, 1, 339. R3 I, 2. 19. I, 3, 242. IV, 4, 81. Troil. II, 3, 18. Rom. I, 4, 61. Cymb. IV, 2,90. Spider-like, like a Spider: H8 I, 1, 62. S p l g e t , a peg put into the faucet to keep in the liqaor: will thou the s. wieldt Wiv. I, 3, 24. Spill (impf. and partic. spilled or spilt) 1) to shed; once used of tears: Lucr. 1236. Usually of blood: Ven. 1167. Lucr. 999. 1801. L L L IV, 1, 35. John III, 1, 102. R2 I, 2, 19. II, 1, 131. V, 5, 115. H4B 11,2,122. H 6 A I V , 6 , 22. R3 1,3,125 (Ff spent). III,3,22. Rom. 111,1,152. Tim. Ill, 5,88. Ant. IV,8,3. 2) to destroy: so full of artless jealousy is guilt, it —s itself in fearing to be spilt, Hml. IV, 5, 20. crack nature's moulds, all germens s. at once, Lr. Ill, 2, 8. cf. Lucr. 1801 and R2 V, 5, 115. Spilth, effusion: our vaults have wept with drunken s. of wine, Tim. II, 2, 169. Spin (impf. and partic. spun) 1) tr. and intr. to draw out into threads; to work at drawing threads: Lucr. Arg. 10. Gent. Ill, 1, 316. Tw. I, 3,110. H6B IV, 2, 31. Cor. I, 3, 93. 2) to issue in a thread or small current: make incision in their hides, that their hot blood may s. in English eyes, H5 IV, 2, 10. S p l n l l , name in All's II, 1, 43: in the regiment of the S.

s S p i n n e r , a spider with long legs: Mids. 11,2, 21. Rom. I, 4, 59. S p i n s t e r , one whose occupation is to spin: Tw. II, 4, 45. HS I, 2, 33. Oth. 1, 1, 24. S p i r e , top, snmmit: to silence that, which, to the s. and top of praises vouched, would teem but modest, Cor. 1, 9, 24. S p i r i t (dissyll. and monosyll.) 1) vital power, life: the expense of t. in a waste of shame is lust in action, Sonn. 129, 1. the breath of heaven hath blown hit (the coal's) t. out, John IT, 1, 110. now my s. is going; I can no more, Ant. IV, 15, 58. Plnr. — t : my —s, as in a dream, are all bound up, Tp. 1, 2, 486. my —s are nimble, II, 1, 202. weariness, to the dulling of my — t , III, 3, 6. these things smother her —s up, Ado IV, 1, 113. thought / thy —s were stronger than thy shames, 127. L L L IV, 3, 306. As II, 4, 1. All's V, 1, 2. Wint. V, 3, 41. John 11, 232. Cymb. I, 5, 41 etc. 2) vivacity, mettle, fire, courage: defect of s., life and bold audacity, Lncr. 1346. I do applaud thy s. Gent. V, 4,140. I have s. to do any thing, Meas. 111,1, 213. all things are with more s. chased than enjoyed, Merch. II, 6, 13. woo her with some s. Shr. II, 170. let thy blood and s. embrace them, Tw. II, 5, 160. threw off his s., his appetite, his sleep, Wint. II, 3, 16. John V, 4, 2. 1I4A IV, 1, 101. H6B 111, 2, 308. H6C I, 2, 43. R3 III, 4, 52. Cor. I, 5, 14. Cymb. V, 3, 35 etc. Plur. —s: summon up your dearest — s , L L L II, 1. pluck up thy —s, Shr. IV, 3, 38. you do draw my — s from me with new lamenting ancient oversights, H4B II, 3, 46. H5 II, 1, 72. H6A V, 2, 1. H6C II, 2, 56. Ant. Ill, 13, 69. V, 2, 173 etc. 3 temper, disposition, sentiments: I measure him by my own s.,for I should flout him, Ado II, 3, 149. the man hath a contemptible s. 188. his jesting s. Ill, 2, 60. a man of great s. L L L 1, 2, 2. it (reckoning) fitteth the s. of a tapster, 43. of such a merry, nimble, stirring s. V, 2, 16. that's the way to choke a gibing s. 868. allay with some cold drops of modesty thy slapping s. Merch. II, 2, 196. thou shall see the difference of our s. IV, 1, 368 ( Q l - circle) disperse to nought, I, 2, 135. Jove's —ing the ground; only in the par tic. — e d : —ed snakes, tree, H6CV,2,14. her clothes s. wide, Hml. IV, 7,176. Mids. II, 2, 9. — ed livers, Troil. V, 3, 18. the —ed b) to be propagated from one place to others: die, Tim. V, 4, 34. a handkerchief —ed with straw- dying fear through all her body s. Lucr. 1266. lest his berries, Oth. Ill, 3, 435. infection s. further, Cor. Ill, 1, 311. 2) to stain, to taint: Lucr. 196. 721. 1172. Sonn. Sprig, a small shoot, a spray: Lr. II, 3, 16. 95, 3. W i n t I, 2, 328. B3 I, 3, 283. Oth. V, 1, 36. Sprlght or S p r i t e , = spirit; 1) mood, occa— ed= polluted, guilty: this —ed and inconstant man, sional state of the mind: with a lazy s. Ven. 181.

strife, Err. Ill, 2, 27; cf. of the same piece is every flatterer'» s. Tim. Ill, 2, 72 ( M . Edd. spirit, port etc.). in a merry s. let the forfeit be nominated far an equal pound of your fair flesh, Merch. I, 3, 146. what it thist s.t Wint. II, I, 58. name not your loss your s. Cymb. II, 4, 48. in s. = in jest: A d o I, 1, 179. A i I, 2, 30. IV, 3, 157. Lr. 11, 1, 37. — contemptuous jesting, mockery: you shall buy this s. as dear, Err. IV, 1, 81. would behold in me this shameful s. IV, 4, 108. to fashion this false s. Mills. Ill, 2, 194. all to make you s. 161. he wouldmake but a s. of it, Ado II, 3, 163. to make s. at, or with, — to mock at: make ». at me, W i r . Ill, 3, 160. lest she make s. at it, Ado 111,' 1, 58. to make s. withal, As

1106

S

intending weariness u>ith heavy s. Lacr. 121. cheer we cherish —s, Lucr. 950 (perhaps also in 869). shall in the $. of love thy love-springs rott Err. Ill, 2, 3. up hie —i, Mcb. IT, 1, 127. 2) mind, soul: her winged s. Lucr. 1728. the quin4) an elastic body used in locks; a spring-lock: tessence of every s. heaven would in little show, As III, to the trunk again, and »hut the s. of it, Cymb. 11,2,47. 2, 147. Troil. I, 3, 56 (Ff spirit). S p r i n t , vb. (impf. sprang: H6C T, 7, 31. Cor. I, 3) any supernatural being: Tp. 1,2,381. 11,2,121. 3,17. sprung: Ven. 1168. Err. I, 1, 6. H4B 1,1,111. Err. II, 2, 192. Mids. II, 1, 33. T, 400. Wint. II, 1, H8 III, I, 7. Tim. 1,2,116. Hml. Ill, 1,186. Partic. 26. 28. Mcb. Ill, 5, 27. = ghost: Lacr. 451. Mids. sprung) 1) to leap, to bound: away he — s , Ven. 258. from whence with life he never more sprung up, H4B V, 388. Troil. Ill, 2, 34 (Q spirit). Mcb. II, 3, 84. 8 p r i g h t « 4 , haunted: I am s. with a fool, Cymb. 1,1,111. straight —s out into fast gait, H8 111,2,116. Metaphorically, = to exult: I sprang not more in joy II, 3, 144. S f r i | h t f a l | or Spriteful, full of spirit: a s. noble at first hearing he was a man-child, Cor. I, 3, 17. cf. joy ...at that instant like a babe sprung up, Tim. I, gentleman, J o h n IT, 2, 177. 2,116 (quibbling: exulted; and flowed forth as from S p r l g h t f a l l r » with great spirit: R2 I, 3, 3. 8 | r i f h t l i f , playing the spirit; the service done a fountain). 2) to rise out of the ground and grow by vegeby a spirit: and do my s. gently, Tp. I, 2, 298. S p r i g h t l y or Sprltely, 1) lively, brisk, in good tative power: Ven. 167. 417. Pilgr. 378. B2 I, 2, 13. spirits: dance canary with s.fire and motion, All's II, H5 II, 4, 40. H6C II, 6, 50. H8 III, 1, 7. Tit. T, 1, 9. I, 78. that s. Scot of Scots, H4A II, 4, 377. my s. Hml. T, 1, 263. Lr. IT, 4, 17. With up: Ven. 1168. brethren, Troil. II, 2, 190. thy s. comfort, Ant. IT, 7, Troil. I, 2,190. Csed of any manner of growing and 15. we'll... with our s. port mate the ghosts gaze, IT, rising or thriving: as my duty —s, so perish they, 14, 52. be s., for you faU 'mongst friends, Cymb. Ill, H6A III, 1, 175. they never then had sprung like summer-flies, H6CII, 6,17. there is sprung up an heretic, 6, 75. Adverbially: address yourself to entertain them s. H8 III, 2, 101. cf. Gallant-springing. Hence = to issue, to proceed, to originate; with Wint. IT, 4, 53. it (war) is s. walking, audible, and full of vent, Cor. IT, 5, 237 ("the expression refers to from: Err. 1,1, 6. Ill, 2, 55. L L L IT, 3, 304. H6A II, the more lively and definite advance of a hound, ari- '4, 85. 111,1,166. H6C III, 2,126. 111,3,67. T , 7 , 3 1 . sing from the discovery of good vent, i. e. scent, as Rom. I, 5, 140. Tim. IT, 3, 203. Hml. Ill, 1, 186. IT, compared with the dissatisfied snuffings and uncertain 5, 76. Lr. 1, 1, 188. I, 4, 302. Per. T, 1, 29. With of: progress when nothing is in view." Edinb. Rev. Oct what stock he —s o f , Cor. II, 3, 245. With the adv. whence: whence —s this deep despairf H6C III, 3, 12 '72, p. 342. Most M. Edd. sprightly, waking). 2) having the quality of a spirit: Jupiter appeared {from whence: L L L IT, 3, 304. H6A III, 1, 166. HCC to me, with other s. shows of mine own kindred, Cymb. T , 7 , 3 1 ) . 3) to issue as from a fountain: clear wells s. not, T, 5, 428. Spring, subst. 1) fountain; source; in a proper Pilgr. 281. current« that s. from one most gracious and in a metaphorical sense: Lucr. 1455. Tp. 1,2,338. head, R2 III, 3, 108. II, 2, 164. R2 1,1, 97. H4A T, 2, 23. H6B III, 1,101. Sprlftge, a gin, a noose for catching birds: Wint. IT, 1, 72. H6C IT, 8, 55. R3 II, 2, 68. Tit. T, 2, 171. IT, 3,36. Hml. 1,3, 115. T, 2, 317. T, 3,167. Rom. Ill, 2,102. T, 3, 218. Tim. IT, 3,421. Spring-halt, a kind of lameness in which a horse Mcb. 1,2,27. 11,3,103. Hml. IT, 7, 20. Cymb. 11,3,23. suddenly twitches up his legs: H8 I, 3, 13. Spring-time, the vernal season: As T, 3,20. 26. 2) the vernal season (only once without the article: Tp. IT, 114): Ven. 141. Lucr. 331. 869. Sonn. 1, 10. Shr. II, 248. H6B III, 1, 337. H6C II, 3, 47. Tit. 53, 9. 98, 1. 104, 5. Pilgr. 132. Tp. IT, 114. LLL I, Ill, 1, 21. Sprinkle, 1) to scatter in drops: —s in your faces 1, 97. 101. T, 2, 901. Mids. II, 1, 111. As T, 3, 22. Tw. Ill, 1, 161. Wint. IT, 4, 113. T, 1, 152. R2 I, 3, your reeking villany, Tim. Ill, 6, 102. upon the heat 214. Ill, 4,48. T, 2, 47. H4B I, 3, 38. H6B III, 1,31. and flame of thy distemper s. cool patience, Hml. Ill, H6C II, 2, 163. R3 III, 1, 94. H8 III, 1, 8. Hml. I, 3, 4, 124. 39. Per. I, 1, 12. Emblematic of youth: the tender s. 2) to scatter on in drops, to besprinkle: that blood upon thy tempting lip, Yen. 127. thy vices bud before should s. me to make me grow, R2 V, 6, 46. s. our thy s. Lucr. 604. stealing away the treasure of his s. society with thankfulness, Tim. Ill, 6, 79. Sonn. 63,8. farewell, the latter s. H4A I, 2, 177 (end Sprite, 8 p r l t « f a l , Sprltely, see Spright etc. of the spring; i. e. a man old in years and young in Spraat, vb. to grow fast and high that it may desires), id's S. became a harvest, Cymb. 1,1,46. who grow and s. as high as heaven, H4B II, 3, 60. withered in her s. of year, Per. IT, 4, 35. Spruce, 1) trim (in a bad sense), affected: too Hence = the beginning, the first and freshest part picked, too s., too affected, too odd, LLL T, 1,14. threeof any state or time: love's gentle s. doth always fresh piled hyperboles, s. affectation, T, 2, 407. remain, Ven. 801. thy hasty s. still blasts, Lucr. 49. 2) brisk, dashing: now, my s. companions, Shr. IT, our love, was new and then but in the s. Sonn. 102, 5. 1, 116. how this a. of love resembleth the uncertain glory of an Sponge and Spongy, see Sponge and Spongy. April day, Gent I, 3, 84. in the s. of love, Err. Ill, 2, Spar, subst. 1) the instrument worn on horsemen's 3. the April's in her eyes: it is love's s. Ant. 111,2,43. heels to prick the horses: Ven.285. Sonn.50,9. Meas. in this new s. of time, R2 T, 2, 50. Even: since the I, 2, 166. All's II, 5, 40. Wint. I, 2, 96. H4B I, 1, 42. middle summer's s. Mids. II, 1, 82. as sudden as flaws 49. IT, 1, 119. Rom. II, 4, 73. Caes. IT, 2, 25. T, 3, congealed in the s. of day, H4B IT, 4, 35. 15. Mcb. I, 6, 23. set —s, Wiv. IT, 5, 70. usurping 3) a young shoot, a sprig: this canker that eats up his —s too long, All's IT, 3, 119 (in the ceremonial love's tender s. Ven. 656. to dry the old oak's sap and | degradation of a knight his spurs were hacked off from

s

1107

hia legs), giving rein* and —» to my free speech, B2 203. — to be angry with: I know no personal cause I, 1, 55. from helmet to the ». H5 IV, 6, 6. horsemen to s. at him, Caes. II, 1, 11. Spy, subst. 1) seer, perceiver, observer: if these that make to him on the s. Caes. V, 3, 29. Figuratively, = incitement, instigation: finds be true —es which I wear in my head, here's a goodly brotherhood in thee no sharper s.t B2 I, 2, 9. H6B 1, sight, Tp. V, 259. 3, 153. Tim. Ill, 6, 73. Caes. II, 1, 123. Mcb. I, 7, 2) one watching, or sent to watch, the movements 25. Per. Ill, 3,23. With to: which is another s. to my of others: Ven. 655. Tp. I, 2, 455. Gent. V, 1, 10. departure, Wint. IV, 2, 10. Troil. II, 2, 200. Lr. II, John IV, 1, 129. Cor. I, 6,18. Lr. Ill, 1,24. V, 3,17. Ant. Ill, 7, 78. With on: or on my frailties why are 1, 78 (Ff spirits). 2) a ahoot of the root of a tree: by the —s plucked frailer —es, Sonn. 121, 7. the heaven sets —es upon up the pine and cedar, Tp. V, 47. grief and patience, us, Wint. V, 1, 203. rooted in him both, mingle their —s together, Cymb. IV, 3) an advanced guard, Fr. iclaireur, Germ. Plankler: when sorrows come, they come not single —es, but 2, 58. Spar, vb. to prick and drive with the spar; trans.: in battalions, Hml. IV, 5, 78. within this hour at most LLL IV, 1,1. As III, 4, 47. R2 IV, 72. H6C V, 7, 9. I will advise you where to plant yourselves; acquaint R3 V, 3,340. H8 V, 3,23. Trail. IV, 5, 186. Absol.: you with the perfect s. o' the time, the moment on't, Mcb. Sonn. 50, 12. 51, 7. R2 II, 3, 58. Tim. IV, 3, 153. III, 1, 130 (i. e. that which will precede the time of = to ride fast, to travel with great expedition: B2 the deed, and indicate that it is at hand). Perhaps II, 1, 36. V, 2, 112. H4B I, 1, 36. H6A IV, 3, 19. also in Cor. 1, 6, 18. Caes. V, 3, 30 (he —s on). Mcb. Ill, 3, 6. A n t III, Bpr> vb. 1) intr. to look, to pry: revealing day 1, 7. through every cranny —es, Lucr. 1086. now will I to Figuratively, = 1) to incite, to impel: love will the chink, to s. an lean hear my Thisby's face, Mids. not be —ed to what it loathes, Gent. V, 2, 7. LLL II, V, 195. I s. You s.I what do you s. f Troil. Ill, 1,102 119. Troil. V, 3, 48. Hml. IV, 4, 33. With forth-, my ("the usual exclamation at a childish game called Hie, desire did s. me forth, Tw. in, 3, 5. with on .* Meas. spy, hie". Steevens). With into: what a man cannot IV, 2, 85. B2 IV, 53. 2) to hasten: so much they s. smell out, he may s. into, Lr. 1,5, 24. it is my nature's their expedition, Gent. V, 1, 6. that to the pace of it 1 plague to s. into abuses, Oth. Ill, 3, 147. may s. on my journey, Cor. 1,10, 33. Opposed to stop 2) tr. to perceive, to see: like one that —es an in both senses: whose spiritual counsel shall stop or s. adder, Ven. 878. she —ed the hunted boar, 900. —es me, Wint. II, 1, 187. discover to me what both you s. the foul boar's conquest, 1029. he—es Lucretia's glove, and stop, Cymb. I, 6, 99. Lucr. 316. in thy shady cell, where none may s. him, 8pur-(alled, wounded with the spar; s. and tired sits Sin, 881. he —ed in her some blemish, 1358. such by jouncing Bolingbroke, B2 V, 5, 94 (Qq spurr'd, signs of truth in his plain face she — ed, 1532. he, —ing galled). her, bounced in, Pilgr. 83. Love ... —ed a blossom, 8purl*, name in All's II, 1, 43. IV, 3, 184. 229 and LLL IV, 3, 103. what is in Silvia's face, but 8 p a r n , subst. 1) a thrust, a stroke, a hurt: that I may s. more fresh in Julia's, Gent V, 4, 114. Is. which gives my soul the greatest «., is dear Lavinia, entertainment in her, Wiv. I, 3, 48. IV, 2, 204. IV, 6, Tit. HI, 1, 101. who diet that bears not one s. to their 43. Meas. Ul, 2, 44. Ado II, 3, 254. Mids. ill, 2, 19. graves of their friends giftl Tim. I, 2, 146. V, 187. 328. Shr. IV, 2, 60. All's III, 5, 93. B2II, 1, 2) a kick, an insult: the —* that patient merit of 271. H4B II, 2, 87. H6A 1,1,127. 1,4,19. 22. H6B the unworthy takes, Hml. Ill, 1, 73. I, 1, 242. H6C III, 2, 136. IV, 6, 28. V, 3, 4. B3 I, 8 p n r n , vb. 1) to strike with the foot, to kick; 1, 26 (Ff see). I, 4, 270. Troil. I, 2,153.165. Bom. trans.: that like a football you do s. me thust you s. me IV, 1, 68. Tim. I, 2, 52. Lr. II, 4, 250. Oth. 1,1,77. hence, and he will s. me hither, Err. II, 1, 83. and s. to s. out (= to look out in Tim. Ill, 2, 67): what eye in pieces posts of adamant, H6A 1,4,52. Usually ex- but such an eye would s. out such a quarrel? Bom. ill, pressive of disdain and contempt, or of anger: spaniel- 1, 23. like, the more she —s my love, the more it fawneth on 8«uahfcle, to quarrel, to brawl: Oth. II, 3, 281. her, Gent. IV, 2,14. Mids. II, 1, 205. Ill, 2, 225. 313. S t u a t r a n , part of an army; a troop: H6A IV, 2, Merch. I, 3, 119. 128. 132. John II, 24. H6C I, 4, 23. Caes. II, 2, 20. Oth. I, 1, 22. A n t III, 9, 1. 58. Cor. V, 3,165. Tim. 1, 1, 85.281. Caes. Ill, 1,46. S«uaBder, 1) tr. to scatter: and other ventures he Ant. II, 5, 63. HI, 5, 17. Cymb. IV, 1, 20. V, 5,294. hath, —ed abroad, Merch. I, 3, 22. Intr.; with against: why thou against the church, 2) intr. to go at random and without a certain aim our holy mother, so wilfully dost s. John III, 1, 142 (cf. Scatter, intr.): the wise man's folly is anatomized (cf. to kick against the prides, Acts IX, 5). With at: even by the —ing glances of the fool, As II, 7, 57. —s at his love, ... beating his kind embracements with Square, subst ljrule, regularity, just proportion: her heels, Ven. 311. wouldst thou not spit at me and s. I have not kept my s., but that to come shall att be done at me, Err. II, 2, 136. —s enviously at straws, Hml. by the rule, A n t II, 3,6. all other joys, which the most IV, 5, 6. With upon: I'll strike thee to my foot, ands. precious s. of sense prof esses, Lr. I, 1, 76 (-— which upon thee, B3 I, 2, 42. the soundest sense acknowledges as joys. Qq possesses 2) to treat with contempt, to scorn; trans.: he shall for professes; see below). s. fate, scorn death, Mcb. Ill, 5, 30. what safe and 2) squadron, troop: our —s of battle, H5IV, 2,28. nicely I might well delay ...I disdain and s. Lr. V, 3, no practice tn the brave —s of war, Ant. Ill, 11, 40. 145. Intr., with at: thou that —est at right, at law, at 3) equal extent on all sides; compass, range (?): reason, Lucr. 880. in vain Is. at my confirmed despite, all other joys, which the most precious s. of sense 1026. to s. at your most royal image, H4B V, 2, 89. possesses, Lr. I, 1, 76 (Ff professes for possesses). wilt thou s. at his edict and f u f f i l a man'tf B3 I, 4, 4) the embroidery on the bosom part of a shift

1108

S

(Nares and Toilet): you would think a smock were a Wint. I, 2, 171. like to a trusty s. did run away, H6A the-angel, he to chants to the sleeve-hand and the work IV, 1, 23. some such s. he was that turned your wit the about the s. on't, Wint. IV, 4, 212. seamy side without, Oth. IV, 2, 145. S q u a r e , adj. 1) having four equal rides: ray queen's S q a i r e - I I k e , like an attendant: to knee his throne ». brow, Per. Y, 1, 109 (a forehead as high as it is and s. pension beg, Lr. II, 4, 217. broad, consequently a high forehead). S q u i r r e l , the animal Sciurus: Gent. IV, 4, 59. 2) suitable: for those that were, it is not s. to take Mids. IV, 1, 40. Bom. I, 4, 68. on those that are, revenges, Tim. V, 4, 36. With to: if S t a b , subst. a thrust with the sharp point of a report be s. to her, Ant. II, 2, 190 ( = if she is such weapon: Tp. Ill, 3, 63. Mcb. II, 3, 119. In a moral as the report goes). sense: this sudden s. of rancour, R3 III, 2, 89. S q u a r e , vb. 1) to adjust, to regulate, to shape: S t a b , vb. 1) to thrust or to kill with the point of thou art said to have a stubborn soul, that apprehends a weapon: Lucr. Arg. 21. Gent. IV, 1, 51. Meas. IV, no further than this world, and —st thy life according, 3, 19. Wint. I, 2, 138. H4A II, 4, 160. H5 IV, 5, 7. Meas.V,487. with us that s. our guess by shows, All's H6B IV, 1, 65. 137. H6C II, 4 , 6 . II, 6, 30. V, 5, 53. II, 1, 153. I will be —d by this (dream) Wint. Ill, 3, R3 I, 2, 11. 182. 242. I, 3, 212. I, 4, 56. 101. 108. 41. 0, that ever I had —d me to thy counselI V, 1, 52. Ill, 3, 16. IV, 4, 63. Tit. V, 2, 47. 100. 103. Bom. to s. the general sex by Cressid's rule, Troil. V, 2, II, 4, 14. Tim. V, 1, 105. Caes. Ill, 2,157. I am—ed 132 ( = to judge), how franticly I s. my talk, Tit. with laughter, L L L V, 2, 80 ( = I have side-stitches). Obscene double-meaning: he —ed me in mine own III, 2, 31. 2) to qnarrel: they never meet ... but they do s. house, H4BII, 1,15. if Caesar had —ed their mothers, Mids. II, 1, 30. are you such fools to s. for thist T i t Caes. I, 2, 277. cf. Wint. 1, 2, 138(?). II, 1, 100. 124. 'twere pregnant they should s. between 2) absol. to make or offer a thrust with the point themselves, Ant. II, 1, 45. mine honesty and I begin to of a weapon: —ing steel, Wint. IV, 4, 748. he will s. s. Ill, 13,41. H4B II, 1, 13. Caes. Ill, 2, 180. 188. IV, 3, 20. With 8 | a f t r e r , quarreller: it there no young s. now that at: to s. at half an hour of my life, H4B IV, 5, 109. will make a voyage with him to the devil, Ado I, 1, 82. In a moral sense, = to mortify, to be extremely cutS q u a s h , an unripe peascod: Mistress S., your ting: she speaks poniards, and every word — s , Ado (Peaseblossora's) mother, Mids. Ill, 1, 191. as a s. is II, 1, 255. to say a soldier lies, is — ing, Oth. Ill, 4, before 'tis a peascod, Tw. I, 5, 166. this kernel, this 6. cf. first let my words s. him, H6B IV, 1, 66; and s., this gentleman, Wint. I, 2, 160. see H6C II, 1, 98. S q u e a k , to cry with a shrill acute tone: Merch. 3) to drive, to plunge, to thrust (the weapon as II, 5, 30 (Ff Q2.3.4 squealing). Tw. II, 3, 97. R3 I, 4, object): s. poniards in our flesh, H6C II, 1, 98. 54 (Ff shrieked). Hml. I, 1, 116. Ant. V, 2, 220. S t a b l e , subst. a house for horses: All's II, 3, 301. S q u e a l , to cry with a shrill voice: the vile —ing John V, 2, 140. E 2 111, 3, 117. V, 5, 72. H4A II, 1, of the wry-necked f i f e , Merch. II, 5 , 3 0 (Ql squeaking), 39. 106. if your husband have —s enough, you'll see ghosts did shriek and s. Caes. II, 2, 24. he shaU lack no barns, Ado III, 4, 48. I'U keep my —s Squeeze, to press closely with the fingers: Hml. where I lodge my wife, Wint. II, 1, 134 (Ingleby: to keep one's —s meant to keep personal watch over IV, 2, 22. one's wife's chastity. The common interpretation, acSqnele, name in H4B III, 2, 23. S q u i e r or S q u i r e , a square, a rule, a measure: cording to which Antigonus would be hinting at some do not you know my lady's foot by the s. t LLL V, 2, unnatnral propensity of Semiramis recorded by Pliny, 474. twelve foot and a half by the s. Wint. IV, 4,348. presupposes in the poet's audience too much scholarship and too strong nerves). four foot by the s. H4A II, 2, 13. S t a b l e , adj. steady, constant: a smooth, discreet S q u i n t , to turn (the eye) to an oblique position: and s. bearing, Tw. IV, 3, 19. —s the eye, Lr. Ill, 4, 122. cf. Asquint. S t a b l e m e n , constancy: Mcb. IV, 3, 92. Squiiiy, to look asquint: dost thou s. at met Lr. S t a b l l a h , to establish: and s. quietness on every IV, 6, 140 (Qs squint). side, H6A V, 1, 10. Squire, see Squier. S t a b l l s h m e n t , settled inheritance: unto her he S q u i r e , 1) a gentleman next in rank to a knight: come cut and long-tail, under the degree of a s. Wiv. gave the s. of Egypt, A n t III, 6, 9 (cf. Establish). S t a e k , in Hay-stack, q. v. III, 4, 48. a bearing-cloth for a —'s child, Wint. Ill, Staff (plur. staves; the same form as Anglos, 3, 119. a landless knight makes thee a landed s. John 1, 177. now is this Vice's dagger become a s. H4B III, genitive in Tw. V, 292) 1) a stick carried for support, 2, 344. knights and —s, H5 IV, 8, 83. 94. I will make or used as a weapon: Gent. II, 3, 21. II, 5, 28. 31. you a s. of low degree, V, 1, 38 (allusion to a popular III, 1, 246. Ado V, 4, 126. Merch. II, 2, 72. H6B romance entitled 'The Squire of low degree'), a hun- IV, 2, 172. H8 V, 4, 8. Cor. I, 1, 70. Tit. I, 198. by dred knights and —s, Lr. I, 4, 262. no s. in debt, III, Jacob's s. Merch. II, 5, 36. hermits' slaves, H4B V, 1, 71. a palmer's s. H6B V, 1, 97. Hml. IV, 5, 25. he 2, 86. a — s cloth, Cymb. II, 3, 128. 2) an attendant on a noble warrior or on a royal holds Belzebub at the staves end, Tw. V, 292 (stands person: us that are —s of the night's body, H4A I, 2, at bay and keeps him off), the s. of my age, Merch. 27. my queen's a s. more tight at this than thou, Ant. II, 2, 70. we have no s., no stay, H6C II, 1, 69. of IV, 4, 14. cf. H5 IV, 8, 83. 94. Lr. I, 4, 262. his fortunes you should make a s. to lean upon, Ant. 3) a familiar title, given sometimes in tenderness, III, 13, 68. Proverbs: a s. is quickly found to beat a and sometimes in contempt; almost ~ fellow: a pro- dog, H6B HI, 1, 171. have at you with a proverb — per s.l Ado I, 3, 54. her womb then rich with my young Shall I set in my s.t Err. Ill, 1, 51 (is here a lance s. Mids. II, 1, 131. so stands this s. officed with me, meant? And does the expression receive some light

s from Ado V, 2, 20: you must put in the pike with a vieet). 2) a pole, a stake: the rampant bear chained to the ragged s. H6B V, 1, 203. 3) an ensign of office, a badge of authority: R2 II, 2, 59. II, 3, 27. H4A V, 1, 34. H4B IV, 1, 126. H6B I, 2, 25. II, 3, 23. 32. 43. = inagic wand: Tp. V,54. 4) the shaft of a lance; and the lance itself: John II, 318. H4B IV, 1, 120. B3 V, 3, 65. Mcb. V, 3,48. V, 7, 18. to break a s. = to tilt, to combnt with a lance: Ado V, 1, 138. As III, 4, 47. R3 V, 3, 341. Per. II, 3, 35 (cf. the German Lanzenbrechen). 5) a strophe, a stanza: let me hear a s., a stanze, a verse, LLL IV, 2, 107. Staffer«, name: H4A V, 3, 7. 13. V, 4,41. H4B I, 1, 18. H6B I, 4, 55. IV, 2, 120. IV, 4, 34. H6C 1, 1, 7. 10. IV, 1, 130. H8 1, 1, 200. Staffordshire, English county: H4B III, 2, 22. Stag, the male red deer: Wiv. V, 5, 14. As II, 1, 33. Shr. Ind. 2, 50. H6A IV, 2, 50. Tit. II, 3, 71. Ant. 1, 4, 65. Stage, snbst. 1) a temporary structure, a scaffold: that thete bodies high on a *. be placed to the view, Hml. V, 2, 389. 407. 2) die floor on which theatrical performances are exhibited (often in a figurative sense): Lucr. 278. 766. Sonn. 15, 3. 23, 1. Mids. Ill, 1, 4. Merch. I, 1, 78. As II, 7, 139. Tw. Ill, 4, 140. Wint. V, 1, 58R2 V, 2, 24. H4B I, 1, 155. H5 Prol. 3. Epil. 13. Rom. Prol. 12. Mcb. II, 4, 6. v, 5, 25. Hml. II, 2, 358. 588. Lr. IV, 6, 187. Per. Ill Prol. 59. 3) a single step of gradual process: supplying every s. with an augmented greeting, Ant. HI, 6, 54. to learn of me the —s of our story, Per. IV, 4, 9. S t a g e , vb. to exhibit publicly, as in a theatre: I do not like to s. me to their eyes, Meas. I, 1, 69. be — d to the show against a sworder, Ant. Ill, 13, 30. the quick comedians will s. us, V, 2, 217. Stagger, 1) tr. a) to make to reel, to fell down: that hand shall burn in never-quenching fire that —s thus my person, B2 V, 5, 110. b) to cause to hesitate, to bewilder: the question did at first so s. me, H8 II, 4, 212. 2) intr. to waver, to hesitate: without any pause or —ing take this basket, Wiv. Ill, 3, 12. whether the tyranny be in his place, or in his eminence, Is. in, Meas. 1, 2, 169. a man may s. in this attempt, As III, 3, 49. Stagger*, 1) a sensation which makes to reel; giddiness, vertigo: does the world go roundt Bow come these s. on met Cymb. V, 5, 233. 2) perplexity, bewilderment: I will throw thee from my care for ever into the s. and the careless lapse of youth and ignorance, All's II, 3, 170. 3) a disease of horses indicated by staggering and falling down: spoiled with the s. Shr. Ill, 2, 55. Staid, composed, calm: put thyself into a haviour of less fear, ere wildness vanquish my —er senses, Cymb. HI, 4, 10. Stain, subst. 1) any spot different from the colour of the ground: the s. upon his silver down will stay, Lucr. 1012. scarce blood enough to give each curtleaxe a s. H5 IV, 2, 21. upon thy cheek the s. doth sit of an old tear, Rom. II, 3, 75. press for tinctures, —», Caes. II, 2, 89. = a natural mole: full of unpleasing

1109

blots and sightless —s, John HI, 1, 45. you lo remember this s. upon her, Cymb. II, 4, 139. 2) tincture, tinge: you have some s. of soldier in you. All's I, 1, 122. there is no man hath a virtue that he hath not a glimpse of, nor any man an attaint but he carries some s. of it, Troil. I, 2, 26. 3) a taint of disgrace: Lucr. 1701. 1708. Sonn. 109, 8. Meas. Ill, 1, 208 (do no s. to your person). Wint. II, 2, 19. John II, 114. H4A III, 1, 187. 116A IV, 5, 42. R3 III, 7, 234. Cor. I, 10, 18 (suffering s. by him). Tim. V, 1, 176 (giving our virgins to the s. ...of beastly war). Cymb. II, 4, 140. s. to all nymphs, Ven.9 (by eclipsing tbem). s. to thy countrymen, H6A IV, 1, 45. Stain, vb. 1) tr. a) to dye, to tinge with a different colour: beauty would s. that ore with silver white, Lucr. 56. b) to discolour, to spot, to maculate; absol.: as the berry breaks before it —eth, Ven. 460. With an object: Yen. 664. 1122. Tp. II, 1, 64. Mids. V, 144. 288. As IV, 3, 98. Wint. V, 3, 82. John II, 45. 357. R2 IV, 29. V, 5, 111. H4A I, 1, 64. Ill, 2, 136. V, 2, 94. V, 4, 13. H4B V, 5, 25. H6A V, 4, 44. H6B II, 2, 65. Ill, 1, 259. IV, 1, 11. H6C I, 4, 79. 153. II, 3, 21. Cor. V, 6, 113. Tit. I, 116. Ill, 1, 125. 213. V, 2, 171. Rom. Ill, 3, 95. V, 3, 140. Lr. II, 4, 281. Ant. V, 1, 25. c) to darken, to dim: through their light joy seemed to appear, like bright things —ed, a kind of heavy fear, Lucr. 1435. clouds and eclipses s. both moon and sun, Sonn. 35, 3. to s. the track of his bright passage, R21ll,3,66. if that her breath will mist or s. the stone, Lr. V, 3, 262. In a moral sense, —- to eclipse: I'll raise the preparation of a war shall s. your brother, Ant. Ill, 4, 27. d) to disfigure, to deface: which (beauty) the hot tyrant (lust) —s and soon bereaves, Ven. 797. he's something —ed with grief, Tp. 1, 2, 414. —ed the beauty of a fair queen's cheeks with tears, R2 III, 1, 14. that any harm should s. so fair a show, III, 3, 71. I'll corrupt her manners, s. her beauty, R3 IV, 4, 206. e) to soil, to taint, to disgrace; absol.: lust and murder wake to s. and kill, Lucr. 168. would not put my reputation in any —ing act, All's III, 7, 7. With an object: Lucr. 196. 655. 684. 1181. 1655. 1743. 1836. Meas. II, 4, 55. Err. II, 2, 138. Ado III, 1,85. Mercb. I, 3, 140. John IV, 2, 6. H4A 1,1, 85. H6A IV, 5, 26. Troil. V, 2, 179. Tit. V, 3, 38. Rom. Ill, 1, 116. Tim. 1, 1, 16. Caes. II, 1, 132. Hml. IV, 4, 57. f ) to pervert, to corrupt: that it (my nature) could so preposterously be —ed, to leave for nothing all thy sum of good, Sonn. 109, 11. we must not so s. our judgment, to prostitute our malady to empirics, All's II, 1, 123. 2) intr. to grow dim, to be obscured, to be soiled: suns of the world may s. when heavens sun —eth, Sonn. 33, 14. if virtue's gloss wilt s. with any soil, LLL II, 48. Stained, adj. (see Appendix) caused by a stain or concerning a stain; full of disgrace: thou shalt not know the s. taste of violated troth, Lucr. 1059. ere she with blood hath stained her s. excuse, 1316. wash away thy country's s. spots, H6A III, 3, 57. Stalnea, place in England: 115 II, 3, 2. Stalnleas, immaculate: Tw. I, 5, 278. Rom. Ill, 2, 13.

1110 Stair, 1) steps made for the purpose of ascending: cords made like a tackled «. Bom. II, 4, 201. 2) a single step leading up; bnt nsed only in the plural: the —t, a* he treads on them, kite his feel, L L L V, 2, 330. at false at —t of sand, Merch. Ill, 2, 84. in these degrees have they made a pair of —t to marriage, As V, 2, 41. at common at the —i thai mount the Capitol, Cymb. I, 6, 105. Hence — t = the whole order of steps by which the upper part of a bnilding is arrived a t : at you go up the —s, Hml. IV, 3, 39. keep below —t, A d o T, 2, 10 (in the servants' room), up —t and down — t , H 4 A II, 4, 112. gone down —t, H 4 B II, 1, 107. 202. S t a i r - w e r k , work made on a staircase: W i n t . Ill, 3, 75. S t a k e , snbst. 1) a strong stick or a post fixed in the g r o u n d : T p . Ill, 2, 98. H6A I, 1, 117. Especially a) the post to which one condemned to die by fire is fastened: I will die in it at the t. Ado I, 1, 235. when thou contest to the s. H 6 A V, 3, 44. Hence = pyre: place barrels of pitch upon the fatal s. H 6 A V, 4, 57. And «= judgment, execution in general: bringing the murderous coward to the s. L r . II, 1, 64. b ) the post to which a bear is tied to be baited: have you not set mine honour at the s. and baited it, T w . Ill, 1, 129. call hither to the s. my two brave bears, H6B V, 1, 144. Caes. IV, 1, 48. Mcb. V, 7, 1. L r . Ill, 7, 54. Used in a lascivious sense by way of punning: Merch. Ill, 2, 220. 2) that which is pledged or wagered: the rich s. drawn, W i n t . I, 2, 248. 3) the state of being laid and pledged as a wager; always preceded by at: at s. Troil. Ill, 3, 227. Cor. Ill, 2, 63. Oth. IT, 2, 13. at the s. All's II, 3, 156. Hml. IV, 4, 56. S t a k e , vb. 1) to set and plant like a stake: I have a soul of lead so —s me to the ground I cannot move, Bom. I, 4, 16. 2) to wager, to pnt to hazard: Cymb. V, 5, 188. s. down, Merch. Ill, 2, 218. S t a l e , snbst. 1) a decoy, a bait: the trumpery in my house, go bring it hither, for s. to catch these thieves, T p . IV, 187. to cast thy wandering eyes on every s. Shr. Ill, 1, 90. Explained by some in this sense in E r r . II, 1, 101 and H6C III, 3, 260. 2) a laughing-stock, a d u p e : but, too unruly deer, he breaks the pale and feeds from home; poor lam but his s. E r r . II, 1, 101 (perhaps with a quibble: he is my dear, but I his s., i. e. one of whom he is weary). to make a s. of me amongst these mates, Shr. I, 1, 58 (perhaps a quibbling allusion to the expression stalemate at chess), had he none else to make a s. but met H6C HI, 3, 260. was there none else in Rome to make a s., but Saturnine? Tit. I, 304. 3) that which has become vapid und tasteless, or is worn out by use ( E r r . II, 1, 1 0 1 ? ) ; hence almost equivalent to a prostitute: marrying the renowned Claudio to a contaminated s. Ado II, 2, 26. to link my dear friend to a common s. IV, 1, 66. 4) the urine of horses: thou didst drink the s. of horses, Ant. I, 4, 62. T h e host calls Dr. Caius bully t . in Wiv. II, 3, 3 0 ; cf. Castalion King Urinal, v. 34. S t a l e , adj. worse for age, vapid and tasteless, worn out by use: Lncr. 1362. Compl. 268. Merch. II, 5, 55. As II, 4, 63. Wint. IV, 1,13. B2 V, 5, 104. H 4 A III, 2, 41. H 4 B II, 4, 141. Troil. II, 2, 79. V,

s 4, 11. Bom. II, 4, 139. Hml. I, 2 , 1 3 3 . Lr. I, 2, 13. Cymb. Ill, 4, 53. S t a l e , vb. to render stale, to make common and worthless: must not so s. his palm nobly acquired, Troil. II, 3, 201 ( O . Edd. staul). to s. it (an old story) a Utile more, Cor. I, 1, 95 (O. Edd. scale), to s. with ordinary oaths my love to every new protester, Caes. I, 2, 73. out of use and —d by other men, IV, 1, 38. age cannot wither her, nor custom s. her infinite variety, A n t II, 2, 240. S t a l e n e a a , the state of being corrupted by time: Per. V, 1, 58. S t a l k , subst. the stem of a plant: Yen. 1175. Compl. 147. B3 IV, 3, 12. Per. IV, 6, 46. S t a l k , subst. a stately w a l k : with martial s. Hml.

I, 1, 66.

S t a l k , vb. 1) to walk with a stately step: it —s away, Hml. I, 1, 50. Used with some dislike or irony: shall we give the signal to our rage and s. in blood to our possession1 J o h n II, 266. Is. about her door, Troil. 111,2,9. he —» up and down like apeacock, 111,3,251. 2) to walk like a fowler behind a stalking-horse: into the chamber wickedly he — s , Lucr. 365. s. on; the fowl sits, Ado II, 3, 95. S t a l k l n g - h e r s e , a real or artificial horse, behind which the fowler conceals himself: he uses his folly like a s. and under the presentation of that he shoots his wit, As V, 4, 111. S t a l l , subst. 1) the part of a stable in which a horse or an o x is k e p t : Shr. II, 360. H4A V, 2, 14 (feed like oxen at a s.). Mcb. II, 4 , 1 6 . 2) a small shed in which an occupation is carried o n : work for bread upon Athenian — s , Mids. Ill, 2, 10. —s, bulks, windows, are smothered up, Cor. II, 1, 226. S t a l l , vb. 1) to keep in a stall or stable: differs not from the —ing of an ox, As I, 1, 11. 2) to place as in a stall; to fix or fasten so as to prevent escape; to secure: the steed is —ed up, Ven. 39. and -- ed the deer that thou shouldst strike, Pilgr. 300. Metaphorically, = to keep close: s. this in j/our bosom, All's I, 3, 131. 3) to install, to invest: decked in thy rights, as thou art —ed in mine, B 3 I, 3, 206. 4) to dwell, to live as in a common stall: we could not s. together in the whole world, Ant. V, 1, 39. S t a l l U n , lection of O. Edd. in Tw. II, 5, 124 (M. Edd. staniel), and of Qq in Hml. II, 2, G16 (Ff and M. Edd. scullion). S t a m f o r d , place in England: H4B III, 2, 43. S t a m m e r , to stutter: As III, 2, 209. S t a m p , subst. 1) the act of striking the foot forcibly downward: at our t. here o'er and o'er one fulls, Mids. Ill, 2, 25. 2) an instrument by which an impression is m a d e : to seek anew some fresher s. of the time-bettering days, Sonn. 82, 8. coin heaven's image in - s that are forbid, Meas. II, 4, 46. his sword, death's s , where it did mark, it took, Cor. II, 2, 111. 3) a mark imprinted, an impression: hath upon him still that natural s. ( a mole) Cymb. V, 5, 366. Figuratively, = visible character: without the s. of merit, Merch. II, 9, 39. not a soldier of this season's s. should go so general current, H4A IV, 1, 4. your fire-new s. of honour is scarce current, B 3 I, 3, 256. the s. of nobleness, H8 III, 2, 12. he has the s. of

s

1111

Marcius, Cot. I, 6, 23. carrying the ». of one deject, Emphatically: had Narcissus seen her as she stood, HML. I, 4, 31. change the s. of nature, 111, 4, 168. Lucr. 265 (German: wie tie dastand). the poor fright4) that which is marked with an impression: the ed deer that —s at gaze, 1149. why s. you in this empress sends it thee, thy s., thy seal, Tit. IV, 2, 70 strange staret Tp. Ill, 3, 94. I s. for judgment, Merch. (i. e. a child, cf. the verb in Cymb. II, 5,5.). Especially IV, 1, 103. 142 (cf. below". hou> many then shouli - coin: —s in gold or sums in sealed bags, Wiv. Ill, cover that s. bare, 11, 9, 44. —est thou aloof upon com4, 16. hanging a golden s. about their necks, Mcb. IT, parisonf H6A V, 4, 150. s.fair, I pray thee; let me 3, 153 (the coin called angel), 'tween man and man look on thee, Troil. IV, 5, 235. / ». in pause where I shall first begin, Hml. HI, 3, 42. •My weigh not every s. Cymb. T, 4, 24. Opposed to verbs of motion: —ing lakes, Tp. V, Stamp, vb. 1) to strike with the foot forcibly downward: Ven. 316. Shr. Ill, 2, 169. 230. John III, 33. a —ing pond, Merch. 1, 1, 89. the —ing pool, Lr. 1, 122. H6C 1, 4, 91. Ill, 3, 169. Cor. I, 3, 35. Tim. III, 4, 139. Iam —ing water, Tp. II, 1, 221 (between 1, 2, 149 (s. upon me). Caes. II, 1, 244. With an ebb and flood), 'tis with him in —ing water, between accus. expressing an effect: under my feet Is. thy car- boy and man, Tw.. 1, 5, 168. cf. the swan's feather, dinal's hat, H6A 1,3,49. your hearts M s. out, 1,4,108. that — s upon the swell at fitU of tide, and neither way 2) to impress, to imprint: wax... wherein is — ed inclines, Ant. Ill, 2, 49. my deadly —ing eye, Tit. II, the semblance of a devil, Lncr. 1246. reproach is —ed 3, 32 (fixed, staring), never s. lyou had rather, Wiv. in CoUatmus'face, 829. 941. Sonn. 112, 2. Meas. I, HI, 3, 133 (i. e. do not lose time with saying 'yon had I , 5 1 . Merch. II, 7, 57. H8 III, 2, 325. Tit. IV, 2, rather*, but look to what yon have to do). > not to discourse, Gent. V, 2, 44. —ing to prate and talk, 127. Lr. I, 4, 306. 3) to mark with an impression: as the event —s Wint. Ill, 2, 41. take leave and s. not to reply, H6C them, Ado 1, 2, 7. —ed coin, Wint. IV, 4, 747. I that IV, 8, 23. tee will not s. to prate, B3 I, 3, 351. s. not am rudely — ed, B3 I, 1, 16. when I was —ed, Cymb. to answer: here, take thou the hilts, Caes. V, 3, 43. he stood by, whilst I was made a wonder, H6B II, 4, 45 II, 5, 5 (cf. the subst. in Tit. IV, 2, 70). 4) to make valid and current (by marking with (and did nothing to prevent it), grace to s., and virtue an impression1: and in his praise have almost —ed go, Meas. Ill, 2, 278 (probably = grace in rest, and the leasing, Cor. V, 2, 22. has an eye can s. and coun- virtue in action). »., I say, Yen. 284 ( = stop). Gent. IV, 1, 3. Ado III, 3, 27. 32. 177. Caes. IV, 2, 1. Cor. terfeit advantages, Oth. II, 1, 247. Stanch, adj. strong and tight, firm, steady: what V, 2, 1. Hinl. l; 1, 14. Cymb. V, 3, 88 etc. there s., for you are spell-stopped, Tp. V, 60. if thou darest s. hoop should hold us s. Ant. II, 2, 117. Stanch, vb. to satiate: let my tears s. the earth's Err. V, 31 . in thine (eyes) 111, 1, 284. —s Scotland s. I condemned far pride so much, Ado III, 1,108. R2 where it didl Mcb. IV, 3, 164. behold where —s the II, 2, 132. II, 3, 119. Troil. Ill, 3, 219. Lr. I, 4, 5. usurper's cursed head, T, 8, 54. where late the diadem thou shall s. cursed, John III, 1, 173. more than I s. stood, Hml. II, 2, 530. why one's nose —s i the middle debted to this gentleman, Err. IV, 1, 31. through the oris face, Lr. I, 5, 19. nature in you —s on the very length of times he —s disgraced, Lucr. 718. 1833. Is. verge of her confine, II, 4, 149. a more unhappy lady, dishonoured, Ado IV, 1, 65. I stood engaged. All's V, if this division chance, ne'er stood between, Ant. Ill, 3, 96. Troil. V, 3, 68. s. excommunicate, John III, 1, 4, 13. where yond pine does s. IV,. 12, 1. your isle, 223. s. excused, IV, 3, 51. R3 I, 2, 86. s. indebted to which —s as Neptune's park, Cymb. Ill, 1, 18 etc. you, Merch. IT, 1, 413. how s. you minded, H8 III, 1, 4) to be written: if aught in me worthy perusal s. 58. if her fortunes ever stood necessitied to help, All's against thy sight, Sonn. 38,6. whose fine —s in record, T, 3, 84. so —s this squire officed with me, Wint. I, Meas. II, 2, 40. the strong statutes s. like the forfeits 2,171. whereby we s. opposed, H4A T, 1, 67. whereof in a barber's shop, V,323. it —s as an edict in destiny, our uncle did s. possessed, R2 II, 1, 162. R3 III, 1, Mids. I, 1, 151. if it (this day) must s. still (in the 196. so you s. pleased withal, Merch. Ill, 2, 211. s. calendar) John III, 1, 89. ». aye accursed in the ca- resolved, Tit. I, 135. lands which he stood seized of, lendar, Mcb. IV, 1, 134. Hml. I, 1, 89. things —ing thus unknown, T, 2, 356. 5) to exist; to make one's appearance: nothing —s and s. unshaken yours, H8 III, 2, 199. but for his scythe to mow, Sonn. 60, 12. the blots of With adjectives: I s. accountant for as great a sin, nature's hand shall not in their issue s. Mids. V, 417. Oth. II, 1, 302. they would s. auspicious to the hour, poor trespasses, more monstrous —ing by, Wint. Ill, Lncr. 347. Wint. IT, 4, 52. —s chief in power, All's 2, 191. every man that stood showed like a mine, H8 II, 1, 115. the fold—s empty, Mids. II, 1, 96. H8 V, I, 1, 21. 3,10. ancestors who stood equivalent with mighty kings, 6) to be in a state or condition: how —s the matter Per. V, 1, 92. s. forfeit, LLL V, 2, 427. the gods towith Mem? Gent. II, 5, 21. when it —s well with him, day s. friendly, Caes. V, 1, 94. s. gracious to the rites, it —s well with her, 23. thus —s it with me, Meas. 1, Tit. I, 78. he —s obdurate, Merch. IV, 1, 8. of many

s mine being one may s. in number, though in reckoning none, Rom. I, 2, 33 (cf. Meas. II, 4, 58). he should t. one of the three to share it, Caes. IV, 1,14. how loathly opposite I stood, Lr. II, 1, 51. but all alone —s hugely politic, Sorm. 124,11. that the comparison may s, more proper, Merch. Ill, 2, 46. With substantives: s. my friend, H4B III, 2, 235. 245. H8 IV, 2,157. s. good father to me now, Shr. IV, 4, 21. where each second stood heir to the first, Oth. I, 1, 38. s. my good lord, H4B IV, 3, 89. —ing your friendly lord, Cor. II, 3,198. to s. auspicious mistress, Lr. 11, 1, 42. With adverbs or prepositional expressions: the Cyprus wars, which even now s. in act, Oth. I, 1, 152. though our proper son stood in your action, I, 3, 70. s. under the adoption of abominable terms, Wiv. 11,2,308. the people do s. but in a forced affection, Caes. IV, 3, 205. regards thai s. aloof from the entire point, Lr. I, I , 2 4 2 . he that breaks them —s m attainder of eternal shame, L L L I, 1, 158. s. at my bestowing, All's II, 3, 59. At* integrity —s without blemish, Meas. V, 108. tchat case s. I in? W i n t I, 2, 352. on what condition —* it (my fanlt) and wherein t R2 II, 3, 107. a true soul when most impeached —s least in thy control, Sonn.125,14. s. in hard cure, Lr. 111,6,107. my hopes s. in bold cure, Oth. II, 1,51. you s. icithin his danger, Merch. IV, 1, 180. s. in your own defence, L L L V, 2, 85. nice affections wavering stood in doubt, Compl.97. to be worst, —s still in esperance, Lr. IV, 1, 4. you s. in coldest expectation, H4B V, 2, 31. our preparation —s in expectation of them, Lr. IV, 4,22. if it s. within the eye of honour, Merch. I, 1, 136. as we s. in fear, Meas. II, 3, 34. H6B IV, 2, 66. I s. on fire: come to the matter, Cymb. V, 5 , 1 6 8 . the doom —s in effectual force, Gent. Ill, 1, 223. L L L 1 , 1 , 1 1 . my woeful self, that did in freedom s. Compl. 143. 'tis best we s. upon our guard, Tp. II, 1. 321. — s at a guard with envy, Meas. I, 3, 51. in the great hand of God I s. Mcb. II, 3,136. one would speak to her and s. in hope of answer, W i n t V, 2, 110. Tit. II, 1, 119. which else would s. under grievous imposition, Meas. I, 2,194. my life —s in the level of your dreamt, Wint. Ill, 2, 82. such as s. not in their liking, Cor. I, 1, 199. s. in assured loss, Lr. 111,6,102. many lives s. between me and home, H6C III, 2 , 1 7 3 . a note of what Is. in need of, Gent. II, 7, 84. what dangerous action, stood it next to death, V, 4, 41. freely have they leave to s. on either part, All's I, 2, 15. in which predicament thou —est, Merch. IV, 1, 357. to be king —s not within the prospect of belief, Mcb. I, 3, 74. not being the worst —s in some rank of praise, Lr. II, 4, 261. *. in readiness, T i t I, 325. whose fine —s in record, Meas. II, 2, 40 (cf. snb 4). to both it —s in like reguest. Cor. Ill, 2, 51. if thou —est not in the state of hanging, V, 2, 70. the help of one —s me in little stead, B 6 A IV, 6, 31. have I lived to s. at the taunt of one, Wiv. V, 5, 151. but 0, the thorns we s. upon, Wint. IV, 4, 596. none —s under more calumnious tongues, H8 V, 1, 113. Cor. IV, 2, 7. 7) Followed by prepositions; a) to s. against = to oppose; to offer resistance: devices ... which shall then have no power to s. against us, Meas. IV, 4, 16. s. against us like an enemy, H4A IV, 3, 37. H4B IV, 4, 95. manhood is called foolery, when it —s against a fatting fabric, Cor. Ill, 1, 246. Caes. Ill, 2, 124. Lr. II, 1, 70. IV, 7, 33. b) to s. by = to maintain, to support, to assist;

1113

will you s. by ust HGCFV, 1,145. to s.firm by honour, Troil.11,2,68. s.byour Ajax, IV, 5,89 (as his second). c) to s.for = 1) to be for, to side with, to support, to fight for: / s. wholly for you, Wiv. Ill, 2, 62. I will s.for it (virginity) a little, All's I, 1,145. s.for your own, B 5 I, 2, 101. I'll s. to-day for thee and me and Troy, Troil. V, 3,36. that hath thus stoodfor his country, Cor. II, 2,45. when Sfardus stood for Rome, IV, 6,45. —est so for Posthumus, Cymb. Ill, 5, 66. cf. Merch. IV, 1,103. 142. Wint. Ill, 2 , 4 6 . 2) to be in the place of, to represent: for Achilles' image stood his spear, Lncr. 1424. a face, a leg, a head, stood for the whole, 1428. craft, being richer than innocency, —s for the facing, Meas. Ill, 2, 11. I am to s. for him, L L L V, 2, 508. I s.for sacrifice, Merch. Ill, 2,57. thanks which ... —s for my bounty, R2 II, 3, 67. if thou darest not s.for ten shillings, H4AI,2,157 (quibbling), do thou s.for my father, II, 4 , 4 1 3 . 4 7 7 . / «. here for him, H5 II, 4, 116. there —s your friend for the devil, III, 7, 128. my will shall s. for law, H6C IV, 1, 60. the commoners, for whom we s. Cor. II, 1, 243. the people of Rome, for whom we s. a special party, T i t 1,20. must thou needs s. for a villain in thine own workt Tim. V, I, 39. do thou for him s. Lr. I, 4, 157. this borrowed passion —s for true old woe, Per. IV, 4,24. (cf. s. thou as Dauphin in my place, H6A I, 2, 61). 3) to be as good as; to be reckoned: a woman's nay doth s. for nought, Pilgr. 340. I hope this reason —s for my excuse, Shr. Ind. 2, 126. cf. our compelled sins s. more for number than for accompt, Meas. II, 4, 58 (compare Rom. I, 2, 33). 4) to offer one's self as a candidate (in the fashion of ancient Rome): when he shall s. for his place, Cor. II, 1,165. were he to s. for consul, 248. II, 2, 2. II, 3, 195. V, 6, 28. d) to s. in = to insist on; lection of O. Edd. in T i t IV, 4, 105: if she s. in hostage for his safety. M. Edd. s. on hostage; bat cf. R2 II, 3, 107. e) to s. on = 1) to insist on: if that thy valour s. on sympathy, R2 IV, 33. and then s. upon security, H4B I, 2, 42. when articles too nicely urged be stood on, H5 V, 2, 94. and s. upon my common part, Cor. I, 9, 39. do not s. upon it, II, 2, 154. 2) to make much of, to attach a high value to: in these times you s. on distance, Wiv. II, 1,233. you s. upon your honour! II, 2,20. this fellow doth not s. upon points, Mids. V, 118. we s. upon our manners, W i n t IV, 4 , 1 6 4 . let him that is a true-born gentleman and —s upon the honour of hit birth, H6A II, 4, 28. do not s. on quillets how to slay him, H6B III, 1, 261. wherefore s. you on nice points, H6C IV, 7, 58. your franchises, whereon you stood, Cor. IV, 6, 86. you that stood to much upon the voice of occupation, 96. this minion stood upon her chastity, Tit. II, 3, 124. who s. so much on the new form, Rom. II, 4, 35. I never stood on ceremonies, Caes. II, 2, 13. s. not upon the order of your going, Mcb. Ill, 4, 119. to s. on more mechanic compliment, Ant IV, 4, 31. 3) to depend on (to rely on as well as to be in a state of dependance from): — s so firmly on his w\fe's frailty, Wiv. II, 1, 242. the good I s. on is my truth and honesty, H8 V, 1, 123. it stood upon the choice offriendt, Mids. 1,1,139. your fortune stood upon the casket there, Merch. Ill, 2, 203. upon whose influence Neptune's empire — s , Hml. I, 1, 119. 4) to concern, to be of importance to: consider how it —s upon my credit, Err. IV, 1, 68. my state —t on me to defend, not to debate, Lr. V, 1, 69. The prepositiop 71*

1114

S

transposed: it —s your grace upon to do him right, R2 I, 2, 262. s. close up, H8 V, 4, 92. who sensibly outII, 3, 138 ( = it is your office, your duty), it — s me dares his senseless sword, and, when it bows, —s up. mucA upon to Hop all hop**, B 3 IV, 2, 59. does it not Cor. 1, 4, 54. how stiff is my vile sense, that I s. up, i. me now upon, ... is't not perfect conscience, to quit Lr. IV, 6, 287. I have an absolute hope our landmen him with this armt Hml. V,2,63. it only —s our lives will s. up, Ant. IV, 3,11. whilst he stood up and spoke, upon to use our strongest hands, Ant. II, 1, 50. 5) to V, 1, 7. 2) to ascend a higher place: shall we s. up have to do with; to concern one's self abont: — s on here and see themf Troil. I, 2, 193. 3} to rise: ileas. tricks when lam indisposed, Err. 1,2,80. Is. on sudden V, 460. Mids. IV, 1, 146. Merch. II, 2, 86. All's II, 1, haste, Bom. II, 3 , 9 3 . 'tis but the time and drawing days 64. 67. R2 V, 3, 111. H6A III, 4, 25. H8 V, 1, 114. out that men s. upon, Caes. Ill, I , 100. 6) to be on: Cor. Ill, 2, 12. V, 3, 52. Tit. I, 485. Bom. Ill, 3, 75. what terms the enany stood on, H5 III, 6, 78 ( = what 88. IV, 2,28 etc. In a moral sense, = to rise in arms; were the terms of the enemy; cf. Term), the sore terms to fight; to rebel: he that tempered thee bade thee s. up, we s. upon with the gods, Per. IV, 2, 38. to determine gave thee no instance why thou shouldst do treason, H5 of what conditions we shall s. upon, H4B IV, 1, 165 II, 2, 118. we stood up about the corn, Cor. II, 3, 16. ( = what shall be oar conditions), the main descry we all s. up against the spirit of Caesar, Caes. II, 1, —s on the hourly thought, Lr. IV, 6, 218 ( = is to be 167. gods, s. up for bastards, Lr. I, 2, 22. a peasant expected every hour). s. up thus! Ill, 7, 80. weret not that we s. up against f ) to s. to = 1) to side with, to assist, to support; them all, A n t II, 1,44. — to rise in order to make a to maintain, to guard, to be firm in the cause o f : s. declaration or put in a claim: nature might s. up and to me, H4B II, 1, 70. call them pillars that will s. to say to all the world, Caes. V, 5,74. the which immediacy us, H6CII,3,51. s. to me in this cause, Cor. V,3,199. may well s. up and call itself your brother, Lr. V, 3,65. who ever yet have stood to charity, and displayed the to weet we s. up peerless, Ant. I, 1, 40. —s up for the effects of disposition gentle, H8 II, 4, 86. or let us s. main soldier, I, 2, 197. where was he that could s. up to our authority, or let us lose it, Cor. Ill, 1,208. 2) to his parallelt Cymb. V, 4, 54. abide by, to persist in: s.fast, good Fate, to his hanging, e) As with up, similarly with many other adverbs Tp. 1,1,32. now I'll s. to't, the pancakes were naught, it receives the sense of motion, or rather of a state As I, 2, 69. Sir John —s to his word, H4A I, 2, 130. caused by previous motion, and becomes equivalent and yet you will s. to it; you will not pocket up wrong, to to step, to go, to come: how coldly those impediments HI, 3, 183. will speak more in a minute than he will s. forth of wealth, of filial fear, Compl. 269. that my s. to in a month, Bom. II, 4, 157. to this point I s accusers ... may s. forth face to face, H8 V, 3, 47. that both the worlds I give to negligence, ... only I'll Mostly in the imperative: s. all aloof, Merch. Ill, 2, he revenged, Hml. IV, 5, 133. 3) to go through, to 42. s. apart, Err. V, 364. B2 III, 3, 187. s. aside, maintain one's ground in: Troilus will s. to the proof, Gent. IV, 2, 81. Ado IV, 2, 32. L L L IV, 1, 55. As Troil. I, 2, 142 ( = stand the test), to s. to it = to III, 2, 132. H6C III, 3, 110. s. away, H5 IV, 8, 14. be brave and stout-hearted; not to flinch; to do one's All's V, 2, 17. s. back, Shr. II, 341. John IV, 3, 81. best: an thy mind s. to it, boy, steal away bravely, All's H6A I, 2, 70. I, 3, 33. 38. B3 I, 2, 38. Caes. Ill, 2, II, 1, 29. the danger is in —ingto it, III, 2, 43 (quibb- 172. s. by, Ado IV, 1, 24. Shr. I, 2, 143. John IV, 3, l i n g \ is't a lusty yeomant will a s. to'tt H4B II, 1, 5. 94 (— step aside, withdraw). U6B II, 1, 72 ( = apwe stood to't in good time, Cor. IV, 6,10. 'tis he. S. to proach, come up). Ant. Ill, 11, 41. s. forth, Mids. I, it, Mcb. Ill, 3, 15.. 1, 24. HI, 1, 83. Merch. IV, 1, 175. B2 IV, 7. H8 I, g) to s. with — 1) to join, to make common cause 2, 129. s. o f f , Tp. Ill, 2, 92. 94. Caes. Ill, 2, 171. In with: I think he will s. very strong with us, Caes. II, 1, the same manner with the prepod. from: s. from him, 142. then s. with us, Mcb. 111,3,4. 2) to agree; to be H4B II, 1, 74. IV, 4, 116. s. from the hearse, Caes consistent with: your good will may s. with ours, this III, 2, 169. day to be conjoined, Ado V, 4, 29. if it s. with honesty, II. trans. 1) to resist: an she s. him but a little, he As II, 4, 91. such assurance ta'en as shall with either will throw a figure in her face, Shr. I, 2, 113. none part's agreement s. Shr. IV, 4, 50. if with thy will it durst s. him, H6A I, 1, 123. a great sea-mark —ing —s, H6C II, 3, 38. if it may s. with the tune of your every flaw, Cor. V, 3, 74. the lust-dieted man, that —s voices that I may be consul, Cor. II, 3, 91. your ordinance, Lr. IV, 1, 71 (Ff slaves\ the villain 8) with adverbs; a) to s. o f f , = 1) to keep at a would not s. me, Cymb. I, 2, 15. who dares not s. his distance: our bloods ... s. off in differences so mighty, foe, V, 3, 60. All's II, 3, 127. s. no more o f f , IV, 2, 34. 2) to have 2) to go through, to abide, to snstain: thou hast relief, to appear prominent: the truth of it —s off as strangely stood the test, Tp. W, 7. and s. the push of gross as black and white, H5 II, 2, 103. every vain comparative, H4A III, 2, 66. H4B II, 2, 40. b) to s. out = 1) not to take part, to keep off: Troil. II, 2,137. I will s. the hazard of the die, B3 V, repaying what we took from them, ... only myself stood 4, 10. Tim. V, 2, 5. \f this poor trash of Venice s. the out, Tw. Ill, 3, 35. what, art thou s t i f f f —est outf putting on, Oth. II, 1,313. I must s. the course, Lr. Ill, Cor. 1,1, 245. 2) to be in arms, to rebel: you have of 7, 54. his love, which —s an honourable trial, Ant. I, late stood out against your brother, Ado 1, 3, 22. his 3, 74. to s. the buffet with knaves, I, 4, 20. spirit is come in, that so stood out against the church, 3) With an accus. of time: you have stood your J o h n V,2,71. the rebels which s. out in Ireland, U21,4,38. limitation, Cot. II, 3, 146 (your limited or prescribed c) to s. to to fall to work: I will s. to and feed, time), as I did s. my watch, Mcb. V, 5, 33 (cf. s. Tp. Ill, 3, 49. makes him s. to and not s. to, Mcb. II, sentinel, Mids. II, 2, 26). 3, 38 (cf. All's II, 1, 29). Standard, 1) an ensign of war, a banner: L L L d) to s. up = 1) to be on the feet, to remain IV, 3, 367. H6A II, 1, 23. H6B 1,1,256. B3 V, 3, 22. upright: that which here — s up is but a quintain, As 264. 348.

s 2) a standard-bearer: Tp. Ill, 2, 18 (Stephano's epeccb). 20 (quibbling between s. and slander). HUnder, one who stands: being slippery —», Troil. Ill, 3, 84. Stander-by, one present, a bystander: Wint. 1,2, 279. B3 1,2,163. I, 3,210. Troil. IV, 5, 190. Cymb. II, 1, 12. S t a n d i n g , subst. 1) time of existence: will continue the s. of his body, Wint I, 2, 431. 2) station: how this grace speaks his otrn s. Tim. I, 1, 31 (how exactly this grace expressed the place due to its owner. Steevens: 'how the graceful attitude of this figure proclaims that it stands firm on its centre, or gives evidence in favour of its own fixure'. S t a n d i n g - b e d , a bed supported by legs (distinguished from a truckle-bed, q. v.): Wiv. IV, 5, 7. Standing-bawl (not hyph. in 0 . Edd.) a bowl resting on a foot: Per. II, 3, 65. Standing'tuck (not hyph. in O. Edd.) a rapier placed upright: H4B II, 4, 274. Stand-under, a word coined by Launce by way of quibbling: Gent. 11, 5, 33. Stanlel, a species of hawk; a word substituted by M. Edd. for stallion of 0 . Edd. in Tw. II, 5, 124; and proposed by some for scamels in Tp. II, 2, 176. Stanley, name of 1) Sir John S. H6B II, 3, 13. II, 4, 77. 91. 104. 2) Sir William S. H6C IV, 5, 1. 23. R3 IV, 5, 10. 3) Lord S. (cf. Derby): R3 I, 3,17. III, 1,167. Ill, 2, 3. Ill, 4, 84. IV, 2, 90 etc. 4) his son George S. R3 IV, 4, 497. IV, 5, 3. V, 3, 346. V, 5, 9. Stannyel, see Staniel. Stance (the later Ff and some M. Edd. stanza) a strophe: L L L IV, 2, 107. Stance (some M. Edd. stanza) the same: As II, 5, 18. 19. Staple, 1) a loop of iron made to receive a bolt: with massy —s and corresponsive and fulfilling bolts, Troil. Prol. 17. 2) thread, pile: he draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the s. oj his argument, L L L V, 1,19. Star (masc. in Ven. 861) a celestial body shining in the night Ven. 861. 1032. Lucr. 164.1008. Sonn. 132,7. Gent. 11,6,9. 111,1,156. Wiv. 1,3,101. Meas. IV,2,219. L L L IV, 3,231. V, 2, 205. Mids. 111,2,407. Shr IV, 6, 7. 31. AU'sI, 1,97. Wint. I, 2,48.425. V, 1, 206. Ant. Ill,13,95 etc. the seven —s, H4AI,2,16. H4B II, 4, 201. Lr. 1,5,38. fixed s. LLL 1,1,89. the north s. Ado II, 1,258. the northern s. Caes. Ill, 1, 6Of the watery s. (the moon) Wint. 1,2,1; the moist s. Hml. 1,1,118. a blazing s. AU's I, 3,91. a falling s. H8 IV, 1, 55; cf. A n t IV, 14, 106. a shooting s. R2 II, 4, 19; cf. Ven. 815; Lucr. 1525; Mids. II, 1,153; Hml. I, 5, 17. Brilliant things called —s; especially bright eyes: Lucr. 13. Sonn. 14,10. Wint. V, 1, 67. Or persons of brilliant qualities: Phoen. 51. H5 Epil. 6. H6A I, 2, 144. R3 II, 2, 102. H8 IV, 1, 54. Rom. I, 2,25. Ant. IV,14,106. V,2,311. Eminent persons made — s after their death: H6A I, 1,55. Cymb. V, 5,352. Per. V, 3, 79. cf. Rom. Ill, 2, 22. Influencing human fortune: Sonn. 14, 1. 25, 1. 26, 9. Tp. I, 2, 182. Gent. II, 7, 74. Ado II, 1, 349. LLL III, 79. V, 2, 394. Shr. IV, 5,40. All's 1,1, 197. 205. 1,3,252. 11,5,80. Tw. 1,3, 142. 11,1,3. II, 5, 156. 184. Wint. 1,2,363. John III, 1, 126. R2IV.21. H6A I, 1, 4. IV, 5, 6. H6B III, 1, 206. H6C IV, 6, 22. R3 111, 7,172. IV, 4, 215. Rom. 1,4,107. V, 1,24. V,

1115 3, 111. Caes. I, 2, 140. Hml. I, 4, 32. Lr. rv, 3, 35. Ant. Ill, 13, 145. Cymb. V, 4, 105 (Jovial s.) etc. Lord Hamlet is a prince, out of thy s. Hml. II, 2, 141 (above thee in fortune). = loadstar: it (love) is the s. to every wandering bark, Sonn. 116, 7. there's no more sailing by the s. Ado III, 4, 58. cf. Sonn. 26, 9 and All's II, 1, 57. -- a mark or figure resembling a star: a mole, a sanguine s. Cymb. V, 5, 364. Star-blasting, pernicious influence of the stars (cf. Blast): Lr. Ill, 4, 60. Star-chamber, a court of criminal jurisdiction: Wiv. I, 1, 2. Star-creaaed, not favoured by the stars, unfortunate: Rom. Prol. 6. Stare, subst. a fixed look with eyes wide open: why stand you in this strange s. t Tp. Ill, 3, 95. Stare, vb. 1) to be stiff, to stand on end: makest ...my hair to s. Caes. IV, 3, 280. 2) to look with fixed eyes wide open: Ven. 301. 1149. Wiv. V, 5,168 (—ings, in Evans' speech). L L L V, 2, 927. 936. Shr. Ill, 2, 230. John IV, 3, 49. R2 V, 3, 24. H6B III, 2, 170. 371. Caes. I, 3, 2. Ill, 1, 97. IV, 3, 40. Mcb. II, 3, 110. Lr. IV, 6, 110. Oth. V, 1, 107 (Qq stir). V, 2, 188. Cymb. Ill, 4, 5. With on: Lucr. 1448. Wint. V, 2, 13. R3 III, 7, 26 (Qq gazed). Caes. II, 1, 242. in her sad face he — s , Lucr. 1591. With an accus. expressing the effect: I will s. him out of his wits, Wiv. II, 2, 291. Star-gazer, astrologer: Ven. 509. Stark, adj. stiff (used only in speaking of a dead body): lies s. and s t i f f , H4A V, 3, 42. stiff and s. and cold, Rom. IV, 1, 103. how found you him * S., as you see, Cymb. IV, 2, 209. Stark, adv. absolutely, quite: s. mad, Err.II, 1,59. V, 281. Shr. 1,1, 69. Wint. Ill, 2,184. s. naked, Pilgr. 80. Tw. Ill, 4, 274. Ant. V, 2, 59. s. spoiled, Shr. Ill, 2,55. S t a r k l y , stiffly (as in a dead body); as fast locked up in sleep as guiltless labour when it lies s. in the traveller's bones, Meas. IV, 2, 70. Starlight, the light of the stars: Wiv. V, 5, 106. Mids. II, 1, 29. V, 320. Star-like, resembling or like a star: H8 V, 5,47. Tim. V, 1, 66. Starting, the bird Sturnus vulgaris: H4A 1,3,224. Starred, fortuned, fated: s. most unluckily, Wint. Ill, 2,100. Starry, adorned with stars: the s. welkin, Mids. III, 2, 356. Start, subst. 1) a sudden and involuntary motion of the body: these flaws and —s ... would well become a woman's story, Mcb. Ill, 4, 63. 2) a hasty fit, a sudden and capricious impulse; a sudden appearance: the first face of neither (joy or grief), on the s., can woman me unto't, All's III, 2, 52 (when it comes suddenly and unawares), base inclination and the s. of spleen, H4A III, 2, 125. such unconstant —s are we like to have from him, Lr. 1,1,304. by —s, his fretted fortunes give him hope and fear, Ant. IV, 12,7. by —s and in —s = by fits, by snatches, incoherently: mangling by —s the full course of their glory, H5 Epil. 4 (by a desultory and fragmentary representation; cf. the verb in Troil. Prol. 28). she did speak in —s distractedly, Tw. II, 2, 22. 3) a sudden Betting out, a breaking forth: take the

1116

S

>., run away, Merch. II, 2, 6. seven of my people, with an obedient s., make out for him, Tw. II, 5, 65. you eland like greyhounds in the slips, »training upon the s. H5III, 1,32. the French ... should make a s. o'er seas and vanquish you, H6B IV, 8, 45. this will give it (his rage) i . again, Hml. IT, 7, 194. to get the s. of = to leave behind: should so get the s. of the majestic world, Caea. I, 2, 130. to have the s. of = to have the advantage of: you have the s. of me, Wiv. V, 5, 171. S t a r t , vb. 1) intr. a) to make a sudden and involuntary motion of the body, as if by a twitch: Lucr. 348. Wiv. V, 5, 90. Wint. V, 3, 104. H4A II, 3, 46. H6B II, 4, 35. IV, 1, 32. B3 111,4, 87 (Qq startled). H8 III, 2, 113. Mcb. I, 3, 51. V, 1,50. V, 2, 23. Hml. I, 1, 148. With at: Ven. 302. 878. All s I, 3, 148. R3 III, 5, 7. IV, 2, 108. Bom. I, 4, 86. b) to move suddenly, to rise or go away abruptly. from her betumbled couch she —eth, Lucr. 1037. / did begin to s. and cry, 1639. by this, —s Collatine as from a dream, 1772. blushing apparitions to s. into her face, Ado IV, 1,162. you s. away and lend no ear unto my purposes, H4A I, 3, 216. and —ing so he seemed in running to devour the way, H4B I, 1, 46. made him from my side to s. H6A IV, 7, 12. beginning in the middle, —ing thence away to what may be digested in a play, Troil. Prol. 28. with —ing courage give thy trumpet a loud note to Troy, IV, 5, 2. each chance that —sC the way before thee, Cor. IV, 1,37. *., eyes! Mcb. IV, 1,116 (i. e. from your sockets), make thy two eyes, lite stars, s. from their spheres, Hml. I, 5, 17. s. not so wildly from my affair, 111,2,321. then away she —ed, Lr. IV, 3, 33. kings would s. forth, Ant. Ill, 13, 91. after this strange —ing from your orbs, Cymb. V, 5, 371. The place mentioned, not from which, but for which, one suddenly sets out: how if your husband s. some other wheret Err. II, 1, 30. With up: and then —s up (from her bed) Bom. Ill, 3, 100. your bedded hair —s up, Hml. Ill, 4, 122. 2) trans, a) to startle, to alarm suddenly: every feather—syou, All's V,3,232. it straight— syou,Troil. V, 2,101. direness ... cannot once s. me, Mcb.V,5,15. b) to rouse: he —ed one poor heart of mine in thee, Tw. IV, 1, 63 (play upon the words heart and hart), do but s. an echo with the clamour of thy drum, John V, 2,167. to s. a hare, H4A 1,3,198. s. a spirit, Caes. I, 2 , 1 4 7 . to s. my quiet, Oth. I, 1, 101. S t a r t i n g - h a l e , evasion, subterfuge: what trick, what device, what s. canst thou now find out to hide thee from this open and apparent shamef H4A II, 4, 290. S t a r t l n g l y , by starts, abruptly: why do you speak so s. and rashf Oth. Ill, 4, 79. S t a r t l e , 1) intr. to move in a sudden alarm; to be frighted or shocked: patience herself would s. at this letter, As IV, 3, 13. my horse ... —d, when he looked upon the Tower, B3 111,4,87 (Ff started), what fear is this which —s in our earst Bom. V, 3, 194. 2) tr. to alarm, to rouse, to shock: —s and frights consideration, J o h n IV, 2, 25. —s mine eyes, V, 2, 61. H8 111, 2, 294. Per. V, 1, 147. S t a r t - u p , one newly come into notice; an upstart: Ado I, 3,69. S t a r v e or S t e r v e (the latter form in Merch. IV, 1, 138. Cor. IV, 2, 51. Bom. 1, 1, 225. Tim. 1, 1, 257. Cymb. I, 4,180. rhyming to deserve in Cor. II, 3,120) 1) intr. a) to perish, to die: I'U s. ere I'll rob afoot further, H4A II, 2, 22. he had better s. than but once

think this place becomes thee not, H8 V, 3, 132. bettet it is to die, better to s., than crave the hire which first we do deserve, Cor. II, 3, 120. we'U see 'em s. first, Lr. V, 3, 25. b) to be benumbed with cold: you but warm the —d snake, H6B III, 1,343. comfortless as frozen water to a —d snake, Tit. Ill, 1, 252. lest the bargain should catch cold and s. Cymb. 1,4,180. c) to perish with hanger: H4A 1,3, 89.159. II, 1, 30. H 6 A I I I, 2,48. H6B I, 1, 135. 229. Cor. IV, 2,51. Rom. Ill, 5, 194. Per. II, 1, 72. d) to suffer hunger or want: Merch. 1,2,7. V,295. H5 IV, 2,16. Bom. V, 1, 70. With for (cf. Die) = to be hungry f o r , extremely desirous of: clean —d for a look, Sonn. 75, 10. Is. for a merry look, Err. II, 1, 88. am —ed for meat, Shr. IV, 3, 9. —ing for a time of pell-mell havoc, H4A V, 1, 81. Partic. —d = 1) hungry, ravenous: thy desires are wolvish, bloody, —d and ravenous, Merch. IV, 1,138. 2) famished, lean (cf. Starveling): this same —djustice, H4B 111,2,327. you —d bloodhound, V, 4, 31. 2) trans, a) to paralyze, to disable: aches contract and s. your supple joints, Tim. I, 1, 257. they (their mouths) are now —d for want of exercise, Per. I, 4, 38. Peculiar expressions: it is too —d a subject for my sword, Troil. I, 1, 96 (too powerless, too inconsiderable). titntr go home; here s. we out the night, V, 10, 2 (let us here see the night come to an end). b) to destroy with cold, to nip: the air hath —d the roses in her cheeks, Gent. IV, 4, 159. c) to afflict with want or hunger: when she (nature) did s. the general world beside and prodigally gave them (graces) all to you, L L L II, 11. beauty —d with her severity, Bom. I, 1, 225. give them l{fe whom hunger —d half dead, Per. I, 4, 96. who —s the ears she feeds, and makes them hungry, V, 1, 113. With from: we must s. our sight from lovers' food till morrow, Mids.

1, 1, 222.

S t a r v e - l a e k « ? , name: . by them, Hml. I, 2, 202.

State-matters, public affairs: Oth. Ill, 4, 155. Statesman, one employed in public affairs and versed in the arts of government: Meas. Ill, 2, 155. W i n t . I, 2, 168. Oth. I, 2, 99. State - statues, not statesmen, but mere images resembling them: or sit s. only, H8 I, 2, 88. Statlllas, name in Caes. V, 5, 2. Statlan, 1) act or mode of standing: in the unshrinking s. where he fought, Mcb. V, 8, 42. a s. like the herald Mercury, Hml. Ill, 4, 58. her motion and her s. are as one, Ant. Ill, 3, 22. 2) a place to stand i n : puff to win a vulgar s. Cor. II, 1, 231. take up some other s. IV, 5, 33. 3) position: if you have a s. in the file, not i' the worst rank of manhood, Mcb. Ill, 1,102. they in France of the best rank and s. Hml. I, 3, 73. Statist, a statesman, a politician: I do believe, s. though I am none, that this will prove a war, Cymb. II, 4, 16. I once did hold it, as our —s do, a baseness to write fair, Hml. V, 2, 33. Statua, writing of M. Edd. for statue, as often as this word is trisyllabic. Statue (trisyll., and to be written statue, in HG6 III, 2, 80. R 3 III, 7, 25. Caes. 11, 2, 76. Ill, 2, 192) an image shaped by a sculptor: Ven. 213. 1013. Sonn. 55, 5. Gent. IV, 4, 206. W i n t . V, 2, 103. V, 3, 10. 47. 88. H6A III, 3, 14. H6B III, 2, 80. R 3 III, 7, 25. H8 I, 2, 88. Troil. V, 1, 60. V, 10, 20. Cor. II, 1, 282. Rom. V, 3, 299. Caes I, 3, 146. II, 2, 76. 85. Ill, 2, 55. 192. Ant. Ill, 3, 24. P e r . II Prol. 14. Blunder of Dogberry for statutes: A d o III, 3, 85 ( Q and the later Ff statutes'). Stature, size: Gent IV, 4, 163. W i r . Ill, 3, 138. Mids. Ill, 2, 291. As III, 2, 285. H4B 111, 2, 277. Per. V, 1, 110. Statute, 1) an edict, a law: Meas. 1, 3, 19. I, 4, 67. V, 322. Err. I, 1, 9. 1, 2, 6 V, 126. A d o III, 3, 85 ( F l statues). L L L I, 1, 17. R 2 IV, 213. H6B IV, 7, 19. H6C V, 4, 79. Cor. I, 1, 86. Mcb. Ill, 4, 76.

2) a b o n d ; a mortgage: the s. of thy beauty thou wilt take, thou usurer, that put'st forth all to use, Sonn. 134, 9. a great buyer of land, with his —s, his recognizances, Hml. V, 1, 113. Statute-cays, woollen caps, which, by Act of Parliament in 1571, the citizens were enjoined to wear on holydays: better wits have worn plain s. L L L V, 2, 281 ( = better wits may be found among the citizens). Stanaeh, see Stanch. StaYes, see Staff. Stay, subst. 1) continuance in a place; forbearance of departure: Lucr. 328. my s. must be stolen out of other affairs, Meas. Ill, 1,158. your s. with him may not be long, 256. IV, 1, 44. W i n t . 1, 2, 16. 25. 97. R2 II, 1, 223. V, 5, 95. H5 V Chor. 37. H 6 A IV, 6 , 4 0 . B o m . I, 1,164. Oth. 1, 3, 277. I make some s. Mids. Ill, 2, 87. 2) continuance in a state: this inconstant s. Sonn. 15, 9 ( = transitoriness). 3) delay, tarrying: no more of s.; to-morrow thou must go, Gent. I, 3, 75. no bed shall e'er be guilty of my s. Merch. Ill, 2,328. our dinner will not recompense this long s. Tim. Ill, 6, 35. make no s. Mids. V, 428. let's make no s. Tim. Ill, 6, 128. 4 ) prop, support: what hope, what s. J o h n V, 7,68. these feet, whose strengthless s. is numb, H 6 A II, 5 , 1 3 . H6B II, 3, 25. H6C II, 1, 69. R 3 II, 2, 74. 75. 76. Troil. V, 3, 60. 5) T h e imperative of the verb nsed substantively: here's a s. that shakes the rotten carcass of old death out of his rags, J o h n 11,455 (i. e. a word of command: stay! = stand! hold! stop! German: ein Halt). Stay, vb. 1) intr. a) to stand: so o'er this sleeping soul doth Tarquin s. Lucr. 423. who —s it (time) still withalt As III, 2, 348. I'll s. above the hill, H 6 C III, I , 5 . to s. on = to stand on, to insist o n : I s hereon my bond, Merch. IV, 1, 242. to s. = to make a stand, not to flee: give them leave to fly that will not s. H6C II, 3, 50. not that I fear to s. II, 5, 138. an he had —ed by him, Cor. II, 1, 143 ( = opposed him), s. by me, my lords, H6C I, 1, 31 ( = assist me), s. thou by thy lord, Caes. V, 5, 44. you —ed well by't in Egypt, Ant. II, 2, 179 ( = you have stood your ground). b) to stand still, to stop: each shadow makes him stop, each murmur s. Ven. 706. to make her s. 873. there she —ed, Lucr. 1275 (stopped, paused), in pursuit of the thing she would have s. Sonn. 143, 4. and never —s to greet him, As II, 1, 54. the glorious sun —s in his course, J o h n III, 1,78. s. and breathe awhile, H4A V, 4, 47. Oftenest in the imperative: Wiv. V, 5, 84. Meas. V, 354. Err. V, 364. Mids. II, 2, 84. 87. V, 281. H4A II, 2, 85 (Qq stand). HGA III, 1,103. H6C IV, 3, 27. R 3 I, 2, 33. Cor. V, 2, 1. Rom. IV, 3, 57. Hml. I, 1, 51. 127 etc. etc. Hence = to cease, to have an end: here my commission —s, H6B II, 4, 76. c) to be in a place: when ... thy shade ... on sightless eyes doth s. Sonn. 43,12. I would be brought where thou dost s. 44, 4. tell him where I s. Meas. IV, 5, 7. and s. here in your court for three years, L L L I, I, 52. hou> long within this wood intend you s.t Mids. II, 1, 138. the chamber where we —ed, H 4 B IV, 5, 57. if he s. in France, H 5 II, 4, 139. Distinguished from to abide: they cherish it (virtue) to make it s. there, and yet it will no more but abide, Wint. IV, 3. 98 ftho clown's spcechV

s d) Co continue in a place or state, to remain: she — s, exclaiming on the direful night, Lucr. 741. the »tain upon his silver down a ill s. 1012. that to my use it might unused s. from hands of falsehood, Sonn. 48, 3. then s. at home and go not, Gent. II, 7, 62. s. with me awhile, 111, 1, 58. 244. IV, 1, 21. Wiv. I, 4, 40. Ill, 5, 59. Meas. II, 2,26. Err. I, 2,10. IV, 1, 86. IV, 4,155. V, 336. LLL 1,1, 111. Mids. II, 1, 145. Tw. I, 3,119. W i n t . I, 2,15. B2 1,2,57. H6A IV, 5, 20. 50. H6C III, 2, 58. Cor. II, 3, 45 (we are not to i. all together). Tim. IV, 3,47 (s. thou out for earnest, — remain without) etc. etc. to s. behind = not to join a person or an enterprise: John III, 3, 1. V, 7, 70. R3 II, 2, 154. Lr. Ill, 6\ 108. Ant. Ill, 7,20. not to s. behind a person or an enterprise: As 1, 1, 115. All's II, 1, 24. Tw. Ill, 3, 4. Troil. I, 1, 83. Cor. I, 1, 247. e) to delay, to tarry, to be long: thou —est too long, Pilgr. 168. thou hast —ed so long that going will scarce serve the turn, Gent. Ill, 1, 388. —est thou to vex me herel IV, 4, 66. we s too long, Wiv. IV, 1, 87. no longer —ing but to give the mother notice, Meas. I, 4, 86. Is. too long from her, Shr. Ill, 2,112. Err. Ill, 2, 173. Err. IV, 1, 33. 91. V, 20. H6B III, 1, 94. IV, 8, 62 etc. s. not to expostulate, H6C II, 5, 135 (lose no time with expostulating ; cf. Stand), s. not to talk with them, Tit. II, 3, 306. Cor. IV, 2, 43. Rom. V, 3, 158. cf. H6B II, 4, 86. f ) to wait: but, like a sad slave, s. and think of nought, Sonn. 57,11. s.: not get, Tp. I, 2, 36. dinner is ready, and your father —», Gent. I, 2, 131. Ill, 1, 53. Wiv. IV, 5, 13. Meas. II, 3, 17. Err. Ill, 1, 36. L L L V, 2, 845. Mcrch. V, 302. H4A II, 4, 63. IV, 3, 29. H6B IV, 10, 7. H6C IV, 1, 5 etc. With for: not —ing for the people's suffrages, Lncr. Arg. 3. you are - ed for, Gent II, 2, 19. Ill, 1, 382. 385. Wiv. I, 1, 213. 314. IV, 6, 49. Err. I, 2, 76. Ill, 2, 189. IV, 1, 91. Mids. 1, 1,168. Merch. II, 6,48. 111,4, 82. J o h n II, 44. R2 I, 3, 5. Tim. I, 1, 179 etc. With on, = 1) to attend on, to wait on : 1 thank you, and will s. upon your leisure, All's III, 5,48. thine eye hath —ed upon some favour that it loves, Tw. II, 4, 24. my house and welcome on their pleasure s. Bom. I, 2, 37. worthy Macbeth, we s. upon your leisure, Mcb 1,3,148. they (the players) ». upon your patience, Hml. Ill, 2,112. he —s upon your will, Ant. I, 2, 119. 2) to wait for: I have a servant comes with me along, that —s upon me, Meas. IV, 1, 47. our throats are sentenced and s. upon execution, Cor. V, 4, 8. cf. Err. V, 20. 2) trans, a) to help to stand upright, to keep from falling, to support, to prop : makes nice of no vile hold to s. him up, John III, 4, 138. struck me, that thought to s. him, overboard, B3 I, 4, 19. two props... to s. him from the fall of vanity, III, 7, 97. b) to make to stand, to keep from proceeding on its way, to stop: a river - ed swelleth with more rage, Ven. 331. all these poor forbiddings could not s. him, Lncr. 323. she her plaints a little while doth s. 1364. if you meet the prince, you may s. him, Ado 111,3,81. 85. 88. IV, 1, 285. Wint. II, 3, 110. H6A I, 5, 2. Rom. V, 2, 12. c) to keep back ; to restrain : he was ed by thee, Lucr. 917. your ships are —ed at Venice, Shr. IV, 2, 83. ». your thanks awhile, Wint. I, 2, 9. s. thy revengeful hand, R2 V, 3, 42. H6A I, 2, 104. s. my thoughts, that labour to persuade my soul, H6B 111, 2, 136. Ill,

1119

1, 105. Caes. IV, 3, 127. Hml. IV, 5, 136. With from: to s. you from election, Merch. Ill, 2, 24. you might s. him from his intendment, As 1, 1, 139. how my men will t. themselves from laughter, Shr. Ind. 1, 134. Ill, 2, 23. H4B IV, 1, 123. d) to cease, to finish: the goose came out of door, and —ed the odds by adding four, L L L III, 93. 99. retreat is made and execution —ed, H 4 B IV, 3, 78. 0 that my death would s. these ruthful deeds, E 6 C II, 5, 95. s. your strife, T i t III, 1, 193. e) to pnt off, to retard: to s. him not too long, lam content ...to have him matched, Shr. IV, 4, 30. did entreat his holiness to s. the judgement o' the divorce, H8 III, 2, 33. we do our longing s. to hear the rest untold, Per. V, 3, 83. f ) to make to remain, to detain: that tide will s. me longer than I should, G e n t II, 2, 15. —s me here at home tinkept, As I, 1, 8. if they (anchors) can but s. you where you'll be loath to be, W i n t IV, 4, 582. my heart hath one poor string to s. it by, J o h n V, 7, 55. H 8 I, 1, 5. Tit. II, 3,181. Bom. V, 3, 187. Caes. II, 2, 75. = to suffer to remain: we —ed her for your sake, As I, 3, 69. g) to wait for: flesh —s no farther reason, Sonn. 151, 8. my father —s my coming, Gent. 11, 2, 13. we must s. the time, Mids. V, 259. s. the very riping of the time, Merch. II, 8,40. let me s. the growth of his beard, As 111, 2, 221. B2 I, 3, 4. Troil. I, 1, 25. Bom. II, 5, 36. Mcb. IV, 3, 142. Hml. V, 2, 24. Oth. IV, 2, 170. Ant. Ill, 13, 155. to s. one's leisure: Sonn. 58, 4. Sbr. 111,2, 219. IV,3,59. J o h n l l , 5 8 . H4AI,3,258. h) to remain for the purpose of: I cannot s. thanksgiving, L L L II, 193 ( = I have no time for thanking you), s. not thy compliment, IV, 2, 147 ( = lose no time with thy courtesy, but go). / ». dinner there, B3 III, 2, 122. Bom. IV, 5, 150. to s. question (German: Rede stehen): I will not s. thy questions, Mids. II, 1, 235. I'll s. no longer question, Merch. IV, 1, 346. —ing no longer question, H4B I, 1, 48. i) to abide, to undergo, to meet, to stand: they basely fly and dare not s. the field, Yen. 894. she wUl not s. the siege of loving terms, Bom. I, 1, 218. arming myself with patience to s. the providence of some high powers, Caes. V, 1, 107. Stead, subst. 1) place which another bad or might have; preceded by in: Gent. IV, 4, 206. Merch. IV, 1, 161. Shr. I, 1, 207. H6A 1, 5, 29. Cor. V, 3, 192 (were you in my ».). Tim. IV, 1,6 (—s). Caes. V, 1, 85 ( — s ) . Mcb.V,3,26. 2) use, help: the help of one stands me in little s. H6A IV, 6, 31. S t e a d , vb. 1) to supply, to replace: with up: we shall advise this wronged maid to s. up your appointment, go in your place, Meas. Ill, 1, 260. 2) to be of use to, to benefit, to help: necessaries which since have —ed much, Tp. 1, 2, 165. so it s. you, 1 will write, Gent II, 1, 119. can you so s. me as bring me to the sight of Isabella t Meas. I, 4, 17. may you t. met Merch. I, 3, 7. Shr. I, 2, 266. All's III, 7, 41. V, 3, 87. Bom. II, 3, 54. Oth. I, 3, 344. Per. Ill Prol. 21. IV Prol. 41. cf. Bested. Steadfast, fixed, not turned aside: and with a s. eye receives the scroll, Lucr. 1339. oppose thy s. gazing eyes to mine, H6B IV, 10, 48. Steadfastly, with fixed eyes: upon this hurt she looks so s. Ven. 1063.

1120

S

Steady, firm, fixed, not tottering: if his head will the prep, on or upon: now stole upon the time the dead of night, Lucr. 162. as the morning —s upon the night, itand —er on a pole, H6B IT, 7, 101. Steal (impf. stole; partie. stolen; stole Mcb. II, 3, Tp. T, 65. on us both did haggish age s. on, All's I, 73. CMS. II, 1,238). 1) tr. a) to take clandestinely and 2, 29. 'tis strange he thus should s. upon us, W i n t T, without right; absol.: Tp. IT, 239. Wiv. 1,3, 30. 32. 1, 115. All's T, 3, 42. H4B II, 2, 172. Hml. I, 5, 61. Meas. I, 2, 10. 14. II, 2, 177. H5 T, 1, 92 etc. With Lr. IT, 6, 190. A n t III, 6, 42. an object: Yen. 160. 934. 1056. Bonn. 48, 13. 75, Stealer, one who steals, a thief: Ado II, 1, 233. 6. Tp. T, 299. Gent. IT, 4, 10. 34. Wiv. Ill, 4, 40. Hml. Ill, 2, 349. Cymb. II, 3, 75. Meaa. Ill, 1, 159. Err. Ill, 1,44. Ado II, 1, 206. 231. Stealth, 1) the act of stealing, theft: Tim. Ill, 4, Ill, 3, 44. L L L T, 1, 40. Merch. I, 3, 91. All's II, 5, 27. Lr. HI, 4, 96. 86. John IT, 3, 136. H6B III, 1, 55. H6C IT, 5, 17. 2) clandestine practice: the s. of our most mutual T, 1, 43 etc. With away: Lucr. 1056. Sonn. 63, 8. entertainment, Meas. I, 2, 158. Lr. I, 2, 11. by s. = With from: Lncr. 1068. 1555. Sonn. 36, 8. 79, 9. clandestinely: Err. Ill, 2, 7. Rom. Ill, 5, 217. 99, 2. 15. Gent. IT, 4, 59. Meas. II, 4,43. Ado T, 4, 3) clandestine motion; a going secretly: 'thy dials 89. Mids. Ill, 1, 171. Ill, 2, 284. 436. Merch. II, 8, shady s. Sonn. 77, 7. your s. unto this wood, Mids. 19. Ill, 2, 247. Wint. IT, 4, 646. H6C T, 5, 24. H8 Ill, 2, 310. IT, 1, 165. I feel this youth's perfections III, 2, 140. Oth. 1, 3, 208. Ill, 3, 310. Cymb. II, 4, with an invisible and subtle s. to creep in at mine eyes, 117 etc. With of: s. dead seeing of his living hue, Tw. I, 5,316. Sonn. 67, 6. had stolen of both, 99, 10. of a cut loaf Stealthy, done clandestinely: with his s. pace, to s. a shive, Tit. II, 1, 87. Befl.: but do thy worst to Mcb. II, 1, 54. s. thyself away, for term of life thou art assured mine, Steam, vapour: she feedeth on the s. (of Adonis' Sonn. 92, 1. there's warrant in that theft which —t breath) Ven. 63. itself, when there's no mercy left, Mcb. II, 3, 152 (in Steed, a horse for state or war: Ven. 13. 39. both passages quibblingj. With a ¿lat. comm.: al- 263. 290. Compl. 112. Tp. IT, 30. Shr. I, 2, 207. though thou s. thee all my poverty, Sonn. 40, 10. All's II, 3, 300. R2 III, 3, 117. T, 2, 8. 19. H4A II, Applied to the act of running away with a girl or 3, 52. H5 IT Chor. 10. IT, 2, 8. IT, 7, 81. H6B V, of ravishing children: Mids. II, 1, 22. H6B IT, 2, 151. 2,9. H6CII, 1,183. 11, 3, 20. 11, 6,12. IV, 2, 21. Gent. Ill, 1, 11 (away). 15. IT, 1, 48 (away). Wiv. R3 I, 1, 10. Troil. IT, 5, 186. T, 5, 2. Cor. I, 1,121. IV, 4, 74 (away). Merch. IT, 1, 385. Hmi. IT, 5, 173. I, 9, 12. 61. 71. Tit. II, 3, 76. Rom. Ill, 2, 1. Oth. Oth. I, 3, 60. cf. As I, 3, 131. Ill, 3, 351. A n t I, 5, 48. Cymb. II, 3, 23. Osed in a good sense, in speaking of things taken Steel, subst. refined and hardened iron: Wint. or gained in a bland and imperceptible manner: to s. IT, 4, 228. H4B I, 1, 146. H6C II, 1, 160. R3 IV, 1, a kiss, Ven. 726. Gent. II, 4, 160. how many a tear 61. Troil. Ill, 3, 121 (a gate of s.; cf. Sonn. 65, 8). hath love stolen from mine eye, Sonn. 3 1 , 6 . / stole all Tit. IV, 1, 103. true as s.: Mids. 11, 1, 197. Troil.Ill, courtesy from heaven, H4A III, 2, 50. which —s men's 2,184. Rom. II, 4, 210. Emblem of hardness: Ven. eyes, Sonn. 20, 8. Merch. Ill, 2, 125. Per. IV, 1, 41. 111. 199. Lucr. 755. 951. Sonn. 65, 8. 120, 4. Gent. stolest away the ladies' hearts, H6B I, 3, 55. Caes. Ill, I, 1, 149. Ill, 2, 79. Err. Ill, 2, 150. IT, 2, 34. R2 2, 220. Ant. II, 6,106. cf. MidB. Ill, 2, 284. thou hast III,2,111. H4B1I, 3, 54. H6A I, 4, 51. IT, 2, 51. stolen the impression of her fantasy, Mids. I, 1, 32. H6C II, 1, 201. Troil. I, 3, 177. Tit. IT, 3, 47. V, 3, —ing her soul, Merch. T, 19. to s. your thoughts, II, 88. Rom. Ill, 1, 120. Hml. I, 3, 63. Ill, 3, 70. Ant. 1, 12. IV, 4, 33. b) to assume hypocritically: ioho cannot s. a shape Denoting weapons or armour: Tp.II, 1,283. Wiv. that means deceitt H6B 111, 1, 79. that deceit should1, 3, 84. 102. As V, 1, 60. T w . Ill, 3, 5. Wint. IV, s. such gentle shapes, R3 II, 2, 27. 4, 748. John II, 352. R2 III, 2, 59. 111. IV, 50. H4A c) to conceal; to perform secretly: 'twere good to V, 1, 13. H4B IV, 1, 121. H5 III, 7, 161. H6A IV s. our marriage, Shr. Ill, 2, 142. stolen — secret: 2, 11. H6B III, 2, 234. IV, 10, 59. H6C I, 1, 58. II, their stolen marriage day, Boin. V, 3, 233. her stolen 5, 132. H8 II, 1, 76. Troil. HI, 1, 165. IV, 5, 195. hours of lust, Oth. Ill, 3, 338. Cor. I, 9,45. Tit. V, 3, 112. Rom. I, 1, 89. Ill, 1, 2) refl. to creep, to slink furtively: he will s. him- 164. Caes. Ill, 2, 181. V, 3, 76. Mcb. I, 2, 17. Ill, self into a man's favour, All's III, 6, 98. he is wise, 2, 24. Hml. I, 4, 52. Cymb. I, 2, 12. Per. II, 1, 160. and hnth stolen him home to bed, Rom. II, 1,4. cf. Sonn. Adjectively: thy s. bosom, Sonn. 133,9. s. pikes, 92, 1 and Mcb. II, 3, 152. Cor. V, 6, 152. the flinty and s. couch of war, Oth. I, 3) intr. to go or come furtively: she came —ing 3, 231. to the wayward boy, Ven. 344. lest jealousy should by Steel, vb. to make hard: s. my lance's point, R2 his —ing in disturb the feast, 450. he —eth into her 1, 3, 74. Figuratively, = 1) to harden, to make inchamber, Lucr. Arg. 15. away he — j , Lucr. 283. sensible: lest thy hard heart do s. it, Ven. 375. 376. through the dark night he —eth, 729. Sonn. 33, 8. my —ed sense, Sonn. 112, 8. the —ed gaoler, Meas. 104, 10. Meas. Ill, 2, 99. Ado 111, 1, 7. Ill, 3, 63. IV, 2, 90. had not God —ed the hearts of men, R2 V, IV, 2, 64. L L L V, 2, 94. Mids. 1, 1, 164. 213. II, 1, 2, 34. 2) to make firm and strong: from his metal was 65. 191. Ill, 2, 51. IV, 1, 161. 209. Merch. V, 15. his party —ed, H4B I, 1, 116. service shall with —ed As II, 1, 30. All's II, 1, 29. Ill, 2, 132. Ill, 5, 55. sinews toil, H5 11, 2, 36. s. my soldiers' hearts, IV, 1, H4A II, 4, 392. H5 V, 1, 92. H6C I, 1, 3. 212. Ill, 306. H6B III, 1, 331. H6C II, 2, 41. R3 I, 1, 148. 1, 13. IT, 2, 20. R3 111, 7, 168. H8 III, 2, 57. Rom. Troil. I, 3, 353. Caes. II, 1, 121. I, 1, 132. Caes. II, 1, 238. Mcb. II, 4, 26. Hml. Ill, Steeled, adj. made of steel: my s. coat, H6A I, 4, 134. Oth. Ill, 3, 39 etc. With the adv. on: the hour 1, 85. —s on, Err. IT, 1, 52. IT, 2, 60. R3 T, 3, 85. With Steely, made of steel: the s. point of Clifford's

s

1121

lance, H6C II, 3, 16. Figuratively, = hard, firm, unStench, a disgusting smell: John III, 4, 26. H6A bending : but these fixed evil* (lying, folly, cowardice) I, 5, 23. Lr. IV, 6, 131. lit to Jit in him, that they take place, when virtue's s. Step, snbst. 1) pace; progression by one advance bones loolc bleak i' the cold wind, All's I, 1, 114 ( = of the foot: as if he told the —s, Ven. 277. perdition steel-boned, unyielding and uncomplying virtue). shall attend you s. by s. Tp. Ill, 3, 78. to measure Steer, subst rock, mountain ( f ) : come from the kingdoms with his feeble —s, Gent. II, 7, 10. make a pastime of each weary s. 35. 36. LLL V, 2, 194. 195. farthest s. of India, Mids. II, 1, 69 (Ql steppe). Steep, adj. precipitous: LLL IV, 1, 2. H8 I, 1, As II, 7, 130. B2 I, 3,265. turn two mincing —s into a manly stride, Merch. Ill, 4, 67. Wint I, 2, 173. B2 131. Cor. Ill, 3, 88. Hinl. I, 3, 48. Lr. IV, 6, 3. Steep, vb. to dip and soak in a liquid: and his I, 3, 290. Ill, 2, 17. 125. V, 1, 91. H8 I, 2, 43 (front love-kindling fire did quickly s. in a coldfountain, Sonn. but in that file where others tell—s with me). Troil. 153, 3. there may be in the cup a spider —ed, Wint. II, 3, 193 (make). Mcb. II, 1, 57. Hml.V, 1,79. Cymb. II, 1, 40. —s his safety in true blood, John III, 4, 147. IV, 2, 215. Per. II, 1, 164. H4B II, 2, 147. H6C II, 1, 62. B3 I, 3, 178. IV, 4, 2) one remove in climbing, a stair, a degree: they 275. Bom. V, 3, 145. Mcb. II, 3, 121. Figuratively, are as children but one s. below, B3 IV, 4, 301. you = to imbue: do not s. thy heart in such relenting dew have gone slightly o'er law —s, H8 II, 4, 112. the geof lamentations, Lncr. 1828. four days will quickly s. nerals disdained by him one s. below, Troil. 1,3, 130. themselves in night, Midi. I, 1, 7. Let fancy still my 131. that is a s. on which I must fall down, or els» sense in Lethe s. Tw. IV, 1, 66. s. my senses in forget- o'erleap, Mcb. I, 4, 48. one s. 1 have advanced thee, fulness, H4B III, 1, 8. have —ed their galls in honey, Lr. V, 3, 28. as a grise or s. Oth. I, 3, 200. H5 II, 2; 30. with tongue in venom —ed, Hml. II, 2, 3) measure, proceeding, action: no unchaste action 533. —ed me in poverty to the very lips, Oth. IV, 2, or dishonoured s. Lr. 1, 1, 231. doth watch Bianca's 50. —ed our sense in Lethe, Ant. II, 7, 113. are —ed —s so narrowly, Shr. Ill, 2, 141. Plur. —s = path, in favours, Cymb. V, 4, 131. way (in a moral sense): fears which attend the —s of Steep-dewn, precipitous: wash me in s. gulfs of wrong, John IV, 2, 57. we will untread the —S of liquid fire, Oth. V, 2, 280. damnedflight, V, 4, 52. vengeance tend upon your —«, Steeple, tnrret of a church, spire: Gent. II, 1, H6B III, 2, 304. leads discontented—s in foreign soil, 142. H4A III, 1, 33. Lr. Ill, 2, 3. Per. II, 1, 38. B3 IV, 4, 312. controller of our private —s, Tit. II, Steep-op, high and precipitous: having climbed 3, 60. followed your sad — s, Lr. V, 3, 289. the s. heavenly hill, Sonn. 7,5. her stand she takes upon Step, vb. 1) to tread: as your feet hit the ground a s. hill, Pilgr. 121. they s. on, Tw. Ill, 4, 306. Sleepy, having a precipitous declivity: when his 2) to make some steps; to go a little distance and youthful morn hath travelled on to age's s. night, Sonn. with a limited purpose: who sees t\e jurking serpent 63, 5 (cf. 7, 5). bowing his head against the s. mount —s aside, Lucr. 362. Jie — s me to her trencher, Gent. to climb his happiness, Tim. I, 1, 74. IV, 4, 9. s. into the chamber, Wiv. IV, 2, 11. now s. I Steer, subst. the male of the bovine kind; a bull forth to whip hypocrisy, LLL IV, 3, 151. deadly diaa well aa an ox: the s., the heifer and the calf are all vorce s. between me and you, All's V, 3, 319. s. forth called neat, Wint. I, 2, 124. like youthful - s unyoked, mine advocate, W i n t V, 1, 221. none so small advanH4B IV, 2, 103. tage shall ».forth to check his reign, John III, 4, 151. Steer, vb. 1) tr. to direct, to govern (the course lei's s. into the shadow, R2 III, 4, 25. t. aside, H4A of a ship); abs.: at the helm a seeming mermaid —s, II, 4, 36. —ed forth before the king, V, 2, 46. —« m* Ant. II, 2, 214. With an object: you shall s. the happy a little higher, IV, 3, 75. to s. out of these dreary helm, H6B I, 3, 103. a rarer spirit never did «. hu- dumps, T i t I, 391. s. aside, Bom. 1,1,162. by whose manity, Ant. V, 1, 32. boats that are not ~—ed, Cyuib. death he's —ed into a great estate, Tim. II, 2, 232. IV, 3, 46. who, in hot blood, hath —ed into the law, which is past 2) intr. to direct one's course at sea; to sail: thus depth to those, III, 5, 12. what judgement would s. from hulling in the wild sea of my conscience, Idids. toward this to thisf Hml. Ill, 4, 71. «. between her and her this remedy. H8 II, 4, 200. —ing with due course to- fighting soul, 113. this gentleman —s in to Cassio and wards the isle of Rhodes, Oth. 1, 3, 34. entreats his pause, Oth. U, 3, 229. s. you forth, Cymb. Steerage, the act of directing at sea: Rom. 1,4, V, 5, 130. 112. Per. IV, 4, 19. Scarcely to be distinguished from to go, to walk, Stell, to place, to fix: to find a face where all to march: since we are —ed thus far in, Shr. I, 2, 83. distress is —ed, Lucr. 1444. rathe eye hath played the wherein we s. after a stranger, John V, 2,27. we should painter and hath —ed thy beauty's form in table of my not s. too far, H4B I, 3, 20. if well, he —ed before heart, Sonn. 24, 1. quenched the —ed fires, Lr. Ill, 7, me, happily for my example, H8 IV, 2, 10. not —ing 61 (the fixed stars. According to others, = stellated, o'er the bounds of modesty. Bom. IV, 2, 27. I am in starry). blood — ed in so far, Mcb. Ill, 4, 137. whose naked Stem, subst. 1) stalk; branch: two lovely berries breast — ed before targes of proof, Cymb. V, 5, 5. moulded on one s. Mids. Ill, 2, 211. this is a s. of that Step-dame, stepmother: Mids. 1, 1, 5. Troil. Ill, victorious stock, H5 II, 4, 62. sweet s. from York's 2,201. Cymb. 1,6, 1. II, 1,63. great stock, H6A II, 5, 41. Stephana (Stiphano in Tp. V, 277; Stephdno in 2) the forepart of a ship: fell below his s. Cor. II, Merch.) name in Tp. II, 2,65. 100. 104. 113. Ill, 2, 2, 111. they skip from s. to stern, Per. IV, 1, 64. 161. IV, 221 (allusion to a popular ballad; cf. Oth. Stem, vb. to oppose (a current), to press forward II, 3, 92). V, 277. 286. Merch. V, 28. 51. through: to s. the leaves, H6C II, 6, 36. —ing it, Caes. Stephen, name: Shr. Ind. 2, 95 (S. Sly). John I, 2, 109. cf. Re-stem. III, 1,143 (S. Langton). B2 III, 3, 28 (Sir S. Scroop).

1122

S

Tit. IV, 4, 42 (Saint S.). Oth. II, 3, 92 (old ballad. King S. was a worthy peer). H t e p m i t h e r , a mother by marriage only: Cymb. 1, 1, 71. S t e r a e , a vast uninhabited plain (?): from the farthest s. of India, Midi. II, 1, 69 (Qj Ff steepe). S t e r i l e , barren, not fertile: Tp. IV, 69. H4B IV, 3, 129. Caes. I, 2, 9. Hml. II, 2, 310. Oth. I, 3, 328. S t e r i l i t y , barrenness: Lr. I, 4, 300. S t e r l i n g , adj. of foil value: if my word be s. yet in England, R2 IV, 264. with s. money, H4B II, 1, 131. you have ta'en these tenders far true pay, which are not s. Hml. I, 3, 107. S t a n , subst. the hind part of a ship where the rudder is placed: sit at chief est s. of public weal, H6A I, 1, 177. turn our s. upon a rock, H6B III, 2, 91. skip from stem to s. Per. IV, 1, 64. S t e m , adj. 1 ) severe, austere, gloomy, sullen, grim: the s. and direful god of war, Ven. 98. though men can cover crimes with bold s. looks, Lncr. 1252. I would outstare the —est eyes that look, Merch. II, 1, 27. therefore put I on the countenance of s. commandment, As II, 7, 109. the s. brow and waspish action, IV, 3, 9. he hath a s. look, but a gentle heart, J o h n IV, I , 88. swearing and s. looks, H5 V, 2, 61. let thy looks be s. H6A I, 2, 62. why look you still so s. and tragicalt III, 1, 125. Suffolk's imperial tongue is s. and rough, H6BIV, 1,121. our s. alarums changed to merry meetings, R3 I, 1, 7. I have seen thee s. Cor. IV, 1, 24. the fatal bellman which gives the —est good-night, Mcb. II, 2, 4. 2) unkind, hard-hearted, pitiless: but he, like you, would not have been so s. Meas. U, 2,66. pierced through the heart with your s. cruelty, Mids. Ill, 2, 59. will you —er be than he that dies and lives by bloody drop si As 111, 5, 6. you are cold and s. All's IV, 2, 8. s., obdurate, flinty, II6C I, 4, 142. that I am s. and love them not, R3 I, 3,44. ambition should be made of—er stuff, Caes. Ill, 2, 97. attend you here the door of our s. daughter t Cymb. II, 3, 42. 3) fierce and rude; cruel, ferocious: there we will unfold to creatures s. sad tunes, to change their kinds, Lucr. 1147. how many lambs might the s. wolf betray, Sonn. 96, 9. we cannot deal but with the very hand of s. injustice and confused wrong, John V, 2, 23. teaching s. murder how to butcher thee, B2 I, 2, 32. the s. tyrant war, H4B Ind. 14. rough deeds of rage and s. impatience, B6A IV, 7, 8. thy mother took into her blameful bed some s. untutored churl, H6B III, 2, 213. s. Falconbridge commands the narrow seas, II6C I, 1, 239. murder, s. murder, R3 V, 3, 197. what s. ungentle hands have ... made thy body bare, Tit. II, 4, 16. more s. and bloody than the Centaur r' feast, V, 2, 204. lest with this piteous action you convert my s. effects, Hml. III, 4, 129. if wolves had at thy gate howled that s. lime, Lr. Ill, 7, 63. S t e r n a g e , stern, steerage: grapple your minds to s. of this navy, H5 III Chor. 18. S t e r n n e s a , severity of look: how should I behold the s. of his presence? Wint. IV, 4, 24. S t e r r e , see Starve. S t e w , 1) a vessel in which things are stewed or seethed (?): I have seen corruption boil and bubble, till it o'er-run the s. Meas. V, 321. 2) a house of prostitution: to mart as in a Roman

s. Cymb. I, 6, 152. Flur. —s in the same sense: R2 V, 3 , 1 6 . H4B I, 2,60. Steward,one who manages the affairs of another: they are the lords and ownefs of their facet, others bu —s of their excellence, Sonn. 94, 8. Tw. II, 3, 77. 123. II, 5, 169. Wint. V,2, 28. B2 IV, 126. H4B V, 3, 136. R3 111, 7, 133. Tim. I, 1, 288. II, 2, 18. 31. Ill, 4,41. r09. IV, 2 , 1 . 50. IV, 3, 487. 496. 505. V, 1, 8. Hml. IV, 5 , 1 7 3 . high s. (title of an officer of state): HS IV, 1,18. 41. S t e w a r d s h i p , the office of a steward: R2 II, 2, 59. 111,3,78. Stewed, seethed in a slow moist heat: more than half s. in grease, Wiv. Ill, 5, 121. in the rank sweat of an enseamed bed, s. in corruption, Hml. Ill, 4, 93. s. in his haste, Lr. II, 4,31. whipped with wire, and s. in brine, Ant. II, 5, 65. s. prunes, a favourite dish in brothels: Wiv. I, 1, 296. Meas. II, 1, 92. H4A III, 3, 128 (thlre's no more faith in thee than in a s. prune, 1. e. than in any thing to be found in a brothel). H4B II, 4, 158. sodden business! there's a s. phrase indeed, Troil. Ill, 1, 44 (quibbling: a phrase becoming a stew or a brothel). Stick, subst. 1) a staff; a rod: Tp. 1,2,472. H6B IV, 10, 52. Lr. II, 4, 125. 2) any stem of a tree broken or cut for fuel or another purpose: I'll bear him no more —s, Tp. II, 2, 167. he that breaks a s. of Gloster's grove, H6B I, 2, 33. S t i c k , vb. (impf. and partic. stuck) 1) tr. a) to stab, to pierce: you were best s. her, Gent. I, 1, 108 ( = kill, slay; quibbling), to s. the heart of falsehood, Troil. Ill, 2, 202. b) to thrust in: thou —est a dagger in me, Merch. III, 1,115. in his anointed flesh s. boarish fangs, Lr. Ill, 7, 58 (Qq rash). c' to fix by piercing: a codpiece to s pins on, Gent. II, 7, 56. s. it in thy cap, H5 IV, 7,161. d) to fasten, to attach in any manner: to s. it (the rod) in their children's sight, Meas. 1, 3, 25. with two pitch-balls stuck in her face for eyes, L L L III, 199. s. musk-roses in thy sleek smooth head, Mids. IV, 1, 3. he stuck them (wands) up before the fulsome ewes, Merch. I, 3, 87. a thing stuck on with oaths upon your finger, V, 168. in mine ear I durst not s. a rose, J o h n I, 142. s. your rosemary on this fair corse, Rom. IV, 5, 79. e) to fix, to place, to settle: millions of false eyes are stuck upon thee, Meas. IV, 1, 61. I stuck my choice upon her, All's V, 3, 45. that he might s. the smallest opinion on my least misuse, Oth. IV, 2, 108. we must not rend our subjects from our laws, and s. them in our will, H8 I, 2, 94. f) Followed by with, — to set with, to furnish or adorn with on the surface: a lemon stuck with cloves, L L L V, 2, 654. my shroud of white, stuck all with yew, Tw. II, 4, 56. stuck and spangled with your flatteries, Tim. Ill, 6, 101. Similarly: suspicion all our lives shall be stuck full of eyes, H4A V, 2, 8. 2) intr. a) to be fastened to something by piercing, or by cleaving to the surface, or by adhering in any manner): the green plum —s fast, Ven. 527. Lucretia's glove, wherein her needle —s, Lucr. 317. a born devil, on whose nature nurture can never s. Tp. IV, 189. I am a kind of burr; I shall s. Meas. IV, 3, 190. there stuck no plume in any English crest, John II, 317. on

s

1123

the sheets hit hair it —ing, H6B III, 2, 174. they are 113. H6CII, 6, 83. H8 IT. 1, 58. Rom. IT, 3, 33. bum; they'll s. where they are thrown, Troil. Ill, 2,120. With up: John IT, 3, 133. 2) intr. to be suffocated or choked: you thallt. in wherein thou — est up to the eart, Rom. 1,4, 42. when every feather —t in hit own wing, Tim. II, 1, 30. Amen your own report, Meas. II, 4, 158. S t l f m a t l e , one branded by natare with deforstuck in my throat, Mcb. II, 2, 33. hit secret murders - ing on his hands, V, 2,17. which now, like fruit un- mity: foul t. H6B T, 1, 215. H6C II, 2, 136. Stlgmatleal, branded by nature with deformity: ripe, — t on the tree, Hml. Ill, 2, 200. the tlime that t. in making, worte in mind, Err. IT, 2, 22. t on filthy deeds, Oth. V, 2, 149. b to be fixed, not to more: that thou mayst t. C Stile, a step or set of steps to get over fence: the wart like a great sea-mark, Cor. V, 3,73. his sword Wiv. Ill, 1, 33. Wint. IT,3, 133. Lr. IV, 1,58. Quibseemed in the air to s. Hml. II, 2, 501. bling in Ado T, 2, 6 and LLL I, 1, 201. IT, 1, 98. 99. Still, adj. 1) silent; calm and quiet; motionless c) to adhere; in a moral sense: — ing together in calamity, John 111,4,67. the knave wiUt. by thee, H4B (three different significations, but mostly combined in V, 3, 70 (i. e. thou wilt ever be a knave\ constantly one or another manner): pure thoughts are dead and thou hatt stuck to the bare fortune of that beggar, Cymb. s. Lurr. 167. deeper sin than bottomless conceit can comprehend in t. imagination, 702. s. swine eat all the Ill, 5, 119. s. to your journal course, IT, 2, 10. d) to be fixed; in a moral sense: so deep —* it draff, Wiv. IT, 2, 109 (Ray's Proverbs: the ttill tow in my penitent heart, Meaa. V, 480. my father t rough eats up all the draught). at t. midnight, IT, 4,30. how and envious disposition —t me at heart, As 1, 2, 254. t. the evening it, Ado II, 3, 40. s. and contemplative m thit drum —t sorely in your disposition, All's 111,6,46. living art, LLL I, 1, 14. the heart'11. rhetoric, II, 229. our feart in Sanquo s. deep, Mcb. Ill, 1, 50. this ava- at ever t. sleep mocked death, Wint. T, 3, 20. in the rice —t deeper, grotos with more pernicious root than calmest and most — est night, H4B III, 1, 28. at dead lust, IV, 3, 85. his speech —s in my heart, Ant. I, midnight t. H5 HI Chor. 19. the air it t. I, 1, 48. s. 5, 41. and motionleu, IT, 2, 50. H6A T, 4, 174. H6B T, 2, e) to be placed, to be set, to be settled: maidens' 29. R3 IT, 4,18 (Ff I. and mute, Qq mute and dumb). eyet stuck over all his face, Compl. 81; the months, the H8Prol. 11. 111,2,380. Troil. 1,3,200. IT, 4,92. tongues, the eyes and heartt of men ... that numberless Cor. Ill, 2, 11. IT, 6, 37. Tit. Ill, 1, 264. Ill, 2, 14. upon me stuck as leaves do on the oak, Tim. IV, 3, 263; Rom. I, 1, 187 (t. waking sleep). Caes. I, 2, 14. Hml. opinion that so —t on Marciut, Cor. I, 1, 275. all Ill, 4,214. Oth. 1,3,95. T, 2,94. Ant. II, 6,131. IT, their other senses stuck in eart, Wint. IT, 4, 621. a' I I , 1. IT, 15, 28. Cymb. T, 4, 69 (—er). be s., imsaw a flea t. upon Bardolph's nose, H5 II, 3,43. it peratively, = be silent: LLL I, 2, 188. H4A III, 1, (honour) stuck upon him at the tun in the grey vault 244. H6B I, 1, 248. Ill, 1, 304. Ill, 2, 207. H6C II, of heaven, H4B II, 3,18. therein (in his face) ttuck a 2, 122. Oth. T, 2, 46. = be pacified, be contented: tun and moon, Ant. T, 2, 79. With o f f , = to be set Caes. T, 5, 50. to lie «.: John IT, 1, 50. H4A 111, 1, off, to be prominent: your tkitt shall, like a star, t. 238. H4B IT, 5, 212. Caes. IT, 3, 201. Ant. 1,2,114. fiery o f f , Hml. V, 2,268. T, 2,299. Cymb. II, 3, 70. to tit t.: Tp.I,2,170. Cor. 0 to hesitate, to scrapie (always followed by an IT, 6, 37. to Hand »..• Sonn. 104,11. As 111, 2,329. inf.) : 'gainst thyself thou —est not to conspire, Sonn. W i n t T, 3,95. H4B IT, 2, 98. H6C II, 3,30. R3 IT, 10, 6. she will not t. to round me i' the ear, Pilgr. 349. 4,445. Hml. II, 2,506. to stay t. As 111, 2, 348. my H4B I, 2, 26. H8 II, 2, 127. Cor. II, 3, 17. Hml. IT, tongue-tied Mute in manners hold her t. ( = is silent) Sonn. 85, 1. hold you t. Err. Ill, 2, 69. I cannot, nor 5, 93. 8tleklng-*laee, the place in which the peg of a I wilt not, hold me t. IT, 2, 17. 2) continoal, constant ( ? ) : t. ute of grief makes stringed instrument remains fast; the proper degree of tension: screw your courage to the i. Mcb. I, 7,60. wild grief tame, R3 IT, 4, 229. I of these will wrest S t i c k l e r - l i k e , like an arbitrator or umpire in an alphabet and by t. practice learn to know thy meana combat: the dragon wing of night o'erspreads the ing, Tit. Ill, 2, 45 (or = silent, calm, patient?). Still, vb. 1) to silence: t. thy deafening thunders, earth, and t. the armies teparalet, Troil. T, 8, 18. Stiff, 1) rigid, not pliant: clap their female jointt Per. Ill, 1,4. Mostly used in speaking of crying babes: in t. unwieldy arms, R2 111, 2, 115. with t. unbowed the froward infant —ed with dandling, Ven. 562. the knee, H6B III, 1, 16. how t. it my vile tente, that 1 nurse, to t. her child, will tell my ttory, Lucr. 813. stand up, Lr. IT, 6, 286. Used of limbs made rigid Sonn. 143, 14. Ado III, 3, 70. H6A II, 3, 17. 2) to appease, to calm: to t. my beating mind, Tp. and inflexible by weariness, age or death: Err. I, 2, 15. H4A T, 3,42. Cor. 1,1,245. Bom. IT, 1,103. IT, IT, 163. whose advice hath often —edmy brawling discontent, Meas. IT, 1, 9. 5, 26. Cymb. Ill, 3,32. 2} hard, strong: in a t. tempest, H8 IT, 1, 72. make Still, adv. 1) always, ever, constantly: t. the enyou ready your t. bats and clubs. Cor. I, 1, 165. this it treats, ... t. it he sullen, t. he lours andfrett, Ven. 73. t. news, Ant. I, 2, 104 (hard to digest? or, according 75. 358. the will never rite, so he will kiss her s. 480. to Johnson, — asserted with good evidence?). 512. 593. whose tushes never sheathed he whetteth t. Stlff-herne, carried on with nnpliant constancy: 617. her anthem t. concludes in woe, 839. 964. knows none of thit could restrain the t. action, H4B 1,1,177. no pity, but is s. severe, 1000. 1106. thy hatty spring cf. Hml. I, 5, 95. t. blasts, and ne'er grows old, Lucr. 49. like t. pining Stiffen, to make stiff and nnpliant: t. the sinews, Tantalut he titt, 858. hit naked armour of t. slaughsummon up the blood, H5 III, 1, 7. tered lust, 188. thou left'st me more than I did crave: Stiffly,so as not to bend: and you, my tinews,... for why I craved nothing of thee s. Pilgr. 140. the s. vexed Bermoothes, Tp. I, 2, 229. the s. closing waters, bear me s. up, Hml. I, 5, 95. Stifle, 1) tr. to suffocate: Yen. 934. John IV, 3, III, 3, 64. you'll s. be loo forward, Gent. II, 1, 11. love

1124 is s. most precious in itself, II, 6, 24. a most unholy match, which heaven and fortune s. rewards with plague*, IV, 3, 31. did not I bid thee s. mark me and do as I dot IT,4,39. 'tis the curse in love, and s. approved, V, 4, 43. at you trip, s. pinch him, Wiv. V, 5, 96. on whom it will, it will; on whom it will not, so; yet s. 'tis just, Meas. I, 2, 127. pardon is s. the nurse of second woe, II, 1, 298. a life whose very comfort •« s. a dying horror, II, 3, 42. him thou lahourest by thy flight to shun and yet runnest toward him s. Ill, 1, 13. his friends s. wrought reprieves for him, IV, 2, 140. measure s. for measure, V, 416. one so wise as you have s. appeared, 476. their business s. lies out o' door, Err. II, 1,11. wilt thou s. talit IV, 4, 46. s. did J tell him it was vile and bad, V, 67. I see we s. did meet each other's man, 386. the summer s. doth tend upon my state, Mids. Ill, 1, 158. if it stand as you yourself s. do, within the eye of honour, Merch. I, 1, 136. the s. discordant wavering multitude, H4B Ind. 19. which (peace) she shall purchase with s. lasting war, R3 IV, 4, 344. this thy countenance, s. locked in steel, I never saw till now, Troil. IV, 5, 195. thou s. hast been the father of good news, Hml. II, 2, 42. nothing is at a like goodness s. IV, 7, 117. a s. soliciting eye, Lr. I, 1, 234. but.s. the house-affairs would draw her hence, Oth. I, 3, 147. s. close as sure, Cymb. I, 6, 139 etc. etc. S. and anon = ever and anon: s. and anon cheered up the heavy time, John IV, 1, 47. Corrupted to s. an end: a slave that s. an end turns me to shame, Gent. IV, 4, 67. 2) to this time; even now; now no less than before: t? hearken if his foes pursue him s. Ven. 699. such seems your beauty s. Bonn. 104, 3. for s. 'tis beating in my mind, Tp. I, 2, 176. thy shape invisible retain thou s. IV, 185. and s. I see her beautiful, Gent. II, 1, 73. she holds them prisoners s. II, 4, 92. your old vice s. Ill, 1, 283. and youthful s. Wiv. Ill, 1, 46. I am s. attorneyed at your service, Meas. V, 389 etc. 3) in future (no less than formerly); for ever: thou dost survive, in that thy likeness s. is left alive, Ven. 174. as they last, their verdure s. endure, 507. let him keep his loathsome cabin s. 637. bids them s. consort with ugly night, 1041. to give away yourself keeps yourself s. Sonn. 16, 13. hourly joys be s. upon you, Tp. IV, 108. let grief and sorrow s. embrace his heart that doth not wish you joy, V, 214. since thou lovest, love s. and thrive therein, Gent. 1,1,9. if the fat knight shall be any further afflicted, we two will s. be the ministers, Wiv. IV, 2, 234. he would give't thee, from this rank offence, so to offend him s. Meas. Ill, 1, 101. I could find in my heart to stay here s. and turn witch, Err. IV, 4, 160. as I have ever found thee honest-true, so let me find thee s. Merch. Ill, 4, 47. whether I be as true begot or no, that s. I lay upon my mother's head, John I, 76. thou shalt be placed as viceroy under him, and s. enjoy thy regal dignity, H6A V, 4, 132. for France, 'tis ours; and we will keep it s. H6B I, 1, 106 etc. 4) even after all that has happened or has been said; nevertheless, all the same: if nothing but the very smell were left me, yet would my love to thee be s. as mueh, Ven. 442. they fright him, but he s. pursues his fear, Lucr. 308. though thou repent, yet 1 have s. the loss, Sonn. 34, 10. yet seemed it winter s. 98, 13. so you may continue and laugh at nothing s. Tp. 11, 1, 179.

S give me thy favour s. IV, 204. this proves me s. a sheep, Gent. 1, 1, 82. keep tune there s. I, 2, 89. thou shall find me tractable to any honest reason: thou seest I am pacified s. H4A III, 3, 196 (i. e. even without any honest reason. Some M. Edd. I am pacified. Stillf). Gent. IV, 2, 15. Wir. III.4,19. Meas. 111,2,206. Err. II, 1, 110. L L L V, 2, 301. Mids. I, 1,194. II, 2,110. Cymb. II, 3, 97 etc. 5) Accompanying words denoting increase of degree, to imply a gradation beyond what would have seemed sufficient: to whom I wish long life, s. lengthened with all happiness, Lucr. Dedic. 5. the guilt being great, the fear doth s. exceed, Lucr. 229. Before comparatives: Lucr. 98. Sonn. 119, 10. Meas. V, 8 etc. S t i i l a t e i y or 8 t i l l l t » r y , an alembic: from the s. of thy face come» breath perfumed, Ven. 443. S t i l l - b a r n , dead at the birth: B4B I, 3, 64. S t i l l - b r e e d i n g , continually propagating: B2 V, 5, 8. Still-eleaing (not hyphened in 0 . Edd.) always coalescing again: the s. waters, Tp. 111,3, 64. S t i l l - g a s i n g , continually gazing, or silently gazing: in silent wonder of s. eyes, Lucr. 84. S t i l l n e s s , silence; taciturnity; calmness, qniet: do a wilful s. entertain, Merch. I, 1, 90. soft s. and the night, V, 56. modest s. and humility, B 5 III, 1, 4. in patient s. while his rider mounts him, III, 7, 24. the gravity and s. of your youth, Oth. II, 3, 191. S t i l l - p e e r i n g , motionless in appearance ( ? ) : move the s. air, that sings with piercing; do not touch my lord, AH'8llI,2,113 (Emendations proposed: stillpierced, still-piercing, still-pacing, still-piecing etc.). S t i l l - a t a n d , a halt, a stop; absence of motion: the tide swelled up unto his height, that makes a s., running neither way, H4B II, 3, 64. Still-vexed, see Still and Vex. S t i l l y , softly, lowly: the hum of either army s. sounds, H5 IV Chor. 5. S t i n g , snbst. 1) a sharp point with which some animals are armed: Lncr. 364. 493. Gent. I, 2, 107. Shr. II, 211. 215. H4B IV, 5, 206. H5 I, 2, 193. H6B III, 2, 267. H6C II, 2, 15. 138. Troil. V, 10, 43. Caes. II, 1, 16. Mcb. IV, 1, 16. Ant. IV, 15, 26. 2) the thrust made with i t : H6B III, 2, 47. 325. Applied to other things giving acute pain: killed by death's sharp s. Filgr. 134. thou bitter sky, thy s. is not so sharp, As II, 7, 188. what sharp —s are in her mildest words, All's III, 4, 18. slander, whose s. is sharper than the sword's, Wint. II, 3, 86. 3) impulse, incitement: vow, bond, nor space, in thee (love) hath neither s., knot, nor cotfine, Compl. 265. Especially sexual desire: the wanton —s and motions of the sense, Meas. 1, 4, 59. the brutish s. As II, 7, 66. our carnal —s, Oth. I, 3, 335. S t i n g , vb. (impf. and partic. stung) to hurt with a point darted ont; absol.: Tp. I, 2, 329. Mids. Ill, 2, 73. H6B IV, 2, 89. H6C II, 6, 94. H8 III, 2, 56. Tit. V, 1, 14. Caes. V, 1, 38. With an object: Merch. IV, 1, 69. B2 III, 2, 131. V, 3, 58. H4A I, 3, 240. II, 1, 16. H6B 111, 1, 229. 344. Ill, 2, 127. Tit. II, 3, 132. Hml. I, 5, 36. 39. 88. Lr. V, 1, 56. Used of other things cansing a similar pain: —ing nettles, R2 III, 2, 18. Figuratively, — to pain acutely: envy did s. his high-pitched thoughts, Lncr. 40. there's something in't that —s his nature, All's IV, 3, 4. these things t. his mind so venomously, Lr. IV, 3, 47. cf. Hml. I, 5, 88.

s

1125

I t l i f l t H , having no sting: Caes. V, 1, 35. metrius up with bitter wrong, Mids. Ill, 2, 361. whose 8 U n k (impf. stunk, partic. not found) to emit an worthiness would s. it up (the king's virtue) All's I, offensive smell: Tp. I, 2, 3. Wiv. 11!, 5, 115. Meas. 1, 10. —ing my subjects up, H6C V, 5, 15. you do Ill, 2, 29. All's V, 2, 13. H4A II, 4, 394. H6A IV, yourselves but wrong to s. me up, Tim.'Ill, 4, 53. tht 7, 76. 90. H6B IV, 7, 12. 13. Cor. II, 1, 252. IV, 6, senate hath —ed up the confiners, Cymb. IV, 2, 337. 131. Caes. 1, 2, 248. Lr. I, 4, 126. II, 4, 72. Cymb. lest you s. up mine (impatience) V, 4, 112. men must I, 6, 110. IV, 2, 59. Per. II, 4, 10. IV, 6, 145. cf. s. you up. Per. IV, 2, 98. 156. f) to incite, to impel, to instigate: —ed by a paintO'erstink. S t t a h l a g l y , disgustingly: so s. depending, Meas. ed beauty to hit verse, Sonn. 21, 2. As 1,1,170. John 11, 63. 415. B3 I, 3, 331. H8 III, 2, 418. Caes. Ill, III, 2, 28. 8 H a t , snbst. check, constraint (?): and with the 2, 126. Hml. V, 2, 256. Lr. II, 4, 277. With on: LLL i. of war will look MO huge, amazement shall drive cou- V, 2, 695. Tw. Ill, 2, 63. With up: Mids. I, 1, 12. John II, 55. B2 IV, 133. H6B III, 1,163. H6C IV, 8, rage from the state, Per. I, 2, 25 (M. Edd. ostent). S t l a t , vb. 1) tr. to check, to stop, to cause to 12. B3 IV, 4, 468. Caes. II, 1, 176. Ill, 2,214. Hml. cease: we must riot s. our necessary action*, in the fear IV, 7, 9. to cope malicious censurers, H8 I, 2, 76. the combat2) intr. a) to move one's self: he starts at —ing ants being tin half —s their strife before their strokes of a feather, Ven. 302. s. not! Ado III, 3,103. As IV, hegin, Troil. IV, 5, 93. he can at pleasure s. their me- 3,117. Wint. V, 3, 98. John IV, 1, 81. H4A III, 2, tody, Tit. IV, 4,86. make war breed peace, make peace 46. H4B IV, 5,32. H6BII, 4,18. R3 I, 4,164. Troil. Ill, 3, 184. Bom. V, 3, 147. Caes. V, 1, 26. Mcb. V, s. war, Tim. V, 4, 83. 2) intr. to cease: it —ed and said Ay, Bom. I, 3, 5, 12. Hml. 1,1,10. IV, 1, 9. Lr. I, 1,128. V, 3, 265. 48. 57. and s. thou too, 58. wherefore she does, and Oth. II, 3, 173. 207. IV, 1, 56. V, 2, 95. b) to change place; to go or be carried in any swears she'll never s., make raging battery upon shores manner: if I did not think it had been Anne Page, of flint, Per. IV, 4, 42. Stir, snbst. 1) the state of being in motion or in would I might never s. Wiv. V, 5, 199 (Blender's action: what s. keeps good old York there with his men speech, cf. John I, 145). s. not you till you have well of wart B2 II, 3, 51. there is no s. or walking in the determined on these slanderers, Meas. V, 258 ( = do streets, Caes. I, 3, 127. chance may crown me without not go away). I will not let him s. till I have uted the my s. Mcb. I, 3, 144. what you shall know of —s approved meant, Err. V, 102. I will determine this beabroad, Ant. I, 4, 82 ( = of things happening, of fore Is. 167. Mids. Ill, 1, 125. Wint. V, 3,101. 103. John I, 145. 172. H6A I, 4, 55. H6C I, 1, 100. V, enterprises attempted abroad). 2) commotion, tnmult, uproar: the strumpet that 1, 96. Bom. I, 1, 11. 87. Caes. II, 2, 9. 38. Hml. I, began this s. Lncr. 1471. what halloing and what s. is I, 161 (Qq dares s., Ff can walk). Lr. 1,2,186. Oth. this to-dayt Gent V, 4,13. what s. is thist H6A I, III, 1, 30 (if she will s. hither; quibbling). V, 1, 107 4, 98. (Qq an you s., Ff if you stare), look how thou —est 3) agitation, excitement: what recketh he his rider's now! Per. II, 1, 16 ( = how awkward yon are I), how angry s.t Ven. 283. as the Jits and —s ofs mind could thou —est, thou block, III, 2, 90. c) to be in motion; to be enlivened: note in the best express, Cymb. I, 3, 12. Stir, vb. 1) trans, a) to disturb: my mind is troub- —ing passage of the day, Err. Ill, 1, 99. a merry, led, like a fountain —ed, TroiL 111,3,311. a bubbling nimble, —ing spirit, LLL V, 2, 16. the blood more —s fountain —ed with wind, Tit. II, 4, 23. s. no em&ert to rouse a lion, H4A I, 3, 197. now it the mad blood —ing, Bom. Ill, 1, 4. up, Ant. II, 2,13. b) to move: they are heavier than all thy woes can d) to be roused, to be excited: the wrongs I have s. Wint. Ill, 2, 210. he would not s. hit pettitoes, IV, done thee s. afresh within me, Wint. V, 1, 148. that 4, 619. or s.ihy foot, John IV, 3, 96. dare* *. a wing, for which the people s. Cor. Ill, 1, 53. With against: H6C I, 1, 47. we may a* well push against Powle's a* to s. against the butchers of his lift, B2 I, 2, 3. a man s. 'em, H8 V, 4, 16. that more detettt, more —t against defacers of a public c) to awaken: let none of your people s. me, Mids. peace, H8 V, 3, 39. With at: (blood) unapt to s. at IV, 1,43. 'tis time to s. him from hi* trance, Shr. 1,1, these indignities, H4A I, 3, 2. nor s. at nothing till the 182. you ever have wished the sleeping of this business; axe of death hang over thee, H6B II, 4, 49. never desired it to be —ed, H8 II, 4, 164. e) to be active; to be busy: be —ing as the time, d) to excite, to raise: this flower's force in —ing John V, 1, 48. Mortimer doth s. about his title, H4A love, Mids. II, 2, 69. —* good thoughts in any breast, II, 3, 84. s. not to-night, IV, 3, 5. all hell shall s.for John II, 112. to s. a mutiny in the mildest thoughts, this, H5 V, 1, 72. a —ing dwarf we do allowance give Tit. IV, 1, 85. With up: careless lust —tup a despe- before a sleeping giant, Troil. II, 3, 146. Cor. I, 3, 13. rate courage, Ven. 556. I will s. up in England some IV, 5, 233. Bom. IV, 2, 39. IV, 4, 3. Hml. I, 5, 34. black storm, H6B III, 1, 349. the thoughts of them IV, 4, 54. Ant. II, 1, 36. would have —ed up remorse, H6C V, 5, 64. f) to be on foot; to exist: no ill luck —ing but e) to excite, to move, to ronse, to agitate: never what lights on my shoulders, Merch. HI, 1, 99. what could the etrumpet... once s. my temper, Meas. II, 2, wisdom —s amongst yout Wint. II, 1, 21. there'* no 185. so shall we past along and never s. assailants, equity —ing, H4A II, 2,106. I will keep where there As I, 3, 116. I am sorry I have thus far —edyou, is wit —ing, Troil. II, 1, 130. Wint. V, 3, 74. he was —ed with such an agony, H8 g) to be already out of bed in the morning; to be II, 1, 32. 'twill s. him strongly. III, 2, 218. Antony up: myself was —ing ere the break of day, Lucr. 1280. will be himself. But —ed by Cleopatra, Ant. I, 1, 43. you are early —ing, B3 III, 2, 36. s. with the lark toI could not s. him, Cymb. IV, 2, 38. With up: s. De- morrow, V, 3, 5G. Troil. I, 2, 52. Caes. II, 2, 110

1126

S

(are you —ed). Mcb. II, 3, 47. 50. Oth. Ill, 1, 27. 30. P e r . Ill, 2, 12. S t i r r e r , a riser io the m o r n i n g : an early s. H 4 B III, 2, 3. H 5 IV, 1, 6. S l l r n i f , that in which the horseman sets his foot in mounting and riding: Shr. Ill, 2, 50. IV, 1, 124. H6B IV, 1, 53. Cor. Ill, 2, 119. T i m . I, 1, 82. S t l t c h e r y , needlework: Cor. 1, 3, 75. S t i t c h e s , a sharp lancinating p a i n : will laugh yourselves into s. T w . Ill, 2, 73. cf. Side-stitches. S t l t h (Ff styth, Qq stithy) anvil: at foul at Vulcan's i. Hml. Ill, 2, 89. S t i t h y , subst. smithy: Hml. Ill, 2, 89 (Ff styth). S t i t h y , vb. to form on an anvil, to forge: by the forge that —ed Mart hit helm, Troil. IV, 5, 255. S t e c e a t e , a thrust in fencing: your passes, —es, Wiv. II, 1, 234. S t e c e e t a , the same: alia s. carries it away, Rom. Ill, 1, 77 (O. Edd. Alia Stucatho). S t e c h , subst. 1) the t r u n k , the main body of a tree: L u c r . 1063. W i n t . IV, 4, 93. H 5 III, 5, 7. H 6 B III, 2, 213. R 3 III, 7, 127. H8 V, 1, 22. Hml. Ill, 1, 119. Cymb. V, 4, 143. 2) race, lineage, p a r e n t a g e : Merch. IV, 1,296. H 5 I, 2, 71. II, 4, 63. H 6 A II, 5, 41. H 6 B II, 2, 58. R 3 III, 7, 122. H8 IV, 2, 49. Cor. II, 3, 245. Tit. I, 300. Rom. I, 5, 60. Cymb. I, 6, 128. P e r . V, 1, 68. 3) a log, a post; the emblem of a senseless person: no stoic* nor no — s , Shr. I, 1, 31. cf. Flouting-stock, Laughing-stock, Pointing-stock. 4) plur. —s, a machine consisting of two logs, in which the legs of mean offenders were confined by way of punishment: All's IV, 3, 122. 273. Wint. IV, 3, 22. Cor. V, 3, 160. L r . II, 2, 132. 135. 140. 146. II, 4, 88. 201. to put in the —s, Lr. II, 4, 185. to set in the —s, Wiv. IV, 5, 123. All's IV, 3, 127. L r . II, 4,65. to sit in the —s, Gent. IV,4,33. All'slV,3,117. R2 V, 5, 26. a pair of—s, Err. Ill, 1, 60. Shr. Ind. 1,2. the commmon — s , Wiv. IV, 5,123. T h e singular, in quibbling: Gent. Ill, 1, 311. 5) a stocking: Gent. Ill, 1, 312. Shr. Ill, 2, 67. Tw. I, 3, 144. nether — i , H 4 A 11,4,130. Lr.11,4,11. 6 ) - stoccado, thrust in fencing: to see thee past thy punto, thy t. Wiv. II, 3, 26. S t e c k , vb. to set in the stocks: —ing hit messenger, Lr. II, 2, 139 (Qq stopping), who —ed my servants II, 4 , 1 9 1 (Qq struck). Ill, 4 , 1 4 0 (Ff —ed, punished; Qq stock-punished) S t e c k - f l a h , dried cod: I'U make a s. of thee, T p . III, 2, 79. he was begot between two —es, Meas. Ill, 2, 116. you s. H4A II, 4, 271. Name in U4B III, 2, 35. S t a c k i n g * , coverings for the feet and legs: Wiv. Ill, 5, 92. Shr. Ind. 2, 10. IV, 1, 50. Tw. II, 5, 166. Ill, 2, 78. Ill, 4, 53. V, 346. H 4 B II, 2, 18. Hml. II, 1, 79. tall — s (i. e. reaching above the knees) H8 I, 3, 30. S t e c k l a h , insensible: nought so s., hard and full of rage, but music for the time doth change his nature, Merch. V, 81. S t e c k - p u n i s h e d , punished by being set in the stocks: Lr. Ill, 4, 140 (Ff stocked, punished). S t e l e , a rigorist: let's be no — s nor no stocks, Shr. I, 1, 31. S t e k c a l y , name in H8 IV, 1, 101. S t e l e , a long garment worn by women s my white ». of chastity I daffed, Compl. 297.

S t e m a c h , subst 1) the organ of digestion: T p . 11, 2 , 1 1 8 . Ill, 3 , 4 1 . A d o I, 1, 52. L L L I, 2 , 1 5 4 Con a full s). IV, 3, 294. Mids. II, 2, 138. Merch. Ill, 5, 54. Shr. V, 2, 9 (to close our —s up). All's 1,1, 156. J o h n I, 191. H 6 A II, 3, 80. H 6 B IV, 10, 10. T i t . V, 3, 29. Tim. IV, 3, 294. Oth. Ill, 4 , 1 0 4 . P e r . Ill, 2, 54. IV, 1 , 2 9 . Quibbling in G e n t 1, 2 , 6 8 . H 5 I I Chor. 40. Ill, 7, 166. - - power of digestion, figuratively: in despite of his quick wit and his queasy s., he shall fall in love with Beatrice, A d o II, 1, 399. we'U not offend one s. with our play, H 5 I I Chor. 4 0 (quibbling), all goodness is poison to thy s. H8 III, 2, 283. this rudeness is a sauce to his good wit, which gives men s. to digest his words with better appetite, Caes. I, 2, 305. my great revenge had s. for them all, Oth. V, 2, 75. 2) appetite: that you might kill your s. Gent. I, 2, 68 (satisfy your appetite), what is't that tales from thee thy s. H4A II, 3, 44. she (Fortune) either gives a s. and no food, H 4 B IV, 4, 105. our — s will make what's homely savoury, Cymb. Ill, 6, 32. graze as you find pasture. Ay, or a s. V, 4, 2. to have a s., and to have s. = to have appetite: Ado I, 3, 16. Merch. Ill, 5, 92 (quibbling). Shr. IV, 1, 161. to have no s.: Err. I, 2, 49. Ado II, 3, 265. 3) inclination, disposition: you cram these words into mine ears against the s. of my sense, T p . II, 1,107. let me praise you while I have a s. Merch. Ill, 5, 92 (quibbling), it goes much against my s. As III, 2, 22. fall to them (metaphysics) as you find your s. serves you, Shr. 1,1, 38. if you have a s., to't, I, 2,195. All's III, 6, 67. / begin to love with no s. Ill, 2, 18. their villany goes against my weak s. H 5 III, 2, 57. they have only —s to eat and none to fight, III, 7, 166. call some knight to arms that hath a s. Troil. II, 1, 137. you may have every day enough of Hector, if you have s. IV, 5, 264. when you have —s, Caes. V, 1,66. make the wars against my s. Ant. 11,2,50. W i t h to: he which hath no s. to this fight, H 5 IV, 3, 35. my little s. to the war, Troil. Ill, 3, 220. 4) anger, resentment: kill your s. on your meat and not upon your maid, Gent. I, 2, 68. these nobles should such —s bear, H 6 A I, 3. 90. how will their grudging — s be provoked to wilful disobedience, and rebel, IV, 1, 141. the winds grow high; so do your —a, H6B II, 1, 55. to ease their —s with their bitter tongues. T i t . Ill, 1, 234. else I should answer from a full-flowing s. Lr. V, 3, 74. cf. High-stomached. 5) stubborn courage: which raited in me an undergoing t. T p . 1,2,157. the bloody Douglas ... 'gan vail his s. H4B 1,1,129. some enterprise that hath a s. in't, Hml. I, 1, 100. 6) pride, arrogance: vail your —s and place your hands below your husbands' foot, Shr. V, 2,176. a man of an unbounded s., ever ranking himself with princes, H8 IV, 2, 34. S t e m a c h , vb. to be angry a t , to resent: believe not all; or, if you must believe, s. not all, Ant. Ill, 4, 12. 'tis not a time for private —ing, II, 2, 9. S t e m a e h e r , an ornamental covering of the breast, worn by women: Wint. IV, 4, 226. Cymb. HI, 4, 86. S t e m a c h - « a a l m e d , sick at heart, qualmish: Cymb. Ill, 4, 193. S t e n e , subst. 1) concreted earthy matter, neither ductile nor soluble; the substance as well as a single piecc of i t : Lucr. 177. 592. Sonn. 65, 2. Gent. 1, 2,

s 111 (cf. R2 I, 2, 69). II, 7, 28. Wiv. 1,4,119. IV, 1, 33. Meas. I, 3, 53. Mids. V, 162. 182. 192. Merch. I, 1, 30. V, 80. As II, 1, 17. All's II, 1, 76 (to breathe life into a *.). Tw. 1, 5, 92 (has no more brain than a s.). Wint. II, 3, 90 {at ever oak or s. was sound, cf. Mcb. Ill, 4, 22). B2 111, 3, 26. H5 II, 3, 26 (at cold at any s.). IV, 7, 64. H6A III, I, 89. H6C V, 1, 84. H8 V, 3, 104 Cwhen we first put this dangerous s. a rolling) etc. etc. = a monument of stone: Sonn. 55, 4. Wint. I, 2, 360. Denoting the glass of a mirror: if that her breath will mist or stain the t. Lr.V,3,262. The philosopher's s. (a substance supposed to have the property of taming any thing into gold): H4B III, 2, 355. Tim. II, 2, 117. Adjectively: s. jugs, Shr. Ind. 2, 90. hunger broke s. walls, Cor. 1, 1, 210 (proverb). Symbol of hardness and of insensibility: Ven. 200. 211. Locr. 959. 978. Sonn. 94,3. Gent. 1,1,149. II, 3,11. Ill, 2, 79. Tw. Ill, 4,221. H6B V, 2, 50. R3 III, 7, 25. Caes. I, 1, 40. Ill, 2, 147. Otb. IV, 1,193 etc. Peculiar use of the plural: I am not made of —i, R3 III, 7, 224 (M. Edd. ».). you are men of—s, Lr. V, 3, 257. Symbol of dnmbness: your considerate s. Ant. II, 2, 112. 2) a precious stone, a gem: Sonn. 52, 7. Compl. 216. Meas. II, 2, 150. Mercb. II, 8, 20. 21. 24. Wint. IV, 4, 609. R2 II, 1, 46. H6C 111, 1, 63. R3 I, 4, 27. V, 3, 250. Lr. V, 3, 190. Cymb. I, 4, 84. II, 4, 40. 46. 3) the hard covering which encloses the seed of some fruits: cracking the — s of the prunes, Meas. II, 1, 110. 4) a thunderbolt: are there no —s in heaven but what serve for the thunder t Oth. V, 2, 234. the gods throw —s of sulphur on me, Cymb. V, 5, 240. 5) a hail-stone: Ant. Ill, 13, 160. 6) a testicle: Wiv. 1,4,118. H4B1I1, 2,355. Rom. I, 3, 53. Tim. II, 2, 117. Perhaps also, by way of quibbling, in Gent. I, 1, 149 and As II, 4, 47. vb. 1) to pelt or kill with stones: Lucr. 978. Wint. IV, 4, 807. 835. 2) to make like stone, to harden: thou dost s. my heart, Oth. V, 2, 63. StraC'fcaw, a cross-bow, from which stones or bullets were shot: Tw. II, 5, 51. 8t*ne-entter, one who cuts figures in stone: Lr. II, 2, 63. Bt*ne-hard, hard as a stone: R3 IV, 4, 227. S t r a e - s t l l l , still as a stone, without any motion: Lucr. 1730. John IV, 1, 77. Stanlab, = to astonish, to amaze: —ed as nightwanderers often are, their light blown out, Ven. 825. 0 wonderful son, that can so s. a mother, Hml. Ill, 2, 340 (Ff astonish). Staay, 1) made of stones: T i t HI, 1, 259. Rom. II, 2, 67. V, 3, 141. Caes. I, 3, 93. 2) hard, pitiless: Merch. IV, 1,4. H4BIV, 5,108. H6B V, 2, 51. S t a n r - h e a r t e d , hard-hearted: H4A II, 2, 28. 8t«ny-8tratr«rd, place in England: R3 II, 4, 2. Staal, any chair: a s. and a cushion for the sexton. Ado IV, 2, 2. fetch me a s. hither, H6B II, 1, 142. 144. 149. thou s. for a witch, Troil. II, 1, 46 (an instrument of torture), each man to his s Tim. Ill, 6, 73. you look but on a s. Mcb. Ill, 4, 68. push us from our —s, 82. rise from thy s. Ant. II, 7, 62. a ihreeSchmldt, Sbakopeare Lexicon, i. Ed. T. II.

1127

foot s. Mids. II, 1, 52. Cymb. HI, 3, 89. a three-legged s. Shr. I, 1, 64. cf. Footstool, Jointstool. Steep or Staop, subst. a drinking vessel (of uncertain size): Marian, I say! a s. of wineI Tw. II, 3, 14.129. fetch me a s. of liquor, Hml. V, 1,68. set me the —s of wine upon that table, V, 2,278.1 have as. of wine; and here without are a brace of Cyprus gallants that would fain have a measure, Oth. II, 3, 30 (O. Edd. stope). Steap, adj. (?), crooked: as upright as the cedar. S., I say; her shoulder is with child, LLL IV, 3, 89. 8t«ap, vb. 1) intr. a) to bend the body down: the grass —* not, she treads on it so tight, Ven. 1028. the cedar —s not to the base shrub's foot, Lucr. 664. —ing to relieve him, Tp. II, 1, 121. Gent 1, 2, 72. Meas. II, 1, 24. V, 420; cf. H6B IV, 1, 125 and H6C V, 5, 6. Shr III, 2, 164. Tw. II, 2, 16. R2 I, 1, 74. 111,4,31. H4B IV, 2, 42. H6A III, 1, 169. V, 4, 26. Caes. Ill, 1, 105. HmL II, 2, 498. Cymb. Ill, 3, 2, IV, 2, 176. = to get the habit of bending, to become crooked: a straight hack will s. H5 V, 2, 168. Figuratively, = to bow down, to yield, to submit: bend the dukedom to most ignoble —ing, Tp. I, 2, 116. till she s. she must not be full-gorged, Shr. IV, 1, 194. grief is proud and makes his owner s. John III, 1, 69 (a passage justly suspected. Some M. Edd. stout; but perhaps — is master of its owner). V, 4, 55. R2 III. 3, 48. H6A III, 1, 119. V, 1, 61. H6B IV, 1, 119. H6C 1,1, 108. II, 2,151. Cor. V, 6, 29. Tit. II, 1,11. V, 2, 118. Ant. II, 2, 98. With to: and s. to honour, not to foul desire, Lucr. 574. a golden mind —s not to shows of dross, Merch. II, 7, 20. make you s. unto the sovereign mercy of the king, R2 II, 3, 156. you should s. unto a Frenchman's mercy, H6B IV, 8, 50. before he should thus s. to the herd, Cor. Ill, 2, 32. —ing to your clemency, Hml. ill, 2, 160. when majesty —s to folly, Lr. I, 1, 151 ( F f f a l l s ) , cf. H4B IV, 2, 42 and H6C V, 5, 6. b) to come down on prey, to pounce: forthwith they fly chickens, the way which they —ed eagles, Cymb. V, 3, 42. the holy eagle —ed, as to foot us, V, 4, 116. cf. Shr. IV, 1, 194 (quibbling). And in general, = to alight from the wing: though his affections are higher mounted than ours, yet, when they »., they s. with the like wing, H5 IV, 1, 112. 2) trans, to bow down: have —ed my neck under your injuries, R2 III, 1,19. the king before the Douglas' rage —ed his anointed head as low as death, H4B Ind. 32. With to, = to humiliate, to snbdue to: before his sister should her body s. to such pollution, Meas. II, 4, 182. I will s and humble my intents to your directions, H4B V, 2, 120. S t e p , subst. 1) cessation of progressive motion: my restless discord loves no — s nor rests, Lucr. 1124 (perhaps quibbling; cf. sign. 5). what course, what s. he makes, Compl. 109. he hath rid his prologue like a rough colt; he knows not the s. Mids. V, 120 (quibbling; cf. sign. 3). yea, without «., didst let thy heart consent, and consequently thy rude hand to act the deed, John IV, 2,239. time, that takes survey of all the world, must have a s. H4A V, 4, 83. no care, no s. Tim II, 2, 1. let's teach ourselves that honourable s., not to outsport discretion, Oth. II, 3, 2. then began a s. in the chaser, Cymb. V, 3, 40. 2) cessation of speech, interruption: where did I leave f At that sad s., where rude hands etc. R2 V,2,4. these —» of thine fright me, Oth. Ill, 3, 120. 72

1128

S

3) mark in writing, to show the proper pause« in proudest he that —* my way, Shr. Ill, 2, 237. my reading or reciting: Mid«. V, 120 (see sub 1). come, father's blood hath —ed the passage where thy words the full I. Merch. Ill, 1, 17 ( = speak the whole sen- should enter,' H6C I, 3, 22. nor you ... should s. my way, Troil. V, 3, 57. why you s. our way with such tence ont). 4) hinderance, obstacle: (As«« be the —> that prophetic greeting, Mcb. I, 3, 77. he'll s. the course by lander study quite, LLL f, 1, 70. thy kinsmen are no which it might be known, Per. I, 2, 23. With up: s. up I. to me. Bom. 11,2,69 (the surreptitious Ql and some the access and passage to remorse, Mcb. I, 5, 45. M. Edd. let), more impediments than twenty times your d) to hinder from proceeding, to arrest, to keep s. Oth. V, 2, 261. back: to s. the loud pursuers in their yell, Ven. 688. 5) In mosic, a) that by which the sounds of wind her eyelids, who, like sluices, —ed the crystal tide, 956. instruments are regulated: a pipe of so easy and so those bars which s. the hourly dial, Lucr. 327. s. his plain a s. H4B Ind. 17. they are not a pipe for for- speed, 501. a gentle flood, being —ed, the bounding tune's finger to sound what s. she please, Hml. 111,2,76. banks o'erflows, 1119. counsel may s. a while what these are the —s, 376. 381. b) regulation of musical will not stay, Compl. 159. the current being —ed, chords by the fingers: his jesting spirit is now crept into Gent. II, 7, 26. s. the air by which he should revive, a lutestring and now governed by —s, Ado III, 2, 62. Meas. II, 4, 25. proceeded well, to s. all good proceed6) the act of filling up and making whole again: a ing, LLL 1,1,95. no bar to s. the foreign spirits, Merch. breach that craves a quick expedient s. H6B III, 1,288. II,7,46. —ing the career of laughter with a sigh, Wint. 8tap, rb. 1) trans, a) to close by filling up or ob- I, 2, 286. whose counsel shall s. or spur me, II, 1, 187. structing: an oven that is —ed burneth more hotly, Ven. to s. their marches, John V, 1, 7. but s. no wrinkle in 331. s. that (the keyhole) As IT, 1, 165. s. this gap his pilgrimage, B2 I, 3, 230. do you mean to s. any of of breath with dust, John III, 4, 32. tears do s. the William's wages, H4B V, 1, 24. (urn head, and s. purflood-gates of her eyes, H4A II, 4, 435. s. all sight- suit, H5 II, 4, 69. force those waters from me which I holes, IV, 1, 71. the obstructions which begin to s. our would have —ed, IV, 6, 29. who in proud heart doth s. very veins of life, H4B IV, 1, 65. so much wit as will my cornets, H6A IV, 3, 25. to s. devoted charitable s. the eye of Helen's needle, Troil. II, 1, 87. like an deeds, R3 I, 2, 35. he —ed the fliers, Cor. II, 2, 107. oven —ed, T i t II, 4, 36. —ing a bung-hole, Hml. V, your good tongue might s. our countryman, V, 1, 38. s. I, 225. s. a beer-barrel, 235. 237. Applied particu- thine unhallowed toil, Rom. V, 3, 54. the fountain of larly to the ear, mouth and nose: my ears are —ed, your blood is —ed, Mcb. II, 3,104 (has ceased to flow). Gent. Ill, 1, 205. I'll s. mine ears against the mer- s. it, Marcellus, Hml. I, 1, 139; cf. Lr. II, 1, 38 and maid's song, Err. Ill, 2, 169. Merch. II, 5, 34. Shr. IV, III, 6,57. whose disposition will not be rubbed nor —ed, 3, 76. Wint. V, 1, 201. John IV, 2, 120. H4B I, 1, Lr. II, 2,161. send to darkness all that s. me, Ant. Ill, 79. H6C IV, 8, 39. Troil. V, 3, 2. Cor. V, 3, 5. Per. 13, 182. what both you spur and s. Cymb. I, 6, 99. to IV, 2,86. cf. my adder's sense to critic and to flatterer s. the air, Per. I, 1, 100. how I might s. this tempest —ed are, Sonn. 112, 11; the suspicious head ( = ear) ere it came, I, 2, 98. = to hinder from utterance, to put to silence: her of theft is —ed, LLL IV, 3,336; s. the vent of hearing, H4B Ind. 1. — Why dost thou s. my moutht Gent. II, voice is —ed, Ven. 1061. to blow the grief away that 3, 50. s. his mouth with a kiss, Ado II, 1, 321. V, 4, —s his answer so, Lucr. 1664. 6u( she ... the protesta98. John III, 1, 299. R2 V, 1, 95. H4B I, 2, 48. H5 tion —s, 1700. Philomel —s her pipe in growth of riper V, 2, 297. H6B III, 2, 396. H8 II, 2, 9. Troil. Ill, 2, days, Sonn. 102, 8. we shall s. her exclamation, John 141. Tit. II, 3, 185. V, 1, 151. V, 2, 162. 168. Tim. II, 558. vexation almost —s my breath, H6A IV,3, 41. II, 2, 156. Lr. V, 3, 155. Oth. II, 3, 308. V, 2, 71. death shall s. his dismal sound, H6C II, 6, 58. fills cf. 'gins to chide, but soon she —s his lips, Ven. 46. — mine eyes with tears and —s my tongue, III, 3, 14. to to s. your nose, All's V, 2,11. 14. heaven —s the nose s. the rumour, H8 II, 1, 152. it —s me here, Oth. II, at it, Oth. IV, 2, 77. against the blown rose may they 1, 199. s. their nose, Ant. Ill, 13, 39. — to suppress: to s. posterity, Sonn. 3, 8. to s. Applied to wounds or any hurts, = to dress; to Arthur's title in the whole, John II, 562. send succours, make whole, to heal: some surgeon ...to s. his wounds, and s. the rage betime, H6B 111, 1,285. s. the rising of lest he do bleed to death, Merch. IV, 1, 258. where this blood-sucking sighs, H6C IV, 4,22. his deafened parts, breach now in our fortunes made may readily be —ed, which now are midway —ed, Per. V, 1, 48. H6B V, 2, 83. now civil wounds are —ed, peace lives Hence = to put an end to, to finish: revenge on again, R3 V, 5, 40. s. those maims of shame , Cor. IV, him that made me s. my breath, Lucr. 1180, i. e. end my 5, 92. With up: to s. up the displeasure he hath con- life, kill myself; cf. Rom. V, 3, 211 and Oth. V, 2, ceived, All's IV, 5, 79. 202. to s. effusion of our Christian blood, H6AV, 1,9. With in, = to shut or cram in: s. in your wind, to s. all hopes, R3 IV, 2, 60. to s. the inundation of Err. I, 2, 53 ( = keep your breath, be silent a while). her tears, Rom. IV, 1,12. whoso please to s. affliction, to be —ed in, like a strong distillation, with stinking Tim. V, 1, 213. clothes, Wiv. Ill, 5, 114. the envious flood —ed in my 2) intr. as to cease to go forward, to stand still: soul, R3 I, 4, 38 (Qq kept). Ven. 706. John V, 7, 67. H4B I, 1, 38. R3 IV, 2, 45. b) to fill entirely: it (his ear) is —ed with other H8 III, 2, 114. 116. Cor. Ill, 1, 32. Caes. IV, 1, 32. sounds, E2 II, 1, 17. —ing my greedy ear with their = to cease to flow: now —s thy spring, H6C IV, 8,55. bold deeds, H4B I, 1,78. s. their mouths with stubborn b) to cease to speak: Tp. I, 2, 34. V, 198. Gent. bits, H8 V, 3, 23. III, 1, 364. H6C III, 2, 52. R3 111, 5, 3. IV, 3, 16. c) to encumber, to obstruct, to render impassable: Rom. II, 4, 98. 99. Per. V, 1, 162. distance should not s. my way, Sonn. 44, 2. let me s. Stare, subst. (used only in the sing.; therefore in this way first (i. e. the door) Wir. Ill, 3, 174. the Sonn. 136,10. store's, not stores', which is the writing of

s M. Edd.) I) property, possession, having: poor chattily is rifled of her s. Lncr. 692. if t. of crowns be scant, PilgT. 409. I am debating of my present s. Merch. 1, 3, 54. aid me with that s. of power you have, All's V, 1, 20. your s. is not for idle markets, Tw. Ill, 3,45. many a pound of mine own proper s. H6B III, 1, 115. this man may be possessed with some s. of crowns, H6C II, 5, 57. In s. = a) laid up, hoarded: how many sons of mine hast thou (the tomb) in *., that thou wilt never render to me more, Tit. I, 94; cf. Store-house in Mcb. II, 4, 34. b) at one's disposal, in readiness, prepared forose: I have better news ins. for you, Merch V,274. if heaven have any grievous plague in s. B3 I, 3, 217. I have an hour's talk in s. for you, Caes. 11,2,121. the vengeance that they had in s. Per. II, 4, 4. 2) plenty, abundance, great number or quantity: poorly rich, to wanteth in his s. Lncr. 97. heaven's fair sun that breeds the fat earth's t. 1837. I make my love engrafted to this s. Sonn. 37,8. increasing s. with lost and loss with s. 64,8. m tchose confine immured is the s. which should example where your equal grew, 84, 3. in thy —'» account I one must be, 136, 10. the sea ... receives rain still and in abundance addeth to his s. 135, 10. to aggravate thy s. 146, 10. too small a pasture for such s. of muttons, Gent. I, 1, 105. thou callest for such s., when one is one too many, Err. Ill, 1, 34. to your huge s. wise things seem foolish, LLL V, 2, 377. great s. of wedding cheer, Shr. Ill, 2, 188. s. of parting tears, R2 I, 4 , 5 . H4A II. 2, 94 ( = warehouse?). H4BIV, 3. 131. H6B III, 1,169. B3 1,2,155. H8 V, 4, 77. Cor. I, 9, 32. Rom. I, 1, 222. I, 2, 22. Caes. IV, 1, 30. Ant. IV, 1, 15. Cymb. I, 4, 107. 3) increase of men, fertility, population: let those whom Nature hath not made for »., harsh, featureless and rude, barrenly perish, Sonn. 11,9. truth and beauty shall together thrive, if from thyself to s. thou wouldst convert, 14, 12. cf. the verb in Oth. IV. 3, 86. Doubtful passage: whose warped looks proclaim what s. her heart is made on, Lr. Ill, 6, 57 (Collier stone). S t a r e , vb. 1) to preserve, to lay np, to hoard: him she —s, to show what wealth she had m days long since, Sonn. 67, 13. him as far a map doth nature s., to show false art what beauty was of yore, 68,13. five hundred crowns, which I did s. to be my foster-nurse. As II, 3, 40. all the —d vengeances of heaven, Lr. II, 4, 164. With up: which he bade me s. up, as a triple eye, All's II, 1, 111. 2) to stock with people, to populate: to new s. Prance with bastard warriors, H5 III, 5, 31. as many to the vantage as would s. the world they played for, Oth. IV, 3, 86. Partic. —d = furnished, supplied, provided: their tables were —d full, Per. I, 4, 28. a cup that's —d unto the brim, II, 3, 50. With of: whereof the city is well — d , Cor. I, 1, 194. Oftener with: so —d with friends, John V, 4, 1. —d with all (faults) Cor. II, 1, 20. —d with ill, Per. I, 1, 77. —d with corn, 1,4, 95. S t a r e • h a n s e , a magazine: Cor. I, 1, 83. 137. III, 1, 114. Applied to a burying-place: Colmekill, the sacred s. of his predecessors, Mcb. II, 4, 34; cf. »fore in Tit. I, 94. B t e r m , subst. a tempest (usually a violent wind attended with rain): Tp. I, 1, 15. II, 2, 19. 39. 43. 114. 116. Err. I, 1, 81. Shr. Ill, 2, 174. V, 2, 150.

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Wint. Ill, 2, 214. Ill, 3, 49. John IV, 2, 108. R2 II> I, 35. 264. H6B III, 2, 103. V, 1, 206. H6C V, 3, 13. 8 3 II, 3, 35. 44. H8 I, 1, 90. Ill, 1, 164. Troil. I, 1, 37 (O. Edd. scorn). T i t II, 3, 23. II, 4, 54. IV, 4, 71. Tim. IV, 3, 266. Mcb. I, 2, 26. Hral. II, 2, 505. Lr. II, 4, 82. 290. 312. Ill, 1,49. Ill, 4, 6. 29. Ill, 7, 59. IV, 1, 34. IV, 3, 30. Ant. I, 2, 154 (—s and tempests). III, 13, 165. Cymb. Ill, 3, 62. Per. Ill Prol. 53. III, 1, 19. IV, 1, 21. Figuratively, = commotion, tumult, disturbance, violent excitement, extreme danger: Lucr.966.1518. 1589. Compl. 101. Ado V, 4, 42. Mids. I, 2,29. Shr. I, 1, 177. John V, 1, 20. V, 2. 55. R2 II, 4, 22. H6B III, 1, 349. V, 1, 198. H6C III, 3, 38. 47. IV, 1, 38. IV, 6, 98. IV, 7, 43 (in his time of s.). H8 IV, 2, 21. Troil. I, 3, 47 (—s of fortune). T i t I, 154. II, 1, 25. Rom. Ill, 2, 64. Caes. V, 1, 68. Oth. I, 3, 250 (my downright violence and s. of fortune; Ql scorn). Ant. IV, 4, 13. Storm, vb. 1) intr. a) to blow with violence: then s. venomously, Per. Ill, 1, 7 (M. Edd. thou —est, or thou s. thou). b) to be passionate, to chafe, to fnme: why, look you, how you s. Merch. 1,3,138. to be so baited, scorned and —ed at, R3 I, 3, 109 (Qq thus taunted, scorned and baited at), now is a time to s. Tit. HI, 1, 264. the ocean swells not so as Aaron —s, IV, 2,139. wherefore s. you sot Rom. I, 5, 62. 2) tr. to agitate, to infest, to disquiet: —ing her world with sorrow's wind and rain, Compl. 7. Starm - b e a t e n , violently blown against and struck by a storm: to dry the rain on my s. face, Sonn. 34, 6. S»«nny, 1) tempestuous, full of wind and rain: like a s. day, now wind, now rain, Ven. 965. s. blustering weather, Lncr. 115. the s. gusts of winter's day, Sonn. 13, 11. as. day, which makes the rivers drown their shores, K2 III, 2, 106. a s. night, Per. Ill, 2, 4. 2) violent, passionate: if you give o'er to s. passion, H4B 1, 1, 165. his s. hate, H6B III, 1, 155. S t a r j , subst 1) history, account of memorable events: he that can endure to follow with allegiance a fallen lord does conquer him that did his master conquer, and earns a place >" the s. Ant. Ill, 13, 46. 2) any tale of true or fabulous events: she told him —es to delight his ear, Pilgr. 47. some shallow s. of deep love, Gent. I, 1, 21. the s. of the Prodigal, Wir. IV, 5, 8 and H4B II, 1, 157. the s. shall be changed: Apollo flies, and Daphne holds the chase, Mids. II, 1, 230. love's —es, II, 2,122. Pyramus and Thisbe, says the s., did talk through the chink of a wall, III, 1, 65. tell sad —es of the death of kings, R2 III, 2,156. our author will continue the s. H4B V, 5, 144. those that have not read the s. H5 V Chor. 1. Epil. 2. H8 Prol. 26. I, 1, 36. II, 3, 90. Tit. Ill, 2, 83. V, 3, 83. Rom. I, 3, 92. V, 3, 309. Mcb. Ill, 4, 65. Hml. Ill, 2,273. Cymb. II, 2, 27 and II, 4, 69 (=? the subject represented by a picture; cf. Wiv. IV, 5, 8 and H4B II, 1, 157). Per. IV Prol. 19. IV, 4, 9. V Prol. 2. 3) report, account given about a matter or person; recital of facts and incidents: the light will show, charactered in my brow, the s. of tweet chastity's decay, Lucr. 808. the nurse, to still her child, will tell my s. 813. 1 can set down a s. of faults concealed, Sonn. 88, 6. that tongue that tells the s. of thy days, 95, 5. the s. of my life, Tp.V,304.312. to hear the s. of your 72*

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loots discovered, Gent. T, 4, 171. to tell tad —es of s. Cor. Ill, 2,127 (the stress seems to be on the words my own mishaps, Err. I, 1, 121. 138. all the s. of the feel and fear. Let thy mother rather be in person night told over, Midg. V, 23. which makes her s. true. offended by thy pride than be further solicitous about All's IT, 3, 66 (i. e. that which is told about her). its dangerous consequences), his s. when he did stand B 5 IT, 3, 56. H6C I, 4, 160. R3 I, 2, 161. IT, 3, 8 for consul, V, 6, 27. B t a v e r , fodder for cattle, as hay, straw, and the (Ff s., Qq — es). IT, 4, 280 (Ff letter). Hml. T, 2, 360. Oth. I, 3,129. Ant. T, 2, 364. Cymb. HI, 6 , 9 2 . like: the turfy mountains, where live nibbling sheep, and flat meads thatched with s., them to keep, Tp. IT, 63. Per. T, 1, 135. 166. 4) that which a person says or tells: where did I S t « w , to bestow, to place, lo lodge, to lay np: leavet No matter where, quoth he, leave me, and then night . . . in her vaulty prison —s the day, Lucr. 119. the s. aptly ends, Ven. 716. their (lovers') copious the mariners all under hatches —ed, Tp I, 2, 230. —es oftentimes begun ... are never done, 845. whose safely — e d , Hml. IT, 2, 1. where hast thou —ed my (Sinon's) enchanting s. the credulous old Priam after daughtert Oth. I, 2, 62. slew, Lucr. 1521. he that writes of you ...so dignifies 8 t « w a g e , state of being laid np: to have them in his s. Sonn. 84,8. could make me any summer's s. tell, safe s. Cymb. I, 6, 192. 98, 7 (i. e. praise the delights of summer), reworded S t r a e h y , a name or title not yet satisfactorily a plaintful s. Compl. 2. without the which this s. were explained: the lady of the S. married the yeoman of the most impertinent, Tp. I, 2, 137. 306. T, 117. make me wardrobe, Tw. II, 5, 45. not your s. Meas. 1,4,30 ( = make me not your theme, S t r a g g l e r , rover, vagabond: ht's whip these —s i. e. don't make a fool of me). Err. T, 356. Ado I, 1, o'er the seas again, B3 T, 3, 327. 313. IT, 1, 124. As IT, 3, 154. All's T, 3, 229. R2 S t r a g g l i n g , roving dispersed!/ and apart from T, 2, 2. H4A III, 3, 191 (ft appears so by the s., i. e. the main body: s. slaves for pillage fighting, Lucr. there is no denying it after what has been said). H4B 428. he enriched poor s. soldiers with great quantity, II, 4, 272. H6C II, 1, 44. Caes. I, 2, 92. Mcb. V, 5, Tim. T, 1, 7. 29. Hml. 1, 1, 32. Oth. I, 3, 158. 165. IT, 1, 135. S t r a i g h t (cf. Strait) adj. passing from one point Cymb. HI, 3, 55, 91. T, 5, 286. Hence almost = to another by the nearest way, right, direct, not crookmatter, subject, business: when Prospero is destroyed. ed: s. legs and passing strong, Ven. 297. I may be s , That shall be by and by: I remember the s. Tp. Ill, 2, though they themselves be bevel, Sonn. 121,11. Shr. II, 156. who hath a s. ready for your ear, Meas. IT, 1,56. 256. Tw. II, 3, 148. H4A I, 1, 82. II, 4, 164. H5 V, let us from point to point this s. know, All's T, 3, 325. 2,168. Rom. II, 1,19. Cymb. Ill, 1, 38. Per. V, 1,110. as index to the s. we late talked o f , B3 II, 2, 149. I S t r a i g h t , adv. 1) straight-forward, not by a denm st read this paper; I fear, the s. of hit anger, H8 viating course: bear thine eyes s., though thy proud III, 2, 209. heart go wide, Sonn. 140, 14. floating s., obedient to S t a r r , snbst. = floor, see Clear-stories. the stream, Err. I, 1, 87. lo, he is tilting s. L L L V, 2, St*ry, vb. to relate, to give an account of: —es 483 (not breaking his spear across; cf. Across), he his victories, his triumphs and his glories, Ven. 1013. runs s. and even, H4A III, 1, 114. he —es to her ear her husband's fame, Lacr. 106. how 2) immediately, without delay: the steed breaketh worthy he is I will leave to appear hereafter, rather his rein, and to her goes he s. Ven. 264. and s., in than s. him in his own hearing, Cymb. 1, 4, 34. pity of her tender years, they both would strive who first St*a», see Stoop, subst. should dry his tears, 1091. what fond beggar, but to S t s a t , 1) strong, firm: rifted Jove's s. oak, Tp. touch the crown, would with the sceptre s. be strucken V, 45. rocks impregnable are not so s. ... but time downf Lucr. 217. as one shifts, another s. ensues, decays, Sonn. 65, 7. 1104. 1299. 1634. Sonn. 45, 14. 89,3. 100,5. 129, 2) vigorous, full of life: pluck s. men's pillows 5. 145, 5. Wiv. I, 1, 118. IV, 2, 85. 103. IV, 4, 75. from below their heads, Tim. IV, 3, 32. IV, 6, 32. Meas. I, 2, 166. I, 4, 85. II, 2, 1. Err. Ill, 3) proud, overbearing: 1 will be strange, s. Tw. 2, 190. IV, 1,102. IV, 2, 63. IV, 4, 59. 143. L L L V, • I, 5,185. as s. and proud as he were lord of all, H6B 2, 277. Mids. Ill, 2, 403. IV, 1, 65. Merch. I, 1, 31. I, 1, 187. correcting thy s. heart, Cor. Ill, 2, 78. I, 2, 65. 1, 3, 175. II, 4, 25. II, 6, 50. II, 9 , 1 . As II, 4) bold and resolute: with dreadful pomp of s. in- 1, 68. Ill, 5, 136. Wint. II, 3, 14. R2 II, 1, 215. V, vasion, John IT, 2, 173. this earth ... bears not alive 3, 139. H6A IV, 1, 73. IV, 4, 40. V, 4, 47. H6B II, 1, so s. a gentleman, H4A T, 4, 93. the s. Lord Talbot, 141. Ill, 2, 15. 244. H6C I, 2, 71. R3 I, 3, 355. H8 H6A I, 1, 106. s. Pendragon, III, 2, 95. a —er cham- III, 2, 115. Hml. II, 2, 451. Oth. IV, 1, 58 etc. etc. pion never handled sword, III, 4, 19. the s. Parisians Stralght>pight, straight-fixed, erect: for feature, do revolt, V,2,2. s. kerns, H6B IV, 9,26. ». Diomede, laming the shrine of Venus, or s. Minerva, Cymb. V, H6C IV, 2,19. a wise s. captain, IV, 7, 30. s. resolved 5, 164. mates, K3 I, 3, 340. the s. Earl Northumberland, H8 S t r a i g h t w a y , immediately, on the spot. Tp. V, IV,2,12. s. Mercutio, Kom. 111,1, 174. s. Tybalt, 178. 235. Mids. Ill, 2, 34. V, 204. H6A I, 5, 7. H6B IV, the s. Norweyan ranks, Mcb. I, 3, 95. 9,33. Caes. II, 2,127. Ant. Ill, 11, 20. Cymb. Ill, 5,83. S t a u t l y , 1) strongly, firmly: his bark is s. timS t r a i n , subst. 1) effort of thought (as if by violent bered, Oth. II, 1, 48. stretching of the mind): and, in the publication, make 2) boldly, resolutely, obstinately: faint not, faint no s., but that Achilles ... will find Hector's purpose heart, but s. say: so be it, Lncr. 1209. thou that so s. pointing on him, Troil. 1,3,326 (— make no difficulty, hast resisted me, H6C II, 5, 79. she speaks for you t. no doubt). Oth. Ill, 1, 47. 2) motion of the mind, internal action, impulse, Stantneaa, overbearing and unbending pride: let feeling (German: Regung): other —s of woe, which thy mother rather feel thy pride than fear thy dangerous now seem woe, compared with loss of thee will not seem

s «0, Sonn. 90, 13. unless ht know some s. m me, that I know not myself, he would never have boarded me in this fury, Wiv. II, 1, 91. measure his woe the length and breadth of mine, and let it answer every s. for s., as thus for thus, and such a grief for such, Ado V, 1, 12. love is full of unbefitting —s, L L L V, 2,770. if it did infect my blood with joy, or swell my thoughts to any s. of pride, H4B IT, 5, 171. do not these high —s of divination in our sister worlc some touches of remorse 1 Troil. II, 2, 113. can it be that so degenerate a s. as this should once set footing in your generous bosoms t 154. thou hast affected the fine —i of honour, to imitate the graies of the gods, Cor. V, 3, 149. praise his most vicious s., and call it excellent, Tim. IV, 3, 213. it it no act of common passage, but a s. of rareness, Cymb. III,4, 95. O noble s.l IT, 2, 24. 3) natural disposition: I would all of the same s. were tn the same distress, Wiv. Ill, 3, 197. he is of a noble s., of approved valour and confirmed honesty, Ado II, 1, 394. you have shown to-day your valiant s. Lr. T, 3, 40. 4) stock, race: he it bred out of thai bloody s. that haunted us in our familiar paths, H5 II, 4, 51. the s. of mans bred out into baboon and monkey, Tim. I, 1, 259. if thou wert the noblest of thy s. Caes. T, 1, 59. I do shame to think of what a noble s. you are, and of how coward a spirit, Per. IT, 3, 24. 5) note, tone, song: I at each sad s. will strain a tear, Lucr. 1131. the s. of strutting chanticleer, Tp. 1, 2, 385. play false —s, As IT, 3, 68. that s. again! Tw. I, 1, 4. touch thy instrument a s. or two, Caes. IT, 3, 257. Strain, vb. 1) tr. a) to press, to squeeze: our king has all the Indies in his arms, and more and richer, when he —s that lady, H8 IV, 1, 46. b) to extend, to stretch: I am to pray you not to s. my speech to grosser issues nor to larger reach than to suspicion, Oth. Ill, 3, 218. Absol.: you s. too far, H4A IT, 1, 75 (yon go too far in your apprehensions). c) to exert, to ply hard, to pnt to die utmost strength: to strange sores strangely they s. the cure, Ado IV, 1, 254. my breast I'U burst with —ing of my courage, H6A I, 5, 10. our hope in him is dead: let us return, and s. what other means is left unto us, Tim. V, 1, 230. he sweats, —s his young nerves, Cymb. Ill, 3,94. to s. courtesy = to insist on the precedence of others, to decline to go first: they all s. courtesy who shall cope him first, Yen. 888; and hence = to remain behind: my business was great; and in such a case as mine a man may s. courtesy, Bom. II, 4, 55. Par tic. —ed — excessive: this —ed passion doth you wrong, H4B I, 1, 161. with —ed pride to come between our sentence and our power, Lr. I, 1, 172 (Qq strayed). d) to urge: note, if your lady s. his entertainment with any strong or vehement importunity, Oth. Ill, 3, 250. e) to wrench; to force, to constrain: s. their cheeks to idle merriment, John III, 3, 46. nor aught so good but —ed from that fair use revolts from true birth, Rom. II, 3, 19. it —s me past the compass of my wits, IV, 1, 47. Partic. —ed — forced, constrained: what — ed touches rhetoric can lend, Sonn. 82, 10. on what compulsion must It The quality of mercy is not —ed, Merch. IV, 1, 184. f ) to filter: I at each sad strain will s. a tear, Lucr. 1131. I love thee in so —ed a purity, Troil. IV,

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4, 26 (Ff strange), faith and troth, —ed purely from all hollow bias-drawing, IV, 5, 169. g) to tune (?): it is the lark that sings so out of tune, —ing harsh discords, Rom. Ill, 5, 28. 2) intr. to make efforts, to exert one's self: more —ing on for plucking back, Wint. IV, 4, 476 (like a hound in the leash), like greyhounds in the slips, —ing upon the start, H5 III, 1,32. to build his fortune I will s. a little, Tim. I, 1, 143. I do not s. at the position, — it is familiar, — but at the author's drift, Troil. Ill, 3, 112 (I do not put my brains on the rack; I see no difficulty in the position, cf. subst. Strain 1. Ff s. it at). Remarkable expression: with what encounter so uncurrent I have —ed to appear thus, Wint. Ill, 2, 51 (perhaps = brought about, contrived. Dyce: with what unwarrantable familiarity of intercourse I have so far exceeded bounds, or gone astray, that I should be forced to appear thus in a public court as a criminal. — Collier strayed, Johnson have I been stained). S t r a i t , subst. 1) a narrow passage: the tide ... boundeth ... back to the s. that forced him on so fast, Lucr. 1670. honour travels in a s. so narrow, where one but goes abreast, Troil. Ill, 3, 154. 2) difficulty, distress: I know into what —s of fortune she is driven, As T, 2, 71. S t r a i t , adj. (cf. Straight) 1) narrow: flying through a s. lane, Cymb. T, 3, 7. 11. 2) tight, close: you rode, like a kern of Ireland, your Frenchhose o f f , andinyour s.strossers, H5111,7,57. 3) parsimonious, niggardly: I do not ask you much, I beg cold comfort; and you are so s. and so ingrateful, you deny me that, John V, 7, 42. 4) strict: whom I believe to be most s. in virtue, Meas. II, 1, 9. some s. decrees that lie too heavy on the commonwealth, H4A IT, 3, 79. such a s. edict, H6B III, 2, 258. his means most short, his creditors most s. Tim. I, 1, 96. Adverbially: proceed no —er 'gainst our uncle Qloster than ..., H6B HI, 2, 20. S t r a i t « ^ , put to difficulty, at a loss: if your lass should call this your lack of love or bounty, you were »./or a reply, Wint. IT, 4, 365. S t r a l t l r , strictly: his majesty hath s. given in charge that no man shall have private conference with his brother, R3 1, 1, 85. IT, 1, 17 (Ff strictly). S t r a l t n e M , strictness, severity: if his own l\fe answer the s. of his proceeding, Meas. Ill, 2, 269. S t r a n d , see Strond. S t r a n g e , Lord S. of Blackmere, one of Talbot's baronial titles: H6A IT, 7, 65. S t r a n g e , adj. 1) of another country, foreign: one of the s. queen's lords, LLL IT, 2, 134. wear s. suits, disable all the benefits of your country, As IT, 1, 34. as by s. fortune it came to us, Wint. II, 3, 179 (as the child of a foreigner), studies his companions like a s. tongue, H4B IV, 4, 69. H8 III, 1, 45. he (my man) is s. and peevish, Cymb. 1,6,54. I am something curious, being s., to have them in safe stowage, 191. 2) not one's own, belonging to another: the impression of s. kinds is formed in them by force, Lucr. 1242. millions of s. shadows on you tend, Sonn. 53,2. tn him a plenitude of subtle matter, applied to eautels, alt s. forms receives, Compl. 303. some such s. bull leaped your father's cow, Ado V, 4, 49. s. fowl light upon neighbouring ponds, Cymb. I, 4, 97. cf. Strange achieved.

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3) unknown; unused before; new: to new-found methods and to compoundt t. So no. 76, 4. »chat s. fish hath made kit meat on theef T p . II, 1, 112; cf. 11, 2, 28. 32 (and H8 V, 4, 34). the tignet it not t. to you, Meas. IV, 2, 209. thy complexion th\/tt to t. effects, after the moon, 111,1,24. at t. at the thing I know not, Ado IV, 1,271. ¡earned without opinion, and t. without heresy, L L L V, 1,6 (new and original), love to Richard it a t. brooch in thit all-hating world, B2 V, 5, 66. you did devite t. tortures, H6B III, 1, 122. I stalk about her door, like a t. tout upon the Stygian banks, Troil. Ill, 2, 10 (newly arrived), these t. Jliet, these fashion-monger», Bom. II, 4, 34. new honourt come upon him, like our t. garments, Mcb. I, 3, 145. 4) not knowing, unacquainted: I will acquaintance ttrangle and look t. Sonn. 89, 8. at t. unto your town at to your talk, Err. II, 2,151. why look you t. on met you know me well, V, 295. to put a t. face on hit own perfection, Ado II, 3, 49 ( = not to seem to know his own accomplishment), am become as new into the world, s., unacquainted, Troil. Ill, 3, 12. I know thee well, but in thy fortunes am unlearned and t. Tim. IV, 3,56. you make me e. even to the disposition that I owe, Mcb. Ill, 4, 112 (you make me not to know myself, not to know whether I am a brave man or a coward). 5) reserved, distant, estranged, not familiar: in many's looks the false heart't history it writ in moods and frowns and wrinklet t. Sonn. 93, 8. look t. and frown, Err. II, 2,112. thy self I call it, being t. to me, 123. you grow exceeding s. Merch. I, 1, 67. why do you look so s. upon your wifet All's V, 3, 168. I will be t., stout, Tw. II, 5,184. you throw a s regard upon me, V, 219. if he were proud, or covetous of praise, or t. or self-affected, Troil. II, 3, 250. those that have more cunning to be s. Horn. II, 2, 101. I should have been more s. 102. s. love, grown bold. III, 2, 15. you bear too stubborn and too t. a hand over your friend, Caes. I, 2, 35. 6) extraordinary, enormous, remarkable, singular: against s. maladies a sovereign cure, Sonn. 153,8. with good life and observation t. Tp. Ill, 3, 87. he it sick of a s. fever, Meas. V, 152. to t. tores strangely they strain the cure, Ado IV, 1, 254. we will utith some s. pastime solace them, L L L IV, 3, 377. thou It thow thy mercy and remorse more t. than is thy t. apparent cruelly, Merch. IV, 1, 20. he hath t. placet crammed with obtervation. As II, 7, 40. full of t. oaths and bearded like the pard, 150. impossible be t. attempts to those that weigh their pains in sense, All's I, 1, 239. I see a s. confession in thine eye, H413 1, 1, 94. a s. tongue makes my cause more s., suspicious, H8 III, 1, 45. this (murder) most foul, s. and unnatural, Hml. I, 5,28. t. and fastened villain, Lr. II, 1,79 (Qq strong), there is some s. thing toward. 111, 3, 20. 'tis a s. truth, Oth. V, 2, 189. he hath laid s. courtesies and great of late upon me, Ant. II, 2, 157. all t. and terrible events are welcome, IV, 15, 3. nature wantt stuff to vie s. forms with fancy, V, 2, 98. the doth think she hath s. lingering poisons, Cymb. I, 5, 34. fame answering the most s. inquire, Per. Ill Frol. 22. To make it s. = to do as if something extraordinary had happened; to seem to be shocked: she makes it s., but she would be best pleased to be so angered with another letter, Gent. I, 2, 102. why makett thou it to s.t Tit. II, 1, 81. 7) surprising, wonderful, odd: Ven. 791. 985. Tp.

I, 2, 178. 401. II, 1, 199. 213. 318. 11, 2, 28. 32. 41. Ill, 3, 95. IV, 143. 234. V, 117. 228. 232. 242. 289. Meas. IV, 2, 216. V, 38. 39. 42. 44. Err. 1, 1, 52. Ill, 1,97. Ado II, 3, 22. IV, 1,270. L L L V, 2, 210. Mids. Ill, 1, 90. 107. V, 59. Merch. I, 1, 51. II, 8, 13. IV. 1, 177. Shr. I, 1, 85 (wiU you be to t.1). Tw. 1, 3 , 120. V, 70. John I, 44 etc. etc. Followed by should: Wint. V, 1, 114. J o h n V, 7, 20. Caes. II, 2, 35. Ant. III, 7, 58. Adverbially: how t. or odd toe'er I bear mytelf Hml. 1,5,170. she wiU speak most bitterly and t. Most t , but yet most truly, Meas. V, 36.37 (the suffix ly belonging to both adverbs; cf. Appendix). Strange-achieved, gained and yet not enjoyed; acquired not for one's own self, but for the benefit of others: for this they have engrossed and piled up the cankered heaps of t. gold, H4B IV, 5, 72. S t r a n g e - d W p a a e d , of a remarkable disposition or nature: it it a t. time, Caes. I, 3, 33. Strangely, 1) as something not one's own, as a thing belonging to another country or to other people: that thou commend it s. to someplace where chance may nurse or end it, Wint. II, 3, 182. 2) in the manner of one who does not know another or pretends not to know him; in a distant and reserved manner: when thou shalt s- pass and scarcely greet me, Sonn. 49,5. I have looked on truth askance and t. 110, 6. you all look t. on me, H4B V, 2, 63. which of the peert have uncontemned gone by him, or at leatt t. neglectedt H8 III, 2,11. to pass s. by him, Troil. Ill, 3, 39. they pass by s. 71. 3) extraordinarily, uncommonly: thou hast s. stood the test, Tp. IV, 7. 0 mitchief s. thwarting, Ado III, 2, 135. to strange sores s. they strain the cure, IV, 1,254. the herds were s. clamorous, H4A 111, 1, 40. t. visited people, ... the mere despair of turgery, he cures, Mcb. IV, 3, 150. 4) in a manner to cause wonder and surprise: Tp. III, 3, 40. V, 160. 313. Meas. I, 4, 50. IV, 2,120. J o h n IV, 2, 144. H8 111, 2, 29. IV, 1, 81. IV, 2, 112. V, 3, 94. Mcb. Ill, 6, 3. Hml. V, 1, 172. 173. Cymb. V, 2, 17. V, 5, 272. Per. II, 2, 53. Btrangeneaa, 1) distant behaviour, reserve: she puts on outward t. Ven. 310. measure my s. with my unripe years, 524. ungird thy i. T w . IV, I, 16. the t. of his altered countenance, H6B 111, 1, 5. the savage t. he puts on, Troil. II, 3, 135. between your t. and hit pride, III, 3, 45. put on a form of t. 51. he shall in i. stand no farther off than in a politic distance, Oth. Ill, 3, 12 (Qq in strangest). 2) wonderfulness, power of exciting surprise: Tp. I, 2, 306. V, 247. Meas. V, 386. Lr. IV, 6, 66. Stranger, 1) one of another country or place: Err. 1, 2, 60. IV, 2, 9. LLL V, 2, 174. 218. Merch. Ill, 3, 27. As IV, 3, 153. Shr. II, 87. 90. V, 1, 111. All's IV, 1, 17. Tw. Ill, 3, 9. John V, 2, 27 (O. Edd. stranger, march; M. Edd. stranger march). R2 11,3,3. H8 1, 4, 53. II, 2, 102. II, 4, 15. Tit. IV, 2,33. Oth. 1,1,137. Cymb. 1,6, 59. 151. II, 1, 35. 37. 44. II, 4, 126. Per. I, 4, 25. II, 2, 42. 52. II, 5, 46. V, 1, 114. Adjectively: the s. queen, LLL IV, 2, 143. to seek new friends and s. companies, Mids. 1, 1, 219 (O Edd. strange companiont). swearing allegiance to s. blood, John V, 1, 11. the t. paths of banishment, R2 I, 3, 143. my t. toul, B3 I, 4, 48. a t. knight, Per. II, 3, 67. II, 5, 16.

s

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Straw, subst. 1) the stalk on which corn grows, 2) one unknown or, at least, not familiar; one not belonging to the house, a guest: lend* embracements and from which it is thrashed: when shepherds pipe unto every s. Ven. 790. in the interest of thy bed a s. >n oaten — s, L L L V, 2, 913. those that with haste came, Lucr. 1620. count the world at. Gent. V, 4, 70. aill make a mighty fire, begin it with weak —s, Caes. Err. IV, 1, 36. Merch. 1, 2, 135. Ill, 2, 240. As 111, I, 3, 108. Emblem of weakness and insignificance: 2, 275. All's II, 5, 91. V, 3, 26. Tw. I, 4, 4. R2 I, •ur lances are but —s, Shr. V, 2, 173. oaths are —s, 3, 239. H6B 1, 3, 82. H8 li, 3, 17. V, 1,170. Bom. H5 II, 3, 53. start at wagging of a s. R3 III, 5, 7. I, 5, 146. Mcb. IV, 3, 163. Hml. 1, 5, 165. Cymb. I, ipurns enviously at — s , Hml. IV, 5, 6. a pigmy's s. 4, 30. 111. Per. II, 5, 77. With to: ice are but —sto does pierce it, Lr. IV, 6, 171. Hence = trifle: 1force Aim, Tim. Ill, 2, 4. metaphorically: and to my state not argument a s. Lucr. 1021. I prize it not a s. Wint. grew s. Tp. I, 2, 76. to make us —s to his looks of III, 2, 111. shall blow each dust, each »., each little love, H4A I, 3, 290. Mcb. IV, 3, 125. Lr. I, 1, 117. rub, out of the path, J o h n 111, 4, 128. will not debate the question of this s. Hml. IV, 4, 26. find quarrel in Oth. Ill, 3, 144. Adjectively: never coped with s. eyes, Lucr. 99. a s. 55. 2) a mass of stalks of grain cut and thrashed: a a s. cur, Merch. I, 3, 119. 3) any other person, not one's self: when shall he flatted hive of s. Compl. 8. stuff me out with s. H 4 B think to find a s. just, when he himsel/ himself con- V, 5, 88. a wisp of s. were worth a thousand crowns founds, Lucr. 159. Adjectively: she thought they (her ID make this shameless collet know herself, H6C II, 8, words) touched not any s. sense, All's I, 3, 114 ( = 144 ( " a wisp, or small twist, of straw or h a y , was often applied as a mark of opprobrium to an immowere not overheard by any other person). 4) one unacquainted, not knowing: a s. to those dest woman, a scold, or similar offenders; even the most imperial looks, Troil. I, 3, 224. my child is yet a ihowing it to a woman was, therefore, considered as a grievous affront." Nares). first thrash the corn, then s. in the world, Rom. I, 2, 8. Strangered, estranged, alienated: dowered with efter burn the s. Tit. II, 3, 123. Proverbially combustible: she burned with love, as s. with fire flameth, our curse, and s. with our oath, Lr. I, 1, 207. S t r a n g l e , to choke, to kill by stopping respi- Pilgr. 97. the strongest oaths are s. to the fire t the ration: —ing a snake, LLL V, 1, 142. V, 2, 595. the Mood, Tp. IV, 52. = bed-straw, litter: Meas. IV, 3, smallest thread will serve to s. thee, J o h n IV, 3, 129. 38. All's IV, 3, 289. Lr. Ill, 2, 69. Ill, 4, 45. IV, H4A II, 4, 547. H6B II, 3, 8. Ill, 2, 170. R 3 IV, 4, 7, 40. Straw, vb. = strew; see O'erstrawed. 138. Rom. IV, 3 , 3 5 ( = to suffocate). Oth. IV, 1, 220. Strawberry, the fruit of the plant Fragaria: H5 Metaphorically, = to hinder from appearance, to suppress, to extinguish: I will acquaintance s. and 1,1,60. R3 III, 4, 3 4 . 4 9 . Oth. Ill, 3, 435. Straw-calaar, of a light yellow: your s. beard, look strange. Sonn. 89,8. if is the baseness of thy fear that makes thee t. thy propriety, Tw. V, 150 (disown Mids. I, 2, 95. Strawy, resembling straw: the s. Greeks, ripe for what tbou art), s. such thoughts, Wint. IV, 4, 47. vapours that did seem to s. him, H4A I, 2, 227 (i. e. the Us edge, fall down before him, like the mower's swath, sun), he has —d his language in his tears, H8 V, 1, Troil. V, 5, 24 (Ff straying). Stray, subst. 1) dereliction, aberration: I would 157. —s our dear vows even in the birth of our own labouring breath, Troil. IV, 4, 39. dark night —s the not from your love make such a s. Lr. I, 1, 212. 2) a straggler, a vagabond: impounded as as. the travelling lamp, Mcb. II, 4, 7. S t r a n g l e r , that which chokes and destroys: the king of Scots, H5 1, 2, 160. to seise me for a s. H6B band that seems to tie their friendship together will be IV, 10, 27. Collectively, = stragglers: pursue the scattered s. the very s. of their amity, Ant. II, 6, 130. Strap, a slip of leather attached to boots to make H4B IV, 2, 120. Stray, vb. 1) intr. to wander from a direct course their putting on more easy: an they ^boots) be not, let them hang themselves in their own —s, Tw. I, 3, 13. or from company: Ven. 234. Tp. I, 2, 417. Ill, 3, 9. a Stnppad«, species of torture, in which a per- Gent. I, 1, 74. II, 7, 31. Mids. V, 409. Merch. II, 7, son was drawn up by his arms tied behind his back, 35. V, 30. R2 1, 3, 206. H6B 111, 1, 211. H6C 111, and then suddenly let down with a j e r k : an I were %, 176. Troil. V, 5, 24 (Ff —ing, = straggling; Qq and M. Edd. strawy). Tit. Ill, 1, 88. V, 1, 20. Ant. at the s. H4A II, 4, 262. S t r a t a g e m , 1) an artifice in war, a trick to de- IV, 14, 47. Metaphorically: love is... skipping and ceive the enemy ( a deed as well as a practice': All's sain, ... full of —ing shapes,... varying in stibjects, III, 6, 37. 68 (your mystery in s.). IV, 1, 55 (it was LLL V, 2, 773 (—ing monosyll., like many similar in s.). H5 IV, 8, 113. H6A 111, 2, 18. IV, 5, 2. Lr. participles; M. Edd. stray or strange). In a moral lense, = to go astray, to deviate from the right: IV, 6, 188. 2) any artifice or trick: H4B II, 4, 22. R3 III, 5, Sonn. 41, 10. H8 V, 3, 64. Lr. I, 1, 172 ( F f — erf, Qq »framed). Per. I, 1, 104. I I . Tit. II, 1, 104. II, 3, 5. 2) tr. to mislead: hath not else his eye —ed his 3) a dreadful deed, anything amazing and appalling: fit for treasons, —s and spoils, Merch. V, 85. affection in unlawful lovet Err. V, 51. Streak, subst. a line of colour different from the every minute note should be the father of some s. H4B I, 1, 8. what —s, how fell, how butcherly, this deadly (round: chequering the eastern clouds with —i of light, quarrel daily doth beget, H6C 11, 5, 89. that heaven Rom. II, 3, 2. what envious —s do lace the severing should practise —s upon so soft a subject, Rom. Ill, tlouds in yonder east, III, 5, 7. the west yet glimmers vith some —s of day, Mcb. Ill, 3, 5. 5, 211. Streak, vb. to overspread, to anoint: with the Strata, name j n Ones. V, 5, 32. 33. 44. 48. 50. \ juice of this I'll s. her eyes, Mids. II, 1, 257. 63. 64.

1134

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S t r e a k e d , variegated with lines of a different colour, dappled: the eanlings which were s. and pied, Merch. I, 3, 80. s. gillyvors, Wint. IV, 4, 82. Stream, subst. any current of water: in vain you strive against the s. Ven. 772. left me to the mercy of a rude t. H8 111, 2, 364. a vagabond flag upon the i. A n t 1, 4, 45. = a current in the sea: floating straight., obedient to the s. Err. I, I, 87. my boat tails freely, both with wind and t. Oth. II, 3, 65. = a river, brook, or rivulet: the petty —s that pay a daily debt to their salt sovereign, Lucr. 649. Gent. II, 7, 34. Ado III, 1, 27. As II, 1, 46. IV, 3, 80. John II, 443. B2 V, 3, 62. H5 I, 2, 209. Caes. I, 1, 64. Hml. IV, 7, 168. Oth. IV, 3, 45. Cymb. IV, 2, 184. Figuratively, = amoving throng of people: the rich s. of lords and ladies, H8 IV, 1, 62. we will be there before the s. o' the people, Cor. 11, 3, 269. cf. to forswear the full s. of the world, As III, 2, 440. Applied to tears and to blood flowing plentifully: Lucr. 1078. Compl. 285. Merch.Ill, 2,46. Lucr. 1774. R2 I, 1, 103. H6A III, 3, 55. B3 V, 5, 37. To full beams of light: thy (the moon's) gracious, golden, glittering —s, Mids. V, 279 (Qq F l beams'). To copious language: that we must lave our honours in these flattering —s, Mcb. Ill, 2, 33 ( = streams of flattery). In a moral sense, - course, drift, bent, tendency: the very s. of his life ... must give him a better proclamation, Meas. Ill, 2, 150. he that in this action contrives against his own nobility, in his proper s. o'erflows himself, All's IV, 3, 29. what relish is in thist how runs the s.t Tw. IV, 1, 64. we see which way the s. of time doth run, H4B IV, 1,70. which swims against your s. of quality, V, 2, 34. the s. of his dispose, Troil. II, 3, 174. that 'gainst the s. of virtue they may strive, Tim.IV, 1,27. offend the s. of regular justice, V,4,60. Sometimes = water, flood in general: gilding pale — s with heavenly alchemy, Sonn. 33, 4. turns into yellow gold his (Neptune's) salt green —s, Mids. Ill, 2, 393. would scatter all her spices on the s. Merch. I, 1, 33. bubbles in a late disturbed s. H4A II, 3, 62. as plays the sun upon the glassy — s , H6A V, 3, 62. the s. to cool this heat, Tit. II, 1, 133. suffocating —s, Oth. Ill, 3, 389. Stream, vb. 1) intr. to flow like a current; used only figuratively: round about her tear-distained eye blue circles —ed, like rainbows in the sky: these watergalls in her dim element foretell new storms, Lucr. 1587 (cf. All's 1, 3, 157). to imperial Love do my sighs s. All's II, 3, 82. her eyes in heaven would through the airy region s. so bright, Rom. II, 2, 21 (cf. the subst. in Mids. V, 279). 2) tr. to emit, to pour out: as they (thy wounds) s. forth thy blood, Caes. Ill, ], 201. — to unfurl, to display fully in the wind: —ing the ensign of the Christian cross against black pagans, R2 IV, 94. Streamer, ensign, flag: his brave fleet with silken —s the young Phoebus fanning, H5 111 Chor. 6. Street, a public way in a town: Lucr. 1834. Wiv. IV, 2, 40 (at s. end; cf. End). L L L IV, 3, 278. 281. Merch. II, 5, 32. Shr. I, 2, 233. V, 1, 149. Tw. Ill, 3, 25. John IV, 2, 148. V, 1, 39. R2 V, 5, 77. H4A III, 2, 68. H4B III, 2, 329. H6A III, 1, 84. H6B II, 4, 8 etc. etc. in the s.: Meas. IV, 4, 12. Err. Ill, 1, 36. HI, 2, 188. IV, 1, 106. V, 225. Ado III, 3, 36. Merch. II, 8, 14. All's IV, 3, 89. Tw. V, 67. John

IV, 2, 185. H4A I, 2, 95. 98. 100. H6À I, 6, 13 etc. through the —s: Wiv. IV, 5, 32. Err. V, 140. H6B 11, 4, 14. IV, 7, 144. Cor. V, 3, 115. Ant. II, 2, 234. S t r e n g t h , 1) power of the body, vigour, force: Ven. 42. 111. 280. Lncr. 124. Sonn. 23, 4. Gent. II, 4, 193. Meas. II, 2, 108. Err. II, 2, 178. Ado IV, I, 200. L L L I, 2, 180. As I, 2, 182. 185. Tw. Ill, 4, 254. W i n t III, 2, 107 (cf. Limit). IV, 4, 414. John II, 330. V, 2, 63. 137. B2 I, 1, 73. Ill, 2, 180. 181. H4A HI, 3, 7. H4B II, 3, 55. Ill, 1, 42. IV, 4, 8. IV, 5, 44. 218. H5 IV, 7, 90. V, 2, 141. H6A I, 5, 1. 15. II, 3, 63. Ill, 2, 112. V, 5, 32. H6B 111, 2, 173. IV, 10, 53. H6C I, 4, 21. II, 3, 4. II, 6, 24. Ill, 2, 145. V, 2, 8. V, 4, 9. 68. Troil. 1, 1, 7. I, 3, 114. 137. Cor. I, 3, 87. IV, 5, 118. Tit. II, 3, 117. 238. 241. 242. Ill, 2, 2. Rom. V, 1, 78. Hml. IV, 4, 45. Lr. IV, 6, 235. V, 3, 131. A n t IV, 14, 49. IV, 15,33. Cymb. IV, 2, 160. V, I, 31. V, 5, 150. Per. I, 4, 49. Abstr. pro concr. : conferring them on younger — s, Lr. I, 1, 41 ; cf. Cor. IV, 7, 55. In a relative sense, = any degree of personal force: little s. rings out the doleful knell, Lucr. 1495. your swords are now too massy for your — s , Tp. Ill, 3, 67. what s. I have's mine own, Epil. 2. As 1,2,206. Shr. V, 2, 174. 2) power of resisting, fastness, solidity: seven walled towns of s. H6A III, 4, 7. for s. and safety of our country, H6C III, 3, 211. the king's name is a lower of s. R3 V, 3, 12. thy country's s. and weakness, Cor. IV, 5, 146. all the policy, s. and defence, that Rome can make against them, IV, 6, 127. our castle's s. will laugh a siege to scorn, Mcb. V, 5, 2. 3) power of mind; moral or intellectual force: though she strive to try her s. Pilgr. 317. all advice my s. can give you, Meas. I, 1, 7. a charge too heavy for my s. All's 111, 3, 4. we will, according to your —s and qualities, give you advancement, H4B V, 5, 73 (Ff «.). I have no s. in measure, H5 V, 2, 140. women may fall, when there's no s. in men, Rom. 11,3, 80. thou hast the s. of will to slay thyself, IV, 1, 72. 125. retentive to the s. of spirit, Caes. I, 3, 95. you do unbend your noble s., to think so brainsickly of things, Mcb. II, 2, 45. with all the s. and armour of the mind, Hml III, 3, 12. 4) force, efficiency, weight; energy: no object but her passion's s. renews, Lucr. 1103. a power I have, but of what s. and nature I am not yet instructed, Meas. I, 1, 80. thy threats have no more s. than her weak prayers, Mids. Ill, 2, 250. with all religious s. of sacred vows, John III, 1, 229. those prisoners were not with such s. denied, H4AI, 3,25. arguments of mighty s. H6C III, 1, 49. disguise the holy ». of their command, Troil. II, 3, 136. a proof of s. she could not publish more, V, 2, 113 ( = she could not publish a stronger proof; cf. Of ', this boy does reason our petition with more s. than thou hast to deny it, Cor. V, 3, 176. by the s. of their illusion, Mcb. Ill, 5, 28. whose (circumstances') s. 1 will confirm with oath, Cymb. II, 4, 63. whose wisdom's ». Per. I, 2, 119. Ò) power, sway, authority: ». by limping sway disabled, Sonn 66, 8. to leave poor me, thou hast the ». of laws, 49, 13. if thou wouldst use the ». of all thy state, 96, 12. in the very refuse of thy deeds there is such ». and warrantise of skill, 150, 7. ere they can behold bright Phoebus in his ». Wint. IV, 4, 124. to give him ». to make a more requital of your lore, John

s

1135

II, 33. bidding me depend upon thy stars, thy fortune ficacy: the ox hath —ed his yoke in vain, Mids. II, 1, and thy ». Ill, 1, 126. it shall be so »" the right and s. 93. s. thy chest, Troil. IV, 5, 10. let our alliance be o' the commons, COT. Ill, 3, 14. they stand in their an- combined, our best friends made, our means —ed, Caes. cient t. IV, 2, 7. no more deep will I endart mine eye IV, 1, 44. ducking observants that s. their duties nicely, than your content gives s. to make it fly, Rom. I, I Lr. II, 2, 110. since your kindness we have —ed thus 3, 99. our arms, in s. of malice, and our hearts of far. Per. V, 1, 55. cf. Cor. V, 6, 45. —ed = strained, brothers' temper, do receive you in, Caes. Ill, 1, 174 constrained, affected, exaggerated: —ed metre of an (having fall power of doing yon harm), make your antique song, Sonn. 17, 12. extremely—ed and conned oicn purpose, how in my s. you please, Lr. II, 1, 114. with cruel pain, Mids. V, 80. to hear the wooden diayrown to s. Ant. 1, 3, 48. logue and sound 'twixt his — ed footing and the scaffold6) high degree, vehemence: dishonoured me even age, Troil. I, 3, 156. in the s. and height of injury, Err. V, 200. you would 2) intr. a) to be extended, to be drawn out: there's abate the s. of your displeasure, Merch. V, 198. I'll not a minute of our lives should s. without some pleasure wrestle with you in my s. of love, Ant. Ill, 2, 62. now. Ant. I, 1, 46. 7) number, amount of force: of what ». they are b) to reach, to extend to: the —ing of a span a-foot, All's IT, 3, 181. to descry the s. o' the enemy, buckles in his sum of age, As III, 2, 139. had it (his Lr. IV, 5, 14. V, 1, 52. Ant. II, 2, 164. skill) —ed so far, All's I, 1, 22. so far as my coin 8) armed force, body of troops, army: dissever would s. H4A I, 2, 62. which (his lost) — ed to their your united —», John II, 388. should draw his several servants, R3 III, 5, 82. it (his will) —es beyond you, —s together, H4B I, 3, 76. all France with their chief to your friends, H8 I, 2, 141. that the precipitation assembled s. H6A I, 1, 139. gathers, and march unto might down s. below the beam of sight, Cor. Ill, 2, 4. him straight, IV, 1, 73. leader of our English s. IV, a wit of cheveril, that —es Jrom an inch narrow to an 3, 17. Men from Ireland come I with my s. H6B III, ell broad, Rom. II, 4, 87. his means may wells, so far 1, 380. H6C V, 3, 22. R 3 IV, 3, 50 ( Q q army). IV, as to annoy us all, Caes. II, 1, 159. will the line s. out 4, 449. V, 3, 26 (Ff power). T i t 1,43. 194. Ant. II, to the crack of dooml Mcb. IV, 1, 117. S t r e t c h - m a n t h e d , open-mouthed: Wint. IV, 1, 17. S t r e n g t h e n , 1 ) tr. to make stronger or more 4, 196. S t r e w (spelling of 0 . Edd.) or S t r e w (rhyming efficacious: Sonn. 102, 1. All's II, 4, 51. Tw. V, 162. John III, 1, 103. H4B II, 2, 30. H6C I, 2, 58 (s. to dew in Rom. V, 3, 12; to so in Cymb. IV, 2, 287. themselves). II, 6, 7. Ill, 1, 52. IV, 1, 37. H8 V, 3, Impf. —ed in Per. 1,4, 23, a rather doubtful passage; 118. Tit 1,214. Caes.ll, 1,248 (to s. that impatience). partic. strewn in Tw. II, 4, 61; everywhere else strewed) 1) to scatter, to spread by scattering: rushes H ml. V, 1, 317. Per. IV, 6, 114. 2) to grow stronger and stronger: they s. from —ed, Shr. IV, 1, 48. not a flower on my cojfin let there be —n, Tw II, 4, 61. has —ed repentant ashes on his strange to stranger, Tp. V, 227. S t r e n t t h l e M , wanting strength, weak: Ven. 153. head, J o h n IV, 1, 111. R 3 I, 3, 242. Cor. V, 5, 3. Caes. I, 1, 55. Cymb. Ill, 6, 50. IV, 2, 287. Per. I, Lucr. 709. H4B I, 1, 141. II6A II, 5, 13. S t r e t c h , 1) tr. u ) to extend (German: reiken, 4 , 2 3 . ? ) . Metaphorically: s. good luck on every sacred and strecken) : the duke dare no more s. this finger of room, Wiv. V, 5, 61. so I have —ed it in the common mine than he dare rack his own, Meas. V, 316; cf. ear, Meas. I, 3, 15. she may I. dangerous conjectures would upon the rack of Mm tough world s. him out lon- in ill-breeding minds, H a l . IV, 6, 14. smooth success ger, Lr. V, 3, 315. their (groans') discharge did s. his be —ed before your feet, Ant. I, 3, 101. leathern coat almost to bursting, As II, 1, 37. —ed 2) to spread by being scattered over, to cover along like u wounded knight, 111, 2, 253. if both gain, with things scattered: —ing her way with flowers, all the gift doth s. itself as 'tis received, and is enough L L L IV, 3, 380. whose delay is—ed with sweet», All's for both, All's II, 1, 4. upon uneasy pallets —ing thee, II, 4, 45. to ». him o'er and o'er, Wint. IV, 4, 129. H4B III, 1, 10. my grief - es itself beyond the hour J o h n I, 216. R2 I, 3, 289. V, 2, 47. H8 IV, 2, 168. of death, IV, 4, 57. he —ed him, and, with one hand Troil. IV, 5, 166. Rom. V, 3, 12. 17. 36. 281. Hml. on his dagger, ...he did discharge a horrible oath, H8 V, 1, 269. Cymb. IV, 2, 390. Per. IV, 1, 15. I, 2, 204 (he rose to his fall height), if you might S t r e w i n g « , things strewed: ».fittest for graves, please to s. it (your chereril conscience) II, 3, 33. Cymb. IV, 2, 285. reverend for thy —ed out life, Troil. I, 3, 61. have S t r e w m e n t a , the same: she is allowed her virgin nothing out for length, and make us think rather our crants, her maiden s. Hml. V, 1, 256. state's defective for requital than tr« to s. it out, Cor. S t r i c t , 1) tight, close: she wildly breaketh from II, 2, 55 (to extend, i. e. to show or offer it), thus far their t. embrace, Ven. 874. having —ed it (your hand) 111, 2, 74. my sinews shall 2) exact, accurate, rigorously nice; a ) used of be —ed upon him, V, 6, 45. J s. it out for that word things: keep the obsequy to ». Phoen. 12. ». statutes 'broad', Rom. II, 4, 89. have I in conquest —ed mine and most biting laws, Meas. 1,3,19. a more ». restraint, arm so far, Caes. II, 2, 66. would s. thy spirits up into I, 4, 4. other ». observances, L L L I, 1, 36. the —est the air, Lr. IV, 2, 23. Caesar's ambition, which swelled decrees, 117. with what s. patience have I sat, IV, 3, so much that it did almost s. the sides o' the world, 165 (German: mit peinlicher Geduld). my s.fast, R2 Cyiub. Ill, 1, 50. II, 1, 80. J will call him to so ». account, H4A 111, 2, b) to open wide: how shall we s. our eye when ca- 149. keep aloof from *. arbitrement, IV, 1, 70. your pital crimes appear before us, H5 II, 2, 55. s. the no- s. preciseness, H6A V, 4, 67. such s. and severe covestril wide, 111, 1, 15. his nostrils —ed with struggling, ' nants, 114. you undergo too s. a paradox, striving to H6B III, 2, 171. make an ugly deed look fair, Tim. Ill, 5, 24 ( = whnt c) to strain, to put to the utmost strength or ef- is too strictly, too positively a paradox?), law is s.

1136

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85. Ait s. and most observant watch, Hml. I, 1, 71. 1, 2, 358. John IV, 2, 235. R2 IV, 277. H4A IV, 2, take no —er render, Cymb. V, 4, 17. our t. edict, Per. 21. V, 4, 107. H5 II, 4, 54. H6A I, 1, 134. I, 4, 75. I, 1, 111. this s. charge, II, 1, 131. — bl of persons, H6B I, 1, 54. IV, 2, 28. IV, 7, 86. 87. R3 I, 4, 228. = 1) severe, proceeding by exact rales: the s. deputy, Tit. II, 1, 93 (Ql strooke). II, 3, 117 ( F f Q> strook). Meat. 1,2, 186. this t. court of Venice, Merch. IV, 1, Ill, 1, 258. Cor. V, 6, 149. Caes. I, 2, 177. Hml. V, 204. 1 was too s. to make mine own away, R21,3,244. 2, 25 (Qq strooke). stroke ( M . Edd. struck): Wiv. V, this fell sergeant, death, is s. in his arrest, Hml. V, 2,5, 1. B3 V, 3, 217. Troil. II, 2, 7. Tit. 1,364. Hml. 348. 2 ) rigorous, hard, crael: the i. fates, Per. III,2,339 (Qq strooke . Ant. Ill, 1,1. strook or strook« III, 3, 8. (M. Edd. struck): Tp. V, 25. Wiv. V, 2, U . Err. Ill, Strictly, exactly, severely, without remission or 1, 56. Shr. II, 362. H4B V, 4, 11. H5 IV, 8,27. B3 indulgence: the king hath s. charged the contrary, R3 I, 1, 92. H8 V, 1, 1. Cor. I, 6, 4. II, 2, 80. IV, 1, 8. IV, 1, 17 ( Q q straitly). she has so s. tied her to her IV, 5, 230. Tit. II, 1, 93 ( F f Qi struck). 11,3,117 chamber, Per. II, 5, 8. (Ql struck). Rom. I, 1, 167. Tim. I, I, 23. Mcb. IV, Stricture, strictness: a man of s. andfirmabsti- 3, 225. Hml. I, 1,7. I, 4, 4. II, 2, 620. Ill, 2, 339 nence, Meas. I, 3, 12. (Ff stroke). V, 2, 25 ( F f struck). 378. Ant. I, 2, 87. Stride, subst. a step; especially a long and proud Cymb. Ill, 4, 117. IV, 2, 320. strucken: Lucr. 217. step: turn two mincing steps into a manly s. Merch. Err. I, 2, 45. Caes. II, 2, 114. Hml. Ill, 2, 282 (Qq Ill, 4, 68. every tedious s. R2 I, 3, 268. every s. he strooken; the surreptitious Ql and M. Edd. stricken). makes upon my land is dangerous treason. III, 3, 92.Lr. I, 4, 94 (Qq struck), stroken: Cor. IV, 5, 156. a s. and a stand, Troil. HI, 3, 252. follow his —s, Caes. Ill, 1. 209. strooken: L L L IV, 3, 224 Rom. I, Tim. 1, 1, 80. the - s they victors made, Cymb. V, 3, 1, 238. Hml. Ill, 2, 282 (Ff strucken). stricken: R2 43. In Mcb. II, 1, 55 M. Edd. —s, O. Edd. sides. V, 1, 25 (Qq thrown). Caes. II, 1, 192. Stride, vb. (cf. Bestride) 1) to step over: a debt1) to make to disappear, to efface, to blot (Germ. or, that not dares to s. a limit, Cymb. Ill, 3, 35. streichen): that thou didst love her, —s some scores 2) to mount as a rider: I mean to s. your steed. away from the great compt, All's V, 3, 56. all damage Cor. I, 9, 71. —ing the blast, Mcb. I, 7, 22. else ... shall be stroke off, Troil. II, 2, 7. her presence Strife, 1) endeavour: one that, above all other —s, shall quite s. off all service I have done, III, 3, 29. I contended especially to know himself, Meas. Ill, 2, 246. shall s. off this score of absence, Oth. Ill, 4, 179. with s. to please you, All's V, 3, 338. I'll do my best As a naval term, used of sails, = to lower, to to woo your lady: yet, a barful s.! whoe'er J woo, my-let down: must s. sail to spirits of vile sort, H4B V, self would be his wife, Tw. I, 4, 41. I do beseech thee2, 18 ( = do them homage), now Margaret must s. to cease thy »., and leave me to my grief, Rom. II, 2,her sail and learn a white to serve, H6C III, 3, 5. 152 (M. Edd. iui make him s. H6B IT, 9,9. In a relative sense, when preceded by numerals, = amounting to, powerful to the extent of: how many horse the duke is s. All's IT, 3, 149. seven thousand s. H4A IT, 1, 88. he was not rix and twenty s. IT, 3, 56. H4B III, 1, 96. H6A IT, 1, 20. H6C II, 1, 177. T, 3, 14. Jocularly: I have ban dear to him, lad, some two thousand s., or so, Tw. ID, 2, 59 (Sir Toby's speech). 4) firm, solid: nor gates of steel so s., hut time decays, Sonn. 65,8. though the ship were no —er than a nutshell, Tp. 1, 1 , 5 0 . not on a band, but on a —er thing, a chain, Err. IV, 2, 50. by Cupid's —at bow,

1140

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Mids. I, 1, 169. a t. matt, Tw. I, 2, 14. it (my leg) is t. I, 3 , 1 4 3 (i. e. thick, bulky), what —er breaitplate than a heart untainted, H6B III, 2, 232. t. staves, H8 T,4,8. t. at the axletree on which heaven ridet, Troil. 1, 3, 66. t.fettert, A n t I, 2 , 1 2 0 . Metaphorically, = fixed , firm, constant: which makes thy love more t. Sonn. 73, 13. her mother, even e. against that match, Wiv. IT, 6, 27. the t. ttatutet stand lite the forfeit* in a barber's thop, Meas. T, 322. any vice whote t. corruption inhabits our frail blood, Tw. Ill, 4, 390. our t. possession and our right for tis, John I, 39. 40. thou ever t. upon the —er tide, 111, 1, 117. t. reasons make t. actions, III, 4, 182. the t. warrant of an oath, B2 IT, 235. t. at a tower in hope, I, 3, 102. maket one pardon t. T, 3, 135. the t. courte of my authority, H8 T, 3,35. to tteel a >. opinion to themselves, Troil. 1,3, 353. he wili stand very t. with us, Caes. II, 1, 142. be t. in whore, Tim. IT, 3, 141. things bad begun make themselves t. by ill, Mcb. Ill, 2, 55. my —er guilt defeats my t. intent, Hml. Ill, 3, 40. cannot remove nor choke the s. conception that I do groan withal, Oth. T, 2, 55. we are s. in custom, Per. Ill, 1, 52. hath built Lord Cerimon such t. renown at time thall ne'er decay, III, 2, 48. Hence, in a good sense, — rare, to be relied on, certain: how it this justifiedt The —er part of it by her oum lettert, All's IT, 3,65. there it no Englith soul more —er to direct you than yourtelf, H8 I, 1, 147. I held Epicurut s. and his opinion, Caes. T, 1,77. whose death indeed't the —est in our censure, Per. 11,4, 34 ( = most certain). In a bad sense, = obdurate, reckless: 0 heinous, t. and bold conspiracy, B2 T, 3, 59. s. and fastened villain, Lr. II, 1, 79 (Ff strange). 5) affecting the senses forcibly: to be stopped in, like a s. distillation, Wiv. 111,5,114. poor suitors have s. breaths, Cor. 1,1,61 (bad breaths, cf. All's T, 2, 5). In a general sense, = working forcibly, forcible, effectnal, powerful: attailed by night with circumstances s. of present death, Lucr. 1262. far the weaker with so s. a fear, 1647. to him that bears the s. offence's cross, Sonn.34,12. I will drink potions of eisel 'gainst my t. infection, 111, 10. my t. imagination sees a crown dropping upon thy head, Tp. II, 1, 208. the —est suggestion, IV, 26. the — est oaths are straw to the fire i'the blood, 52. in my heart the s. and swelling evil of my conception, Meas. II, 4, 6. the fiend is s. within him, Err. IV, 4, 110. with the force and t. encounter of my amorout tale, Ado I, 1, 327. messengers of t. prevailment, Mids. I, 1, 35. lost with their fears thus s. Ill, 2, 27. such trickt hath s. imagination, T, 18. the spirit of my father grows I. in me, As 1, 1, 75. let gentleness my s. enforcement be, II, 7, 118. the oath of a lover is no —er than the word of a tapster, 111, 4, 34. my reasons are most s. All's IV, 2, 59. to tell, he longs to tee hit ton, were t. Wint.1,2,34. s. matter of revolt and wrath, John III, 4, 167. t. reasons, 182. think them (reasons) t. IV, 2, 41. 42. know the — est and surest way to get, R2 III, 3, 201. had not God, for some s. purpose, steeled the hearts of men, V, 2, 34. s. poison, H6B III, 3, 18. reasons s. and forcible, H6C I, 2, 3. 0 instance, s. as Pluto's gates, Troil. V, 2,1,53. I am his kintman and hit tubject, t. both againtt the deed, Mcb. I, 7, 14. my —er guilt defeatt my t. intent, Hml. Ill, 3, 40. which drivet o'er your content thete t. necessities, Ant. Ill, 6, 83. the tore terms we

stand upon with the gods will be t. with us for giving over, Per. IT, 2, 38 etc. 6) of a high degree, great, violent: night doth nightly make grief t strength teem — er, Sonn. 28,14. whose inward pinches therefore are most t. Tp. T, 77. foUy in foolt beart not to t. a note at foolery in the wit*, L L L T, 2, 75. to ». a liking, As I, 3, 28. love's t.pattion, All's I, 3, 139. her (Fortune's) s. displeasure, V, 2, 6. to t. a passion, Tw. II, 4, 97. the verity of it it in t. suspicion, Wint. V, 2, 31. at. disease, J o h n III, 4, 112. the fit it —est, 114. my paint and s. endeavour!, H5 T, 2, 25. I'll amerce you with to t. a fine, Rom. Ill, 1, 195. t. shudders, Tim. IT, 3, 137. nor our t. sorrow upon the foot of motion, Mcb. II, 3, 130. I am weak with toil, yet t. in appetite, Cymb. Ill, 6, 37 etc. 7) severe (German: ttrenge)? cf. the passages quoted above: Meas. V, 322. L L L T, 2, 75. H8 V, 3, 35. Hml. IT, 3, 3. Ant. Ill, 6, 83. Adverbial use: tmell tomewhat t. All's V, 2, 5. I have the back-trick simply at t. at any man in Illyria, Tw. I, 3, 132. though it do work at t. at aconilum, H4B IT, 4, 47. violenteth in a sense as t. at that which cauteth it, Troil. IT, 4, 4. I am armed so s. in honesty, Caes. IT, 3,67. conceit in weakest bodies —est works, Hml. Ill, 4, 114. he that builds —er than the mason, T, 1, 46. 54. Strong-barred, shut with strong bolts: s. gates, John II, 370. S t r a n g - b a s e d , standing on a firm foundation: the s. promontory, Tp. T. 46. S t r a n g • b e s i e g e d , besieged by a mighty force, bard-beset: s. Troy, Lucr. 1429. S t r a n g - b a n d e d , imposing a strong obligation: that s. oath, Compl. 279. S t r a n g - l l x e d , firmly established: s. is the house of Lancaster, H6A II, 5, 102. S t r o n g - f r a m e d , of a strong make: tut, I am t., he (the devil) cannot prevail with me, R3 1, 4, 154 (Qq strong in fraud). S t r a n g - J a l n t e d , having strong limbs: s. Samson, L L L I, 2, 77. S t r a n g - k n i t , firmly joined or compacted: s. limbs, H6A II, 3. 21. s. sinews, H6C II, 3, 4. S t r a n g l y , 1) firmly, in such a manner as not easily to be shaken or removed: thy merit hath my duty t. knit, Sonn. 26, 2. you are to t. in my purpose bred, 112, 13. I am affianced this man's wife as t. at words could make up vowt, Meas. V, 227. 2) with great force and power, in such a manner as not easily to be forced or resisted: too t. embattled againtt me, Wiv. II, 2, 260. t. guarded, John III, 3,2. who t. hath set footing in this land, R2 II, 2, 48. look you t. arm to meet him, H5 II, 4,49. fortify it t. 'gainst the French, 111,3,53. 'tis s. wedged up in a blockhead, Cor. II, 3, 30. Dunsinane he t. fortifiet, Mcb. T, 2, 12. 3) with energy; forcibly: our late edict thall s. stand in force, L L L I, 1, 11. which each to other hath to t. sworn, 309. which was so t. urged past my defence, J o h n I, 258. we all have t. sworn to give him aid, R2 II, 3, 150. delivered s. through my fixed teeth, H6B III, 2, 313. all these accused him s. H8 II, 1, 24. the for him pleadt i. to the Moor, Oth. II, 3, 361. do i. speak to us, Ant. 1,2,188. this will witness outwardly, at t as the conscience doet within, Cymb. II, 2,36. 'tit

s

1141

not sleepy business, but must bt looked to speedily and lack power to move, LLL IV, 3, 55. that I may appear s. to him, Tw. Ill, 4, 74. upon some s. and uncourteous s. ni, 5, 27. 4) in a high degree, much, violently: what did he parts, V, 369. though authority be a s. bear, Wint. IV, note but s. he desiredt Lacr. 415. some passion that 4,832. your s. usage of the pope, John V, 1,18. treated works him s. Tp IT, 144. your charm so s. works 'era, with a s. outside, H5 V, 2, 244. this s. Cade, H6B III, V, 17. which appears most s. in bearing thus the absence 1, 360. you bear too s. and too strange a hand over of your lord, Merch. Ill, 4, 3. if it smell so s. All's T, your friend, Caes. I, 2, 35. you s. ancient knare, you 2,8 (cf. 5). possessed with fear so s. that they dare not reverend braggart, Lr. II, 2, 133. to slubber the gloss meet each other, H4A II, 2,113. though s. apprehended, of your new fortunes with this more s. and boisterous H4BI, 1,176. 'twill stir him s. H8 111, 2,218. tosatisfy expedition, Oth. I, 3, 228. 4) ruthless, insensible: thou art said to have a s. my remembrance the more s. Mcb. V, 1, 38. suspects, soul, that apprehends no further than this world. Meas. yet s. loves, Oth. Ill, 3, 170 (Ff soundly). 8 t r « B | . n e c k e d , having a strong neck: Ven. 263. V, 485. pluck commiseration from s. Turks and Tartars, Straag-rlbbcd, having strong ribs: Troil. 1,3,40. Merch. IV, 1,32. it is the —est young fellow of France, S t r o n g - t e m p e r e d , very hard (cf. Temper): s. As 1, 1, 148. the sepulchre in s. Jewry, R2 II, 1, 55. free from a s. opposite intent, H6B 111, 2, 251. do not steel, Ven. 111. 8 t f » | - H l B | e 4 , having strong wings: Ant. IV, give advantage to s. critics, apt, without a theme, for depravation, Troil. V, 2, 131. 15, 35. S t u b b o r n - c h a s t e , see Stubborn sub 2. Strawer* (most M. Edd. trossers; cf. Nares' and Htmbfesra - h a r d , see Stubborn sub 1. Dyee's glossaries) tight drawers or breeches: in your strait s. H5 III, 7, 57. S t a b b a r a l y , obstinately: when s. he did repugn S t r a w , S t n w l i f i , and g t r s w m w t i , see the truth, H6A IV, 1, 94. Stabberane««, 1) obstinacy, contumacy: to perStrew etc. Stray, destroy: what I have left behind —ed in sever in obstinate condolement is a course of imfious s. Hml. I, 2, 94. dishonour, Ant. Ill, 11, 54. 2) roughness, harshness: translate the s. of fortune Struggle, vb. to strive, to make efforts in order to escape from the grasp of a superior force: Ven. into so quiet and so sweet a style. As II, 1, 19. even 227. 710. 1047 (—ing for passage). John IV, 1, 77. his s., his checks, his frowns ... have grace and favour in them, Oth. IV, 3, 20. H6B III, 2, 171. H6C I, 4, 62. Hml. Ill, 3, 68. S t a c k , stoccado, thrust in fencing: he gives me Strumpet, a prostitute: Lucr. 1471. Meas. II, 2, 183. Err. IV, 4, 127. All's II, 1, 174. V, 3, 293. Wint. the s. in with such a mortal motion, that it is inesitable, Ill, 2, 103. H6A I, 5, 12. V, 4, 84. R3 111, 4, 73. 76. Tw. Ill, 4, 303 (most M. Edd. stuck-in or studtin). if Tit. V, 2, 191. Hml. II, 2, 240. Oth. IV, 1, 97. IV, 2, he by chance escape your venomed s. Hml. IV, 7, 162. Stud, an ornamental knob or protuberance: coral 81. 82. 85. V, 1, 34. 78. 121. 122. 2, 77. 79. Ant. I, 1, 13. V, 2, 215. Cymb. Ill, 4, 22. 116. the s. wind, clasps and amber —s, Pilgr. 366. two letters tor her Merch. II, 6, 16. 19. that s. Fortune, John 111, 1, 61. name fairly set down in —s, Shr. Ill, 2, 63. S t a M e d , adorned with shining knobs: the s. Hml. II, 2, 515. S t r a m p e t « d , made a strumpet, debauched, de- bridle, Ven. 37. their harness s. with gold and pearl, Shr. Ind. 2, 44. Bled: Sonn. 66, 6. Err. II, 2, 146. S t a d e n t , one devoted to books, a scholar: Wiv. S t r a a g , see String, vb. Strut, to walk with a proud gait or affected dig- Ill, 1, 38. LLL II, 64. Ill, 36. Tw. IV, 2, 9. S t a d i a * , 1) studious, intent, inclined: aprince nity: Tp. I, 2, 385. Wiv. 1,4, 31. K3 1,1,17. Troil. I, 3, 153. Mcb. V, 5, 25. Hml. Ill, 2, 36. Ant. Ill, 13, should not be so loosely s. as to T6in€inb€f so weak a composition (viz small beer H4B II, 2,10. your graces 114. Cymb. Ill, 1, 33. Stabble, the part of corn-stalks left in the ground heme been more than could my s. purposes requite, H8 by the reaper: like a ». land at harvest-home, H4A I, 111, 2,168. I have heard it, and am well s. for a liberal 3, 35 (courtiers' beards, at that time, would not be thanks which I do owe you, Ant. II, 6, 48. closely shaved, but trimmed with a pair of scissors). 2) With in, — having made a thing one's study; to kindle their dry s. Cor. II, 1, 274. well versed, practised: one well s. in a sad ostent, S t a b b a r n , 1) stiff, hard, not flexible: are you Merch. 11,2, 205. as one that had been s. in his death, more s. hard than hammered iront John IV, 1, 67 to throw away the dearest thing he owed, as 'tcere a (M. Edd. stubborn-hard). stop their mouths with s. bits, careless trifle, Mcb. I, 4, 9. H8 V, 3, 23. his s. buckles, with these your white enS t a d l a a s , 1) diligent, eager to attain a thing: chanting fingers touched, shall more obey than to the be wary in thy s. care, H6A II, 5, 97. edge of steel, Troil. Ill, 1, 163. bow, s. knees, Hml. 2) given to books and learning: the s. universities, Ill, 3, 70. Gent I, 3, 10. 2) unreasonably obstinate, contumacious, headS t n d l a a t l y , diligently, carefully: written pamstrong: proud, disobedient, s., lacking duty, Gent. Ill, phlets s. devised, H6A III, 1, 2. I, 69. turned her obedience to s. harshness, Mids. I, 1, Study, snbst. 1) any endeavour of the mini: it is 38. leaving his wealth and ease, a s. will to please, As my s. to seem despiteful and ungentle to you, Ai V, 2, II, 5, 55. the queen is obstinate, s. to justice, H8 II, 4, 85. to be more thankful to thee shall be my s. Wint. IV, 122. to s. spirits they (the hearts of princes) swell, HI, 2, 21. I have laboured, and with no little s., that my 1, 163. your s. answer about the giving back the great teaching and ...my authority might go one way, H8 V, seal, HI, 2, 346. as she is s., chaste against all suit, 3, 34. Tit. V, 2, 12. Lr. I, 1, 279. Plur. — es: your Troil. I, 1, 100 (M. Edd. stubborn-chaste). safety, for the which myself and them bend their best 3) rough, rude, rugged, harsh: I fear theses, lines —es, JohnIV,2,51. H4A 1,3,228. H8 III, 1,121.174.

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2) application to books and learning: Pilgr. 61. Tp. Ill, l , 20. Meas. 1,4, 61. L L L 1, 1, 55.58. 6 7 . 6 8 . 70. 84. 143. I, 2, 53. II, 23. IV, 2, 113. IV, 3, 300. 311. Midi. I, 2, 69 ( / a n slow of «.; Snag's speech). H 4 B I, 2, 132. H 5 1,1, 57. H 6 A II, 4, 56. V, 1, 22. Plur. — es: T p . I, 2, 77. Gent. 1,1, 67. L L L 1,1,172. As T, 4, 32. Shr. I, 1, 9. Ill, 1, 12. 3) the object of such application: those (liberal arts) being ali my ». T p . I, 2, 74. H 5 I, 1 , 4 2 . L r . Ill, 4,163. Peculiar expression: an he were (in my books), J would burn my i . Ado I, 1, 81. 4) an apartment appropriated to literary employment: H 6 B I, 3 , 6 2 . T i t V , 2 , 5 . Horn. 111,3,76. Caes. 11,1,7. Figuratively: the idea of her life thall meetly creep into his t. of imagination, A d o IV, 1,227 (cf. my bosonT» shop in Sonn. 24, 7). S t n d y , vb. 1) to fix the mind on a subject, to dwell on in t h o u g h t , to be intent: the state whereon I —ed, Meas. II, 4, 7. to s. where I well may dine, L L L 1 , 1 , 6 1 . hath mine uncle Beaufort and myself ... —ed so long, sat in the council-house, H6B I, 1, 90. how to s for the people's welfare, H6CIV,3,39. W i t h an inf.: or s. where to meet some mistress fine, L L L 1, 1, 63. s. to break it, 66. 80. 144. then l'U s. how to die, As IV, 3, 63. as had she —ed to misuse me so, Shr. U, 160. who —es day and night to answer all the debt he owes to you, H4A 1,3, 184. who should s. to prefer a peace, B 6 A III, 1, 110. Transitively, = to meditate; to devise; to think o n ; to be intent o n : s. help for that which thou lamentest, Gent. Ill, 1, 242. I have —ed eight or nine wise words t speak to you, Ado III, 2, 73. what —ed torments hast for met Wint. 111,2,176. as I have watched the night ...in —ing good for England, H6B 111, 1,111. to s. fashions to adorn my body, R 3 I, 2, 258. I shall s. deserving, Lr. I, 1, 32. 'tis a —ed, not a present thought, Ant. II, 2, 140. 2) to apply the mind to books and learning: to live and s. here three years, L L L I, 1, 35. 48. 51. 59. 108. 181. 1 , 2 , 3 7 . 5 6 . IV, 3, 292. 296. As III, 2, 339. Shr: I, 1, 17. II, 80. Trans., = to apply to for the purpose of learning: he hath —ed her will, Wiv. 1, 3, 54. do you s. them hothf (the sword and the word) 111, 1, 45. s. what you most affect, Shr. 1,1, 40. H4B IV, 4, 68. Per. 111,2,32. Hence = to learn by heart: painted cloth, from whence you have —ed your question*. As III, 2, 291. where did you s. all this goodly speech t Shr. II, 264. I can say little more than I have —ed, Tw. I, 5, 190. 206. s. a speech of some dozen lines, Hml. II, 2, 566. cf. the subst. in Mids. I, 2, 69. 3) to meditate, to mus>e, to ponder: —es my lady1 mistress, look on me, L L L V, 2,847. lhave been —ing how I may compare this prison unto the world, R2 V, 5, 1. W i t h of: you make me s. of that, Tp. II. 1, 82. With on: bids thee s. on what fair demands thoumeanest to have him grant thee, Ant. V, 2, 10. 4) to make out by scientific research: here is three —ed, L L L I, 2, 54. S t a f f , subst. 1) that of which a thing is made; materials: we are such s. as dreams are made on, T p . IV, 156. nature never framed a woman's heart of prouder s. Ado 111, 1, 50. it hat s. 'tis made of, Merch. I, 1, 4. ambition should be made of sterner s. Caes. Ill, 2, 97. if it be made of penttrable s. Hml. III. 4, 36. that we are made of t. so flat and dull, IV, 7, 31. nature wants

s. to vie strange forms with fancy, Ant. V, 2,97. great nature moulded the s. so fair, Cymb. V, 4 , 4 9 . Specially, = cloth, texture of any kind: I gave him Vie s. Shr. IV, 3 , 1 1 9 . what s. wilt have a kirtle of f H 4 B I I , 4 , 2 9 7 . 2) m a t t e r , substance, thing; in a physical sense: he'U make us strange s. T p . IV, 234. J never knew man hold vile s. so dear, L L L IV, 3, 276. youth's a s. will not endure, T w . U, 3, 53. (here's a whole merchant's venture of Bourdeaux s. in him, H4B II, 4, 69. who in spite put s. to some the beggar, T i m . IV, 3,272. cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous s. Mcb. V, 3 , 4 4 . did compound for her a certain s. Cymb. V, 5 , 2 5 5 (a potion). In a moral or intellectual sense: there's in him s. that puts him to these ends, H8 I, 1, 58. you are full of heavenly s. Ill, 2, 137. serves as s. for these two to make paradoxes, Troil. 1, 3 , 1 8 4 . thy verse swells with s. so fine and smooth, T i m . V, 1,87. there was no such s. in my thoughts, Hml. 11,2,324. yet do 1 hold it very s. o'the conscience to do no contrived murder, Oth. 1, 2, 2. I do not think so fair an outward and such s. within endows a man but he, Cymb. I, 1, 23. Especially, things spoken or recited': it is more pleasing s. Shr. Ind. 2, 142 (i. e. a comedy). Usually in contempt: what s. is this! how sayyoul T p . II, 1, 254. 0 heavens! what s. is heret Meas. Ill, 2, 5. this is the silliest s. that ever I heard, Mids. V, 212. such a deal of skimble-skamble s. H4A 111, 1, 154. here's goodly s. toward, H4B II, 4, 214. at this fusty s. ... Achilles laughs, Troil. I, 3, 161. O proper s ! Mcb. Ill, 4, 60. such s. as madmen tongue, Cymb. V, 4, 146. 3) furniture; goods; utensils: rich garments, linens, —s and necessaries, T p . I, 2, 164. household s. Shr. Ind. 2, 143. Ill, 2, 233. what masking s. is heret IV, 3, 87. Aw treasure, rich —s, and ornaments of household, H8 111,2,126. such boiled s. as well might poison poison, Cymb. I, 6, 125; cf. the s. we have, a strong wind will blow it to pieces, Per IV, 2, 19. = luggage: fetch our s.from thence, Err. IV, 4, 153. 162. V, 408. 409. S t u l T , vb. 1) to fill very full, to c r a m : till gorge be —ed, Ven. 58. a maid, and —ed! A d o HI, 4, 65. a hulk better —ed in the hold, II4B II, 4, 70. cleanse the —ed bosom, Mcb. V, 3, 44. I will s. your purses full of crowns, H 4 A I, 2 , 1 4 6 . Followed by with: they (the lines) are —ed with protestations, Gent. IV, 4,134. to s. my head with more ill news, J o h n IV, 2,133. with a foul traitor's name s. I thy throat, R2 1, 1, 44. H4B Ind. 8. Cor. V, 1, 53. Oth I, 1, 14. P e r . 1, 4, 67. 93. Applied to empty things swelled out by putting something i n : a —ed man, Ado I, 1, 59. —ed tennisballs, III, 2, 47. parsley to s. a rabbit, Shr. IV, 4, 101. J o h n I, 141. H 4 A II, 4, 497. Cor. II, 1, 98. Rom. V, 1, 43. W i t h out: —s out his vacant garments with his form, J o h n III, 4, 97. H 4 B V, 5, 87. Figuratively, = to make full, to complete: it will s. his suspicion more fully, Lr. Ill, 5,22. W i t h up: his servile powers, who, flattered by their leader's jocund show, s. up his lust, as minutes fill up hours, Lucr. 297. Partic. —ed = full, complete: whom you know of—ed sufficiency, Wint. II, 1,185. —ed with - full of: —ed with all honourable virtues, Ado I, 1, 56. —ed with honourable parts, Rom. Ill, 5, 183. 2) to press or thrust in: in ivory coffers lhave —ed my crowns, Shr. II, 352. 3) —ed = unable to smell in consequence of a cold: Ado 111, 4, 64.

s S t u f B a g , that which is used to 611 any thing: A d o I, 1, 59. • S t u m b l e , 1) to trip in walking, to be near falling: Shr. Ill, 2, 59. IV, 1, 79. H2 V, 5, 87. H4B I, 1,131. R3 I, 4, 18. Ill, 4, 86. With at: s. at the threshold, H6C1V.7,11. Rom. V, 3,122. —ing caused by darkness: if grows dark, he may f. L L L V, 2, 633. before the —ing night did part our weary powers, J o h n V, 5, 18 (the night in which there is no safe walking or acting). Applied to the tongue: his tongue, all impatient to speak and not see, did s. with haste, L L L II, 239. my tongue should s. in mine earnest words, H6B 111,2,316. I n a moral sense, = to err: so you s. not unheedfully, Gent. I, 2, 3. she'll not s. Wint. II, 3, 52. blind reason —ing without fear, Troil. 111,2,77. they s. that run fast, Rom. II, 3, 94. I —ed when I saw, Lr. IV, 1, 21. 2) With on, = to light on by chance or inadvertently: what man art thou that thus bescreened in night so —st on my counselt Rom. II, 2, 53. nor aught so good but strained from that fair use revolts from true birth, —ing on abuse, II, 3, 20. S t u m b l i u g - b l e c f c , that which obstructs the way: I would remove these tedious —s and smooth my way upon their headless necks, H6B I, 2, 64. S t a m p , a part remaining after the rest is amputated or destroyed: H8 I, 3, 49 (of a tooth). Tit. II, 4, 4. Ill, 2, 42. V, 2, 22. 183. S t u p i d , dull, wanting sensibility and apprehension: s. with age, Wint. IV, 4, 409. S t a p i f y , to make insensible, to bennmb: will I. and dull the sense awhile, Cymb. 1,5,37. Partic. —ed = stupid: or —ed or seeming so in skill, Wint. II, 1, 165. S t u r d y , 1) stoat, strong: the forceless flowers like s. trees support me, Ven. 152. 2) brutally relying on one's strength: look where the s. rebel sits, H6C I, 1, 50. S t y i snbst. an inclosure for swine: R3 IV, 5, 2. A n t IV, 15, 62. Figuratively, a place of bestial debauchery: Hml. Ill, 4, 94. Per. IV, 6, 104. S t y , vb. to lodge as in a sty: here you s. me in this hard rock, Tp. I, 2, 342. S t j c l a i i , pertaining to the infernal river Styx: upon the S. banks, Troil. HI, 2, 10. S t y l e , 1) manner of writing with regard to language: Bonn. 32, 14. 78, 11. 84, 12. Ado V, 1, 37. V, 2, 6. 2) manner of expression appropriate to particular characters: I can construe the action of her familiar s. Wiv. I, 3, 51. L L L 1, 1, 201. IV, 1, 98. As 11,1, 20. IV, 3, 31. H6A IV, 1, 50. R3 IV, 4, 360. 3) title, appellation: Ford's a knave, and I will aggravate his s.; thou, Master Brook, shalt know him for knave and cuckold, Wiv. II, 2, 297. count's master is of another s. All's II, 3, 205. here is a silly stately s. indeed! the Turk, that two and fifty kingdoms hath, writes not so tedious a s. as this, H6A IV, 7, 72. 74. King Reignier, whose large s. agrees not with the leanness of his purse, H6B I, 1, 111. a queen in title and in s. I, 3, 51. As for plays on the word, see Stile. Styled, titled: thou wert dignified enough, to be s. the un der-hangman of his kingdom, Cymb. II, 3, 134. S t y x , the infernal river: Troil. V, 4, 20. Tit. I, 88. Alluded to in R 3 I, 4, 45. Schmidt, Shskeapeare L»lcon. 2. E me quite, Meas. II, 2. 186. IV, 2, 84. L L L 1, 2, 187. IV, 1, 40. Wint. IV, 4, 587. H6A I, 2, 109. Oth. I, 3, 112. II, 3, 346. V, 2, 348. Cymb. I, 1, 136. With to: her infinite cunning —d me to her rate, All's V,3,217. his large fortune ... —* and properties to his love and tendance all sorts of hearts, Tim. I, 1, 57. 'twould s. my father entirely to her love, Oth. Ill, 4, 59. —d to = subject to, subjngated by: my nature is —d to what it works in, like the dyer's hand, So mi. I l l , 6. this man's threats, to whom I am —d, T p . I, 2, 489. my heart's —d even to the very quality of my lord, Oth. I, 3, 251. his face —d to penetrative shame, Ant. IV, 14, 74 (not showing any trace of its former pride). 3) to crash, to oppress, to tame, to disable: being once —d in armed tail, Troil. V, 10, 44. to make him worthy whose offence —s him, Cor. I, 1, 179. nothing could have —d nature to such a lowness but his unkind daughters, Lr. Ill, 4, 72. S u M u e m e a t , conquest, victory: despising many forfeits and —s, Troil. IV, 5, 187. S u b j e c t , snbst. 1) one under the dominion of another: Ven. 1045. Lncr. 616. 722. Tp. 1, 2, 341 (I am all the —» that you have). II, 1,165. II, 2,131. 157. Ill, 2, 41. V, 167. Gent. II, 6, 8. Meas. V, 317. Err. II, 1, 19. Ado III, 3, 33. 35. Merch. Ill, 3, 49. Shr. V, 2 , 1 5 5 . H6A III, 1, 182. IV, 1,166. IV, 2, 7. V, 4 , 160. H 6 B 1, 3, 52 (to). II, 2, 8. IV, 9, 5. 6. H6C III, 1, 70. 78. 81. R3 IV, 4, 356. Lr. V, 3, 60 (/ hold you but a s. of this war, not as a brother; i. e. one who ought to obey, not to command). Ant. I, 3, 92 (your royalty holds idleness your s.) etc. etc. 2) the people under the dominion of a sovereign: the general s. to a well-wished king quit their own part, Meas. II, 4, 27 (M. Edd. the general, ».). the greater file of the s. held the duke to be wise, 111, 2, 145. let the s. see, to make them know . . . , V, 14. one that indeed physics the s., makes old hearts fresh, Wint. I, 1. 43. why this watch so nightly toils the s. of the land, Hml. 1, 1, 72. the levies ... are all made out of his s. I, 2, 33. how from the finny s. of the sea these fishers tell the infirmities of men, Per. II, 1, 52. cf. also H6B IV, 1,82. 3) creature, being; that which is in existence: our very priests must become mockers, if they shall encounter 73

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such ridiculous —' as you are, Cor. II, 1, 94. that heaven ihould practise stratagems upon so soft a s. at myself, Bom. Ill, 5, 212 (perhaps collectively in Per. II, 1,52; see sab 2). Hence the following expression: thoughts are no —s; intents but merely thoughts, Meiu. V, 458; i. e. thoughts are no real, existing things. 4) he who, or that which, is exposed or liable to something: have I scaped love-letters in the holidaytime of my beauty, and am I now a s. for themf Wir. II, 1, 3. leaves his part-created cost a naked s. to the weeping clouds, I14B I, 3, 61. we are time's —s, and time bids be gone, 110. to be shame's scorn and s. of mischance, H6A IT, 6, 49. Iam too mean a s. for thy wrath, H6C I, 3, 19. live each of you the —s to his hate, B3 1,3,302. proved the s. of my own sours curse, IV, 1, 81. beauty, wit, high birth, ... are —s all to envious and calumniating time, Troil. Ill, 3, 173. 5) that which is spoken or thought or treated of; theme, argument: how can my Muse want s. to invent, Sonn. 38,1. the wits of former days to —s worse have given admiring praise, 59, 14. 82, 4. 84, 6. 100, 4. 103, 10. Meas. II, 4, 2. Err. V, 65. Ado V, 1, 137. L L L I, 2, 120. V, 2, 774. H6C 111, 2, 91. H8 Prol. 7. Tim. IV, 3, 272. Caes. I, 2, 92. 6) he who, or that which, is the canse or occasion of something: I am the unhappy s. of these quarrels, Merch. V, 238. I could be sad. Very hardly upon suck a s. H4B II, 2, 47. 1 cannot fight upon this argument; it is too starved a s. for my sword, Troil. 1,1,96. none so noble whose life were ill bestowed or death unfamed where Helen is the s. II, 2, 160. the dry serpigo on the s. (of the quarrel) II, 3, 81. near approaches the s. of our watch, Mcb. Ill, 3, 8. Subject, adj. 1) being under the dominion of another: let me have no s. enemies, John IV, 2, 171 (i. e. no enemies among my subjects). I, her sovereign, am her s. love, R3 IV, 4, 355 (Qq s. low), the eastern tower, whose height commands as s. all the vale, Troil. 1, 2, 3. With to: I am s. to a tyrant, Tp. Ill, 2, 48. Meas. II, 4, 27 (O. Edd. the general s., M. Edd. the general, s). John II, 43. H5 I, 2, 242. H8 II, 4, 26. Tim. IV, 3, 347. Hml. I, 3, 18. Cymb. I, 1, 172. 2) exposed, liable, obnoxious: s. to the tyranny of mad mischances, Ven. 737. s. and servile to all discontents, 1161. s. to Time's love or to Time's hate, Sonn. 124, 3. be s. to no sight but thine and mine, Tp. r. 2, 301. Wiy. Ill, 5, 117. Err. V, 54. Merch. Ill, 1, 64. John III, 1, 14. B2 III, 4, 103. H4B 111, 2, 325. IV, 4, 54. H5 IV, 1, 251. Subject, vb. l ) t o put under the power of another: s. his coronet to his crown, Tp. I, 2, 114. 2) to expose, to make liable: I rather will s. me to the malice o f . . . a bloody brother, As II, 3, 36. S u b j e c t e d , adjectively, 1) having the qualities of a snbject: s. thus, how can you say to me, Iam a kingt B2 III, 2, 176. 2) due from a subject, becoming in a subject: needs must you lay your heart at his dispose, s. tribute to commanding love, John I, 264. Subjection, the state of being a subject; service: brought in s her immortality, and made her thrall to living death, Lucr. 724. (the horse) proud of s., noble by the sway, Compl. 108. his majesty ...to whom I am now in ward, evermore in s. All's 1,1,6. to whom I do bequeath my faithful services and true s. everlastingly, John V, 7, 105. whom to disobey icere against all pro-

portion of s. H5 IV, 1, 153. I dare be bound he's true and shall perform all parts of his s. loyally, Cymb. IV, 3, 19. I'll tame you, I'll bring you in s. Per. II, 5, 75. S u b m e r g e d , put under water, drowned: so half my Egypt were s. and made a cistern for scaled snakes, Ant. II, 5, 94. Bufcmlaalra, 1) the act of submitting, delivery of one's self to the authority of another: s., Dauphin! 'tis a mere French word, H6A IV, 7, 54. proclaim a pardon to the soldiers fled that in s. will return to us, B3 V, 5, 17. 2) humble behaviour, reverence: to whom, with all s., I do bequeath my services, John V, 7, 103. give sorrow leave awhile to tutor me to this s. R2 IV, 167. tell her I return great thanks, and in s. will attend on her, H6A II, 2, 52. all the court admired him for s. H6B HI, 1, 12. I commend this kind s. V, 1, 54. in all s. and humility, 58. 3) acknowledgment of a fault, confession of error: be not as extreme in s. as in offence, Wiv. IV, 4, 11. I may ... find pardon on my true s. H4A 111, 2, 28. 0 calm, dishonourable, vile s. Rom. HI, 1, 76. Submissive, testifying submission or inferiority; humble: L L L IV, 1, 92. Shr. Ind. 1, 53. H6A 111,4, 10. IV, 7, 53. . Submit, 1) trans, to subject, to yield or resign to the power of another: I s. my fancy to your eyes, All's II, 3,174. Refl.: tee should s. ourselves to an unknown fear, All's II, 3, 6. s. thee, boy, John II, 159. Ill, 1, 194. H5 II, 2, 77. H6A V, 4, 130. Cor. Ill, 3, 44. Caes. I, 3, 47 expose). Ant. HI, 12, 17. 2) intr. to yield, to give up resistance, to acknowledge the power of another: what must the king do now t must he s.t R2 III, 3, 143. he shall s., or I will never yield, H6A III, 1,118. With to: H6A V, 1, 56. Cymb. V, 5, 460. Per. II, 4, 39. Suborn, to procure by secret collusion, to abet: thou hast —ed the goldsmith to arrest me, Err. IV, 4,85. what peer hath been —ed to grate on yout H4B IV, 1, 90. whom 1 did s. to do this ruthless piece of butchery, R3 IV, 3,4. they (the murderers of Duncan) were —ed, Mcb. II, 4, 24 Applied especially to false witnesses: Sonn. 125,13. Meas. V, 106. 308. H6AV,4,21. H6B III, 1, 180. Oth. Ill, 4, 153. Subornation, the crime of procuring one to do a bad action, and specially to bear false witness: guilty of perjury and s. Lucr. 919. wear the detested blot of murtherous s. H4A I, 3,163. the duchess by his s. began her devilish practices, H6B III, 1, 45. foul s. is predominant, 145. Subscribe, 1) to underwrite (one's name); absol.: my uncle's fool —d for Cupid, Ado I, 1, 41. write to him; I wills. Ant. IV, 5, 14. With to: s. to your deep oaths, and keep it too, LLL I, 1, 23. if my tongue did e'er solicit, or my hand s. to any syllable that made love to you, Per. 11,5,69. Transitively, = to write or place underneath: s. your names, LLL 1 , 1 , 1 9 . they shall s. them for large sums of gold, R2 I, 4, 50 (underwrite their names). 2) to sign and attest with one's own hand: he hath not yet —d this, H5 V, 2, 363. —d by the consuls, Cor. V, 6, 82. —d it, Hml. V, 2, 52. 3) to become surety, to guaranty; with for: I know thou'rt valiant; and, to the possibility of thy soldiership, will s. for thee, All's III, 6, 89 (I warrant that thou

s wilt do all that thou possibly canst). I will t. for thee, thou art both lcnave and foci, 1Y, 5, 34. 4) to admit of, to grant, to acknowledge: at 11. not that, nor any other, but in the lost o/question, Meas. II, 4, 89. I will i. him a coward, Ado V, 2, 59. will you s. hit thoughtt Troil. II, 3, 156. With to, in the same sense: plead a new state in thy unrivalled merit, to which I thus t.: Sir Valentine, thou art a gentleman etc., Gent V, 4, 145. but when I had —d to mine own fortune and informed her fully, All's V, 3, 96 (acknowledged, confessed the state of my affairs). 5) to yield, to confess one's self to be in the wrong, to submit: if I have fewest (roses), Is. in silence, H6A II, 4, 44. which fear if better reasons can supplant, I will t. and tay I wronged the duke, H6B III, 1,38. all cruels else «., Lr. Ill, 7, 65. With to, = to submit to, to acknowledge the superiority of, to pay respect to, to obey: death tome —t, since spite of him I'U live in this poor rhyme, 8onn. 107, 10. to your pleasure humbly I s. S h r I, 1, 81. Hector in his blaze of wrath —s to tender objects, Troil. IV, 5, 105. toe will all s. to thy advice, Tit. IY, 2, 130. Transitively, = to make to be inferior, to rednce to the state of dependency: the king gone to-nightl — d his power 1 Lr. 1, 2, 24 (Ff prescribed). SnfcscrlptlMi, submission, obedience: you owe me no s. Lr. Ill, 2, 18. Safcs*«neBt, following: small pricks to their s. volumes, Troil. I, 3, 344. • Subsidy, a tax imposed on a particular occasion: H6B IV, 7, 25. PI. — ei: H6C IV, 8, 45. Satirist, to live, to continue: so long as brain and heart have faculty by nature to s. Sonn. 122,6. no more infected with my country's love than when Iparted hence, but still —ing under your great command, Cor. V, 6, 73. Safcstanee, 1) matter; that of which things consist: if the dull s. of my flesh were thought, Sonn. 44,1. what is your s., whereof are you model 53,1. so much as makes it light or heavy in the s. Merch. IY, 1, 328. all of one nature, of one s. bred, II4A 1,1,11. the purpose is perspicuous even as s., whose grostnett little characters sum up, Troil. I, 3, 324 (as the material world, which seems immense, but is calculated and defined by means of little figures. According to others, it means here wealth, treasure, estate), as thin of s. as the air, Rom. 1,4,99. thou dost breathe, hast heavy s. Lr. IV, 6, 52. 2) any thing existing by itself, of which we can say that it is; a being: you murdering ministers, wherever in your sightless —s you wait on nature's mischief, Mcb. 1,5,50. all the noble s. Hml. I, 4, 37 (corr. pass.), that little seeming s. (Cordelia) Lr. I, 1, 201. earthly man is but a s. that must yield to you, Per. II, 1, 3. 3) that which constitutes the thing itself, and not only a vain semblance of it (usually opposed to shadow): flowers distilled leese but their show; their s. still lives sweet, Sonn. 5,14. since the s. of your perfect self is else devoted, I am but a shadow, Gent. IV, 2,124. 127. my s. should be statue in thy stead, IV, 4, 206. so far this shadow (a picture) doth limp behind the s. Merch. Ill, 2, 130. each s. of a grief hath twenty shadows, R2 II, 2, 14. there (in my soul) lies the s. (of my grief) IV, 299. much of the father's s.! H4B III, 2,142. now the s. shall endure the like (as the picture, viz hang) H6AII, 3,38. Men have I s. too, 49. my s. is not here, 51. these are his s., sinews, arms and strength,

1145

63. the s. of that great shadow I did represent, H6B 1, 1, 13. shadows have struck more terror to tlu soul of Richard than can the s. of ten thousand soldiers, R3V, 3,218. he takes false shadows for true—t, Tit. Ill, 2, 80. despised s. of divinest show, Rom. Ill, 2, 77. the very s. of the ambitious is merely the shadow of a dream, Hml. II, 2, 264. Hence = die main and essential part of a thing: dear father, soul and s. of us all, Tit. I, 374. amceit, more rich in matter than in words, brags of his s-, not of ornament, Rom. II, 6, 31. 4) material means and resources: grows stronf and great in s. and in power, R2 III, 2, 35. and yet, in s. and authority, retain but privilege of a private man, H6A V, 4, 135. Hence = goods, means of living, treasure: this shadow doth such s. give that IM thy abundance am sufficed, Sonn. 37,10. you take On sum and s. that I have, Gent. IV, 1, 15. he is of t.good, Wiv. I, 3, 40. love like a shadow flies when s. love pursues, II, 2, 215. he shall not knit a knot in his fortunes with the finger of my s. Ill, 2, 77. thy s. cannot amount unto a hundred marks. Err. I, 1, 24. he hath put all my s. into that fat belly of his, H4B II, 1, 81. the sixth part of his s. to be levied without delay, H8 I, 2,58. you have sent innumerable s. ...to furnish Borne, III, 2, 326. 5) contents, purport: how far the s. of my praise doth wrong this shadow in underprizing it, Merch. Ill, 2, 127. their (the letters') cold intent, tenour ami s., thus, H4B IV, 1, 9. unto your grace do I in chief address the s. of my speech, 32. S u b s t a n t i a l , 1) material, corporeal, bulky: to draw with idle spiders' strings most ponderous asd s. things, Meas. Ill, 2, 290. cf. Self-substantial. 2) real, solid, not merely seeming, not illuuve: your reason was not s. Err. II, 2, 105. acquitted by a true s. form, H4B IV, 1, 173. a dream, too flatteringsweet to be s. Rom. II, 2, 141. S u b s t i t u t e , one acting with delegated power in the place of another: Meas. Ill, 1,192. IV, 2,19J. V, 133. 140. Merch. V, 94. R2 1, 2, 37. I, 4, 48. H4B IV, 2, 28. IV, 4,6. H6A V, 3 , 5 . H6B III, 1,371. R3 III, 7, 133. 181. Oth. I, 3, 224. Per. V, 3, 51. Substituted, 1) put in the place of another: how their child shall be ... s. in the place of mint, T i t IV, 2, 159. 2) invested with delegated authority: who is s. 'gainst the'French, I have no certain notice, H4B I, 3, 84. S u b s t i t u t i o n , the office of a substitute, delegated authority: Tp. I, 2, 103. S u b s t r a e t a r , detractor, slanderer: Tw. I, 3,37. Subtile and S u b t l l t y , see Subtle, Subtlety. Subtle, l ) t h i n , fine, nice, delicate it must needs be of »., tender and delicate temperance, Tp. II, 1, 41. some joy too fine, too t., potent, Troil. 111,2,25 (M.Edd. subtle-potent), a point as s. as Ariachne's broken vtoof, V, 2, 151. 2) sly, artful, cunning: am I politic? am Is.t Wiv. Ill, 1, 103. s. as Sphinx, LLL IV, 3, 342. a s. traitor needs no sophister, H6B V, 1, 191. Warwick is a s. orator, H6C III, 1,33. incensed by his s. mother to teunt and scorn you, R3.III, 1, 152. nor sweeten talk, nor play at s. games, Troil. IV, 4, 89. bolder, though not so s. (as the devil) Cor. I, 10, 17. the s. queen of Goths, Tit. I, 392. the swift, the slow, the s. (log) 73*

1146 Mcb. Ill, 1, 96. ». at the fox for prey, Cymb. Ill, 3, 40. 3) acting under the cover of a false appearance; being other than in seeming; deceptions, treacherous: the ». thining secrecies writ in tie ¡flatty inargento of tuck books, Lucr. 101 (secrecies hid under a false show, bnt well discernible to the eye of a man of experience). twi/t t. pott, 926 (moving imperceptibly and approaching nnawares). to mock the t. in themtelvtt beguiled, 957. at t. Sinon here it painted, to tober, tad, to weary and to mild, 1541. in him a plenitude o f t . matter, applied to cautele, all ttrange formt receive!, Compi. 302. tmooth not thy tongue with filed talk, lett the tome t. practice smell, Pilgr. 307. a delicate wench. Ay, and a t. Tp. II. 1,44. thou t., perjured, falte, disloyal man, Gent. IV, 2, 95. the it too t. for thee, and her smoothness, her very tilence and her patience speak to the people, As I, 3, 79. I feel thete •youth's perfections with an invitible and t. stealth to creep in at mine eyes, Tw. 1,5,316 (i. e. imperceptible; or rather not sufficiently guarded against, as not seeming dangerous at first), this s. king, H4A I, 3, 169. a t. knave! but yet it shall not serve, II6B II, 1, 104 (playing the innocent). »., false and treacheroue, R3 1,1,37. thet. traitor thit day had plotted ... to murder me, III, 5, 37. thy age confirmed, proud, s., bloody, IV, 4, 171. he is equal ravenous at he it t. H8 I, 1, 160. like to a bowl upon a «. ground, I have tumbled past the Mrotr, Cor. V, 2,20 (seeming smooth and even, but in fact uneven and treacherous), what s. hole is thit, whote mouth it covered with rude-growing briers, Tit. II, 3, 198. when ». Greeks surprised King Priam's Troy, V, 3, 84. suck the t. blood o' the grape, till the high fever teethe your blood to froth, Tim. IV, 3, 432 (running glibly over the palate, but heating the blood. German: heimtückisch), is not thy kindness s. 515. let our hearts, at t. mattert do, stir up their servants to an act of rage, and after teem to chide 'em, Caes. II, 1, 175. a slipper and t. knave, Oth. II, 1, 246. thit it a t. whore, IV, i, f l . S u b t l e t y , 1) cunning; stratagem: the fox which lives by t. Ven. 675. by gins, by snares, by s. H6B III,

1, 262.

2) false appearance, deception, illusion : un learned in the world's false —es, Sonn. 138,4. you do yet taste tome —es of the isle, that will not let you believe things certain, Tp. V, 124 (Steevens: "this is a phrase adopted from ancient cookery and confectionary. When a dish was so contrived as to appear unlike what it really was, they called it a subtlety. Dragons, castles, trees etc. made out of sugar, had the like denomination". A remark furnishing a new instance for the peculiar use of the word, but hardly illustrative of the above passage). 'tis the king's s. to have my life. Per. II, 5, 44. S u b t l e - w l t t e d , crafty: the s. French conjurers, H6A I, 1, 25. Subtly, deceitfully: thou proud dream, thatplayest to ». with a king's repose, H5 IV, 1, 275. and danger, like an ague, s. taints even then when we tit idly in the tun, Troil. 111,3,232. a poison, which the friar ». hath ministered to have me dead, Bom. IV, 3,25 (Ff subtilly). S u b t r a c t e r , writing of some M. Edd. for subItractor, q. v. S u b u r b i , the parts of a city that lie without the walls: Meas. I, 2, 98. 105. II, 1, 65. Tw. Ill, 3, 39. R6A I, 4, 2. 9. H8 V, 4, 76. Metaphorically: dwell

S I but in the t. of your good pleasure t Caes. II, 1, 285 ("the s. were the general resort of disorderly persons in fortified towns, and in London also. It was the same in ancient times". Nares). S u b v e r a U n , destruction: seek ». of thy harmless life, H6B III, 1, 208. S u b v e r t , to destroy: —t your towns, H6A II, 3, 65. Succeed, 1) to follow, to come after, to be subsequent or consequent; absoL: a most harth one (language^, and not to be understood without bloody —ing, All's II, 3, 199 ( = consequence) after tummer evermore —t barren winter, H6B II, 4, 2. a pattern to all princet living with her, and all that thall t. H8 V, 5,24. the effectt he writes of t. unhappily, Lr. 1,2,157 (come to pass after his prediction), not another comfort like to thit —» in unknown fate, Oth. II, 1, 195. bethought me what wat past, what might t. Per. I, 2, 83. —ing = later, living in after-times: sung by children in —ing timet, Lucr. 525. beauty's pattern to —ing men, Sonn. 19,12. to God, my king, and my —ing ittue, B2 I,3,20. —ing aget, B3 111,1,71. to the —ing royalty he leavet the healing benediction, Mcb. IV, 3, 155. Trans.: the curse of heaven and men t. their evils, Per. I, 4, 104. 2) to take the place which another has left; to become heir; absol.: no woman thall t. in Salique land, H5 I, 2, 39. H6B II, 2, 52. H6C I, 1, 146. 227. H8 II, 1, 112. Tit. I, 40 (Hanmer: —erf). Mcb. Ill, 1, 64. IV, 3, 49. Per. I, 4, 64. Trans., = a) to be heir or successor to: «. thy father in mannert at in thape, All's 1,1,70. noi Amurath an Amurath —t, H4B V, 2, 48. H5 Epil. 10. H6A II, 5, 83. H6C II, 2, 94. b) to inherit: if not a fedary, but only he owe and t. thy weaknett, Meas. II, 4, 123. 3) to come down by order of snccession, to descend , to devolve: a ring, that downward hath —ed in his house from ton to son, All's III, 7,23. seize upon the fortunes of the Moor, for they ». on you, Oth. V, 2, 367 (Qq «. to you), hope, —ing from so fair a tree as your fair self, doth tune ut otherwise, Per. I, 1, 114. S u c c e e d e r , successor, heir: B3 IV, 4, 128. V, 5, 30. SaeccM, 1) snccession: our parents' noble names, in whose s. we are gentle, Wint. I, 2, 394. and so t. of mischief thall be born, and heir from heir thall hold thit quarrel up, H4B IV, 2, 47. 2) issue, result, fortune (as a vox media): let me hear of thy t. in love, Gent. I, 1, 58. I'll tend him certain word of my t. Meas. I, 4, 89. t. will fashion this event in better thape, Ado IV, 1, 236. to try t. All's I, 3, 253. when your lordship seet the bottom of hit I. in it, III, 6, 39. we cannot greatly condemn our t. 59. J know not what the t. will be, 86. so thrive I in my enterprise and dangerout t. of bloody wart, R3 IV, 4, 236 (Qq dangerous attempt of hostile arms), the t. shall give a scantling of good or bad unto the general, Troil. I, 3, 340. lead their —es as we wish our own, Cor. I, 6, 7. I shall ere long have knowledge of my s. V, 1,62. my speech should fall into such vile s. as my thoughtt aim not at, Oth. Ill, 3, 222. Caesar and Lepidus have made wart upon Pompey. What is the s.t Ant. Ill, 5, 6. bad s. H6C 11,2,46. Troil. 11,2,117. goods. H6C III, 3, 146. Cor. I, 1,264. Lr. V, 3,194. A n t II, 4,9. best t. H6C II, 2, 74. well found t. Cor. II, 2, 48.

s 3) prospérons termination of an enterprise, good fortune: greet! heaven / o r his ». Lucr. 112. on a lovebook pray for my s. Gent. I, 1, 19. Merch. Ill, 2, 243. All's IV, 3, 100. Wint. V, 1, 166. 115 II, 2, 24. H6A I, 2, 82. I, 6, 5. IV, 7, 62. V, 2, 8. H6C I, 2, 76. II, 1, 125. R3 IV, 4, 193. V, 3, 165. Troil. I, 3, 183. IV, 5, 149. Cor. I, 9, 75. Caes. II, 2, 6. V, 3, 65. Mcb. I, 3, 90. 132. I, 5, 1. I, 7, 4. Ant. I, 3, 100. V, 2, 103. Cymb. I, 1, 32. IV, 2, 352. I n c c c M a a t l j , successfully? or following after another (viz Aemilius, who had gone before) ? then go J., and plead to him, Tit. IV, 4, 113 (some M. Edd. successfully ; Capell incessantly). Successful, effective, prospérons, fortunate : Shr. 1, 2, 158. W i n t 111, 1, 12. H4B IV, 4, 1. H6C II, 2, 41 (fortune). Tit. I, 66. 172. Successfully, fortunately: As 1,2,162 [he looks $.; cf. Look). Shr. IV, 1, 192. Tit. I, 194. B u e e e u l a n , 1) the act of following, of doing as another has done before: example, that so terrible shows in the wreck of maidenhood, cannot for all that dissuade s. All's III, 5, 25. 2) that which is to come; fnturity: slander lives upon s., for ever housed where it gets possession, Err. Ill, 1,105 (feeds on fnturity, makes all that is to come its prey), he hath put me off to the s. of new days this month, Tim. II, 2, 20. their writers do them wrong, to make them exclaim against their own s. Hml. 11,2,368. 3) the act or right of succeeding or coming to the inheritance of ancestors: Sonn. 2, 12. Tp. II, 1, 151. All's IV, 3, 314. Wint. IV, 4, 440. 491. R2 II, 1, 199. H4A III, 2, 99. H6C II, 1, 119.172. IV, 6, 56. Hml. Ill, 2, 356. 4) successors, heirs, descendants: Cassibelan ... for him and his s. granted Rome a tribute, Cymb. Ill, 1, 8. thinking to bar thee of s., as thou reft'st me of my lands, III, 3, 102. Successive (successive in Mess. II, 2,98), 1) following in order or uninterrupted course: what future evils, either now or by remissness new-conceived, and so in progress to be hatched and born, are note to have no s. degrees, but, ere they live, to end, Meas. II, 2, 98 (viz the degrees of being conceived, of being hatched, and of being born), an union richer than that which four s. kings in Denmark's crown have worn, Hml. V, 2,284. 2) having or giving the right of succeeding to an inheritance; hereditary, legitimate: now is black beauty's s. heir, Sonn. 127, 3. as next the king he was s. heir, H6B III, 1, 49. plead my s. title with your swords, Tit. I, 4. Successively, 1) in uninterrupted order, one following another: is it upon record, or else reported s. from age to aget R3 III, 1, 73. 2) by order of succession and inheritance : so thou the garland wearett s. H4B IV, 5, 202. but as s. from blood to blood, your right of birth, R3 III, 7, 135. Succeaacr (successor), one that follows in the place of another: Wint. V, 1, 48. = descendant: Wiv. I, 1, 14. H8 I, 1, 60. Sneccisr, subst. any kind of relief or assistance: As II, 4, 75. R2 111, 2, 32. H4A V, 4, 45. H6A I, 2, 50. IV, 3, 30. H8 11, 1, 109. Per. 1, 1, 171. far from his s. H8 III, 2, 261 (from the possibility of coming to his assistance), draw to her s. V, 4, 55. Plur. —s = auxiliary troops: H5 III, 3, 45. II6A IV, 4, 23. H6B III, 1, 285.

1147 S a e c e n r , vb. (used only in the inf. pres.). to relieve, to help, to assist: shine sun to s. flowers, Pilgr. 208. God will s. us, H6B IV, 4, 55. H6C III, 3, 41. 207. IV, 7, 56. Tit. IV, 4, 80. Sack, 1) of that or the like kind or degree: some of us are gentlemen, s. as the fury of ungoverned youth thrust from the company of awful men, Gent IV, 1,45. a spare mast, s. as seafaring men provide, Err. 1,1,81. s. is the simplicity of man, LLL I, 1, 219. though the devil lead the measure, s. are to be followed, All's II, 1, 58. s. as to my claim are liable, John V, 2, 101. s as thou, Mcb. IV, 2, 82. s. the adornment of her bed, Cymb. II, 2, 25 etc. Adjectively: four s. lamps. Ven. 489. s. nectar, 572. 949. Lucr. 102. 155. 363- 460. 896.1555. Tp. 1,2,28. 372.465. V, 184. Cor. Ill, 3, 19 (». time = then) etc. etc. s. time-beguiling sport, Ven. 24. s. distilling showers, 66. s. petty botdage, 394. 638. Lucr. 832. 999. 1347.1825. Tp.ll, 1,174. The ind. art. placed between it and the noun: s. a park, Ven. 239. 522. s. a weak and silly mind, 1016. s. a peerless dame, Lucr.21. 464. 1540. Tp. 1,2,101. 457.493. Ill, 2, 37. Gent 1,1, 161. Ado V, 1, 7 (s. a one) etc. s. a coloured periwig, Gent. IV, 4, 198 (see A). s. another proof, Gent. 1,1,97; and, on the other hand, another s. offence, Meas. 11,3,14. As for s particular signification of s. another, see Another. Followed by the conjunction that: s. disdain that they have murdered this poor heart, Ven. 501. thi birds s. pleasure took, that some would sing, 1101. Lucr. 19. 1265. 1385. 1403. 1433. 1532. 1561 etc. By ss, in the same sense: such signs of rage they bear ...as it seemed they would debate with angry swords, Lucr. 1419. I feel s. sharp dissension in my breast as I am sick, H6A V, 5, 84 etc. (cf. As). By an inf., in the same sense (viz of an effect'1: I would with s. perfection govern, to excel the golden age, Tp. II, 1,167. s. is the simplicity of man to hearken after the flesh, LLL I, 1, 219. As, correlatively, before the thing related to or compared with: with s. black payment as that hast pretended, Lucr. 576. who so base would s. an office have as slanderous death's man to so base a slave, 1000. in me thou seest the twilight of s. day as after sunset fadeth in the west, Sonn. 73, 5. Tp. Ill, S, 16. Gent IV, 1, 45. Err. I, 1, 81. John V, 2, 101. Mcb. IV, 2, 82 etc. etc. s. as it is = of whatever kind: every man has business and desire, s. as it is, Hml. I, 5,131. I have other holy reasons, s. as they are, All's I, 3, 35. The relative pronoun in the same sense: nt man well of s. a salve can speak, that heals the wound and cures not the disgrace, Sonn. 34, 7. in me thou seest the glowing of s. fire that on the ashes of his joutk doth lie, 73,9. s. a youth that can do my business, Gent. IV, 4, 70. with s. gifts that heaven shall share wilt you, Meas. II, 2, 147. s. things that want no ear but yours, IV, 3,108. whose state is s. that cannot choose but lend and give where it is sure to lose, All's I, 3, 210. s. allowed infirmities that honesty is never free of, Wint. I, 2, 263. s. words that are but roted in your tongue, Cor. Ill, 2, 55. to s. a man that is no fleering tell-tale, Caes. 1,3,116. s. suffering souls that welcome wrongs, II, 1, 130. her offence must be of s. unnatural degree that monsters it, Lr. I, 1, 222. put upon him s. to form in the mind, to figure to one's lelf, to imagine; absol.: in your —ing once more put yovr sight of heavy Pericles, Per. V Prol. 21. With an object: nor dare I question with my jealous thought where you may be, or your affairs s. Sonn. 57, 10 (form sn idea of your affairs). Passively: when great treasun is the meed proposed, though death be adjunct, there's » death —d, Lucr. 133. whether it is that she reflectS to bright, that dazzleth them, or else some shame — d , 577. a vulgar comment will be made of it and that —d by the common rout ... that may . . . Err. Ill, 1, 101. more furious raging broils than yet can be imagined v —d, H6A IV, 1, 186. Hence —d = imaginary: tht sight which makes —d terror true, Lncr. 455. make such wanton gambols with the wind, upon —d fairness, Merch. 111,2,94. — With a clause: s. within the girdle of these walls are now confined two mighty monarchies, H5 Prol. 19. s. that you have seen the king embsrk his royalty, 111 Prol. 3. that you aptly wills, what pageantry ...the regent made in Mytilene, Per. V, 2, 5. 3) to imagine, to fancy, to think (erroneously): he shall s. no other but that he is carried ..., All's III, 6, 26. With a double accns.: all hearts, which lb] lacking have —d dead, Sonn. 31, 2. so many hate —d them mistress of his heart, Compl. 142. he —s ne travelled to Poland, Meas. I, 3, 14. s. the singing birds musicians, R2 I, 3, 288. he doth s. my sleep my death, H4B IV, 5,61. which vainly I —d the Holy Laid, IV, 5,239. they s. me mad, Tit. V, 2,142. to s. her thaste, Oth. IV, 1, 73. Passively: how easy is a bush—d a bear, Mids.V,22. I am—d dead, All's IV, 4, II. idly —d the founder of this law, H5 I, 2, 59. — d d e a d , Per. V, 3, 35. cf. —d as forfeit to a confined doom, Sonn. 107, 4. s. him now at anchor, Per. V P n l . 16. Hence —d = pretended: let my unsounded self, —d a fool, now set thy wit to school, Lucr. 1819. let the —d fairies pinch him, Wiv. IV, 4, 61. —d Licentio must get a father, called —d Vincentio, Shr. II, 409. if you should tender your —d aid, All's I, 3, 242. wounding —d peace, H4BIV, 5,196. so termed • / our —d father, H6B IV, 2, 33. tell false Edward, th/ —d king, H6C III, 3, 223. IV, 1, 93. these —d evib, B 3 I, 2, 76. to his foe —d he must complain, Htm. II Chor. 7. in this —: thou toldst me thou wouldst hunt the boar, Ven. 614. shall t. my loving tale, Lucr. 48C. that we before have heard them told, Sonn. 123, 8. t. your piteous heart there's no harm done, Tp. I, 2, 14. 34. 43. 100 (see Into. As for the construction, cf. Wint. I, 2, 337: and thereby for sealing the injury etc. = for sealing thereby). 117. 260. Ill, 2, 48. Gent. I, 3, 1. 11,4,87. II, 7, 5. Wiv. 1, 1, 137. Ill, 4, 9. IV, 4, CO. Err. IV,

T 3, 89 etc. etc. to t. fortune, Sonn. 14, 5. Ant. I, 2, 43. 55. tot. a lie, Tp. I, 2, 248. Ill, 2, 32. Wiv. I, 1, 69. Ado IT, 1, 324. Merch. Ill, 4, 69 etc. to t. one's mind, Gent. I, 1, 148. Err. II, 1, 48 (cf. Mind), to t. tales (see Tale), Tp. V, 129. Meas. IV, 3, 175. T w . II, 1, 43 etc. cf. Sonn. 76, 7. 89, 12. R3 I, 3, 113 (threat you me with —ing of the kingt a construction only possible in the supposition, that in the phrase to tell the king the latter word U accus., not dative), he —s you rightly. Ye t. me what you wish for both, my ruin, 118 III, I, 97. 98 (i.e. he counsels you well). With of: —s him of trophies, Ven. 1013. not to t. of good or evil luck, Sonn. 14,3. Tp. Ill, 3, 96. IV, 168. Wiv. III, 3, 31. Meas. II, 4, 186. E r r II, 2. 18. Mids. Ill, 2, 310. As I, 2, 243. J o h n II, 348. B2 V, 3, 1. H4A V, 2, 37. A n t II, 2, 78 ( I told him of myself, i. e. I gave him an acconnt of my manner of living). Ill, 6, 45 etc. To before the person: nor can I fortune to brief minute« tell, Sonn. 14, 5. she —s to your highness simple truth, Err. V, 211. Iheardhim t. it to one of his company, H4A II, 1, 62. I could t. to thee, as to one it pleases me to call my friend, H4B II, 2, 44. t. this heavy message to the king, H6B III, 2, 379. no jocund health ... but the great cannon to the clouds shall t Hull. I, 2, 126. The person snbject of the passive: I was told you were in a consumption, Ado V, 4, 96. / have been told so of many, As III, 2, 361. has been told so, Tw. I, 5, 156. he must be told on't, Wint. II, 2, 31. John IV, 2, 114. H5 III, 7, 113 ( I was told that). Troil. II, 3, 88. Tim. IV, 3, 214. The thing snbject of the passive: my tale is told, L L L V, 2, 729. Merch. IV, 1, 276. 'twas told me you were rough, Shr. II, 245. W i n t III, 3, 121. were it but told you, V, 3, 116. the news was told, H4A I, 1, 58. this shall be told our lovers, Troil. I, 3, 284. two truths are told, Mcb. I, 3, 127. 'tit told me he hath oft given private time to you, Hml. I, 3, 91. when 'tis told, Lr. V, 3 , 1 8 2 . our ills told us, A n t I, 2, 114. what by me is told, Per. Ill Prol. 57. Peculiar phrases: a) I can t. you = you shall see; trust me; you may rely on i t ; take warning: this will shake your shaking, I can tell you, Tp. II, 2, 88. (Acre are pretty orders beginning, lean t. you, Meas. II, 1, 250. you will take little delight in it, I can t. you, As 1, 2,169. 'tis in request, I can t. you, W i n t IV, 4,297. it jumps with my humour, ... leant, you, H 4 A I , 2 , 7 9 . you shall find no boys' play there, I can t. you, V, 4,76. he'U lay about him to-day, I can t. them that, Troil. I, 2, 58. let them take heed of Troilus, I can t. them that too, 61. leant, you, III, 2 120. Cor. IV, 3, 26. Similarly : you are a churchman, or, I'll t. you, cardinal, 1 should judge now unhappily, H8 1,4,88. when his disguise and he is parted, t. me what a sprat you shall find him, All's III, 6, 113. b) I cannot t. = I don't know what to say or what to do: I cannot t.; I make it breed as fast, Merch. I, 3, 97. good Grumio, fetch it me. I cannot t.; I fear 'tis choleric, Shr. IV, 3, 22. I cannot t., but I had as lief take her dowry with this condition, I, 1, 135. IV, 4, 91. and yet, in some respects, 1 grant I cannot go: I cannot t.; virtue is of so little regard, H4B I, 2,190. she did you wrong, for you were trothplight to her. I cannot t.: things must be as they may, H5 II, 1, 22. I cannot t., the world is grown so bad, B31,3,70. / cannot t.; we must proceed as we do find the people, Cor. V, 6,15. c) whenf can you tellt an expression of contemptuous defiance or refusal: have at

1187

you with a proverb — shall I set in my staffl Have at you with another; that's — when? can you tellt Err. Ill, 1, 52. lend me thine. Ay, whent canst t.t H4A II, 1, 43. cf. we have French quarrels enow, if you could t. how to reckon, H5 IV, 1, 241. proud and ambitious tribune, canst thou t.t Tit. I, 201. d) I. not me — go to; nonsense! (. not me; when the butt is out, we will drink water, Tp. Ill, 2, 1. but t. not me: I know, Anton io is sad to thvdc upon his merchandise, Merch. 1,1, 39. t. not me of mercy. 111, 3, 1. tilly-fally, Sir John, ne'er t. me, H4B II, 4, 90. tushl never t. me; I take it much unkindly, Oth. I, 1, 1. Cor. IV, 6, 55. 4) to say, to epeak: wilt thou make the match t Be —s her, no, Ven. 587. more I could t., but more I dare not say, 805. as if they heard the woeful words she told, 1126 (rhyming), marking what he—s with trembling fear, as fowl hear falcon's bells, Lncr. 510 (rhyming), remember what I told you: if the prince do solicit you, you know your answer, Ado II, 1, 69. but t me then, 'tis so, All's I, 3, 182. my dear dear love to your proceeding bids me t. you this, Caes. II, 2, 103 (i. e. my love bids me say this to, i. e. with respect to, your proceeding), to t. true, to t. truly, to t. truth, to t. plain etc. (cf. the rcsp. words) = to speak troth etc.: Gent. II, 5, 35. Wiv. Ill, 4, 11. L L L IV, 3, 272. Mids. Ill, 2, 68. All's I, 3, 181.191. Tw. IV, 2 , 1 2 1 . H4A 111, 1, 59 etc. — In Cor. 11, 1, 67 O. Edd. t.you heme. 5) to explain, to solve: whoso asked her for his wife, his riddle told not, lost his life, Per. Prol. 38. Teller, one who tells or communicates: the nature of bad news infects the t. Ant. I, 2, 99. T e l l - t a l e , one who gives mischievous information about the concerns of other persons: Gent. I, 2, 133. Wiv. I, 4, 12. Merch. V, 123. H4B IV, 1, 202. Caes. I, 3, 117. Adjectively: the t. day, Lucr. 806. these t. women, B3 IV, 4, 149. Tellni, the earth, personified: Neptune's salt wash and —' orbed ground, Hml. Ill, 2, 166. I will rob T. of her weed, Per. IV, 1, 14. T c n i i u t , reading of Qq (Ff om.) in Lr. II, 2, 150; M. Edd. contemned'st. T e m p e r » subst 1) the state of a metal as to its hardness; the quality of a sword: to stain the t. of my knightly sword, B2 IV, 29. a sword, whose t. I intend to stain with the best blood, H4A V, 2,94. which (blade) bears the better t. H6AII, 4,13. sword, hold thy t. H6B V, 2,70. it is a sword of Spain, the ice-brook's t. Oth. V, 2, 253. 2) disposition, constitution, temperament: never could the strumpet ... once stir my t. Meas. II, 2, 185. a hot t. leaps oer a cold decree, Merch. I, 2, 20. you know your father's t. Wint. IV, 4, 478. a noble t. dost thou show in this, J o h n V, 2, 40. he holds your t. in a high respect, H4A 111, 1, 170. what man of good t. would endure this tempest of exclamaiiont JI4B II, 1, 87. his t. must be well observed, IV, 4, 36. O that the living Harry had the t. of him, V, 2, 15 .if thou canst love a fellow of this t. H5 V, 2, 153. hearts of most hard t. melt and lament for her, H8 II, 3, 11. you have a gentle, noble t. Ill, 1, 165. in whom the —s and the minds of all should be shut up, Troil. I, 3, 57. you keep a constant t. Cor. V, 2,100. thy beauty hath made me effeminate and in my t. softened valour's steel, Rom. Ill, 1,120. his comfortable t. hath forsook him, Tim. Ill, 4, 71. a man of such a feeble t. Caes. I, 2, 129. our hearts of brothers' t. Ill, 1, 175. that dauntless t. of

1188

T

his mind, Meb. Ill, 1, 52. after the noble t. of your IV, 7, 24 (cf. Dittemperance). O t., lady, Ant. V, lordship, Cymb. II, 3, 6. 2, 48. 3) chastity: thou makett the vestal violate her oath; Emphatically, = wonted disposition, freedom from excess or extravagance, equanimity: keep me in thou blowest thefirewhent. it thawed, Lucr. 884. though (.: I would not be mad, Lr. I, 5, 51 (cf. Distemper), you can guess what t. should be, you know not what it is, Ant. Ill, 13, 121. hit captain's heart ... reneges ail t. Ant. I, 1, 8. 4) female name: T. teas a delicate wench, T p II, T e m p e r , vb. 1) trans, to bring to a proper or desired state or quality: lack of —td judgment, Meas. 1 , 4 3 (Taylor: though bad they be, they u-ill not bate an V, 478. never durst poet touch a pen to write until his ace to be called Prudence, Temp'ranee, Faith, or Grace). ink were —ed with love'* sight, L L L IT, 3, 347. ParT e m p e r a t e , l ) of a mild temperature: shall I ticular significations: a) to compound, to mix: the compare thee to a summer's dayt thou art more lovely poison of that liet in you to t. Ado II, 2, 21. —ing ex- and more t. Sonn. 18, 2. cf. H5 III, 3, 30. tremities with extreme tweet, Bom. II Chor. 14. if you 2) moderate, calm: peace, lady ! pause, or be more could find out a man to bear a poison, I would I. it, 111, t. John II, 195. such t. order in to fierce a cause, III, 5, 98. it it a poison —ed by himself, Hml. T, 2, 339. 4, 12. my blood hath been too cold and t. H4A 1, 3, 1. to t. poisons for her, Cyrab. V, 5, 250. whiles yet the cool and t. wind of grace o'erblows the ... b) to wet, to moisten (dry things): the kerns of clouds, H5 III, 3, 30. there was more t.fire under the Ireland are in arms and t. clay with blood of English- pot of her eyet, Troil. I, 2, 160. who can be ... t. and men, H6B III, 1, 311. and cast you (the eyes)with the furiout in a moment, Mcb. II, 3, 114. watert that you lose, to t. clay, Lr. I, 4,326. let me go 3) chaste: come, t. nymphs, Tp. IV, 132. she is not grind their bones to powder small and with this hateful hot, but t. as the morn, Shr. II, 296. liquor t. it, Tit. V, 2, 200 (or = mix it). T e m p e r a t e l y , moderately, calmly: Cor. II, 1, c) to warm: what wax so frozen but dissolves with 240. Ill, 1, 219. Ill, 3, 67. Hml. Ill, 4, 140. —ing? Ven. 565. T e m p e s t , a violent storm: Ven. 238. 454. 800. d) to make hard by cooling: the elements, of whom Lucr. 1788. Sonn. 116, 6. Tp. I, 2, 194. V, 6. 153. your swords are —ed, Tp. Ill, 3 , 6 2 (or = compound- Wiv. II, 1, 64. V, 5, 23. Mids. I, 1, 131 (the t. of my ed ?). cf. strong-tempered in Ven. I l l , and mittempered eyet, i. e. tears). Tw. Ill, 4 , 4 1 9 . J o h n 111, 4 , 1 . IV, 3, in Bom. I, 1, 94. 156. V, 1,17. V, 2, 50. B2 I, 3. 187. II, 1, 263. Ill, e) to fashion, to monld, to dispose: where you may 3, 46. H4A V, 1, 6. H4B II, 1, 87. II, 4, 392. H5 II, t. her by your persuasion to hate young Valentine, Gent. 4, 99. H6B III, 1, 351. Ill, 2, 102. 176. IV, 9, 32. V, III,2,64. he (the devil) that —ed thee bade thee stand 1, 197. H6C II, 5, 86. V, 6, 46. B3 I, 4, 44. IV, 4, up, gave thee no instance why thou thouldst do treason, 523. H8 I, 1, 92. IV, 1, 72 (in a ttiff t.). Troil. 1,3, Ho II, 2, 118. 'tis she that —t hint to this extremity, 26. Tit. I, 458 (dies in t. of thy angry frown). IV, 2, B3 I, 1, 65 (Ff tempts). and t. him with all the art I 160. Caes. I, 3, 5. 10. Hml. Ill, 2, 7. Lr. Ill, 2, 62. have, to pluck proud Luciut from the warlike Goths, III, 4, 12. 24. Oth. II, 1, 21. 34. 68. 187. Ant. I, 2, Tit. IV, 4, 109. 154. Per. I, 2, 98. Ill Prol. 48. IV, 1, 19. IV, 4, 30. The partic. —ed, adjectirely, = 1) disposed: V, 3, 33. when you are better —ed to attend, H4A I, 3, 235. T e m p e s t - d r a p p i n g - f l r e , reading of O. Edd. in when was my lord so much ungently —ed, to stop his Cae9. 1,3, 10; M. Edd. tempest dropping fire; perhaps ears against admonishment1 Troil. V, 3, 1. when grief tempest-dropping fire, i. e. fire dropping with the fury and blood ill —ed vexeth him, Cacs. IV, 3, 115. 116. of a tempest. 2) having a certain state or quality; conditioned: if Tempest-teased, tossed or thrown about by a the truth of thy love to me were so righteously —ed as tempest: Bom. Ill, 5, 138. Mcb. I, 3, 25. mine is to thee, As 1, 2, 14. took fire and heat away T e m p e s t n e n s , blowing with violence: t. gusts, from the best —ed courage of his troops, H4B1,1,115. H6A V, 5, 5. Tit. V, 3, 69. were your days as green as Ajax' and your brain so Temple, l ) a n edifice appropriated to public wor—ed, Troil. II, 3, 265. I thought thy disposition better ship: Tp. IV, 153. Ado III, 3, 172. Mids. II, 1, 238. —ed, Bom. Ill, 3, 115. IV, 1, 185. 202. IV, 2, 16. Merch. II, 1, 44. As III, 3, 2) intr. to have or get a proper or desired state or 50. Wint. II, 1, 183. Ill, 1, 2. H6A II, 2, 12. Cor. Ill, quality: I have him already —ing between my finger 3, 36. IV, 6, 85. V, 3, 67. 207. Cymb. V, 4, 106. V, and my thumb, and shortly will I seal with him, H4B 5, 398. 482. Per. 111,4, 13. V, 1,241. V, 2, 17. V, 3, IV, 3, 140 (becoming warm and soft like wax), few 25. Used of man and of the human body as the hamen rightly t. with the stars, II6C IV, 6, 29 (act and bitation of the soul: Lucr. 719. 1172. Tp. I, 2, 457. think in conformity with their fortune), cf. untemper- Tim. V, 1, 51. Mcb. 11, 3, 73. Hml. I, 3, 12. Cymb. ing in H5 V, 2, 241. II, 1, 69. IV, 2, 55. V, 5, 220. Temperallty, Mrs Quickly's word for temper: 2) name of the two inns of court in London: II6A H4B II, 4, 25. 11,5,19. T. garden, H6A 11,4,125. T. hall, H4A 111, Temperance, 1) agreeable temperature, mild 3, 223. H6A II, 4, 3. climate: it (the island) must needs be of subtle, tender T e m p l e , the upper part of the sides of the heail and delicate t. Tp. II, 1, 42. where the pulse is felt: lays his finger on his t. H8 III, 2) moderation; calmness: a gentleman of all t. 2, 115. Plur. — s : Mids. IV, 1, 56. Merch. I, 1, 170. Meas. Ill, 2, 251. are you chafedt ask God for t. H8 John II, 108. B2 III, 2, 161. H6A V, 4, 134. H6C I, 1,1, 124. being once chafed, he cannot be reined again 4, 104. B3 IV, 4, 383. V, 5, 5. Tit. II, 3, 62. Oth. IV, to t. Cor. Ill, 3, 28. justice, verity, I., stableness, Mcb. 1, 53. IV, 3,92. in the whirlwind of passion you must acquire Temple-garden, see Temple. and beget a t. Hml. Ill, 2, 8. I doubt not of his t. Lr. T e m p l e - h a l l , see Temple.

T T e m p I e - h a n n t l n g , resorting to, and dwelling abont, temples: the t. martlet, Mcb. I, 6, 4. T c m p m l , 1) pertaining to this life or this world, not spiritual, not eternal: my library teas dukedom large enough: oft. royalties he thinks me now incapable, Tp. I, 2, 110. whose minds are dedicate to nothing t. Meas. II, 2,155. his sceptre shews the force of t. potter, Merch. IV, 1,190. is this an hour for t. affairsi H8 II, 2, 73. much better she ne'er had known pomp: though 't be t., yet if that quarrel fortune do divorce it from the bearer, 'tis a sufferance panging, II, 3, 13. so children t. fathers do appease; gods are more full of mercy, Cymb. V, 4, 12. 2) secular, not ecclesiastical: all the t. lands which men devout by testament have given to the church, H5 I, 1, 9. Temporary, temporal, respecting things not spiritual: I know him (Friar Lodowick) for a man divine and holy; not scurvy, nor a t. meddler, Meas. V, 145 (meddling with things which do not concern his spiritual profession. Henley: one who introduces himself, as often as he can find opportunity, into other men's concerns) T e m p e r l s e , to come to terms, to compromise: thou wilt quake for this shortly. I look far an earthquake too, then. Well, you will t. with the hours, Ado 1, 1, 276. the Dauphin is too wilful-opposite and will not t. with my entreaties, J o h n V, 2, 125. if I could t. with my affection, or brew it to a weak and colder palate, the like allayment could 1 give my grief, Troil. IV, 4 , 6 . all's well, and might have been much better, if he could have —d, Cor. IV, 6, 17. T e m p c r l z e r , one who seeks to come to terms with anybody and anything: a mindless slave, or else a hovering (., that canst with thine eyes at once see good and evil, inclining to them both, Wint. I, 2, 302. T e m p t , 1) as a vox media, a) when a person is object, = to call on, to invite, to induce: who but today hammered of this design, but durst not t. a minister of honour, Wint. II, 2, 50. withhold thine indignation, mighty heaven, and t. us not to bear above our power, John V, 6, 38. how often have I —ed Suffolk's tongue ...to sit and witch me, H 6 B III, 2, 114. who —ed me to walk upon the hatches, K3 1,4,12. t. him with speed aboard, Hml. IV, 3, 56. b) when a thing is object, = to try, to risk, to venture o n : nor t. the danger of my true defence, John IV, 3, 84. let grow thy sinews till their biots be strong, and t. not yet the brushes of the war, Troil. V, 3 , 34. when we will t. the frailty of our powers, IV, 4,98. and t. the rheumy and unpurged air to add unto his sickness, CMS. II, 1, 266. 2) to try to seduce, to entice; absol.: thy —ing lip, Ven. 127. the —ing tune, 778. now, to t., all liberty procured, Compl. 252. nor doth she t. Meas. II, 2,165. L L L IV, 3, 257. Mids. Ill, 2, 140. Shr. Ind. 1, 118. Troil. IV, 4, 93. Trans.: Compl. 251. Gent. II, 6, 8. Meas. II, 1, 17. II, 2 , 1 6 3 . Err. IV, 2, 1. 13. IV, 3 , 4 8 . Ado IV, 1, 53. L L L I, 2, 179. V, 2, 322. Merch. II, 2, 3. J o h n III, 1, 208. E 3 IV, 4, 418. 419. Troil. IV, 4, 98. Cor. V, 3, 20. Lr. IV, 6, 222. Oth. IV, 1, 8. With prepositions following, = to seduce: my female evil —eth my better angel from my side, Sonn. 144, 6. his eye unto a greater uproar —s his veins, Lucr.427. thy beauty —ing her to thee, Sonn. 41, 13. mine ear hath —ed judgment to desire, H6C III, 3, 133. 'tis she that —s him to this harsh extremity, E 3 I, 1, C5 (Qt

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tempers him to this extremity), whom corrupting gold would t. unto a close exploit of death, IV, 2, 35. gold will t. him to any thing, 39. t. me no more to folly, Troil. V, 2, 18. let the bloat king t. you again to bed, Hml. Ill, 4, 182. if it t. you toward the flood, I, 4, 69. 3) to provoke; to defy: t. not too much the hatred of my spirit, Mids. II, 1,211. do not t. my misery, T w . III,4,383. if thou darest t. me further, draw thy sword, IV, 1, 45. you t. him overmuch, Wint. V, 1, 73. that man is not alive might so have —ed him, H4A HI, 1, 174. you t. the fury of my three attendants, H6A IV, 2, 10. in —ing of your patience, H8 I, 2, 55. he —s judgment, Troil. V, 7,22. t. not a desperate man, Rom. V,3,59. t. the heavens, Caes. 1,3,53. t. me no further, IV, 3, 36. 59. 62. they t. heaven, Oth. IV, 1, 8. t. him not so too far, Ant. I, 3, 11. T e m p t a t i o n , motive to ill, enticement: Sonn. 41, 4. 94, 4. Meas. II, 2, 158. 182. Merch. I, 2, 106. Wint. I, 2, 77. T e m p t e r , one who entices to evil: Compl. 318. Meas. II, 2, 163. H6A I, % 123. Cymb. II, 2, 9. Ten, twice five: Ven. 22. 519 (t. hundred). 1008. Tp. I, 1, 61. II, 1, 247. II, 2, 34. Ill, 1, 8. G e n t IV, 1, 2. IV, 4, 62. Wiv. I, 3, 8. II, 2, 86. Ill, 5, 54. V, 2,11. Meas. 1, 2, 8 (the t. Commandments). II, 1, 252. 254. 11,4,128. V, 1,42. 45 etc. etc. one to t. (cf. To): H6A I, 2, 34. (. to one: H6A IV, 1,21. H6C 1,2, 75. 1, 4, 60. 'tis t. to one - it is very probable: Shr. V, 2, 62. H4B 1, 1, 182. H6A V, 4, 157. H6B II, 1, 4. H6C V, 1, 46. H8 Epil. 1. cf. Ado II, 3,171. by these t. bones I (i. e. the ten fingers) H6B 1, 3, 193. /'Id set my t. commandments in your face, 145 (i. e. the ten fingers with their nails), as fit as t. groats is for the hand of an attorney. All's II, 2, 22 (the customary fee to an attorney), hail, royal prince I Thanks, noble peer; the cheapest of us is ten groats too dear, R2 V, 5, 72 (cf. Noble and Royal). Substantively: the value of ana t. Troil. II, 2, 23. thou shalt have more than two —s to a score, Lr. 1,4,140. Denoting a playing-card with ten spots: H6C v, ] , 43. cf. Shr. II, 407. T e n a b l e , probably --- capable to be retained, not let ont, not ottered (cf. Intenible). if you have hitherto concealed this sight, let it be t. in your silence still, Hml. I, 2, 248 (Ff treble). T e n a n t , 1) one who holds of another, vassal; servant: those proud lords, to blame, make weak-made women —s to their shame, Lucr. 1260. a quest of thoughts, all —s to the heart, Sonn. 46, 10. you may have drawn together your —s, friends and neighbouring gentlemen, H4A III, 1, 90. where are thy —s and thy followers? R3IV, 4,481. you were the duke's surveyor, and lost your office on the complaint o'the —s, H8 1,2, 173. I have been your (., and your father's t , these fourscore years, Lr. IV, 1, 14. 2) dweller, inhabitant: that frame outlives a thousand — s , Hml. V, 1, 50. Tenantlna, name of a king of ancient Britain: Cymb. 1, 1, 31. V, 4, 73. TenantlesB, unoccupied: leave not the mansion so long t. Gent. V, 4 , 8 . the graves stood t. Hml. 1,1,115. Tench, the fish Cyprinus tinea: I am stung like a t. H4A II, 1, 17. Tend, 1) to have a tendency, to move in a certain direction: his affections do not that way t. Hml. Ill, 1, 170. With to, = to be directed to, to aim at, to contribute to: to no other pass my verses t. than of your

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graces and your gifts to tell, Sonn. 103, 11. the diamond, 'twas beautiful and hard, whereto hit invited properties did t. Compl. 212. whereto —s all thist Midi. Ill, 2, 256. where doing —s to 01, John 111, 1, 272. — s that thou wouldst speak to the Duke of Herefordt R 2 II, 1, 232. thoughts —ing to ambition, V, 5, 18. 23. any thing that —s to laughter, H 4 B I, 2, 9. any choice —t to God's glory, H 6 A V, 1, 27. —ing to the good of their adversaries, Cor. IV, 3, 44. that our request did t. to save the Romans, V, 3, 132. writings all —ing to the great opinion, Caes. 1,2,322. his speech —ing to Caesar's glories, III, 2, 63. whereto we see in all things nature —s, Oth. Ill, 3, 231. that you in all obey her, save when command to your dismission —s, Cymb. II, 3, 57. — < to vice, II, 5 , 2 1 . 2 ) = to attend (q. v . ) ; a ) to be ready for service, to be in waiting: the time invites you; go; your servants t. Hml. I, 3, 83. the associates t., and every thing is bent for England, IV,3,47. give him —ing ( = attendance) Mcb. I, 5, 38. b ) with on, = to wait on: millions of strange shadows on you t. Sonn. 53,2. what should I do but t. upon the hours and times of your desiret 57,1. and t. on no man's business, A d o I, 3, 17. the summer still doth t. upon my state, Mids. Ill, 1, 158. from whence thou earnest, how —ed on, All's II, 1,210. a lord that twenty such rude boys might t. upon, III, 2, 84. three months this youth hath —ed upon me, T w . V, 102. threefold vengeance t. upon your steps, H 6 B III, 2, 304. let us address to t. on Hector's heels, Troil. IV, 4,148. Ajax commands the guard to t. on you, V, 1, 79. you spirits that t. on mortal thoughts, Mcb. I, 5, 42. hitherto doth love on jortune t. Hml. Ill, 2, 216. the knighu that t. upon my father, Lr. II, 1, 97. c ) with to, = to be attentive to, to listen t o : t. to the master's whistle, T p . 1, 1, 8. d ) trans. 1) to attend, to wait on, to serve: four or five women that —ed me, T p . I, 2, 47. in a house where twice so many have a command to t. you, L r . Jl, 4, 266. t. me to-night, Ant. IV, 2, 24. 32. 2 ) to do homage: worthier • than himself here t. the savage strangeness he puts on, Troil. II, 3, 135. her gentlewomen ... — ed her i'the eyes, Ant. II, 2, 212. 3 ) to guard, to take care o f : who didst thou leave to t. his majesty f John V, 6, 32. cherish Duke Humphrey s deeds, while they do t. the profit of the land, H6B 1, 1, 204. so many hours must 11. my flock, H6C II, 5, 31. good angels t. thee! B3 IV, 1, 93 ( Q q guard). 4 ) to accompany: they (cares) t. the crown, R 2 IV, 199. 0) to expect? — s service, Ft" in L r . II, 4, 103. Tendance, attendance; 1) waiting on, attention, care: subdues and properties to his love and t. all sorts of hearts, T i m . I, 1, 57. she purposed, by watching, weeping, i., kissing, to o'ercome you with her show, Cymb. V,5,53. W i t h to: nature does require her times of preservation, which perforce I, her frail son,... must give my t. to, H8 III, 2, 149. 2 ) persons attending: his lobbies fill with t. T i m .

I, 1, 80. Tender, subst. 1) an offer for acceptance: such welcome as honour without breach of honour may make t. of to thy true worthiness, L L L II, 171. which (debt) now in some slight measure it (sleep) will pay, if for his t. here I make some stay, Mids. Ill, 2, 87. the like t. of our love we make, John V, 7, 106. and then to have a wretched puling fool... in her fortune's t., to I

answer Til not wed', Rom. Ill, 5, 186. which is material to the t. of our present, Cymb. 1, 6, 208. Especially a proposal of marriage or of love: there is, as 'twere, at., a kind oft., made afar off by Sir Hugh, W i v . I, 1, 215. if she should make t. of her love, A d o II, 3, 186. I will make a desperate t. of my child's love, Bom. Ill, 4, 12. he hath of late made many —s of his affection to me, Hml. I, 3, 99. do you believe these —s, as you call themt 103. 106. 2) a thing offered: of pensived and subdued desires the t. CompL 219 ( = present). Especially something offered for payment: the barren t. of a poet's debt, Sonn. 83, 4 ; cf. Mids. Ill, 2, 87. that you have ta'en these —s for true pay, Hml. I, 3, 106 (perhaps — tokens representing money). Tender, sabst. regard, care: hast showed thou makest some t. of my life, H 4 A V, 4, 49. nor the redresses sleep, which, in the t. of a wholesome weal, might in their working do you that offence, L r . I, 4, 230. Tender, adj. 1) soft, smooth and weak in a physical sense, not rough or hard: t. hide, Ven. 298. her t. hand, 352. his —er cheek, 353. Love's t. spring, 656. the t. leaves, 798. unruly blasts wait on the t. spring, Lncr. 869. the t. inward of thy hand, Sonn. 128, 6. the soft and t.fork of a poor worm, Meas. Ill, 1, 16. wisdom and blood combating in so t. a body, A d o II, 3, 171. those t. limbs of thine, All's 111, 2, 107. thy t. lambkin, H4B V, 3, 121. my t. lambs, H 6 A I, 2, 76. thy t. side, V, 3, 49. my t.feet, H 6 B II, 4, 34. thai t. spray, H6C II, 6, 50. the t. leaves of hopes, 118 III, 2, 353. too great oppression for a t. thing, Rom. I, 4, 24. with t. Juliet matched, II Prol. 4. Oth. I, 2, 66. Especially applied to immatore youth: the t. boy, Ven. 32. the t. spring upon thy lip, 127. his t. years, 1091. Sonn. I, 4. 12. Pilgr. 53. Gent. I, 1, 3. 47. Ill, 1, 34. L L L I, 2, 8. 12. 14. 16. As I, 1, 135. Wint. Ill, 2, 197. John IV, 2, 58. R2 II, 3, 42. H 6 A III, 1, 71. IV, 1, 149. V, 4, 60. V, 5, 81. H6C II, 2, 115. R3 III, I , 28. IV, 1, 4. 99. 103. IV, 4, 9. 224. 342. 383. 385. V, 3, 95. T i t 111, 2, 22. 48. 50. V, 3, 167. Hml. IV, 4, 48. in protection o/ their t. ones ( = their young) H6C II, 2, 28. 2 ) delicate, in a physical and moral sense; u) gentle, kind: never trained to offices of t. courtesy, Merch. IV, 1, 33. thou art she in thy not chiding, for she was as t. as infancy and grace, W i n t . V, 3, 26. b ) easily impressed, very susceptible of any sensation: the snail, whose t. horns being hit, Ven. 1033. L L L IV, 3, 338. your affections would become t. T p . V, 19. her t. shame will not proclaim against her maiden loss, Meas. IV, 4, 26. 1 am such a t. ass, if my hair do but tickle me, I must scratch, Mids. IV, 1, 27. corrupt the t. honour of a maid, All's III, 5, 75. your soft and t. breeding, T w . V, 331. her frights and griefs, which never t. lady hath borne greater, Wint. II, 2,24. I will devise a death as cruel for thee as thou art t. to't, IV, 4, 452. t. womanish tears, John IV, 1, 36. put in her t. heart the aspiring flame of golden sovereignty, R3 IV, 4, 328. come, seeling night, scarf up the t. eye oj pitiful day, Mcb. Ill, 2, 47. why should u-e be t. to let an arrogant piece of flesh threat us, Cymb. IV, 2, 126. With of: so t. of rebukes that words are strokes to her, Cymb. Ill, 5, 40. With over: you that are thus t. o'er his follies, Wint. II, 3, 128. thou that hast a heart so t. o'er it, 133. a page so kind, so t. over his occasions, Cymb. V, 5,87 (so nicely sensible of his wants), c ) ef-

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feminate: the many will be too chill and t., and they'll not die; so much we t. him, Err. V, 132. by my life, / be for the flowery way, All's IV, 5,56. d) quick, keen, do; which It. dearly, As V, 2, 77. t. well my hounds, sharp: (a hound) unapt for t. smell, Lucr. 695. nor Shr. Ind. 1,16. your minion, whom ... It. dearly, Tw. are mine ears with thy tongue's tune delighted, nor t. V, 129. —ing the precious safety of my prince, R2 I, feeling, Sonn. 141, 6. I, 32. H5 II, 2, 175. H6B III, 1, 277. R3 I, 1, 44. 3) loving, fond: which I will keep so chary as t. and so betide me as well 11. you and all of yours, II, nurse her babe, Sonn. 22, 12. gone in t. embassy of 4,72. if with pure heart's love ... It. not thy beauteous love, 45, 6. a t. fatherly regard, Shr. 11,288. how longprincely daughter, IV, 4,405. you t. more your person's shall t. duty make me suffer wrong t B2 II, 1,164. prick honour than your high profession spiritual, H8 II, 4, my t. patience to those thoughts, 207. in their dear care 116. —ing our sister's honour. Tit. 1,476. which name and t. preservation of our person, H5 II, 2,59. I thank II. as dearly as my own, Rom. Ill, 1, 74. t. yourself them for their t. loving care, H6B III, 2, 280. H6C IV, more dearly, Hml. I, 3, 107. for thine especial safety, 6, 66. the t. love I bear your grace, B3111,4,65. I do which we do t. IV, 3,43. Strange expression: when my love my country's good with a respect more t. than mine angry guardant stood alone, —ing my ruin and assailed own life, COT. Ill, 3,112. a t. kiss, Rom. 1,5,98. whom of none, H6A IV, 7, 10 (the same as tender over my Fortune's t. arm with favour never clasped, Tim. IV, ruin, i. e. my fall; cf. Wint. II, 3, 128. 133; fuU of 3, 250. pity and grief at my fall). 4) making a soft impression, mild: of subtle, t. T e n d e r - b a i l e d , having a tender body, very and delicate temperance, Tp. II, 1, 41. embrace by a young: Cor. I, 3, 6. piece oft. air, Cymb. V, 4, 140. V, 5, 437. 446. soft Tendcr-dylnc, dying in early youth: when death and t. flattery, Per. IT, 4, 45. doth dose his t. eyes, H6A III, 3, 48 (M. Edd. tender 5) exciting kind feelings: subscribes to t. objects, dying). Troil. IV, 5, 106. / know how t. 'tis to love the babe Tender-feeling, very sensible: her t.feet, H6B thai milks me, Mcb. I, 7, 55. With to, = dear: whose II, 4, 9. life's as t. to me as my soul, Gent. V, 4, 37. T e n d e r - h e a r t e d , having great sensibility: R2 Tender, vb. 1) to offer, to present: Me honey fee III, 3, 160. of parting —ed is, Ven. 538. —ed the humble salve T e n d e r - h e f t e d i thy t. nature shall not give thee which wounded bosoms fits, Sonn. 120, 11. who once o'er to harshness, Lr. II, 4, 174 (Qq tender hested). again I1. to thy hand, Tp. IV, 5. those (tears) at her Steevens: "eare Lexicon. 2. EJ. T. II. 76

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H4A V, 4, 98. my conscience Jirst received a i., scruple I tented = incurable in Lr. I, 4, 322. T e n t e d , covered with tents: the t. field, Oth. I, and prick, H8 11, 4,170. her delicate t. will Jind itself abused, Oth. II, 1, 235. Especially lively sympathy, 3, 85. susceptibility of soft passions, particularly of love and T e n t h , the ordinal of ten: Sonn. 38, 9. H5 I, 2, pity: nature will betray its folly, its t. Wint. 1, 2, 152. 77. H6A 1, 1, 110. Troil. Ill, 2, 95. Lr. I, 1, 179. make blind itself with foolish t. H4AI1I,2,91. tears ... Substantively, = 1) one out o f t e n : if we have which nature, love and filial t. shall pay thee, H4B IV, lost so many —s of ours, Troil. II, 2, 21. take thou 5, 39. your t. of heart, R3 III, 7, 210. melting with t. the destined t. Tim. V, 4, 3 3 (by decimation). 2) the and kind compassion, IV, 3, 7. not of a woman's t. to tenth part: the t. of mankind would hang themselves, be, Cor. V, 3, 129. more I. than doth become a man, Wint. I, 2, 199. we render you the t., to be ta'en forth, Cor. I, 9, 34. who of their broken debtors take a third, Cymb. I, 1, 94. Tender-smelllnc, having a delicate smell: your a sixth, a t. Cymb. V, 4, 20. 3) a tithe: among the note smells 'no' in this, most t. knight, L L L V, 2, 569. people gather up a t. H6A V, 5, 93. Ten-time s-barred-up, writing of some M. Edd. T e n d i n g I Mcb. I, 5, 36; see Tend. T e n e t * * , an island near Troy: Troil. Frol. 11. in R2 I, 1, 180; not hyphened in O. Edd. T e n e m e n t , a honse or any property held by a Tent-rayal, the tent of a king: H5 I, 2, 196. tenant or vassal: leased out like to a t. or pelting farm, T e n u r e , the manner of holding lands and teneR2 II, 1, 60. to forfeit all your goods, lands, —s, H8 ments of a superior: where be his quiddities, his quilIII, 2, 342. lets, his cases, his —s and his tricks, Hml. V, 1, 108. T e n f o l d , adj. and adv. ten times greater; ten Tercel, the male hawk: the falcon (i. e. the female times more: our t. grief\ Tit. Ill, 2, 6. I will reward hawk) as the t., for all the ducks in the river, Troil. thee ... t.for thy good ralour, Ant. IV, 7, 15. III, 2, 56 (i. e. Cressida will be as good for hawking T e n n U , a play at which a ball is driven with a as Troilus; cf. the German phrase: sie geht ins Wasser, racket: H8 I, 3, 30. Hml. II, 1, 59. properly = she takes the water well), cf. Tassel-gentle. T e n n i s - b a l l , a ball used in the play of tennis: Teren, a sound imitative of the voice of the nightAdo III, 2, 47. H5 I, 2, 258. ingale: Pilgr. 386. Tennta-caort, a place for playing at tennis: Per. Terens, a Thracian king, who ravished his sisterII, 1, 64. t. keeper: H4B II, 2, 21. in-law Philomele and then cut out her tongne: Lucr. Tenaur (O. Edd. tenor, and oftener tenure) sense 1134. Tit. II, 4, 26. 41. IV, 1, 48. Cymb. II, 2, 45. contained, purport: Gent. Ill, 1, 56. Meas. IV, 2, 216. Term, subst. 1) the time in which a court is held Ado IV, 1,169. Merch. IV, 1, 235. As IV, 3,11. Wint. for the trial of causes: they (lawyers) sleep between t. V, 1, 38. H4AIV, 4,7. H4B IV, 1, 9. V, 5, 75. H5 V, and t. As 111, 2, 350. the wearing out of six fashions, 2, 72 (pi ). H8 I. 2, 206. Troil. II, 1, 100. Caes. IV, 3, which is four —s, or two actions, H4B V, 1, 90. 171. Cymb. II, 4, 36. Ill, 7, 1. Per. I, 1, 111. Ill Prol. 2) time in general: for t. of life thou art assured 24. here folds she up the t. of her woe, Lucr. 1310 mine, Sonn. 92, 2. buy —s divine in selling hours of (i. e. her letter), to find out shames and idle -hours in dross, 146, 11. have sworn for three years' t. to live me, the scope and t. of thy jealousy, Sonn. 61,8 ( = the with me, L L L I, 1, 16. not to see a woman in that t. aim and substance of etc.). misuse the t. of thy kins- 37. within the t. of three years, 131. you shall this man's trust, H4A V, 5, 5 (the meaning, the intention twelvemonth t. ... visit the sick, V, 2, 860. till t. of which he had in confiding the matter to thee). eighteen months be full expired, II6B I, 1, 67. expire T e n t , snbst. a pavilion: costly apparel, —s and the t. of a despised life, Rom. 1,4, 109. for some t. to canopies, Shr. II, 354. Especially the portable lodge do obsequious sorrow, Hml. I, 2, 91. doomed for a cerof soldiers: Ven. 108. Lucr. Arg. 5. Lucr. 15. Meas. tain t. to walk the night, I, 5, 10. taking leave as long 11,1,263. L L L IV, 3,373. V, 2, 307. 309. 311. Merch. a t. as yet we have to live, Cymb. I, 1, 107. V, 5. All's III, 6, 29. IV, 3, 232. John II, 544. Ill, 2, 3) expression, word: stand under the adoption of 6. H4A II, 3, 54. V, 4, 8. V, 5, 22. H5 III, 7, 74. 136. abominable —s, Wiv. II, 2, 309. 310. I cannot woo in IV, 1, 304. H6A 1, 4, 110. IV, 7, 51. H6B V, 1, 55. festival —s, Ado V, 2,41. chides the dice in honourable, H6CIV, 2,20. IV, 3,10. R3 V, 3, 1. 7. 23. 303 (cf. On). —s, L L L V, 2, 327. taffeta phrases, silken —s, 406. Caes. Ill, 2, 176. IV, 2, 46. 51. Ant. IV, 6, 23. V, 1, she in mild —s begged my patience, Mids. IV, 1, 63. 73 etc. etc. (at and in indiscriminately before it). I like not fair —s and a villain's mind, Merch. I, 3, Tent, subst. a probe for searching a wound: the 180 (or = conditions?), as you would say in plain t. that searches to the bottom of the worst, Troil. II, 2, - s, II, 2,68. to have defended it with any —s of zeal, 16. Punning: who keeps the t. nowl The surgeon s box, V, 205. As II, 7, 16. Shr. II, 159. 271. Tw. II, 4, 5. or the patient's wound, V, 1, 11. IV, 2, 36. R2 I, 1, 57. H4A I, 3, 46. II, 3, 52. IV, 1, Tent, vb. to lodge as in a tent, to tabernacle: the 85. IV, 3, 63. V, 4, 162. H4B IV, 4, 73. H5 II, 1, 32. smiles of knaves t. in my cheeks, Cor. Ill, 2, 116 (the IV, 8, 44. V, 2, 99. II6A I, 2, 93. II, 5, 47. IV, I, 97. soldier Coriolanus' speech). H6B I, 1, 30. Ill, 2, 311. IV, 9, 44. IV, 10, 38. V, 1, T e n t , vb. 1) to search, to probe (as a wound): 25. H6C I, 1, 265. II, 2, 85. R3 IV, 4, 359 (Qq in Til observe his looks, I'll t. him to the quick, Hml. II, plain —s tell her my loving tale; Ff plainly to her tell 2, 626. mine ear, therein false struck, can take no my I. t.). Troil. I, 3, 159. V, 2, 38. Tit. II, 3, 110. greater wound, nor t. to bottom that, Cymb. Ill, 4, 118 Rom. I, 1, 218. Ill, 1, 64. Caes. Ill, 1, 203. Mcb. V, (cannot find the bottom of it). 8, 8. Hml. 1, 3, 132. Oth. I, 2, 7. IV, 2, 116. 121. 2) to cure: well might they (your wounds) fester Ant. II, 2, 24. Ill, 4, 7. 'gainst ingratitude, and t. themselves with death, Cor. 4) condition (only in the plur.); a) stipulation, I, 9, 31 (cure themselves, be cured by dying), 'tis a proposition stated and offered for acceptance: if we sore upon us you cannot t. yourself. 111, 1, 236. cf. un- can make our peace upon such large —s and so absolute

T as our conditions shall consist upon, H4B IV, 1, 186. we have consented to all —s of reason, H5 V, 2, 357. Perhaps also in Merch. I, 3, 180 (see above). b ) relation, footing: shall I so much dishonour my fair stars, on equal —s to give him chastisement, R2 IV, 22. that j/ou and I should meet upon such —s as now we meet, H 4 A V, 1, 10. did not we send grace, pardon and —s of love to all of ¡/out V, 5, 3. to close tn —s of friendship with thine enemies, Caes. Ill, 1,203 (or = expressions?), parted you in good —si Lr. I, 2, 171. in quarter and in —s like bride and groom, Oth. II, 3, 180. if you seek us afterwards in other —s (i. e. as an enemy), you shall find us in our salt-water girdle, Cymb. Ill, 1, 80. the sore —* we stand upon with the gods, Per. IV, 2, 37. c ) state, situation, circumstances: long upon these — s 1 held my city, Compl. 176 ( = in this state), what —s the enemy stood on, H 5 III, 6, 78 (what was the position of the enemy), the —s of our estate may not endure hazard so dangerous, Hml. Ill, 3,5. Used with some latitude: were J under the —s of death, Meas. II, 4,100 ( = were I to die), now to deliver her possession up on —s of base compulsion, Troil. II, 2, 153 ( = in consequence of compulsion; by compulsion), to recover of us, by strong hand and —s compulsatory, those lands, Hml. 1,1,103. a sister driven into desperate —s, IV, 7, 26. d ) mode of being or of actiDg; sometimes used in a qnite peripbrastical way: may any —s acquit me from this chancer Lucr. 1706 (any thing that I might do), to keep the—s of my honour precise, W i v . II, 2,22 (all that concerns my honour; o r , in short, — my honour); cf. but in my —s of honour I stand aloof, Hml. V, 2, 257. so rushling in silk and gold, and in such alligant — s , W i v . 11,2,69 ( = in so fine a style; Mrs Quickly's speech), in —s of choice lam not solely led by nice direction of a maiden's eye, Merch. II, 1,13 (with respect to the choice; in my choice), both my revenge and hate loosing on thee without all —s of pity, All's II, 3, 173 ( = without any pity), whom thou in —s so bloody and so dear hast made thine enemies, T w . V, 74 (in BO bloody a manner), if you grow foul with me, 1 will scour you with my rapier, as I may, in fair — » , H 5 II, 1, 60 (Nym's speech). 74. lest your displeasure should enlarge itself to wrathful —s, Troil. V, 2,38 ( = to wrath; or = words), be judge yourself, whether I in any just t. am affined to love the Moor, Oth. I, 1, 39 (justly in any respect; the only instance of the singular). Peculiar passage: our city's institutions and the —s for common justice, Meas. 1,1,11 (the conditions on which common justice proceeds; the proceedings at law). Term, vb. to name, to call: Sonn. 17,11. T p . T , 15. Err. I, 1, 100. A d o II, 2, 44. Merch. Ill, 2, 160. W i n t III, 1, 5. H6A11,1, 20. H 6 B III, 2,196. IV, 2, 33. IV, 7, 66. IV, 9, 30. R 3 III, 4, 41. Ill, 5,79. Troil. I, 1, 44. Cor. IV, 5, 164. 221. L r . II, 4, 200. Cymb. I, 4, 106. V, 5, 448. T e r m a g a n t , an imaginary God of the Mahometans, represented as a most violent character in the old Miracle-plays and Moralities: 'twas time to counterfeit, or that hot t. Scot had paid me scot and lot too, H4 A V,4,114. I would have such a fellow whipped for o'erdoing T.; it outherods Herod, Hml. Ill, 2, 15. Very impertinently substituted by M. Edd. for armgaunt of O. Edd. in Ant. I, 5, 48.

1193

T e r m i n a t i o n , term, word: she speaks poniards, and every word stabs: if her breath were as terrible as her —s, there were no living near her, A d o II, 1, 256. T e r m l e s a , inexpressible, indescribable: like unshorn velvet on that t. skin, Compl. 94. cf. Phraseless. T e r r e n e , terrestrial, earthly: our t. moon is now eclipsed, Ant. Ill, 13, 153. (accentuated on the first syllable, as preceding the subst.). T e r r e s t r i a l , pertaining to the earth, earthly give me thy hand, t. W i r . Ill, 1,108 (the host's speech) this t. ball ( i . e. the earth) R2 III, 2, 41. T e r r l k l e , 1) causing fear, formidable: Tp. I, 2, 264. A d o II. 1,256. All's III, 5, 23. IV, 1, 3. T w . Ill, 4, 197. R 2 III, 2, 133. H4B I, 2, 244. H5 II, 4, 35. Ill, 1, 9. H 6 A IV, 5, 8. H6B 111, 3, 6. R 3 I, 4, 63. H8 III, 1, 164. Cor. I, 4, 57. Tim. V, 4, 2. Caes. !, 3, 130. II, 2, 47. Mcb. I, 2, 51. I, 7, 80. II, 3, 62. Ill, 2, 18. Ill, 4, 78. Lr. IV, 7, 34. Oth. I, 1, 82. V, 2, 203 ( F f horrible). Ant. IV, 15, 3. Cymb. Ill, 1, 27. Per. Ill, 1, 57. 2) fearful, affrighted: what paper were you reading t Nothing, my lord. Not what needed, ihen, that t. dispatch of it into your pockett L r . I, 2, 32. T e r r i b l y , formidably: T p . II, 1, 313. Mids. 1,2, 76. Tim. IV, 3, 136. T e r r i t o r y , the land under the dominion of a prince or state: As III, 1, 8. Lr. I, 1, 51. Plur. —es: Gent. Ill, 1, 163. John 1,10. V, 2,136. R 2 1,3,139. H 6 A V, 3, 146. V, 4, 139. H6B III, 1, 84. Ill, 2, 245. Cor. IV, 5, 140. IV, 6, 40. 77. T e r r a r , 1) great fear or fright felt: which with cold t. doth men's minds confound, Ven. 1048. cowardlike with trembling t. die, Lucr. 231. what t. 'tis, 453. effects oft. and dear modesty, Compl. 202. W i v . IV, 4, 23. T w . III, 4, 207. R 2 V, 4, 9. H 4 B IV, 5, 177. R 3 111, 5, 4. V, 3, 170. L r . IV, 2, 12. to strike t. to: H 6 A II, 3, 24. R 3 V, 3, 217. 2 ) fear communicated, dreadfulness: lent him our t. Meas. I, 1, 20. to stick it in their children's sight for t. I, 3, 26. to our perjury to add more t. L L L V, 2, 470. meet with no less t. than the elements, R 2 III, 3, 55. B3 I, 4, 7. H8 V, 1, 89. V, 5, 48. Cor. II, 2, 109. Rom. Ill, 3, 13. IV, 3, 38. Caes. II, 1, 199. IV, 3, 66. 3) the cause of fear: their perch and not their t. Meas. II, 1, 4. we make trifles of—s. All's II, 3, 4. both joy and t. of good and bad, Wint. IV, 1,1. beating and hanging are —s to me, IV, 3, 30. thou hate and t. to prosperity, John III, 4, 28. here is the t. of the French, H 6 A I, 4, 42. II, 2, 17. IV, 2, 16. IV, 7, 78. H6B III, 2, 328. Tit. I, 29. V, 1, 10. Lr. II, 4, 285. Cymb. IV, 2, 111. T e r t i a n , a fever returning every other day: a burning quotidian t. H5 II, 1, 124 ( M r s Quickly's speech). T e a t , subst. proof; 1) trial, examination: thou hast strangely stood the t. Tp. IV, 7. let there be some more t. made of my metal, Meas. I, 1, 49. bring me to the t. Hml. Ill, 4, 142. 2 ) testimony, evidence: an esperance so obstinately strong, that doth invert that t. of eyes and ears, Troil. V, 2, 122 ( Q the attest\ to vouch this is no proof, without more wider and more overt t. Oth. 1, 3, 107. T e s t a m e n t , a will, a writing by which a person disposes of his property after his death: Lucr. 1183. A s I, 1, 78. II, 1, 47. All's V, 3, 197. H5 I, 1, 10.

76 *

1194

T

IV, 6, 27. H 6 A I, 5, 17. Tim. V, 1, 30. Caes. HI, 2, 135. 158. Per. IV, 2,107. he is come to open the purple t. of bleeding war, R2 III, 3, 94, i. e. he is come to try, who will become heir of England by the decision of war. T e s t e d , tried by a test, refined, pure: the t. gold, Meas. II, 2, 149. T e s t e r , a coin of the value of sixpence: hold, there's a t. for thee, H4B III, 2, 296. For money in general: t. I'll have in pouch when thou shall lack, Wiv. I, 3, 96 (Pistol's speech), cf. Testril. T e e t e r s , to present with a tester: you have —ed tne, G e n t I, I , 153 (Speed's speech). T e s t i f y (used only in the infinitive) to give evidence, to witness, to prove: to t. your bounty, I thank you, you have testerned me, G e n t I, 1, 152. here is the note of the fashion to t. Shr. IV, 3, 131. her mother can t. she was the first fruit of my bachelorship, H6A V, 4, 12. the bricks are alive at this day to t. it, H6B IV, 2, 158. no warmth, no breath, shall t. thou livest, Rom. IV, 1 , 98. some natural notes about her body above ten thousand meaner moveables would t. Cymb. 11,2,30. as yon grim looks do t. Per. Prol. 40. T e s t l m e n l e i , attested, witnessed, proved by testimony: let him be but t. in his own bringings forth, Meas. Ill, 2, 153. T e s t l m e n y , declaration of a witness, proof by witness, evidence given: Meas. II, 4, 131. V, 244. 470. Ado IV, 1, 318. As IV, 3, 171. All s II, 5, 5. Tw. V, 164. Wint. II, 3, 137. Ill, 2, 25. H5 IV, 8 , 3 8 (6eor. Fluellen's speech). Tit. V, 3, 8. Lr. I, 2, 88. Cymb. I, 4, 161. Ill, 4, 22. very reverend sport, truly; and done in the t. of a good conscience, L L L IV, 2, 2 (with the approbation of conscience. SirNathaniel's speech). T e s t l n e s s , fretfalness, peevishness: Cymb. IV, 1, 23. Testril, a sixpence (cf. Tester): Tw. II, 3, 34. Testy, easily angry, fretfal, peevish: Ven. 319. Lucr. 1094. Sonn. 140, 7. Gent. I, 2, 58. Mids. Ill, 2, 358. R3 III, 4, 39. Cor. II, 1, 47. Caes. IV, 3, 46. Per. I, 1, 17. Tetchy, touchy, fretful, peevish: t. and wayicard was thine infancy, R3 IV, 4, 168. he's as t. to be wooed to woo, as she is stubborn-chaste, Troil. I, 1, 99. to see it t. and fall out with the dug, Rom. I, 3, 32. T e t h e r (Qq teder or tider; cf. the low German tidern) a rope by which a beast is confined within certain limits: with a larger t. may he walk than may be given you, Hml. I, 3, 125. Tetter, snbst. a cutaneous disease; scab, scurf: Troil. V, 1, 27. Hml. 1, 5, 71. Tetter, vb. to affect with tetter: those measles, which we disdain should t. us, Cor. III, 1, 79. Tewkshury, town in England: his wit's as thick as T. mustard, H4B II, 4, 262. Last battle-field of Queen Margaret: H6C V, 3, 19. R3 I, 2, 242. I, 3, 120. I, 4, 56. II, 1, 111. V, 3, 120. Text, 1) something written for instruction: and t. underneath, 'Here dwells Benedick the married man,' Ado V, 1, 185. fair as a t. B in a copy-book, LLL V, 2, 42. what shall be next, pardon old Gower, — thus long's the t. Per. II Prol. 40. 2) that on which a comment is written: the t. is old, Ven. 806. what is your t.T Tw. I, 5, 237. 240. 251. that's a certain t. Rom. IV, 1, 21.' no more; the t. is foolish, Lr. IV, 2, 37.

3) a passage of Scripture: society, saith the t., is the happiness of life, L L L IV, 2, 168. 169. approve it with a t. Merch. Ill, 2, 79. your exposition on the holy t. H4B IV, 2, 7. T h a i s » (trisyll.; accentuated now on the first, now on the second syll.), female name in Per. II, 3, 57. V, 1, 212. 213. V, 3, 4. 27. 34. 35. 46. 55. 70. Thallard, name in Per. I, 1, 151. 170. I, 3, 31. II Prol. 23. T h a m e s , the river on which London lies: to be thrown into the T. Wiv. Ill, 5, 6. 122. thrown into T. 129. H5 IV, 1, 120. H6B IV, 8, 3. by the T. side, Wiv. Ill, 3, 16. the T. water, III, 5, 23. T h a n (spelt then in O. Edd , as the modern then is sometimes spelt than, and rhymes to ran and began in Lucr. 1440) the particle used after comparatives, to introduce the second member of the comparison: Ven. 7. 9. 10. 92. 200. 398. 599. 661. 764. 776. 909. Lucr. 77. 105. 299. 418. 537 etc. Tp. I, 1, 21. 48. 50. I , 2, 20. 45 etc. etc. Correlative to so: LLL III, 180. = than that: nor could she moralize his wanton sight, more than his eyes were opened to the light, Lncr. 105. we are made to be no stronger than faults may shake our frames, Meas. II, 4, 133. hath amazed me more than 1 dare blame my weakness. All's II, 1, 88. J had rather glib myself than they should not produce fair issue, Wint. II, 1, 149. Cor. 1 , 4 , 17. Omitted (?): moe thousand deaths, Meas. Ill, 1, 40. T h a n e , an old Scottish title of honour, nearly equivalent to Earl: Mcb. I, 2, 45. 48. 53. I, 3, 48. 4 9 . 7 1 . 7 2 . 8 7 . 105. 108. 109. 116. 119. 122. 133. 1, 4, 35 and passim. T h a n h , vb. to express gratitude to; with an accus.: Tp. I, 2, 175. 293. II, 1, 198 ( I omitted, cf. I ) . Ill, 2, 43. IV, 164. Gent. II, 1, 88. 11,4, 35. IV, 2, 24. IV, 4, 143. 145. Wiv. I, 1, 85. Ill, 4, 60. Meas. IV, 5, 11. Ado I, I, 158. 240. As I, 2, 252. II, 5, 25. 28. Shr. V, 1, 78. H4B V, 3, 69. Caes. V, 1, 45 etc. etc. Passively: you shall find yourself to be well —ed, All's V, 1,36. he (Jove) is to be —ed, Tw. III, 4, 92. God be —ed, Ado V, 1, 190. Merch. II, 2, 55. Shr. Ind. 2, 99. John V, 1, 29. II4A III, 3, 214. H5 II, 2, 158. R3 111, 7, 165. With for: t. him not for that which he doth say, Sonn. 79, 13. heavens t. you for it, Tp. I, 2, 175. II, 1, 123. Gent. Ill, 1, 161. IV, 2, 86. Wiv. II, 2, 84. Merch. II, 1,22. 111,4,43. IV, 1, 341. Shr. Ind. 2, 99. All's V, 1, 33. H4A III, 3, 214. H5 II, 2, 158 etc. etc. a thing to t. God on, II4A III,3,133. t. me no thankings, nor proud me no prouds, Rom. Ill, 5, 153. Ironically: so that my errand, due unto my tongue, It. him, I bare home upon my shoulders, Err. II, 1, 73. nay, I have verses too, It. Biron, L L L V, 2, 34. and Lord Biron, 11. him, is my love, 457. cf. Tp. II, 1, 123. Caes. V, 1, 45 etc. Used to decline a request: will't please your worship to come int No, It. you, Wiv. 1, 1, 277. 280. 293. 315 etc. cf. H4B V, 3, 69. T h a n k f u l , 1) grateful: Ado V, 1,324. L L L IV, 2, 29. As III, 2, 221. All's II, 3, 43. IV, 3, 366. V, 1, 17. Tw. Ill, 4, 83. H8 V, 5, 73. Cor. I, 6, 9 (t. sacrifice, i.e. the sacrifice of thanks). Tit. I, 215. Rom. Ill, 5, 147. Ant. I, 2, 167 (give the gods a t. sacrifice, i. e. a thank-offering). With to: Gent. II, 4, 52. Wint. IV, 2, 20. H8 I, 1, 150. With for: L L L IV, 2, 74. Shr. II, 166. Rom. HI, 5, 149. With to and for: Tw. IV, 2, 89.

T 2) earning thanks, thankworthy: that he can hither come so soon, is by your fancy's t. doom, Per. V, 2, 20. Thankfully, with thanks, gratefully: Mercli. 1, 1, 152. IV, 2, 9. Tim. I, 2, 162. V, 1, 94. Lr. Ill, 6, 2. Cymb. I, 6, 28. 79. Per. IV, 6, 65. T h a n k f u l n e s s , 1) gratitude: Ado IV, 1, 31. H5 II, 2, 32. H6B I, 1, 20. Tim. Ill, 6, 80. 2) thanks: accept my t. Cor. V, 4, 62. take from my heart all t. Per. Ill, 3, 4. T h a n k i n g , subst. gratitude: the charge and t. shall be for me, AU'slll,5,101. Plur. —s = thanks: many and hearty —s to you both, Mea9. V, 4. thank me no —s, Rom. Ill, 5, 153. and graced the —s of a king, Cymb. V, 5, 407. T h u k l e u , ungrateful: Cor. IV, 5, 76. Tim. V, 1, 63. Lr. I, 4, 311. T h a n k s , gratitude expressed, kindness acknowledged: Gent. IV, 4, 53. Meas. I, 1, 41 I, 4, 28. IV, 2, 191. V, 7. Ado II, 3, 259. 271. L L L V, 2, 748. Shr. IV, 3, 41. 45. R2 II, 3, 61 etc. etc. to con t. = to be thankfnl: All's IV, 3, 174. Tim. IV, 3, 428. to give t. = to thank: Sonn. 38, 5. Eit. IV, 3, 5. Ado I, 1, 242. Ill, 3, 20. Mids. V, 89. Merch. IV, 1, 288. Shr. II, 178. All's II, 1, 133. J o h n V, 7, 108. H6A V, 3, 163. R3 I, 1, 127 etc. give t. you have lived so long ( = thank God) Tp. I, 1 , 2 6 ; cf. t. be given, she's very well, All's II, 4, 4. to give t. = to say grace: Shr. IV, 1, 162. cf. Cor. IV, 7, 4. to have t. = to receive t., to be thanked: Mids. I, 1, 249. All's IV, 3, 195. Cor. V, 1, 46. Ant. IV, 14, 140 etc. to render t. As II, 5, 29. to return t. II6A II. 2, 51. t, absol.: Meas. III, 1, 106. V. 534. Ado V, 3, 28. L L L V, 2, 559. Mids. 1, 1, 21. V, 179. Merch. I, 1, 111. H6A II, 4, 132. H6B I, 1, 68. H6C I, 1, 31. Hml. I, 1, 8. In spite of the phrase a thousand t. (Shr. II, 85. H5 IV, 4, 64. H6C III, 2, 56. H8 I, 4, 74. cf. the German tautend Dank), always used as a singular: much t. for my good chter, Err. V, 392. little t. Merch. IV, 1, 288. must have that t. from Rome, Cor. V, 1, 46. t. to men of noble minds is honourable meed, Tit. I, 215. else is his t. too much, Bom. II, 6, 23. much t. Hml. I, 1, 8. well studied for a liberal t. Ant. 11,6,48. T h a n k »giving, 1) thanking: I cannot stay (. L L L II, 193. 2) a short prayer, grace said at table: in the t. before meat, Meas. I, 2, 15. T h a r f c a r a n f h , corrupted from thirdborough, = constable: L L L I, 1, 185. T h a r a a a (M. Edd. mostly Tarsus) name of a town (Tarsus in Cilicia?): Per. 1, 2, 115. I, 4, 21. 55. II Prol. 11 etc. Changed to Thasos or Thassos by M. Edd. in Caes. V, 3, 104, more in congruity, perhaps, with history than with the principles of textual criticism. It seems too probable that Sh. took Tarsus and Thasos for the same. T h a t , demonstr. pron. (plur. those), used to indicate and point to an object of perception (either seen, or —in which case it is called a determinative pronoun — only imagined) as separated from the subject; and therefore distinguished from this: applying this to that, Ven. 713. that time offered sorrow, this, general joy, H8 IV, 1, 6. t'vo ships, of Corinth that, of EpHaurus this. Err. I, 1, 94. that gold (i. e. the crown on thy head) must round engirt these brows of mine, H6B V, 1, 99. to the boy Caesar send this (i. e. my) grizzled head. That (i. e. your) head, my lord* Ant. Ill, 13, 19. my ears would love that (i.e.

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thy) inward beauty, Ven. 434. that hard heart of thine, 500. 631. she hath spied him already with those sweet eyes, Mids. V, 328. thy lips, those kissing cherries, III, 2, 140. what means that hand upon that breast of thinet John III, 1, 21. bind up those tresses, III, 4, 6 1 (v. 68: bind up your hairs'). Surrey durst better have burnt that tongue than said so, H8 III, 2, 254. teach me, Alcides, thy rage,... and with those hands that grasped the heaviest club, subdue my worthiest self, Ant. IV, 12, 46 etc. Used absolutely as well as adjectively; a) adjectively: that sweet coral mouth, Ven. 542. to bury that posterity which ..., 758. at that time, T p . I, 2, 70. wherefore did they not that hour destroy usf My tale provokes that question, 139. 140. that man, 169. no hope that way, II, 1, 240 etc. those fair Hps of thine, Ven. 115. if those hills be dry, 233. love made those hollows, 243 etc. not that devoured, but that which doth devour, is worthy blame, Lncr. 1256^ foretell new storms to those already spent, 1589. out of that 'no hope', Tp. II, 1, 239. that most deeply to consider it the beauty of his daughter, III, 2, 106. that to come, Ant. II, 3, 6. the names of those their nobles that lie dead, H5 IV, 8, 96. that her hand, Troil. I, 1, 55. that their fitness does unmake you, Mcb. I, 7, 53. thy demon, that thy spirit which keeps thee, Ant. II, 3, 19 (M. Edd. unnecessarily: that's thy spirit), threats the throat of that his officer that murdered Pompey, III, 5, 19. draw that thy honest sword, IV, 14, 79. those poor number saved with you, Tw. I, 2, 10. for those of old and the late dignities, Mcb. 1, 6, 18. b) absolutely; with reference to things: begged for that which thou unasked shalt have, Ven. 102. the bettering of my mind with that which ... o'erprized aU popular rate, Tp. I, 2, 91. if he were that which now he's like, II, 1, 282. those (liberal arts) being all my study, Tp. I, 2, 74. those (tears) at her father t churly feet the tendered, Gent. Ill, 1, 225 etc. Plnral form of the subject caused by that of the predicate: those are pearls that were hit eyes, T p . I , 2 , 398. Merch. IV, 1, 254. Cor. I , 6 , 66. the armour that J tarn in your tent, are those stars or sunt upon itt H 5 III, 7,74. Referring to sentences, or to things thought or acted: what of that t Ven. 717. Mids. 1, 1,228 (cf. What), but that I do not, Tp. 1,2,52. Caes. IV, 3,298. take thou that (blows) Err. II, 2,23. it is not that that halt incensed the duke, H6A III, 1, 36. mark but my fait, and that that ruined me, B 8 III, 2, 440. what's thatt (i. e. what you say) Troil. I, 2, 42 etc. that is = that is to say: Tp. II, 1, 282. Meas. II, 4, 135 etc. and that, used to explain or add to what is said: I heard a humming, and that a strange one, Tp. II, 1, 318. he shall pay for him that hath him, and that soundly, II, 2, 81. to deliver all the intelligence against you, and that with the divine forfeit of his soul. All's III, 6, 33. I find it, and that to the infection of my brains, Wint. I, 2, 145. I'll repent, and that suddenly, H4A HI, 3, 5. scarce half made up, and that so lamely, R31,1,22. given hostile strokes, and that not in the presence of dreaded justice, Cor. Ill, 3, 97. so 'tis put on me, and that in way of caution, Hml. I, 3, 95. heard others praise, and that highly, III, 2, 33. you have been talked of, ... and that in Ilamht's hearing, IV, 7, 73. his voice was propertied as all the tuned spheres, and that to friends, Ant, V, 2, 84. Sometimes for the modern so: trim it handsomely. Ay, that I will, Tp. V, 294.

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T

teas there a icue woman with thee f Ay, that there was, Err. T, 367. that angel knowledge, L L L I, 1, 113. that Wiv. IV, 5, 60. lcnowest thou not the duke hath banish- pure congealed while, high Taurus' snow, Mids. Ill, 2, ed met That he hath not. As I, 3, 97. you saw the ce- 141. making that idiot laughter keep men's eyes, John remony t That 1 did, H8 IV, 1, 60. cf. Dogberry's 111,3,45. then was that noble Worcester ta'en prisoner, H4B I, 1, 125. that furious Scot, 126. that wretched phrase: gifts that God gives, Ado III, 5, 47. Referring to persons; not only in the plural: those Anne, thy wife, R3 V, 3, 159. till death, that winter, that I saw suffer, Tp. I, 2, 6. let it lie Jar those that kill it, H8 III, 2, 179. the fool will not; he there, that it concerns, Gent. I, 2, 76. those that betray them do he, Troil. II, 1, 91 etc. Similarly that is, with a preno treachery, Wiv. V, 3, 24. God punish me with hate dicate, by way of applause and encouragement, in those where I expect most love, R 3 II, 1, 35. who there is, i. e. thou art, you are: why, that's my spirit! are those at the gatet Err. Ill, 1, 48. me they left with Tp. I, 2, 215. that's my noble master, 299. why, that's those of Epidamnum, V, 353. my loving greetings to my dainty Ariel, V, 95. why, that's my bawcock, Wint. those of mine in court, All's I, 3, 259. combined with I, 2, 121. sweet queen! that's a sweet queen, i' faith, those of Norway, Mcb. I, 3, 112. those of his chamber Troil. Ill, 1, 77. that's my brave boy, Cor. V, 3, 76. had done it, II, l (as if that). V, 1, 7. Troil. V, 5, 41 (as if that). Cor. IV, 2, 13. Rom. II, 2, 143. Caes. IV, 3, 103. Ilml. IV, 4, 5. L r . IV, 2, 46. V, 3, 262. lest that my mistress hear my song, Pilgr. 348. lest that our goods be confiscate, Err. 1,2,2. T w . III, 4, 384. W i n t . II, 1, 195. J o h n III, 1, 91. 196. H5

II, 4 , 1 4 1 . H 6 C 1,1, 98. Cor. IV, 4, 5. R o m . II, 2, 111. Caes. Ill, 1, 92. L r . IV, 6, 237. P e r . 1, 3, 22. I force not argument a straw, since that My case is past the help of law, Lucr. 1022. Sonn. 92, 10. E r r . II, 1 , 1 1 4 . Merch. Ill, 3, 30. A s III, 5, 94. H 5 IV, 1, 3 2 1 . R 3 I, 1, 82. V, 3, 202. Cor. Ill, 2, 50. V, 3, 98. Mcb. IV, 3, 106. L r . I, 1, 251. 'tis no sin, sith that the justice of your title to him doth flourish the deceit, Meas. IV, I, 74. L r . II, 4, 242. so that (— o n condition t h a t ; i f ) you had her wrinkles and I her money, I would she did as you say, All's II, 4 , 2 0 . W i n t . II, 1 , 9 . R 2 111, 4 , 1 0 2 . does it not flow as hugely as the sea, till that the weary very means do ebbf As II, 7, 73. H 4 B II, 3, 51. IV, 4, 40. H 6 B III, 1, 362. R 3 IV, 4, 231. Mcb. I, 2, 54. Hml. IV, 7, 182. Oth. Ill, 3, 459. V, 2, 336. A n t . II, 7 , 1 1 3 . P e r . I, 2 , 1 0 7 . though that nature with a beauteous wall doth oft close in pollution, yet of thee I will believe ..., T w . 1,2,48. J o h n 111, 3 , 5 7 . Cor. 1,1,144. Lr. IV,6,219. Oth. 1 , 1 , 7 1 . 111,3,261. when that mine eye is famished for a look, ... with my love's picture then my eye doth ftatt, S o n n . 47, 3. L L L IV, 3, 145. As II, 7, 75. IV, 3, 117. T w . V, 398. J o h n 1, 95. II, 405. H 4 A V, 4, 39. H 4 B IV, 2, 5. IV, 5, 135. R 3 I, 4 , 2 4 1 . 111,5,86. Troil. Ill, 2, 22. IV, 5, 193. T i t . V, 2, 198. Rom. Ill, 3, 62. Caes. Ill, 2, 96. H m l . V, 1, 310. and where that you have vowed to study, ... can you still dream ..., L L L IV, 3 , 2 9 6 . where that his lords desire him to have borne his helmet, H 5 V Chor. 17. and whether that my angel be turned fiend suspect I may, yet not directly tell, Sonn. 144, 9. Meas. 1,2,163. As IV,3,59. H6A IV, 1,28. while that the armed hand doth fight abroad, the advised head defends itself at home, H 5 I, 2, 178. V, 2, 46. whiles that his mountain sire ... smiled to see him, II, 4, 57. so then I am not lame, ... whilst that this shadow doth such substance give, Sonn. 37, 10. R 2 IV, 238. T i t . V, 2, 183. what impediment there is, why that the naked, poor and mangled peace should not... put up her lovely visage, H 5 V, 2, 34. 9) Omitted: nor could she moralize his wanton sight, more than his eyes were opened to the light, Lucr. 105. we are made to be no stronger than faults may shake our frames, Meas. II, 4, 133. hath amazed me more than I dare blame my weakness, All's II, 1, 88 (my astonishment has been too great to be laid to the charge of my weakness, or to be called weakness). I'Id give bay Curtal and his furniture, my mouth no more were broken than these boys', II, 3, 66 ( = that my mouth etc.). I had rather glib myself than they should not produce fair issue, W i n t . II, 1, 149. direct mine arms I may embrace his neck, H 6 A II, 5, 37. have we some strange Indian ... come to court, the women so besiege usf H 8 V, 4, 35 etc. Omitted in the first part of the clause and placed in the second: 'tis best we stand upon our guard, or that we quit this place, T p . II, 1, 322. would face me down he met me on the mart and that J beat him, E r r . Ill, 1, 7. but now I am returned and that war-thoughts havn left their places vacant, Ado I, 1, 303. she says I am not fair, that I lack manners, As IV, 3, 15. think I am dead and that even here thou takest thy last leave, R 2 V, 1, 38. T h a t c h , subst. roof: let us not hang like roping icicles upon our houses' t. H 5 111, 5. 24 (the French constable's speech). T h a t c h , vb. to cover as with a roof of straw: t. your poor thin roofs with burthens of the dead, T i m .

T IV, 3, 144 (i. e. with false hair). —ed = having a roof covered with straw: my visor is Philemon's roof ... Why, then, your visor should be —ed, Ado II, 1, 102. ill-inhabited, worse than Jove in a —ed house, As III, 3, 11. In Tp. IV, 6 3 : flat meads —ed with stover, it seems = covered in general, which is the original signification of the word. T h a w , subst. the melting of things frozen: a man of continual dissolution and t. Wiv. Ill, 5, 119. that I was duller than a great t. Ado II, 1, 262. T h a w , vb. to melt, to dissolve; 1) trans.: favour, savour, hue and qualities ... are on the sudden wasted, —ed and done, Ven. 749. thou bUneest the fire when temperance is —ed, Lucr. 884. now my love is —ed, Gent. II, 4, 200. where Phoebus' fire scarce —s the icicles, Merch. II, 1, 5. afire to t. me, Shr. IV, 1, 9. —ing cold fear, H5 IV Chor. 45. t. the consecrated snow, Tim. IV, 3, 386. —ed from the true quality with that which melteth fools, Caes. Ill, 1, 41. 2) intr.: that this too too solid flesh would melt, t. and resolve itself into a dew, Hml. I, 2, 130. T h e (often apostrophized before vowels, f.i. th'one sweetly flatters, th'other feareth harm, Lucr. 172. Cth' air or th'earth, Tp. I, 2, 387. the other abbreviated to t'other or tother: she vaunted 'mongst her minions t'other day, H6B 1,3,87. here comes sleeve and t'other, Troil. V, 4, 19 (Ff th'other). I'll lean upon one crutch and fight with tother, Cor. I, 1, 246. I saw him yesterday, or tother day, Hml. II, 1, 56 etc. In B2 11, 2, 112 and 113 Qq t'one, t'other, Ff th'one, th'other. In Troil. V, 4 , 1 0 even: o' th'tother side; a vulgarism very frequent in contemporary writers, cf. Other), the definite article, employed in general as at present: the sun, Ven. 1. the weeping morn, 2. hied him to the chase, 3. the field's chief flower, 8. the world, 12. the god of fight, 114. so shall the day seem night, 122. my beauty as the spring doth yearly grow, 141 (cf. Spring), the earth's increase, 169. the fire that burneth me, 196. the time is spent, 255. when a painter would surpass the life, 289. her eyes wooed etui, his eyes disdained the wooing, 358. she takes him by the hand, 361. the sense of feeling, 439. what banquet wert thou to the taste, 445. as the wolf doth grin, 459. as the berry breaks, 460. he strikes her on the cheeks, 475. all the earth, 484. in the west, 530. fall to the earth, 546. the night is spent, 717. on the sudden, 749. confounded in Ae dark she lay, 827. catch her by the neck, 872. strike the wise dumb and teach the fool to speak, 1146. from the besieged Ardea, Lucr. 1. his eye commends the leading to his hand, 436. the flesh being proud, desire doth fight with grace, 712 etc. etc. Sometimes instead of the possessive pronoun: hang the head, Ven. 666 (cf. Head), to put the finger in the eye and weep, Err. II, 2, 206. hard in the palm of the hand, III, 2, 124 (Rowe: her hand), for putting the hand in the pocket, Meas. Ill, 2,49. to shake the head, Merch. Ill, 3, 15. you shake the head, Ado II, 1, 377. he bites the lip, R 3 IV, 2, 27 (Ff he gnaws his lip), he hangs the lip at something, Troil. Ill, 1, 152. he drops down the knee before him, Tim. 1,1,61. at the feet sat, Ant. Ill, 6, 5. Caes. II, 4, 34. Mcb. I, 7, 58. Before gernnds: worth the eating, CaeB. I, 2, 296. have hanged a man for the getting a hundred bastards, Meas. Ill, 2, 125. in the delaying death, IV, 2, 174. be cunning in the working this. Ado II, 2,53. you need not fear the having any of these lords, Merch. 1,2,109.

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in the cutting it if thou dost shed one drop, IV, 1, 309. for the better increasing your folly, Tw. 1,5, 85. whose state so many had the managing, H5 Epil. 11. the giving back the great seal to us, H8 III, 2,347. what she doth cost the holding, Troil. II, 2, 52 (cf. Hml. V, 1, 100). nothing in his life became him like the leaving it, Mcb. I, 4, 8. what can man's wisdom in the restoring his bereaved sense, Lr. IV, 4, 9. I will attempt the doing it, Oth. Ill, 4, 22. the seeing these effects, Cymb. I, 5, 25. the locking-up the spirits a time, 41. (of after the gerund, f. i. As II, 4, 49. Caes. Ill, 1, 51). Before proper names: the Hero that here lies, Ado V, 3, 4 (punning upon the appellative noun herot cf. IV, 1, 101. At least the female form heroine is unknown to Sh ). else the Puck a liar call, Mids. V,442. at the Saint Francis here. All's III, 5, 39 (i. e. at an inn called so), the Douglas, H4A II, 3, 28. IV, 1, 3. H4B Ind. 31. (Ac Douglas and the Hotspur, H4A V, I, 116. the Talbot, H6A II, 2, 37. Ill, 3, 20. 31. the Burgundy, III, 3, 37. the Tarqutn, Caes. II, 1, 54. Similarly: the Count Claudio, Ado II, 2, 1. 34. IV, 1, 331. the Count Rousillon, All's I, 2, 18. I, 3, 161. II, 3, 200. the Count Orsino, Tw. I, 5, 109. II, 1, 44. the Prince Florizel, Wint. IV, 2, 29. the Count Melun, John IV, 3, 15. V, 4, 9. the Lieutenant Cassio, Oth. III,4,1 (Ff Lieutenant Cassio). the great Apollo, Wint. II, 3, 200. Ill, 2, 138 (III, 1, 14 and 111, 2, 129 great Apollo), the good Camillo, III, 2, 157. the old Andronicus, Tit. IV, 4, 89. the young Romeo, Rom. II, 4, 125. Before abstract terms seemingly used in a general sense, but in fact restricted by their particular application : torches are made to light, ... fresh beauty for the use, Ven. 164 (Venus has a certain use in mind). doth not the appetite alter f Ado II, 3, 247 (i. e. with respect to marriage), the fashion wears out more apparel than the man, III, 3, 148 (quite personified; cf. v. 140 sq.). when the age is in, the wit is out, III, 5 , 3 7 (Dogberry's proverbial saying, specially applied to his colleague Verges and the wit which he once was master of), the mathematics and the metaphysics, fall to them as you find your stomach serves you, Shr. 1,1,37 (i. e. the studies about which you make so much fuss). so is running away, when fear proposes the safety, All's I, 1, 217 (which before was recommended by advantage). smacks it not something of the policy f John II, 396 (which you make so much o f ) , to live but by the spoil, H6B IV, 8, 41 (read this together with what follows: by robbing of your friends), but say it were not registered, methinks the truth should live from age to age, R3 III, 1, 76. the leisure and the fearful time cuts off the ceremonious vows of love, V, 3, 97. what will you give ust No money, but the gleek, Rom. IV, 5, 115 (the one that I know), all is the fear, and nothing is the love; as little is the wisdom, where the flight so runs against all reason, Mcb. IV, 2, 12. their dear causes would to the bleeding and the grim alarm excite the mortified man, V, 2 , 4 . Cor. IV, 6 , 41. Hml. 1,1, 84. if it be not now, yet it will come; the readiness is all, V,2,234 (i. e. of leaving or dying), that Venus where we see the fancy outwork nature, Ant. II, 2 , 2 0 6 (i. e. that fancy which we are wont to place so far below nature. But cf. imagination, understanding etc. in their present use), see the death sub Death. The same point of view perhaps admissible in the following cases: who is so faint, that dare not be so

1202 bold to touch the fire, the weather being cold1 Ven. 402. 1. e. the flame), in the Ocean drenched, or in the fire, 494. air and water do abate the fire, 654. to swim, to dive into the fire, T p . I, 2, 191. the fire seven times tried this, Merch. II, 9, 63. a death that I abhor; for the water swells a man, Wiv. Ill, 5, 16. what is she in the whitet L L L II, 197. the April's in her eyes, Ant. 111,2,43 (i. e. tears). I have a poor penny-worth in the English, Merch. I, 2, 77 (which is the only language he understands), skill in the weapon is nothing without sack, Q4BIV, 3,123 (opposed to learning), how dare the plants look up to heaven, from whence they have their nourishment! Per. 1,2,55 (not plants in general, bnt we that are like plants). In the predicate: am I the man yett As III, 3, 3 (cf. Man), live you the marble-breasted tyrant still, Tw. T, 127. made his majesty the bawd to theirs, John III, 1, 59. he was the wretched'st thing when he was young, B3II, 4,18. they are the poorest, H8IV, 2,148. if he return the conqueror, Lr. IV, 6, 271. I am alone the villain oj the earth, Ant. IV, 6, 30. thy father was the duke of Milan, T p . 1, 2, 54. that they were living both in Naples, the king and queen there, V, 150. I'll make you the queen of Naples, I, 2, 449. tcere I but now the lord of such hot youth, R2 II, 3, 99 (Qq lord. cf. Lord), the Marchioness of Pembroke! H8 11,3,94 (cf. 63). Before the vocative: the wild waves, whist! Tp. I, 2, 379. brother, my lord the duke! Ill, 3, 51. my lord the king! Wint. Ill, 2, 143. my lord the emperor, resolve me this, Tit. V, 3, 35. farewell, the latter spring, 1I4A 1,2,177 (M. Kdd. thou latter spring). O the father, how he holds his countenance, II, 4, 432. the Roman gods, lead their successes, ... that we may give you thankful sacrifice! Cor. I , 6 , 6 ( M . Edd. ye Roman gods; o r : the Roman gods lead.) Othegods! 11,3,60 IV, 1,37. hark, Tamora, the empress of my soul. Tit. II, 3, 40. the last of all the Romans, fare thee well! Caes. V, 3, 99. the gods! it smites me beneath the fall I have, Ant V, 2 , 171. 221. Lr. II, 4 , 1 7 1 . as you, O the dearest of creatures, would even renew mewith your eyes, Cymb. Ill, 2, 43. exposing it — O, the harder heart! alack! no remedy! — to the greedy touch of Titan, 111,4,164. the god of this great vast, rebuke these surges, Per. Ill, I, 1 (most M. Edd. thou god), cf. the venom clamours of a jealous woman, poisons more deadly than a mad dog's tooth! Err. V, 69 (most M. Edd. the venom clamours of a jealous woman poison etc.). Lr. I, 1, 271. The following differences from modern or common nsage easily accounted for: the one so like the other, Err. 1,1,52. the one of them contains my pic ture, Merch. II, 7, 11. which is the wiser heref Justice or Iniquity? Meas. II, 1, 180. at the first sight they have changed eyes, Tp. I, 2, 440. for urging it the second time to me, Err. II, 2, 47. bad news, by'r lady; seldom comes the better, 113 II, 3, 4. by that you lore the dearest in the world, H8IV, 2,155. as common as any the most vulgar thing to sense, Hml. 1,2,99. never will I undertake the thing wherein thy counsel and consent is wanting, H6C II, 6, 101; cf. in this rapture I shall surely speak the thing I shall repent, Troil. Ill, 2, 139. when he might act the woman in the scene, Cor. II, 2, 100. we shall buy maidenheads by the hundreds, H4AII,4,398. knock 'em down by the dozens, H8 V, 4, 33. should by the minute feed on life, Cymb. V, 5, 51. cf. the articles Heaven, Day, Night, Which etc.

T Before two comparatives, denoting corresponding gradation (cf. Much): the mightier man, the mightier is the thing that makes him honoured, Lucr. 1004. the more she saw the blood his cheeks replenish, the more she thought he spied in her some blemish, 1357. the sooner the better, H6B I, 4, 17. Tp. Ill, 1, 80. Gent. II, 7, 24. IV, 2, 14. Err. II, 2, 89. As IV, 1, 162. R2 1,1,41. H4AV, 2,15. H5 IV, 3,22. H6C V, 1, 70 etc. The first comparative replaced by another form of expression, or supplied in thought-: her words are done, her woes the more increasing, Ven. 254. and that his beauty may the better thrive, with Death she humbly doth insinuate, 1011. never did he bless my youth with his; the more am I accurst, 1120. swells the higher by this let, Lucr. 646. the baser is he ...to shame his hope, 1002. you swinged me for my love, which makes me the bolder to chide you for yours, Gent. II, 1, 89. if you turn not, you will return the sooner, II, 2, 4. Ill, 1, 95. III, 2, 19. IV, 4, 29. 63. V, 4, 136. Wiv. II, 1, 56. 186. III, 2, 86. IV, 6, 39. Meas. I, 4, 22. II, 1, 233. Ill, 1, 6. IV, 3, 48. 50. Err. I, 2, 103. Mids. II, 1, 202. All's 1,1,161. H6A V, 1, 15. H6B I, 1, 29. H6C IV, 1, 83. IV, 8, 56. Mcb. Ill, 1,26. IV, 3,184. Ant. 111,2,52 etc. The article before the second comparative omitted: who taught thee how to make me love thee more the more I hear and see just cause of hate? Sonn. 150,10. Comparative omitted: the more you beat me, I will fawn on you, Mids. II, 1, 204. The article seemingly superfluous: what were thy lips the worse for one poor kissf Ven. 207. let them alone till they are sober: if they make you not then the better answer, you may say they are not the men you took them for, Ado III, 3, 49. how much the better to fall before the lion than the wolf, Tw. Ill, 1, 139. I am the worse, when one says 1swagger' H 4 B I I , 4, 112. Omitted with the liberty peculiar to poetical language and still more common in ancient than in modern poetry: to cabin! Tp. I, 1, 18. safely in harbour is the king's ship, I, 2, 226. stealing unseen to west, Sonn. 33, 8. ere I went to wars, Ado I, 1, 307. the smallest mouse that creeps on floor, Mids. V, 223. milk comes frozen home in pail, LLL V, 2, 925. sticks me at heart, As I, 2, 254. with spectacles on nose and pouch on side, II, 7, 159. no man at door, Shr. IV, I, 123. Wint. IV, 4,352. he be at palace, IV, 4,731. their grace 'fore meat, their talk at table, and their thanks at end, Cor. IV, 7, 3. on one and other side, Troil. Prol. 21. foamed at mouth, Caes. I, 2, 255. performed at height, Hml. I, 4, 21. I will be thrown into Etna, as I have been into Thames, Wiv. Ill, 5,129. from the banks of Wye and sandy-bottomed Severn, H4A III, 1, 65. from Trent and Severn hitherto, 74. you shall have Trent turned, 136. from the waves of Tiber, Caes. I, 2, 114. all the worms of Nile, Cymb. Ill, 4, 37. if Marcius should be joined with Volscians, Cor. IV, 6, 89. King of Pont, Ant. Ill, 6, 72. ear's deep-sweet music, and heart's deep-sore wounding, Ven. 432. proving from world's minority their right, Lucr. 67. wilt thou be glass wherein it shall discern authority for sin, 619. greatest scandal waits on greatest state, 1006. to drown in ken of shore, 1114. when sun doth melt their snow, 1218. eclipses stain both moon and sun, and loathsome canker lives in sweetest bud, Sonn. 35, 3. more tuneable than lark to shepherd's ear, Mids. 1, 1, 184. plain as way to parish church, As 11,7,52. he thai can assure my daughter greatest dower, Shr. II, 345. if thou

T proceed at high as word, All's II, 1,213. mightst never dram sword again, Tw. 1,3,66. longest way shall hare the longest moans, R2 V, 1. 90. to sun's parching heat displayed my cheeks, H6A I, 2,77. where is best place to mate our battery next, I, 4, 65. this jarring discord of nobility, IV, 1, 188. York is meetest man to be your regent, II6B I, 3, 163. as salt as sea, III, 2, 96. while heart is drowned in cares, III, 3,14. in humblest manner, H8 II, 4, 144. I propend to you in resolution to keep Helen still, Troil. II, 2,191. as false ...as fox to lamb, III, 2, 200. fallen in first rank, III, 3, 161. that (love) which dearest father bears his son, Hml. 1,2,111. best safety lies in fear, I, 3, 43. left me bare to weather, Cymb. Ill, 3, 64. as nurse said, Per. IT, 1, 53 etc. Very often omitted before substantives followed by of: o'ercharged with burden of mine own love's might, Sonn. 23,8. in table of my heart, 24,2. our dear love lose name of single one, 39,6. in pride of all his growth, 99, 12. in process of the seasons, 104, 6. some beauty peeped through lattice of seared age, Compl. 14. by help of her ministers, Tp. 1,2,275. in absence of thy friend, Gent. 1,1,59. sink in apple of his eye, Mids. Ill, 2,104. with splendour of his precious eye, John III, 1, 79. to crouch in litter of your stable planks, V, 2, 140. we at time of year do wound the bark, R2 III, 4,57. in reproof of many tales devised, H4A III, 2, 23. rock his brains in cradle of the rude surge, H4B III, 1, 20. in shadow of such greatness, IV, 2, 15. H5 I, 1, 15. I, 2, 58. 110. Ill Cbor. 18. Ill, 5, 22. IV, 7, 81. V, 2, 400. H6A III, 2, 77. H6B I, 2, 36. 79. II, 3, 71. H6C I, 4, 13. II, 1, 133. 11,5,8. 111,2,6. 111,3,211. IV, 1,68. IV, 6,51. IV, 7, 18. R3 III, 5, 81. Ill, 7, 35 (Ff at lower end of the hall; cf. Cor. IV, 5,205; Qq at the lower end etc.). V, 3, 176. H8 III, 2, 128. IV, 1, 10. 16. Troil. 1,1, 38. I, 3,178. Cor. Ill, 3,121. IV, 5, 205. Tit. 1,197. 458. Rom. I, 2, 106. Ill, 2, 82. Caes. I, 2, 301. Ill, 1,216. Hml. 1, 5, 65. Lr. 1, 2, 120. II, 2, 68. Oth. II, 1, 24. Ant. II, 2, 160. Cymb. Ill, 5, 61. IV, 2, 190. Theatre, a playhouse: Asll,7,137. John 11,375. R2 V, 2, 23. Caes. I, 2, 263. 1, 3, 152. Hml. Ill, 2, 31. Thebaa, a native of Thebes: Lr. Ill, 4, 162. Thebea, town in ancient Greece: Mids. V, 61. Thee, sec Thou. Theft, 1) the act of stealing: Ven. 160. Lncr. 838. 918. Sonn. 99, 12. Wiv. I, 3, 28. Err. IV, 2,61. All's II, 1,34. H4AIV, 2,67 ( = practice of stealing). H6A III, 1,48. Troil. II, 2, 92. V, 3, 21. Cor. 1,9,22. Tim. IV, 3, 430. 447. Mcb. II, 3, 151. Lr. IV, 6, 44. Cymb. V, 5,341. Abstr. pro concr.: when the suspicious head of theft is stopped, LLL IV, 3, 336 ( = the ears of thieves). 2) the thing stolen: if he steal aught the whilst this play is playing, ... 1 will pay the t. Hml. Ill, 2, 94. 3) (for the sake of quibbling) the act of withdrawing privily: I'll steal away. There's honour in the t. All's II, 1, 34. shift away; there's warrant in that t. which steals itself, when there's no mercy left, Mcb. II, 3, 151. Their, poss. pron. of the third pers. plnr.: Ven. 20. 44 (each leaning on their elbows). 131. 165. 216. 248. 418. 488. 503. 506. 507. 532 etc. Godsend every one their heart's desire, Ado III, 4, 61. Picardy hath slain their governors, H6B IV, 1,89. Superfluous: tears show their love, but want their remedies, R2 111, 3,203. Their«, absol. poss. pron. of the third pers. plur.: a mischief worse than civil home-bred strife, or theirs

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whose desperate hands themselves do slay, Ven. 765 ( = the mischief of them whose etc.). on eye more bright than t. Sonn. 20, 5. 32, 14. Tp. I, 1, 58. Gent. III, 1, 24 (this love of t. = this their love). Meas. 1,4, 82. LLL V, 2, 138. John II, 35. R2 II, 3, 13. H4B IV, 2,46. H6B III, 2, 385. Cor. II, 1, 220. 111, 1,211. V, 6, 4 (in theirs and in the commons' ears; cf. yours in Tp. U, 1,254). Tim. V, 1, 156. Mcb. 1, 6, 26 (your servants ever have theirs, themselves, and what is theirs, in compt) etc. etc. Them, see They. T h e m e , 1) a subject on which one speaks or writes: leave this idle t., this bootless chat, Ven. 422. you will fall again into your idle over-handled t. 770. if that (my good name) be made a t. for disputation, the branches of another root are rotted, Lncr. 822. fair, kind and true, ... three —s in one, Sonn. 105, 12. I an your t. Wiv. V, 5,170. to me she speaks; she moves me far her t. Err. II, 2, 183. this weak and idle t., no more-yielding but a dream, Mids. V, 434. a son who is the t. of honour's tongue, H4A I, 1, 81. it is a t. as fluent as the sea, H5 III, 7, 36. she is a t. of honour and renown, Troil. II, 2, 199. O deadly gall, and t. of all our scorns, IV, 5, 30. she's a deadly t. 181. handle not the t., to talk of hands, Tit. Ill, 2, 29. that is the very 1.1 came to talk of, Rom. I, 3, 63. to reason most absurd, whose common t. is death of fathers, Hml. 1,2, 103. big of this gentleman our t. Cymb. I, I, 39. will to ears and tongues be t. and hearing ever, III, 1, 4. when a soldier was the t. Ill, 3, 59. 2) discourse on a certain subject: it was the subject of my t. Err. V, 65. your writing now is colder than that t., 'She had not been, nor was not to be equalled*; thus your verse flowed with her beauty once, Wint. V, 1,100; cf. above Err. II, 2, 183 (most commentators: colder than dead Hermione, the former subject of your praise). 3) subject, question, cause, matter: have just our t. of woe, Tp. 11,1, 6. shall I to this ladyl Ay, that's the t. Tw. 11,4,125. the gracious queen, part of his t., but nothing of his ill-ta'en suspicion, Wint. I, 2, 459. in a t. so bloody-faced as this, conjecture ... should not be admitted, H4B I, 3, 22. you are pleasant. WifA your t. I could o'ermount the lark, H8 II, 3, 93. stubborn critics, apt, without a t., for depravation, Troil. V, 2, 131. it will in tine win upon power and throw forth greater —s for insurrection's arguing, Cor. I, 1, 224. to honour and advance the t. of our assembly, II, 2, 61 (him for whose sake we are assembled, i. e. Coriolanus). here he comes, and I must ply my t. Tit. V, 2, 80 (that which I am about), happy prologues to the swelling act of the imperial t. Mcb. I, 3, 129. I will fight with him upon this t. Hml. V, 1, 289. 291. their contestation was t. for you; you were the word of war. Ant. II, 2, 44 (a matter, an enterprise undertaken in yonr interest). Themselves, 1) they or them in contradistinction to others: things growing to t. Ven. 166. if pleased t., others, they think, delight in such-like circumstance, 843. Tp. II, 1, 192. V, 32. Wiv. IV, 1, 69. Meas. I, 1, 34. 1,3,28. 1,4,83. 11,2,177. Tw. 111,4,391 (0 heavens t.l) etc. etc. Refl.: Ven. 132. 765. 810. 1032. Wiv. II, 2, 257. Meas. II, 4, 125. H6C I, 2, 58 etc. etc. 2) each other: each in her sleep t. so beautify, as if between them twain there were no strife, but that life lived in death, and death in life, Lucr. 404. ij they were but a week married, they would talk t. mad,

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Ado II, 1,369. that for a toy, a thing of no regard, King Henry's peers and chief nobility destroyed t. and lost the realm of France, H6AIV,1,147. valour and pride excel t. in Sector; the one almost as infinite as all, the other blank as nothing, Troil. IV, 5, 79. cf. Ourselves. Then (originally spelt than, and sometimes found in this form in Sh., f. i. Mcrch. II, 2, 200. H6C II, 5, 9. rhyming to began: Lncr. 1440) 1) at that time: then thou wast not out three years old, Tp. 1,2,40. how I cried out then, 133. 152. 162. 212. 213. 271. 281. II, 1,274. 111,2,148. Gent.V,4,47 etc. Adjectively: our t. dictator, Cor. II, 2,93. Substantively: then call me husband, but in such a then I write a never, All's III, 2,62. 2) after that: mark his condition and the event; then tell me, if this might be a brother, Tp. I, 2, 117. hear a little further, and then 1'tt bring thee to the present business, 136. 201. 336. 377. II, 1, 185. Ill, 2, 123. V, 317. Gent. 1,1,33. Meas. Ill, 2, 86 etc. = further, besides: Shr. II, 358. Ant. II, 2, 75. Ill, 6, 26 etc. now and then = sometimes: Merch. II, 2, 200. As III, 5, 103. H5 III, 6, 71. Lr. IV, 3, 14 etc. first ... then: Err. IV, 2, 15. H8 V, 3, 15. first ... then . . . Men: Meas. IV, 3, 4. 9. 13. Err. IV, 2, 7. 9. 11. H8 III, 2, 310. 313. 316. 326. first ... and then: R3 III, 2, 8. 10. first ... and then ... and lastly: H6C III, 3, 52. 53. 54. now ... then: H6C II, 5,10. sometime ... then: Tp. II, 2, 10. sometime ... and then: H6C II, 5, 9. sometimes ... and sometime ... and then: Tp. Ill, 2, 149. then ... then ( = now . . . now): As III, 2, 436. 3) if it is so; in that case: work you then, Tp. 1, 1, 45. my affections are then most humble, I, 2, 482. then wisely weigh our sorrow with our comfort, II, 1, 8. why doth it not then our eyelids sinkt 201. 244. 306. 11. 2, 56. 132. 157. Ill, 1, 87. Ill, 2, 59. IV, 1, 32. V, 288. Gent. I, 1, 72. 77. 79 (why t.). 1, 2, 2. 72. 76. 85. II, 1, 85. 11, 5, 17 (how t.t). II, 7, 33.62. Ill, 1, 195 and 107 (who t.t what t.t cf. As II, 7, 83. H6C I, 1, 136). IV, 2, 49. Meas. Ill, 2, 85. Err. II, 1, 97. Merch. 1,1,158. 1,3,115 etc. Transposed: how comes it that thou art then estranged from thy self1 Err. II, 2, 122 ( = how comes it then that etc., a liberty very common in German. Most M. Edd., adopting Rowe's emendation, that thou art thus estranged). 4) on the other hand; in return: thou shall be as free as the mountain winds: but then exactly do all points of my command, Tp. 1,2,499. he is then a giant to an ape; but then is an ape a doctor to such a man, Ado V, 1, 205. Difficult passage: more (reasons), more strong, then lesser is my fear, 1 shall indue you with, John IV, 2, 42 (explained by some as meaning 'then when my fear is less', and emended by others to when lesser etc. Perhaps it ought to be: the lesser). T h e n c e , 1) from that place, from there: Ven. 582. Lucr. 736. 743. 1552. 1724. 1850. Sonn. 48, 13. 51, 3. Tp. I, 2, 62. 131. 393. II, 1, 108. V, 310. Gent. 1, 2, 122. Ill, 1, 37. IV, 1, 23. IV, 2, 117. Meas. IV, 3, 66. Err. II, 2, 129. V, 143. 246. Mids. I, 1, 218. All's III, 2, 55. Wint II, 2, 60. H6A 1,4, 12. H6C II, 2, 107 etc. whate'er thy thoughts or thy heart's workings be, thy looks should nothing t. but sweetness tell, Sonn. 93, 12. in the great hand of God I stand, and t. against the undivulged pretence I fight of treasonous malice, Mcb. II, 3, 136. Preceded by from, in the same sense: Ven. 195. 227. 488. Lucr. 760. Sonn. 86, 12 (I was not sick of any fear from t ) . Compl. 34. Tp. 1, 2, 60. Gent.

II, 4, 53. Meas. IV, 3, 103. Err. IV, 4, 79. 153. Mids. III,2,368. H6AIV, 1,171. H6B11,3, 6. H6C III, 2, 138 (chides the sea that sunders him from t.) etc. 2) from this, out of this; from that source, for that reason: but t. I learn, Sonn. 118, 13. in nothing art thou black save in thy deeds, and t. this slander, as I think, proceeds, 131, 14. t. comes it that my name receives a brand, and almost t. my nature is subdued to what it works in, Sonn. 111, 5, 6. t. it came that..., All's V, 3, 52. t. it is, that I to your assistance do make love, Mcb. Ill, 1, 123. 3) not there, elsewhere, absent: who would be t. that has the benefit of access t Wint. V, 2, 118. 'tis not the land 1 care for, wert thou t. H6B III, 2, 359. they prosper best of all when I am t. H6C II, 5, 18. when fair Cressid comes into my thoughts, — so, traitor! When she comes! when is she t.t Troil. I, 1. 31. From t., in the same sense: to feed were best at home; from t. the sauce to meat is ceremony, Mcb. Ill, 4 , 3 6 ( = from home, as another's guest). Thearie, theory (opposed to practice): had the whole t. of war in the knot of his scarf, and the practice in the chape of his dagger, All's IV, 3, 162. the art and practic part of life must be the mistress to this t. H5 I, 1,52. the bookish t., wherein the toged consuls can propose as masterly as he, Oth. I, 1, 24. T h e r e , 1) in or at that place: Ven. 119. 245. 301. 691. 915. 1035. Lucr. 114 etc. etc. Superfluous: and in a dark and danliish vault at home there left me, Err. V, 248. the County Paris at Saint Peter's Church shall happily muke thee there a joyful bride, Rom. Ill, 5, 116. so that my speed to Mantua there was stayed, V, 2, 12. if at Philippi we do face him there, Caes. IV, 3, 211. Here and there, see Here. 2) to or into that place: will not let a false sound enter there, Ven. 780. there they hoist us, Tp.1,2,148. the rarest that e'er came there, II, 1, 99 etc. 3) Multifariously employed to point to, and single out, persons and things; applied to persons (present or absent): his testy master goeth about to take him; when lo, the unbacked breeder, full of fear, jealous of catching, swiftly doth forsake him, with her the horse, and left Adonis there, Ven. 322 (not = left Adonis in that place, but = left Adonis where he stood). he ran upon the boar with his sharp spear, who did not whet his teeth at him again, but by a kiss thought to persuade him there, 1114 (him who ran on him), for, in conclusion, he did beat me there, Err. II, 1, 74 (i. e. he there, your husband, my master), that goldsmith there, V, 219. he dined with her there, at the Porpentine, 275. Lady Margery, your midwife there, Wint. II, 3, 160. away toward Bury, to the Dauphin there, J o h n IV, 3, 114. knock him down there, H6B IV, 6, 9. that good man of worship, Anthony Woodville, her brother there, R3 I, 1, 67. the haughty prelate Bishop of Exeter, his brother there, IV, 4, 503 ( F f his elder brother). the fool will not, he there, that he: look you there, Troil. II, 1,91. loves the whore there, V, 4, 7. ha, art thou theret V, 6, 8 (art thou come, thou, whom I am seeking?), who's theret Hml. I, 1, 1 (challenge of a sentinel). Used as a call to servants or other inferior persons: what, ho! Abhorson! where's Abhorson there! Meas. IV, 2, 21. where are you there? H6B I, 2, 68. who is theret Take this fellow in, 1,3,36. within there! Flaminius! Servilius! Tim. II, 2, 194. come in, without there! Mcb. IV, 1, 135. louder the music there!

T Lr. IV, 7, 25. from Sicyon, Ao, the news! speak there, Ant. I, 2, 117. on, there! pass along, III, 1, 37. approach, there! Ill, 13, 89. some wine, within there, and our viand»! Ill, 11, 73. let on there! Cymb. V, 5, 484. In other cases also, the person not expressly named, bnt understood: keep tune there still, Gent 1 , 2 , 8 9 (i. e. you, to whom I am speaking), what is he of basest function that says his bravery is not on my cost, thinking that I mean him, but therein suits his folly to the mettle of my speecht There then; how thent what thent As 11, 7, 83 (i. e. to snch a person as this what am I to reply?). Pointing to things: there, take the paper, Gent. I, 2, 46. try me in thy paper. There, and Saint Nicholas be thy speed, 111, 1, 300. there, take it (the diamond) Err. V, 392. what letter are you reading there, Gent. I, 3, 51. toward Swinstead, to the abbey there, John V, 3, 8. there is my hand, H4B V, 2, 117. Or to actions or occurrences: what a blow was there given! Tp. II, 1,180. there spake my brother; there my father's grave did utter forth a voice, Meas. Ill, 1, 86. there, take you that (blows) Err. I, 2, 92. there's for you. Whys there's for thee, and there, and there, Tw. IV, 1, 27; cf. Troil. II, 1,127. how now there! Wint. Ill, 2, 148. there's a bargain made, Caes. I, 3, 120. there's a great spirit gone, A n t I, 2, 126 (by Fulvia's death). why, there then: thus I do escape the sorrow of Antony's death, IV, 14, 94. there; my blessing with thee, Hml. I, 3, 57. Hence often = this, that: thou art thy father's daughter; there's enough, As I, 3, 60. you shall read it in — what do ye call therel All's II, 3, 26. there was the weight that pulled me down, H8 III, 2, 408. why, there's the privilege your beauty bears, Tit. IV, 2, 116. there's a fearful point, Bom. IV, 3, 32. how that might change his nature, there's the question, Caes. II, 1, 13. you and I must part, but that's not it: Sir, you and I have loved, but there's not it, Ant. I, 3, 88. it was not brought me, my lord; there's the cunning of it, Lr. I, 2, 63. but when to my good lord I prove untrue, I'll choke myself: there's all I'll do for you, Cymb. 1,5,87. And = in this, by this: what I will, I will, and there an end, Gent. I, 3, 65. II, 1,168. R2 V, 1, 69 (cf. End), there she lost a noble and renoumed brother, Meas. Ill, 1, 227. serve God, love me, and mend. There will I leave you too, Ado V, 2 , 9 5 (with these words). there all is marred; there lies a cooling card, H6A V, 3, 84. you break no privilege nor charter there, B3 III, 1, 54. thy Juliet is alive, for whose dear sake thou wast but lately dead; there art thou happy; Tybalt would kill thee, but thou slewest Tybalt; there art thou happy too, Rom. Ill, 3, 137; cf. 140. there stand I in much peril, Oth. V, 1, 21. dost thou hold there stillt Ant. II, 5, 92. you have been a great thief by sea. And you by land. There I deny my land service, II, 6, 98 (in this point), there was our error, Cymb. V, 5, 260. = on this occasion; at this point; almost = then: his passion ... even there resolved my reason into tears, there my white stole of chastity I daffed, Compl. 296. Heme the hunter... doth walk round about an oak, with great ragged horns; and there he blasts the tree and takes the cattle and makes milch-kine yield blood, Wiv. IV, 4, 32. and there indeed let him name his name, Mids. HI, 1, 46. and even there he put his hand behind him, Merch. II, 8, 46. and there put on him what forgeries you please, Hml. II, 1, 19. there she shook the

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holy water from her heavenly eyes, Lr. IV, 3, 31. when the rain came,... there I found 'em, there I smelt 'em out, IV, 6, 104. Emphatically, by way of applause: ay, touch him; there's the vein, Meas. II, 2, 70 ( — that's the right way), there's a girl goes before the priest, As IV, 1, 140. why, there's a wench, Shr. V, 2, 180. there's a goodgrandam, John II, 163. H 4 B V , 3 , 2 4 . Troil. I, 2, 217. 218. 223. 248. A n t II, 7, 94. and with irony: you leer upon me, do youl there's an eye wounds like a leaden sword, LLL V, 2, 480. Or = to the point; that's the point: now prove our loving lawful, and our faith not torn. Ay, marry, there! some flattery for this evil, L L L IV, 3, 286. why, there, there, there, there! a diamond gone, Merch. Ill, 1, 87 ( = that touches to the core), why, there 'tis; so say I too, All's II, 3, 17. you are so fretful, you cannot live long. Why, there is it, H4A III, 3, 15. ay, there's the question, H6B IV, 2, 149. there thou hast it, R3 IV, 2, 73 ( F f Men), there was it, Cor. V, 6,44. there thou say'st, Hml. V, 1, 29. O ho, are you there with met Lr. IV, 6, 148. there't the point, A n t II, 6, 31. Used as a cry of encouragement: Silver! there it goes, Silver! Fury, Fury, there! Tyrant, there! T p . IV, 257. there, there, Hortensio, will you any wife? Shr. I, 1, 56. his blows are weU disposed: there, Ajax, Troil. IV, 5,116. Troilus, thou coward Troilus! Ay, there, there! V, 5,43. why, there it goes, Tit. IV, 3, 76. so, so, there! aches contract and starve your supple joints, Tim. I, 1,256. 4) Very frequently placed before the verb, when there is inversion of the subject: where there are but twain, Ven. 123. there wanteth but a mean, Gent. I, 2, 95. let there be some more test made, Meas. I, 1,49. Ven. 863. 1187. Lncr. 133. 143. 976. Tp. I, 2, 15. 29. 238. 242. II, 1, 257.' Ill, 3, 22. 44. Meas. I, 2, 28. Err. Ill, 2,185. Asl,3,121 etc. there is no hiding you = it is impossible to hide you, Wiv. IV, 2,64. there it no following her, Mids. 111,2,82. Ado 111,2,41. AU'sII,3, 251. H4A IV, 1, 39. H8 I, 3, 43. Cymb. IV, 4, 9. Omitted: whose wraths to guard you from ...is nothing but heart-sorrow, Tp. Ill, 3, 81. sigh for the tooth-achel where is but a humour or a worm, Ado III, 2, 27. satisfaction can be none, Tw. Ill, 4, 261. was never subject longed to be a king, H6B IV, 9, 5. remain eth nought but to inter our brethren. Tit. I, 146 etc. Thereabout, 1) near that number, not much more or less: O for a fine thief of the age of two and twenty or t. H4A III, 3, 212 (Qq thereabouts). 2) concerning that: 'twas Aeneas' tale to Dido, and t. of it especially, where he speaks of Priam's slaughter, Hml. II, 2, 468. Thereabouts, 1) near that number: five or six thousand horse,... or t. All's IV, 3, 171. H4A III, 3, 212 (Ft thereabout). 2) of that import, or aiming at that: how! dare not! do not. Do you know and dare nott Be intelligent to me; 'tis t.: for to yourself, what you do know, you must and cannot say, you dare not, Wint. I, 2, 378. he has given example for our flight, most grossly, by his own. Ay, are you 1.1 why, then, good night indeed, Ant. Ill, 10, 29. T h e r e a f t e r , according: how a scores of ewes nowt T. as they be: a score of good ewes may be worth ten pounds, H4B III, 2, 56. Thereat, at it, at that: not for Bohemia, nor tht

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pomp that may be t. gleaned, W i n t IT, 4, 500 (at or have spoke t. Mids. I, 1, 112. L L L I, 1, 191. Ill, 130. in possessing i t ) , that this sight should mate so deep Wint. 1, 2, 396. IV, 4, 384. H4B V, 3, 106. H 6 A II, a wound, and yet detested life not shrink t. T i t . Ill, 1, 4, 79. H6B T, 1, 207. H 6 C I, 1, 58. I, 3, 41. I, 4, 248. (. enraged, Lr. IT, 2, 75. 129. 133. IT, 7, 64. R3 I, 3, 154. 308. Ill, 1, 48. Ill, T h e r e b y , 1 ) annexed to that: t. hangs a tale, 2, 47. Ill, 7, 79. 86. 175. 234. 236 ( F f of this). V, W i v . I, 4, 159. Aa II, 7, 28. Shr. IT, 1, 60. Otb. 3, 268. Rom. Ill, 5, 99. Hml. IT, 3, 61 etc. Often = it«, even when referring to the subject of the sen111, 1, 8. 2 ) by that, by means of that: from fairest crea- tence: all the power t. it ( w i t ) doth apply to prove, by tures we desire increase, that t. beauty's rose might wit, worth in simplicity, L L L IT, 2, 77 ( i . e. all its never die, Sonn. I, 2. Gent. Ill, 1,31. Meas. Ill, I , 6. own power), meaning his house, which, by the sign t., Mids. IT, 1,162. LLL1V,3,283. T w . IT, 1,60. W i n t . I , was termed so, R 3 III, 5, 79. 2 ) from that (cf. Of): t. comes the proverb, Gent. 2, 337. John III, 1, 276. R2 I, 3, 218. B 4 A T, 4, 119. H 6 A T, 4, 115. H6B II, 1, 187. Ill, 2, 218. IT, III, 1, 305. Err. IT, 3, 53. T, 68. 72. t. the raging 2, 171. H6C II, 5, 25. B3 I, 3, 68. Cor. T, 3, 133. fire of fever bred, 75. T i t . II, 3, 207. Mcb. T, 4, 5. she carved thee for her T h e r e * » , on it, on that: shall t. fall and die, seal, and meant t. thou shouldst print more, Sonn. 11,Lacr. 1139. promise-breach t. dependent, Meas. T, 13. A s T, 1, 38. T i t . IT, 4, 84. 411. and t. look, L L L IT, 3, 298. t. his execution Therefore, 1) for that: t. my son C the ooze is sworn, Wint. I, 2, 445. t. I pawn my credit, H6C III, bedded, T p . Ill, 3, 100 (in punishment for this), what 3, 116. t. engrave Edward and York, R3 IT, 4, 272. should I get t. f Mids. Ill, 2, 78. t. we meet not note, from his reason fallen t. Hml. II, 2, 165. if t. you H 4 A 1, 1, 30 (for this purpose), lament t. H4B T , 3, rely. Ant. T, 2, 133. 112. we are t. provided, II6B I, 4, 3 ( w e are provided Thereto, 1 ) to it, to that; governed by verbs: with what is necessary to perform this), hath my sword accords t. Gent. I, 3, 90. adding t. L L L T, 2, 446. t. broke through London gates, that you should leave All's T, 3, 133. T w . T. 83. Wint. II, 1, 67. H5 T, me at the White Hartt IT, 8, 24. thou wilt revolt and 2, 90. H 6 A T, 3,138. Cor. Ill, 2, 97. IV, 5, 73. Mcb. fly to him, J fear. No, mighty liege; t. mistrust me not, IT, 1, 33. Hml. I, 1, 83. L r . I, 4, 361. A n t T, 2, R 3 IV, 4, 479 (aa for this; concerning this), often have 198. By an adjective: if my reason will t. (to my you thanks t. Troil. Ill, 3, 20. Cor. II, 3, 225. fancy) be obedient, Wint. IV, 4, 494. 2 ) on that account, accordingly, consequently: 2 ) besides, over and above, to boot (cf. To): you Ven. 390. 73a. 751. 807. 1087. T p . I, 2, 360. II, 1, are certainly a gentleman, t. clerkly experienced, Wint. 23. Ill, 2, 2. IV, 22. 206. T, 77. Gent. I, 1, 90. I, 3, I, 2, 391. if she be black, and t have a wit, Oth. II, 89. Ill, 1, 84. 276. 323. 370. Ill, 2, 36. 51. 90. IV, I, 133. so out of thought, and t. so o'ergrown, Cyinb. 4, 62. 169 etc. etc. IV, 4, 33. Therein, 1 ) in it or in them; in this; a ) referT h e r e a n t « , to it; for it; besides: points of ignoring to nouns: and therein ( i n a just s h o w ) so en- rance pertaining t. 118 I, 3, 27. asking your pardon sconced his secret evil, Lucr. 1515. to gaze t. (in my t. Hml. IV, 7. 46. there's none so foul and foolish t. breast) on thee, Sonn. 24, 12. Mids. V, 67. R2 I, 3, Oth. II, 1, 142. 181. II, 1, 81. Ill, 3, 168. IT, 276. 115 III Cher. 25. T h e r e u p o n , on this; in consequence of this; I I 6 A III, 2, 127. T, 4, 140. Troil. I, 2, 124. Ilml. therefore (always referring to sentences): and 1.I drew II, 2, 80 etc. my sword on you, Err. V, 262. and t. these errors are b ) referring to sentences, = in this, in this point, arose, 388. and t. I will kiss thee, A d o V, 2, 50. and in this respect: I prattle something too wildly and my t. thou speakest the fairest shoot, L L L IV, 1,12. and father's precepts I t. do forget, T p . Ill, 1, 59. since t. I drink unto your grace, H4B IV, 2, 68. and t. give thou lovest, love still and thrive t. Gent. I, 1, 9. IT, 1, me your daughter, H5 V, 2, 375. and t. he sends you 34. Meas. II, 1, 100. Ado V, 1, 33. Merch. Ill, 2, 90. this good news, R3 III, 2, 48. I dare t. pawn the A s II, 7, 71. All's II, 3, 72. T w . V, 269. Wint. 1,2, moiety of my estate to your ring, Cymb. I, 4, 118. 247. IV, 2, 22. IV, 4, 447. 698. HCC IV, 6, 57. R 3 Therewith, with it: t. angry, I I 4 A I, 3, 40. dry I, 3, 96. Ill, 4, 18. H8 III, 2, 143. T i m . Ill, 1, 21. her weeping eyes t. R3 IV, 4, 278 (Ff withal), t. satisCaes. I, 3, 91. 92. A n t 111, 2, 35 etc. fled, Oth. I, 2, 88 2 ) by this (cf. In): and t. heartens up his servile T h e r e w i t h a l , with it, with that; at the same powers, Lucr. 295. so doest thou too, and t. dignified, time (cf. Withal): give her that ring and t. this letter, Sonn. 101,4. who hast by waning grown, and t. showest Gent. IV, 4, 90. moved t. 175. thy slanders I forgive, thy lovers withering as thy sweet self growest, 126, 3. and t. remit thy other forfeits, Meas. V, 525. showed since t. she doth shun a thousand cursed hours, W i v . me silks... and t. took measure of my body, Err. IV, V, 5, 241. and t. do account myself well paid, Merch. 3, 9. and t. to win me, L L L V, 2,858. did buy a poison, IV, 1,417. but t. suits his folly to the mettle of my speech, and t. came to this vault to die, Rom. V, 3, 289. but of A s II, 7, 81. t. thou wrongest thy children, H6C III, 2, that to-morrow, when t. we shall have cause of state 74. he is my son, yea, and t. my shame, R 3 II, 2, 29. craving us jointly, Mcb. Ill, 1, 34. not alone the impert. thou hast undone, Tit. IV, 2, 77. comforting t., that fections of long - engraffed condition, but t. the unruly when old robes are worn out, there are members to make waywardness, L r . I, 1,301. your lady is one of the new, Ant. I, 2, 170. fairest that 1 have looked upon. And t. the best, Cymb. Thereaf, 1) of it, of that: she dares not t. make II, 4, 33. discovery, Lucr. 1314. in the praise t. spends all his Theraltea, name of the railer ill the Trojan war: might, Sonn. 80, 3. maiden-tongued he was, and t.free, Troil. I, 3, 73 etc. Cymb. IV, 2, 252. Compl. 100. the loss t. still fearing, Pilgr. 94. in lieu Theseus, the fabulous king of Athens: Gent IV, t Gent. II, 7, 88. on the receipt t. Err. IV, 1, 38. to ] 4, 173. Mids. I, 1, 20, and passim in this play.

T

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T k c i u l l » , pertaining to Thessaly: dac-lapped Adverbially: thou shalt be pinched as t. as honeylike T. bulls, Midi. IV, 1, 127. comb, Tp. I, 2, 329. the floor of heaven is t. inlaid T h c w > l ; , country of ancient Qreece: a cry mors with patines of bright gold, Merch. V, 59. bears his tuneable was never holla d to, nor cheered with horn, blushing honours (blossoms) I. upon him, H8 III, in Crete, in Sparta, nor in T. Mids. IV, 1, 131. the 2, 354. boar of T. was never so embossed, Ant. IV, 13, 2. 3) inspissated, crass: had baked thy blood and Thetis, a sea-goddess; mother of Achilles: Troil. made it heavy, t. John 111, 3, 43. his wits as t. as I, 3,212. Ill, 3,94. Confounded with Tethys, the wife Tewksbury mustard, H4B II, 4, 262. make t. my blood, of Ocean us, and used for the sea, the ocean: let the Mcb. I, 5, 44. make the gruel t. and slab, IV, 1, 32. ruffian Boreas once enrage the gentle T. Troil. I, 3, their eyes purging t. amber, Hml. II, 2,200. In a moral 39. T., being proud, swallowed some part o'the earth. sense, = heavy, dull: t. slumber hangs upon mine eyes, Per. IV, 4, 39. Cleopatra called so by Antony in their Per. V, 1, 235. see above: John III, 3, 43. H4B II, 4, naval war against Octavius: Ant. Ill, 7, 61. 262. Mcb. I, 5, 44. Thewes or Thews, muscles and sinews, bodily 4) not transparent, not clear; turbid (of fluids); strength: care I for the Umb, the t., the stature, bulk, dense, dark (of vapours and clouds): let thy misty and big assemblance of a mant H4B III, 2, 276. Ro- vapours march so t. Lucr. 782. come, t. night, Mcb. I, mans now have t. and limbs like to their ancestors, 5, 51. their t. breaths, rank of gross diet, Ant. V, 2, Caes. I, 3, 81. nature, crescent, does not grow alone in 211. dissolve, t. cloud, and rain, 302. a fountain t. and bulk, Uml. I, 3,12. troubled, muddy, ill-seeming, t. Shr. V, 2,143. cf. the They (obj. case them, often mutilated to 'en, f.i. quibble: thine (desert) is toot, to shine, H4BIV, 3,64. Tp. 1, 2, 82. 83. 330. 417. II, 2, 7. Ill, 1, 76. V, 265. In a moral sense: the people muddied, t. and unwhole280. Wir. I, 1, 311. I will leave 'em them, H5 IV, 3, some in their thought* and whispers, Hml. IV, 5, 82 124), personal pronoun of the third pers. plor.; they: (clondy in mind). Applied to eyes, = dim, short-sighted: his dimenYen. 66. 116. 176. 184. 192 etc. etc. them: Yen. 20. 21. 52. 176 etc. etc. Indefinitely, = people, men: sions to any t. sight were invincible, H4B III, 2, 336. they say there's but five upon this isle, Tp. Ill, 2, 6. my sight was ever t. Caes. V, 3, 21. cf. your eyeglass is Gent. II, 4, 96. Wiv. II, 2, 135. 174. Err. I, 2, 97. —er than a cuckolds horn, Wint. I, 2, 269. Ado IV, 1, 254 (to stysnge sores strangely they strain 5) following each other in quick succession, rathe cure). H6B I, 2, 100 etc. Determinatively: they pid, quick: through his lips do throng weak words, so of those marches, H5 I, 2, 140. they of Rome are en- t. come in his poor heart's aid, that no man could distered m our counsels, Cor. 1,2,2. they in France of tinguish what he said, Lncr. 1784. he furnaces the t. the best rank and station, Hml. I, 3, 73. they that level sighs from him, Cymb. 1,6,67 (or = dense, vaporous?). at my abuses, Sonn. 121,9. the best of them that speak Adverbially: O Lord, sir I «., t., spare not me, All's this speech, Tp. I, 2, 429. Gent. I, 2, 31. Err. II, 1, II, 2, 47 (fast, quickly I), and speaking (., which na33. Ado II, 3, 237. H6A III, 3, 75 etc. Superfluous: ture made his blemish, became the accents of the valiant; poor birds they are not set for, Mcb. IV, 2, 36. they for those that could speak low and tardily would turn for them: what stays had I but theyt R3 II, 2, 76. hast their own perfection to abuse, H4B II, 3,24. my heart not the soft way which were fit for thee to use as they beats —er than a feverous pulse, Truil. Ill, 2, 38. to claim, Cor. Ill, 2, 83. them for they: for the which as t.as tale (M. Edd. hail) came post with post, Mcb. myself and them bend their best studies, John IV, 2, 50. 1, 3, 97. why do you send so t.t Ant. I, 5, 63. say, and here's them in our country of Greece gets more with speak t. Cymb. Ill, 2, 58. begging, Per. II, 1, 68 (the fisherman's speech), them Thick, adv. (see Thick, adj.): Lncr. 782. 1784. for themselves, refl.: unto the wood they hie them, Yen. Tp. 1,2,399. Merch. V, 59. All's II, 2,47. H4BII, 3, 323 (cf. Hie), little stars may hide them when they 24. H8 III, 2, 354. Troil. Ill, 2, ¡1«. Mcb. I, 3, 97. list, Lncr. 1008. old woes bear them mild, 1096. Hml. V, 1, 214. Ant. I, 5, 63. Cymb. Ill, 2, 58. Compl. 142. Gent II, 4,123. Ado III, 3,46. Mids. Thick, vb. to thicken, to inspissate: thoughts that II, 1,31. Shr. IV, 1, 5. H4A I, 3,173. Cor. Ill, 1, 23. would t. my blood, Wint. I, 2, 171. V, 3, 8. Bom. II, 3, 27. IV, &, 90. Mcb. II, 2, 25. Hml. Thick - e s r a l B f , crowding: not so sick, as she is I, 2, 56. Oth. II, 3, 181 etc. troubled with t. fancies, Mcb. V, 3, 38. Thlch, adj. 1) having a great circumference, not T h i c k e n , 1) tr. to strengthen, to confirm: this thin or slender: his short t. neck, Yen. 627. the —est may help to t. other proofs that do demonstrate thinly, and the tallest (lady) LLL IV, 1, 47. 48. 51. smite flat Oth. 111,3,430. the t. rotundity o' ¿he world, Lr. Ill, 2, 7. = having or 2) intr. to grow dim, to become dark: light —s, producing more depth or extent than usoal; laid en and the crow makes wing to the rooky wood, Mcb. Ill, so as to increase the bulk: this shoulder was ordained 2, 50. thy lustre —s, when he shines by, Ant. II, 3,27. so t. to heave, H6C V, 7, 23. if this cursed hand were Thicket, a close wood or copse: Gent. V, 3,11. —er than itself with brother's blood, Hml. Ill, 3,44. And LLL IV, 2,60. V, 2,94. H6C IV, 5, 3. Troil. II, 3, adverbially: let her paint an inch t. Hml. V, 1, 214. 270 (keeps t.). 2) dense, close, set with things close to each other, Thick • e y e d , having dim eyes: and given my or being close to each other: thin mane, t. tail, Yen. treasures and my rights of thee to t. musing and cursed 298 (having much hair), in the —est troop, H6C II, melancholy, H4A II, 3, 49. 1, 13. though perils did abound, as t. as thought could Thlek-grawn, dense: this t. brake, H6C III, 1,1. make 'em, H8 III, 2, 195. the dews of heaven fall t. in Thick-lipped, having thick lips: Tit. IV, 2,175. blessings on her, IV, 2, 133. where you perceive them Thick-lips, one having thick lips: Oth. I, 1,66. t. Caes. I, 1, 76. a retire, anon a rout, confusion t. As to the form of the word, cf. Chops, Fatguts, Cymb. V, 3, 41. Jackanapes, Pots, Ribs. S c h m i d t , Shakeipeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. II. 77

1208 T h i c k - p l e a c h e d , thickly interwoven: a t. alley in mine orchard, A d o 1,2, 10. T h l c k - r l k b e r f , having strong ribs; enclosing so as not to be broken through ( c f . Rib ): to reside in thrilling region of t. ice, Meas. Ill, 1, 123. T h i c k • s i g h t e d , short-sighted, purblind: Yen. 136. cf. H4B 111, 2, 336. Caes. V, 3, 21. T h i c k - a k i n , an insensible fellow, a blockhead: what icouldst thou have, boorl what, t.f W W . IT, 5, 2. the shallowest t. of that barren sort, Mids. Ill, 2, 13. T h l d l a a , name in Ant.; M. Edd., following Plutarch, Thyreus, q. v. T h i e f , one who steals: Lncr. 305. 693. 888. 997. Sonn. 48, 8. 99, 2. W W . II, 2, 319. Meas. II, 1, 20. Ill, 2, 17. IV, 2, 47. 49. 50. Err. Ill, 2, 16. IV, 2, 59. A d o III, 3, 53. 57. 62. 134. L L L IV, 3,187. Mids. Ill, 2, 283 (you I. of love). Merch. Ill, 1, 97. 98. A s 111, 2, 345. All's II, 5, 86. Ill, 2, 132. T w . V, 77. 121. R2 III, 2, 47. H 4 A I, 2, 70. II, 1, 103. II, 2, 10. II, 4, 452. Ill, 3, 212. H6B IV, 10, 36. H6C V, 6, 12. Cor. II, 1, 32. T i m . II, 2, 100. IV, 3, 45. 439 sq. Mcb. V, 2, 22. L r . Ill, 7, 23. IV, 6, 156. Oth. I, 2, 57. 62. I, 3, 208. Ant. II, 6, 96. Cymb. I, 4, 100. II, 3, 76. IV, 2, 75. 86. Per. IV, 6, 121. Plor. thieves: Ven. 724. 1086. Lucr. 126. Tp. IV, 187. WW. II, 1, 126. Meas. II, 1, 23. II, 2, 176. Merch. II, 6, 23. A s I, 3, 112. T w . V, 404. R2 III, 2, 39. IV, 123. H 4 A I, 2, 28 (of). 75. II, 2, 29. II, 4, 99. Ill, 3, 63. H5 I, 2, 177. H6C I, 4, 42. 63. Troil. II, 2, 94. Tim. IV, 3, 35. 415 sq. V, 1, 187. L r . 1, 2, 133. Oth. 1, 1, 79. 81. Ant. II, 6, 100. Cymb. 1, 4, 107. Sometimes equivalent to robber: so full of fear as one with treasure laden, hemmed with thieves, Ven. 1022. draw forth thy weapon, we are beset with thieves, Shr. Ill, 2, 238. notable pirate, thou salt-water t. T w . V, 72. a foul felonious t. that fleeced poor passengers, H6B 111, 1, 129. where be these bloody thievesf Oth. V, 1, 63. cf. Lucr. 693. 888. 997. A s I, 3, 112. T w . V, 121. H 4 A II, 2, 98. 99. 112. H6C I, 4, 63. Hml. IV, 6, 21. Per. IV, 2, 97. Used as a term of reproach: Angela is an adulterous t. Meas. V, 40 (or = a secret fornicator), what a deformed t. this fashion is, A d o III, 3, 131. 140. lie still, ye t. H 4 A III, 1, 238. my little tiny t. H4B V, 3, 60. ay me, most credulous fool, egregious murderer, t., any thing that's due to all the villains past, in being, to come, Cymb. V, 5, 211. caused a lesser villain than myself, a sacrilegious t., to do't, 220. cf. IV, 2, 86. T h i e f - a t a l e n , stolen by thieves: Cymb. I, 6, 5. T h i e v e r y , 1) theft: it's an honourable kind of t. Gent. IV, 1,40. I'll example you with t. Tim. IV, 3,438. 2 ) that which is stolen: crams his rich t. up, Troil. IV, 4, 45. T h i e v U h , 1) practising theft: that rich jewel he should keep unknown from t. ears, Lucr. 35. like a t. dog, 736. truth proves t. for a price so dear, Sonn. 48, 14. Applied to violent robbery: with a base and boisterous sword enforce a t. living on the common road, As II, 3, 33. walk in t. ways, Rom. IV, 1, 79 (ways infested by robbers). 2) moving stealthily: time's t. progress to eternity, Sonn. 77, 8. hath told the t. minutes how they pass, All's II, 1, 169. T h i g h , that part of the body which is between the trunk and the knee: Ven. 873. Pilgr. 127. Mids.

T III, 1, 172. As I, 3, 119. T w . I, 3, 149. H 4 A IV, 1, 105. V, 4,131. 155. H4BIV,5,77 (plur. ~es, dissyll.). H6B 111, 1, 362. Cor. II, 1, 167. Rom. II, 1, 19. Caes. II, 1, 301. Oth. Ill, 3, 425. V, 2, 261. Cymb. IV, 2, 310. T h i l l - h e r a e , see Fill-horse. T h i m h l e , a metal cover for the finger, osed to secure it from the needle in sewing: Shr. IV, 3,108. 149. John V, 2, 156. T h i n , adj. 1) lean, slender: my face so f. John I, 141. you t. man, H 4 B V, 4, 20. 34. Metaphorically, - scanty: a t. and slender pittance, Shr. IV,4, 61. 2 ) having little extent from one of the two surfaces to the other: the mure that should confine it in so t. that li/e looks through, H4BIV,4,120. Used of light clothes: if your garments were t. Err. Ill, 1, 70. t. weeds, L L L V, 2, 811. gave himself, all t. and naked, to the numb cold night, R 3 II, 1, 117 . lightly dressed). Metaphorically, = not sufficient for a covering, slight, easily seen through: we will not line his t. bestained cloak with our pure honours, John IV, 3, 24. they (Batteries) are too t. and bare to hide offences, H8 V, 3, 125. wider and more overt test than these t. habits and poor likelihoods, Oth. I, 3, 108. 3 ) not closely set; used of hair: t. mane, Ven. 298. his beard grew t. Shr. Ill, 2. 177. their t. and hairless scalps, R2 III, 2, 112. thatch your poor t. roofs, Tim. IV, 3, 144. with this t. helm, Lr. IV, 7,36 (a bald head). 4 ) rare, not dense; used of the air and of fluids: from his lips did fly t. winding breath, Lucr. 1407. melted into air, t. air, Tp. IV, 150. fantasy, which is as t. of substance as the air, Rom. I, 4, 99. the t. and wholesome blood, Hml. I, 5, 70. t. drink, abhorred by Falstaff and recommended by King Henry VI: H4B IV, 3, 98. 134. H 6 C II, 5, 48. T h i n - b e l l y , a lean belly (characteristic of a man in love): with your arms crossed on your t. doublet like a rabbit on a spit, L L L III, 19 (O. Edd. thinbeUies doublet and thinbellie doublet; M . Edd. thin bellydoublet). T h i n e , possessive pronoun of the second pers. sing.; 1) adjectively before vowels: Ven. 145. Lucr. 483. 516. T p . I, 2, 25. 37. 318. 408. II, 1, 229. II, 2, 139. V, 121. Gent. Ill, 1, 22. Meas. IV, 3, 158. Err. II, 2, 116. Mids. Ill, 2, 298 etc. before A: thine host, thine Ephesian calls, W i v . IV, 5, 19. with own: Ven. 157. T p . 1, 2, 356. IV, 13. W i v . II, 1, 15. Meas. I, 2, 39. Ill, 1, 29. 140. Err. I, 2, 61. II, 2, 200 etc. Perhaps throughout unemphatical, thy, not Mine, being used, where some stress is laid on the pronoun: why, Suffolk, England knows thine insolence. And thy ambition, Gloster, H6B 11,1,31. cf. Ven 170. L L L IV, 3, 28. 2 ) without a noun, but with reference to one preceding: to no sight but t. and mine, T p . I, 2, 302. V, 63. Gent. Ill, 1, 131. IV, 2, 118. Wiv. II, 1,74. Meas. V, 210 etc. with own: Tp. IV, 218. Ven. 117 etc. of t., following a noun, not only = one of those whom or which thou hast: some worthless slave of t. I'll slay, Lucr. 515. 1632. misbegotten blood I spill oft. H 6 A IV, 6, 22. but as often = of thee, thy: those fair lips oft. Ven. 115. that hard heart of t. 500. 631. Sonn. 92, 4. 142, 5. Err. II, 2, 175. John III, 1, 21. H 6 A II, 3, 39. R3IV,4,516. Tit. 1,306. Mcb. V, 3, 16 etc. 3) substantively, = a) thy property: thou mine, 11. Sonn. 108, 7. Gent. V, 4, 135.LLL IV,l,109etc.

1209

T

Tp IV, 32. Gent. V, 4, 151. Meas. I, 1, 31 etc. b) thy did they would not take her life, Tp. 1,2, 266. taught relations, thy children, thy family: that t. may live, thee each hour one t. or other, 355. I would by ianwhen thou thyself art dead, Ven. 172. tatting shame traries execute all —s, II, 1, 148. will not let you beon thee and t. I will inflict, Lacr. 1630. Sonn. 10, 14. lieve —s certain, V, 125. think of each t. well, V, 251. Tit. I, 49. 115. Lr. I, 1, 81 etc. I see —* too, although you judge I wink, Gent. 1,2, Thin-faced, having a thin face: a t. knave, a 139. are all these —s perceived in met II, 1, 34. three —s that women highly hold in hate, 111, 2,33. 'tis a gull, Tw. V, 213. Thing, any substance; whatever is: —> growing foul t. when a cur cannot keep himself in all companies, to themselves are growth's abuse, Ven. 166. t. like a IV, 4, 11. to be a dog at all —», 14. there's no such man, but of no woman bred, 214. if springing —s be t. in me, Wiv. Ill, 3, 72. they can tell you how —s go any jot diminished, they wither in their prime, 417. better than I can, 111, 4, 69. I would not have —s cool, what canst thou boast of —s long since, or any t. en- IV, 2, 240. you shall hear how —s go, IV, 5, 126. 'tis suing, 1078. aU —s in common nature should produce, one t. to be tempted, another t. to fail, Meas. II, 1, 17. Tp. II, 1, 159. / will requite you with as good a t. V, i< it the only t.for a qualm, Ado III, 4, 75. a little t. 169. bears no impression of the t. it was, Gent. II, 4, would make me tell them ..., Tw. Ill, 4, 332. rob the 202. good —s should be praised, III, 1, 353. of ano- exchequer theflrtt t. thou doit, H4A III, 3, 205. — s ther t. she may (be liberal) 359. jrou would have them are often spoke and seldom meant, H6B III, 1, 268. always play but one t. IV, 2, 71. the t. is to be sold, —i have fallen out so unluckily, Rom. Ill, 4, 1. I fear Asll, 4,96. ire will have rings and —s andfine array, some ill unlucky t. V, 3, 136. where, both in time, form Shr. II, 325. IV, 3, 56. I can hardly forbear hurling of the t., each word made true and good, the apparition —s at him, Tw. Ill, 2, 87. has this t. appearedagaint comes, Hml. I, 2, 210. —s standing thus unknown, V, Hml. I, 1, 21 etc. etc. 2, 356. to scan this t. no further, Oth. Ill, 3, 245. it is Applied to men and animals, being, creature: a common t. to have a foolish wife, 302. the breaking imperious supreme of all mortal —s, Ven. 996. we of so great a t. should make a greater crack, Ant. V, leave to be the —s we are for that which we expect, 1, 14 etc. etc. cf. AU-thing, Any, Every, Some etc. the Lncr. 149. some fierce t. replete with too much rage, t. often = that: 'twas I did the t. you wot of, Gent. Sonn. 23, 3. in pursuit of the t. she would have stay IV, 4, 30; cf. past cure of the t. you wot o f , Meas. II, (a hen) 143, 4. thou liett, malignant t. Tp. I, 2, 257. 1, 115. presume not that I am the t. I was, H4B V, 5, dull t., I say so, 285. gabble like at. most brutish, 60. never will I undertake the t. wherein thy countel is 357. I might call him a t. divine, 418. a single t., as wanting, H6C II, 6, 101. I shall surely speak the t. I I am now, 432. good —s will strive to dwell with it, shall repent, Troil. Ill, 2, 139 etc. a t. = something: 459. these be fine —s, II, 2, 120. but this t. dare not, should I have wished a t., it had been he, Gent. II, 4, III, 2, 63. what —s are these, V, 264. this t. of dark- 82. I will do a greater t. than that, Wiv. I, 1, 248. I ness, 275. this is as strange a t. as e'er I looked on, shall discover a t. to you, 11,2, 190. when shall you 289. sweet ornament that decks a t. divine, Gent. II, see me write a t. in rhyme 1 LLL IV, 3, 181. shall I 1, 4. she excels each mortal t. upon the dull earth tell you a t.t V, 1, 152. there is a t. within my bosom dwelling, IV, 2, 51. they (bears) are very ill-favoured tells me ..., H4B IV, 1, 183. a t. devised by the enemy, rough —s, Wiv. I, 1, 312. I hold you as at. enskyed R3 V, 3, 306. I told you a t. yesterday, Troil. I, 2, 185. and sainted, Meas. I, 4, 34. wake when some vile t. is thou wilt undertake a t. like death, Rom. IV, 1, 74. I near, Mids. II, 2, 34. vile (., let loose, III, 2, 260. a should impart a t. to you, Hml. V, 2, 92. I have a t. poor virgin, an ill-favoured t. As V, 4, 60. you are for you, Oth. Ill, 3, 301 etc. idle shallow —s, Tw. HI, 4, 137. make us as fat as Think (impf. and partic. thought; thoughten in tame —s, Wint. I, 2, 92. Othou t.t II, 1, 82. poor t., Per. IV, 6, 115 not partic.) 1) to have the mind occondemned to loss, II, 3, 192. such goodly —* as you, cupied, to revolve ideas in the mind, to meditate: V, 1, 178. go, you (., go. Say, what t., what t.t H4A hath he any eyest hath he any —ingt Wiv. Ill, 2, 31. III, 3, 131. see, sons, what —s you are, H4B IV, 5, when I would pray andt. Meas. II, 4, 1. an bad —ing 65. have you dispatched this tl H6B III, 2, 6. he was do not wrest true speaking, Ado III, 4, 33. I cannot the wretcheeFst t. when he was young, R3 II, 4, 18. speak nor t. Wint IV, 4, 462. on —ing on no thought every man... was a t. inspired, H8 I, 1, 91. the t. of It. R2 II, 2, 31. It., but dare not speak, Mcb. V, 1, courage ... with rage doth sympathise, Troil. 1,3, 51. 87. there is nothing either good or bad, but —ing makes hence, rotten t. Cor. Ill, 1, 179. thou noble t. IV, 5, it so, Hml. II, 2, 256. to put him to ill —ing, Oth. Ill, 122. vows revenge as spacious as between the youngest 4, 29. what shall we do, Enobarbust T. and die, Ant. and oldest t. IV, 6, 68. such —s as you, V, 2, 109. Ill, 13, 1 etc. With an accus. denoting the effect: if none serve with him but constrained —s, Mcb. V, 4, 13. I would t. my heart out of—ing, Ado 111,4,84. Trans., no cataplasm ... can save the t. from death, Bml. IV, with the object of thought, = to form or harbour in 7, 146. the king is a t. A thing, mylordl Of nothing, the mind, to conceive, to imagine, to devise: It. good IV, 2, 31 (Narefi: at. of nothing, a common phrase to thoughts, whilst other write good words, Sonn. 85, 5. express any thing very worthless, cf. a t. of naught in nimble thought can jump both sea and land as soon as Mids. IV, 2, 14). —s that love night, Lr. Ill, 2, 42. t. the place where he would be, 44, 8. what his heart leaving free —s and happy shows behind, III, 6, 112. —s his tongue speaks, Ado III, 2, 14. may this be sot he is a t. too bad for bad report, Cymb. I, 1,16. thou I will not t. it, 121. t. but this ... that you have but basest t. 125. the same dead t. alive,- V, 5, 123 etc. slumbered here, Mids. V, 431. to t. so base a thought, Supplying abstract notions, = matter, affair, cir- Merch. II, 7, 50. that we might show what we alone cumstance , fact, action, story etc.: —» out of hope must t. All's I, 1, 199. what might you t.t Tw. Ill, 1, are compassed oft with venturing, Ven. 567. in hand 128. all the unmuzzled thoughts that tyrannous heart with all —s, nought at ail effecting, 912. for one t. she can t. 131. 'tis powerful, t. it, from east, west, north 77*

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and souik, Wint. I, 2, 202. where I may t. the remnant of my thought m peace, John V, 4, 46. thoughts which honour and allegiance cannot t. R2 II, 1, 208. these deeds must not be thought after these ways, Mcb. II, 2, 33. I saw 't not, thought it not, it harmed not me, Oth. Ill, 3, 339 etc. to t. no harm, L L L I, 1, 44. R3 I, 3, 51. never thought offence, Per. I, 2, 28. t. no shame of me, Lncr. 1204. to t. scorn, gee sab Scorn. With a clause: dost thou t., Claudiot if I would yield him my virginity, thou mightst be freed, Meas. Ill, 1, 97. sleep I now and 1.1 hear all thist Err. II, 2, 185 (imagine only), that little —s she has been sluiced, Wint. 1, 2,194. / tremble to t. your father should pass this way, IT, 4, 19. I am afraid to t. what I have done, Mcb. II, 2, 51. yet have I fierce affections, and t. what Venus did with Mars, Ant. I, 5, 17 etc. 2) to consider: she bids me t. how I have been forsworn, Gent. IV, 2, 10. bid her t. what a man is, Wiv. Ill, 5, 51. do thou but t. what 'tis to cram a maw from such a vice, Meas. Ill, 2, 22. t. you question with the Jew, Merch. IV, 1,70. / teas —ing with what manners I might safely be admitted, All's IV, 5, 93. t. with thyself how more unfortunate than all living women are we come hither, Cor. V, 3, 96 etc. With on: these things further thought on, Tw. V, 324. now 11. on't, they should be good men, H8 111, 1, 21. t. on that, and fa most firm thy resolution, Oth. V, 1 , 4 etc. 3) With of or on, = to call to mind, to recollect, to dwell or to light on by meditation: to t. o'the teen that I have turned you to, Tp. I, 2, 64. t. of that, a man of my kidney, t. of that, Wiv. ill, 5, 116. ichat we do not see we tread upon, and never t. of it, Meas. II, 1, 26. and t. no more of this night's accidents but as the fierce vexation of a dream, Mids. IV, 1, 73. I should t. of shallows, Merch. I, 1, 26. made me to t. of this, All's I, 3, 238. bid Gloster t. of this, K3 1, 4, 245. the most convenient place that I can t. o f , H8 II, 2, 138 etc. haply I t . on thee, Sonn. 29, 10. 30, 13. if —ing on me then should make you woe, 71,8. —ing on thy face, 131, 10. 149, 3. t. on thy Proteus, Gent. I, 1, 12. urge not my father's anger, but t. upon my grief, IV, 3, 28. —ing on it makes me cry 'alas', IV, 4, 89. to t. upon her woes, 149. I weep myself to t. upon thy words, 180. Wiv. II, 1, 166. V, 5, 12. 57. Meas. II, 2, 77. Ado V, 4, 43. 129. Merch. I, 1, 37. II, 2, 178. II, 8, 31. All's I, 1, 90. Tw. Ill, 1, 114. K2 I, 3, 295. H4A III, 3, 35. H6A IV, 1, 148. H6B II, 4, 41. Ill, 2, 344. 348. IV, 7, 15. H6C I, 4, 173. R 3 I , 1,141. V,3, 126. Cor. II, 3, 196. Hml. I, 2, 6. Lr. I, 1,144. Oth. V, 2, 191 etc. 4) to be of opinion: others, they t., delight in suchlike circumstance, Ven. 843. she —s he could not die, 1060. / do not t. thou canst, Tp. 1, 2, 40. I do t., a king, 111, 1,60. when I shall t. Phoebus' steeds are foundered, IV, 30. dost thou t. sot V, 19. you speak not as you t. Mids. Ill, 2, 191. Gent. I, 1, 141. II, 7, 62. Meas. II, 1, 143. Err. I, 1, 88. Ado II, 3, 24. 179. III,4,81. V,4, 43. All's V, 3,210. Oth. V, 2,192 etc. etc. to my —ing, = in my opinion: H4B V, 5, 114. Caes. I, 2, 240. Trans., with a pronoun as object, = to believe: I t . it well, Meas. II, 4, 130. would heart of man once I. it? Hml. I, 5, 121. do you t. thist II, 2, 151 (Ff think 'tis this). I'll hit him now. I do not t. it, V, 2, 306. It. it freely, Oth. II, 3, 335. With a double accus., = to esteem, to hold to be: shouldst t. it heavy, Ven. 156. he —s me now incapable,

Tp. I, 2, 111. may I be bold to t. these sprites, IV, 120. Gent. I, 2, 21. 24. II, 1,33. Meas. 1,1, 72. Tw. V, 325. H4B IV, 1, 146 (every thing set off that might so much as I. you enemies) etc. etc. to t. long — to expect with impatience, to long for: but long she —s till he return again, Lncr. 1359. have I thought long to see this morning's face, Bom. IV, 5, 41. to t. much — to bold it to be a great thing (cf. Lr. Ill, 4, 6 ) : —est it much to tread the ooze, Tp.I,2,252. Acc. c.inf.: —ing his prattle to be tedious, R2 V, 2, 26. It. this lady to be my child Cordelia, Lr. IV, 7, 69 etc. With for: the conceit is deeper than you t. for, Shr. IV, 3,163. dost not t. me for the man 1 am, Cor. IV, 5,62 (cf. H4B 1,2,6, and see For). With as: Caes. II, 1, 32. 5) to jndge, to form an opinion; with of or on: to t. nobly of my grandmother, Tp. 1, 2, 119. t. of each thing well, V, 251. perchance you t. too much of so mucA pains, Gent. II, 1, 119 (estimate them at too high a rate). I shall t. the worse of fat men, Wiv. II, 1, 56. as you hear of me, so t. of me, Ado IV, 1, 338. It. nobly of the soul, Tw. IV, 2, 59. t. of me as you please, V, 317. an honest woman and well thought on, H 4 B I I , 4 , 1 0 0 (of good fame. Mrs Qaickly's speech). to make us no better thought of, a little help will serve, Cor. II, 3, 15. —ing too precisely on the event, Hml. IV, 4, 4 1 etc. Trans., with what as object: what —est thou of the fair Sir Eglamourt Gent. I, 2, 9. V, 4, 164. Wiv. II, 1, 85. Meas. I, 1, 22. Tw. I, 5, 79. II, 5, 32. IV, 2, 58. H8 II, 3, 107. Caes. I, 2, 214 etc. 6) to mean, to intend: I thought all for the best, Bom. Ill, 1, 109. With an inf.: he did t. to reprehend her, Ven. 470. he thought to kiss him, 1110. 1114. if you t. well to carry this, Meas. Ill, 1, 267. I thought to close mine eyes, L L L V, 2, 90. thou thoughtest to help me, All's II, 1, 133. I thought to stay him, B3 I, 4, 19. —ing to bar thee of succession, Cymb. Ill, 3, 102 etc. Inf. of the perfect (cf. Have): here thought they to have done some wanton charm, Tp. IV, 94. I thought to have told thee of it, 168. I did t. to have beaten thee, Ado V, 4, 111. thought to have spoke thereof, Mids. I, 1, 112 etc. I had thought, see Thought snbst. 7) to expect; to hope: 1 thought to have ta'en you at the Porpentine, Err. Ill, 2, 172. I did never t. to marry, Ado II, 3, 236. you t. to dine with me, Sbr. Ill, 2,187. that I should love a star and t. towed it, All's 1,1,98. when men t. least I will, H4A I, 2, 241. all goes well. As heart can t. IV, 1, 84. he little thought of this divided friendship, B3 I, 4, 244. I did not t. to shed a tear in all my miseries, H8 III, 2, 429. he that will t. to live till he be old, Lr. Ill, 7, 69. I did not t. to draw my sword 'gainst Pompey, Ant. II, 2, 156. 8) to bear in mind, to have regard to, to pay attention to, to provide f o r : always thought that I require a clearness, Mcb. Ill, 1, 132. With on: that likewise have we thought upon, and thus, Wiv. IV, 4 , 4 6 . t. upon patience, All's 111,2, 50. the heavens have thought well on thee, to bring forth this discovery, V, 3, 150. have you thought on a place whereto you U got Wint. IV, 4, 547. if any order might be thought upon, H5 IV, 5, 21. when I have chased all thy foes from hence, then will It. upon a recompense, H6A I, 2, 116. I'll t. upon the questions, H6B I, 2, 82. not a thought but —s on dignity, III, 1, 338. well thcught upon, R3 1, 3, 344 and Lr. V, 3, 250. what ever have brtn thought on in this state, that could be brought to bodily act ere Rome had circumvention f Cor. I, 2, 4.

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Thirtieth, the ordinal of thirty: ere the t. of 9) Impersonal!;, it —s = it seems (cf. Methinks and Mtthought): where it —s best unto your royal self, Slay, H6B I, 1, 49. R3 III, 1, 63 (Ff where it think'st best; Ql.a where it Thirty, three times ten: Tp. Ill, 2, 17. Err. V, teem* beet), does it not, thinks 't thee, stand me now 400. Shr. Ind. 2, 116. I, 2, 33 (cf. Pip). All's IV, upon, Hml. V, 2, 63 (Ff thinkst thee, Qq think thee. cf. 1, 63. IV, 5, 86. John II, 530. H4A I, 2, 211. Ill, methinkst in All's II, 3, 269). Perhaps thinks for me- 3, 54. 221. IV, 1, 130. H4B II, 1, 111. II, 4, 179. thinks: what largeness thinks in Paradise was sawn, IV, 1, 22. H6C II, 1, 177. II, 2, 68. Ill, 3, 96. V, 3, Compl. 91. 14. Rom. I, 5, 35. 41. Caes. V, 1, 53. Mcb. IV, 1, 7. Thinking, subst. (cf. Think), thought: I am Hml. HI, 2, 165. 167. V, 1, 177. Lr. Ill, 7,16. Oth. wrapped in dismal —s, All's V, 3, 128. his —s are 1,3,37. Ant. 111,3,31. Plur. —es: thirty dozen moons below the moon, H8 III, 2, 134. speak to me as to thy with borrowed sheen about the world have times twelve —s, Oth. Ill, 3, 131. cf. Wiv. Ill, 2, 31. As V, 2, 55. —es been, Hml. Ill, 2, 168. Cor. IV, 6,31. Tim. I, 1, 219. Oth. I, 2, 76. II, 3, 344. Thla (plur. these. This is sometimes contracted Cymb. 1,4, 157. to this: this a good friar, belike, Meas. V, 131. this a Thinly, 1) not thickly, not closely or numerously: heavy chance 'twixt him and you, Shr. I, 2, 46. this a like stones of worth they (feasts) I. placed are, Sonn. good block, Lr. IV, 6, 187. this or these abbreviated 52, 7. about his shelves a beggarly account of empty to '«: my father died within's two hours, Hml. Ill, 2, 134; M. Edd. these), demonstrative pronoun used to boxes ... were t. scattered, Rom. V, 1, 48. 2) slightly, insufficiently: this may help to thicken point to something that is present or near in place or other proofs that do demonstrate t. Oth. Ill, 3, 431 (cf. time, or to something that is just mentioned or about to be mentioned; adjectively: deign this favour, Ven. thin in I, 3, 108). Third, the ordinal of three; 1) the first after the 15. pay this countless debt, 84. upon this promise did second: Soon. 99, 10. Tp. 1, 2, 445. V, 311. Gent. he raise his chin, 85. for this good turn, 92. this primIV, 4, 24. Wiv. V, 1, 2. Ado V, 1, 276. LLL V, 1, rose bank, 151. these violets whereon we lean, 125. 56. V, 2, 113. Merch. I, 3, 20. 75. II, 7, 8. Ill, 1, these forceless flowers support me, 152. these lovely 11. 81. As I, 2, 137. V, 4, 98. Shr. Ind. I, 13. 57. caves... opened their mouths, 247. would root these Tw. I, 5, 141. 143. II, 3, 189 (let the fool make a beauties, 636. pursue these creatures, 677. these mine t.; cf. H6B III, 2, 303). V, 40 (the old saying is, the eyes, 503. this her mother's plot, Wiv. IV, 6, 32. this t. pays for all). Wint. II, 1, 145. Ill, 2, 99. H4A I, her easy-held imprisonment, H6A V, 3, 139 etc. etc. 2, 207. H4B I, 3, 72. Ill, 2, 330. H5 I, 2, 248 (Ed- within this mile = within a mile of this place: Cor. ward the T.) etc. the poor t. is up, Ant. Ill, 5,12 (i. e. 1, 4, 8. Mcb. V, 5, 37. Absolutely, with reference Lepidos, the last of the three triumvirs). either to single things or to whole sentences or 2) as a fractional number, — one of three eqnal speeches: with this she seizeth on his palm, Ven. 25. (parts): the t. part of a minute, Mids II, 2, 2. a full t. 811. 1121. this said, 217. 865. at this Adonis smiles, part. Cor. V, 6, 78. Substantively: Lr. I, 1, 82. 88. 241. this I do to captivate the eye, 281. what hour is Ant. II, 2, 63. Cymb. V, 4, 19. three —s (i. e. the thisl 495. how is it that this lives in thy mind? Tp. I, whole, all) All's II, 5, 32. In Tp. IV, 3 O. Edd. I 2, 49. tell me if this might be a brother, 118. is not this haw given you here a t. of mine own life; M. Edd. true t 267. for this thou shah have cramps, 325. didst thread or thrid. thou offer her this (dog) from met Gent. IV, 4, 58. your T h l r i k t m i f l i , a kind of constable; substituted nose smells 'no' in this (Nathaniel's nose) LLL V, 2, (on account of Sly's answer) by M. Edd. for head- 569. 0 Antony, I have followed thee to this, A n t V, borough of O. Edd. in Shr. Ind. 1, 12. Corrupted to 1, 36. that our stars should divide our tgualness to this, 48 ( = to this point, this extremity), take this tharborough in LLL I, 1, 185. from this, {fit be otherwise, Hml. II, 2,156. when thou Thirdly, in the third place: Ado V, 1, 222. Thlr«t, subst. want and desire of drink: to quench shah have overlooked this, IV, 6,13 etc. etc. Opposed his t. Shr. 1, 1, 24. unstanched t. H6C II, 6, 83. = to that: applying this to that, and so to so, Ven. 713. two ships, of Corinth that, of Epidaurus this, Err. I, 1, any desire: not in t.for revenge, Cor. I, 1, 25. Thirst, vb. 1) to feel want and desire of drink: 94etc. (cf. That). Plur. these: tired with all these, to all, and him, we t. Mcb. Ill, 4, 91. With for: t.for for restful death J cry, Sonn. 66, 1 (i. e. the following drink, Yen. 92. for blood, H6A III, 1, 117. With considerations), these are they, Tp. II, 2, 109. nor the lover's (melancholy) which is €tll these, As IV, 1, 15. after: and more (blood) —s after, All's 111, 1, 4. 2) to have any vehement desire: whom J so much there lie, and there thy character; there these, W i n t t. to see, W i n t IV, 4, 524. dost thou t. to have me fold 111, 3, 47. one of these is true, IV, 4, 586. all these and up Parca's fatal webt H5 V, 1, 20 (Pistol's speech). more we hazard by thy stay, H6A IV, 6, 40. these indeed seem, Hml. I, 2, 83. last, and as much containing With after: —in; after prey, H6B IV, 4, 51. as all these, IV, 5, 87. where virtue is, these are more Thirsty, feeling want and desire of drink: her virtuous, Oth. Ill, 3, 186. are Utters brought, the tenour t. lips, Ven. 543. our natures do pursue, tike rats that these, Per. Ill Prol. 24. Emphatically (evidently exravin down their proper bane, a t. evil; and when we plained by a gesture, as this in Hml. II, 2,156): O drink we die, Meas. I, 2, 134 ( a t. evil — an evil of could this kiss be printed in thy hand, that thou mightst thirst, a thirst-evil, i. e. an evil thirsted for. cf. their think upon these by the seal, through whom a thousand hungry prey in H6A I, 2, 28; and see Appendix). sighs are breathed for thee, H6B III, 2, 344 (i. e. my LLL V, 2, 372. Shr. V, 2, 144. H4A I, 1, 5. H6C lips). The plural attracted by the form of the preII, 3, 15. my heart is t.for that noble pledge, Cues. dicate: these are devils, Tp.11,2,91. thesebefine things, IV,3,160. to be t. after tottering honour, Per. Ill, 2,40. 120. Ill, 3, 30. V, 259. Gent. II, 7, 72. IV, 1, 5. V, 4, Thirteen, ten and three: Tw. V, 252. 255. John 14. Err. IV, 3, 10. LLL 1,1, 47. 70. Ill, 22. Mid«. II, 460. H6A I, 4, 78. Tim. II, 2, 120.

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II, 1, 81. As IV, 1, 107. H6B III, 1, 64. H8 IV, 2, 154 etc. Not only these, but also this, absol. with reference to persons: to the most of men this is a Caliban, Tp. I, 2, 480. which is that Barnardinet This, my lord, Meas. V, 483. Hymen now with luckier issue speed's than this for whom we rendered up this woe, Ado V, 3, 33. Hector was but a Troyan in respect of this, L L L V, 2, 640. there be fools alive, I wis, silvered o'er; and so was this, Mercb. II, 9, 69. we'll make an instrument of this, Wint. IV, 4, 637. they are both hanged, and so would this be, H5 IV, 4, 78. he was a man; this in respect a child, H6C V, 5, 56. a son some year elder than this, Lr. I, 1, 20. Applied to notions of time, this — 1) the present; this day = to-day: Meas.1,2,182. Err.V,204. Merch. II, 2, 154. IV, 1, 409. H4A II, 4, 176. H6C II, 6, 20. H8 IV, 1, 75. Tit. I, 235 etc. This, absolutely, = tbe present time, now: between this and supper, Cor. IV, 3, 43. the time 'twixt this and supper, Mcb. Ill, 1, 26. and as a stranger ... hold thee from this for ever, Lr. 1, 1, 118. Particularly in the phrases by this and ere this; cf. By and Ere. 2) = last; this other day = very lately: writ to me this other day, All's IV, 3, 226. you denied to fight with me this other day, Wint. V, 2, 140. and said this other day, H4A III, 3, 152. did but try us this other day, Tim. Ill, 6, 3. when your lordship this other day sent to me, 46. a prediction I read this other day, Lr. I, 2, 153. this even — last evening: she did intend confession at Patrick's cell this even; and there she was not, Gent. V,2,42. this night = last night: my troublous dream this night doth make me sad, H6B I, 2, 22. this month, this week etc. = last month, since a month etc : whereon this month I have been hammering, Gent. I, 3, 18. where have you been these two days1 IV, 4, 48. have done any time these three hundred years, Wiv. I, 1, 13. this week he hath been heavy, Err. V, 45. these fifteen years you have been in a dream, Shr. Ind. 2, 81. have been so any time these four hours, Wint. V, 2,147. the language I have learned these forty years, R2I, 3, 159. within these forty hours Surrey durst better have burnt that tongue, H8 III, 2, 253. he hath put me off to the succession of new days this month, Tim. II, 2, 20. how does your honour for this many a dayl Hml. Ill, 1, 91. IMA II, 3, 41. H6A I. 4, 16. H6B IV, 2, 2. IV, 10, 3. 41. Troil. V, 2, 182. Cor. I, 1, 59. Caes. II, 1, 88. Lr. IV, 1, 14. Cymb. IV, 2, 66 etc. Often this for these (the sum being reckoned np, as it were, in a total): which for this nineteen years we have let slip, Meas. I, 3,21. has been a vile thief this seven year, Ado 111, 3, 134. who for this seven years hath esteemed him ..., Shr. Ind. 1, 122. I have forsworn his company this two and twenty years, H4A II, 2, 17. that I did not this seven year, II, 4,343. I have maintained that salamander this two and thirty years, III, 3, 54. this seven years did not Talbot see his son, H6A IV, 3, 37. have ventured this many summers in a sea of glory, H8 III, 2, 360. for this many hundred years, Bom. IV, 3,40 (only in Q2; the rest these), hath lain this two days, V, 3, 176 (only Q2). this three years I have taken a note of it, Hml. V, 1, 150 (Ff these). I have not seen him this two days, Lr. I, 4, 77. this twenty years ... these demesnes have been my world, Cymb. Ill, 3, 69. who for this three months hath not spoken, Per. V, 1, 24. 3) = next to come: this night I'll waste in sorrow, Ven.

583. this night he meaneth to climb ..., Gent. II, 6, 33. he's safe for these three hours, Tp. Ill, 1, 21. 'twill be this hour ere I have done weeping, Gent. II, 3, 1. within these three days his head to be chopped o f f , Meas. I, 2, 69. within these two days he will be here, IV, 2,213. within these two months ...I expect return, Merch. I, 3, 158. within these ten days if that thou be'st found, As I, 3, 45. for these two hours I will leave thee, IV, I , 180. within these three hours 'twill be time, All's IV, 1, 27. there shall not these seven years be born another such, Wint. IV, 4, 589. I must leave you within these two hours, H4A II, 3, 39. nor shall we need his help these fourteen days, 111,1,88. the first of this next month, H6B II, 4, 71. are like to dance these three days, 118 V, 4, 68. shall hold ye play these two months, 90 etc. this for these: he cannot draw his power this fourteen days, H4A IV, 1, 126. within this three hours will fair Juliet wake, Rom. V, 2, 25. In other cases, likewise, now pointing to what has preceded, now to what is to follow: this il is to be a peevish girl, Gent. V, 2, 49 (German: so geht's, wenn etc.). this it is, when men are ruled by women, B3 I, 1, 62. why, this it is, see, see.' H8 II, 3, 81. this it is to have a name, Ant. II, 7, 12. Hector's opinion is this in way of truth ( = as I said), Troil. II,2, 189. this for him, Ant. 111,12,15. On the other hand: why, this it is: my heart accords thereto, and yet a thousand times it answers 'no', Gent. I, 3, 90. marry, this it is, sir, Ado III, 5,7 ( = I shall tell you). your reason1 This it is:..., Caes. IV, 3, 198. but this il is: our foot shall stay with us, Ant. IV, 10, 4. this above all: to thine own self be true, Hml. 1, 3, 78. if thou fall, 0 then imagine this, the earth ...thy footing trips, Ven. 721. this is my spite, that, thou being dead, the day should yet be light, 1133. at last she smilingly with this gives o'er: Fool, fool, quoth she, Lucr. 1567. let this be done: put them..., Meas. IV, 3, 90. what was his cause of angerf The noise goes, this: there is among the Greeks . . . , Troil. I, 2, 12. nor will he yield me this, to show him ..., Tim. 1, 2, 200etc. Used, not to define or point to something, but to designate things or persons as sufficiently known in their qualities; sometimes in a good, oftener in a bad sense: shall cool the heat of this descending sun, Ven. 190. whether doth my mind... drink up the monarchs' plague, this flattery, Sonn. 114, 2. where should they find this grand liquor that hath gilded 'emt Tp. V, 280. alas! this parting strikes poor lovers dumb, Gent. II, 2 , 2 1 . what should it be that he respects in her,... if this fond Love were not a blinded godt Gent. IV, 4, 201. as these black masks proclaim an enshield beauty, Meas. II, 4, 79 (cf. Rom. I, 1, 236). how will you do to content this substitute f III, 1, 192. she should this Angela have married, 221. her combinate husband, this well-seeming Angelo, 231. this Angela was not made by man and woman, 111, 2, 111. this Claudio is condemned for untrussing, 189. what is the news from this good deputyf IV, 1, 27. get you some of this distilled Carduus Benedictus, Ado III, 4, 73. for men's sake, the authors of these women, L L L IV, 3, 359. Lord, what fools these mortals be, Mids. Ill, 2, 115. where are these lads? where are these heartst IV, 2, 25. now will I stir this gamester. As I, 1, 170. this duke hath ta'en displeasure 'gainst his gentle niece, I, 2, 289. 0 this learning, what a thing it is! Shr. 1,2, 160. as we watch these kites that bale and beat, Shr. IV, 1, 198.

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shall we hear this dialogue between the fool and the jthat I kindle the boy t. As I, 1, 179. let your wedding soldier f All's IV, 3, 112. out of this nettle danger toe be to-morrow: t. will I invite the duke, V, 2, 16. you pluck this flower safety, H4A II, 3, 10. like one of are transported by calamity t. where more attends you, these harlotry players, II, 4, 436. how subject we old Cor. I, 1, 78. cf. Wiv. Ill, 5, 77. T h i t h e r w a r d , in that direction: he's gone to serve men are to this vice of lying! II4B III, 2, 326. these fellows of infinite tongue, that can rhyme themselves the duke of Florence: we met him t. All's 111, 2, 55. into ladies' favours, they do always reason themselves Thaas, see Thous. out again, H5 V, 2, 163. these women are shrewd Thamas, Christian name of several persons: T. of tempters, H6A I, 2, 123. where be these uarders, I, 3, Woodstock Duke of Gloster, sixth son of Edward 111, 3. have you dispatched this thing? H6B III, 2, 6. where R2 1, 2, 16. H6B II, 2, 16. T. of Clarence, son of are these porters, these lazy knavest H8 V, 4, 73. Henry IV, H4B IV, 4, 16. 19. 21. 41. Sir T. More, where is this Hector 1 Troil. V, 5, 44. this peace is Lord chancellor in the reign of Henry VIII, H8 III, nothing but to rust iron, Cor. IV, 5, 234. these happy 2, 393. Sir T. Bullen, father of the second wife of masks that kiss fair ladies' brows, Bom. I, 1, 236 (cf. Henry VIII, H8 I, 4, 92. Sir T. Erpingham, R2 II, 1, Meas. II, 4, 79). where's this giilt what, Juliet, I, 3, 283. H5 IV, 1, 13. 24. 96. Sir T. Gargrave, H6A I, 4. these tedious oldfools! Hml. II, 2, 223. when I have 4, 63. 88. SirT. Grey, H5 II Chor. 25. 11,2,150. Sir stolen upon these sons-in-law, Lr. IV, 6, 190. the un- T. Lovell, B3 IV, 4, 520. H8 1, 2, 185. I, 3, 16. 49. tuned and jarring senses, 0, wind up of this child- 64. I, 4, 10. II, 1, 82. V, 1, 5. 7. 10. 22. 27 etc. T. changed father, IV, 7, 17. the ingratitude of this Se- Mowbray Duke of Norfolk/R2 I, 1, 6. 29. 110. I, 3, Uucus does even make me wild, Ant. V, 2, 153. Hence 16. 38. 110. H4B HI, 2, 31. T. Earl of Surrey, R3 these sometimes found, where those wonld be expect- V, 3, 69. Sir T. Vaughan, R3 II, 4, 43. T. Cromwell, ed : with these nails I 'II pluck out these (i. e. thy) false H8IV, 1,108. T_ Horner, H6B 1,3,29. T.Page. Wiv. eyes. Err. IV, 4, 107. why have these banished and 1, 1,46. T. Wai t, H4B 111, 2, 147. Rice ap T. R3 IV, forbidden legs dared once to touch a dust of England's 5, 12. grounds B2 II, 3, 90 (Qq those), if I shall return once T. a name commonly applied to tapsters: Pompey more to kiss these lips, I will appear in blood, Ant. addressed as T. tapster by Mrs Overdone: Meas. I, Ill, 13, 174. will I cause these of Cyprus to mutiny, 2, 115. Thane, a leathern strap (part of a bridle): throwOth. II, 1,281. cf. especially Meas. II, 4,79 and Rom. I, 1, 236, with the notes of the commentators. ing the base t.from his bending crest, Ven. 395; cf. 392. Peculiarities of use: = such: would run to these T h a r n , 1) a sharp prickle growing from the stem and these extremities, Caes. II, 1, 31. with arms en- of a plant; a spine: Lucr. 492. Sonn. 35, 2. All's I, cumbered, thus, or this head-shake, Hml.1,5,174 (shown 3, 135. IV, 2, 19. IV, 4, 32. Wint. I, 2, 329. R2 IV, by a gesture), these many = so many: these many 323. H6A II, 4, 69. H6C 111, 2, 175. V, 5,13. Rom. shall die, Caes. IV, 1,1. Having as for its correlative: I, 4, 26. The nightingale or Philomel supposed to do me this courteous office as to know of the knight lean, in singing, her breast against a thorn, to make what my offence to Aim is, Tw. Ill, 4, 278. under these her song more doleful: whiles against a t. thou bearest hard conditions as this time is like to lay upon us, Caes. thy part, to keep thy sharp woes waking, Lucr. 1135. I, 2, 174. she leaned her breast up-till a t., and there sung the = thus or so: what am I that thou shouldst con- dolefullest ditty, Pilgr. 382. Figurative ose: those —s temn me thist Ven. 205. further I will not flatter you that in her bosom lodge, Hml. 1,5,87. the —s we stand ... than this, that nothing do I see in you ... should upon! Wint. IV,4,596; and quibbling: the roses fearmerit any hate, John II, 518. this long's the text, Per. fully on —s did stand, Sonn. 99, 8 (felt very uneasy). II Prol. 40 (perhaps long substantively. Ff. thus long). 2) a tree or shrub armed with spines: the cankerThisbe (O. Bdd. thisby or Thisbie, a form re- blooms hang on such —*, Sonn. 54, 7. ne'er to pluck tained by M. Edd. only in the speeches of the clowns) thee from thy t. Pilgr. 238 and LLLIV,3,112. through the mistress of Pyramus: Mids. I, 2, 13. 46. Ill, 1,10. ... prickinggoss and —s, Tp.IV, 180. withering on the III, 2,18. IV,2,40. V, 57. 131. 267. 271. 319.366 etc. virgin t. Mids. 1,1,77. a bush of —s, III, 1, 61. briers Merch. V, 7. Rom. II, 4, 45. and —s, III, 2, 29. bush of t. V, 136. plant this t., this Thisby, see Thisbe. canker, H4A I, 3, 176. H6A II, 4,33. H6B III, 1, 67. T h l s n e , Bottom's blunder for Thisbe: Mids. H6C III, 2,175. Figuratively: among the — s and dangers of this world, John IV, 3, 141. I, 2, 55. Thlatle, a prickly plant of the class Syngenesia T h a r n - b o t h , a shrub that has thorns: Mids. (Cirsium): Ado III, 4, 76. 80. Mids. IV, 1, 12. H5 V, 263. T h a r n y , full of thorns, or pricking like thorns; V, 2, 52. T h i t h e r , to that place: Lucr. 113. Sonn. 153,12. properly and metaphorically: t. brambles, Ven. 629. Pilgr. 190. Gent. 1, 1, 55. I, 3, 29. Ill, 1, 128. 145. t. hedgehogs, Mids. 11,2,10. the t. point of bare distress, Wiv. Ill, 5, 77. IV, 4, 27. 44. Meas. Ill, 2, 67. Err. As II, 7, 94. a t. wood, Shr. Ind. 2, 59. H6C III, 2, IV, 1, 112. V, 224. Ado I, 3, 67. II, 1, 267. Ill, 2, 3. 174. V,4,67. the sharp t. points of my alleged reasons, LLL II, 96. IV, 3, 374. V, 2, 312. Mids. 1, 1, 251. H8 II, 4, 224. the steep and t. way to heaven, Hml. 1, Meich. IV, 1,455. As IV, 3,162. Shr. IV, 3,188. All's 3, 48. a —er piece of ground, Per. IV, 6, 153. III, 2, 75. Wint. IV, 2, 57. R2 III, 2, 78. H4A II, 3, T h a r a a g h , prep, throngli: to show her bleeding 118. H6A III, 1,51. H6B 1,4,78. Ill, 1,290. IV, 5, body t. Rome, Lucr. 1851. go t. the streets, Wiv. IV, I I . H6C III, 1, 30. V, 3, 21. V, 6, 67. R3 I, 2, 107. 5, 32. t. bush, t. brier, ... t. flood, t.flre, Mids. II, 1, II, 4, 69. V, 2, 13. H8 I, 1, 112. Oth. II, 1, 216 (Qq 3. 5 (Ql Ff through), and t. this distemperature we see hither) etc. Seemingly = to that (but the idea of the seasons alter, 106 (Q-2 Fl .4 through), how he glisters change of place always retained): nothing remains but t. my rust, Wint. Ill, 2, 172 (O. Edd. through), with

1214

T

Cain go wander t. shades of night, R2 V, 6, 43 (Qq through; Ff through the shades), the false revolting Normans t. thee disdain to call us lord, H6B IV, 1,87. be led U our streets, Cor. V,3,115 (Fl through), whose eyes do never give but t. laughter, Tim. IV, 3,492. these words become your lips as they pass t. them, V, 1,198. will follow the fortunes and affairs of noble Brutus t. the hazards of this untrod state, Coes. Ill, 1,136. to be led t. the streets of Rome, V, 1, 110. t. tattered clothes small vices do appear, Lr. IV, 6, 168 (Qq through). T h a r a n g h , adv. through: who, half t., gives o'er, H4B I, 3, 59 (Ff through), it pureed me t. Per. IV, 3, 35. T h a r a n f h , adj. complete, full, perfect: all his behaviours did make their retire to the court of his eye, peeping t. desire, L L L II, 235 (Qs through). T k a r i D i h h r e , writing of some M. Edd. in Cymb. I, 2, 11; see Throughfare. T h w i O f h l T (cf. Throughly) fully, completely: would t. woo her, wed her and bed her and rid the house of her, Shr. I, 1, 149. to look into this business t. H6B II, 1, 202. we shall heat you t. anon, V, 1,169. these are almost t persuaded, Cor. I, 1, 205. T h a n (apostrophized: th'art: Shr. IV,4,17. All's II, 4, 28. Ill, 6, 88. Tw. II, 3, 128. Cor. IV, 5, 100. Tim. I, 2, 34. II, 2, 58. IV, 3, 481 etc. M. Edd. thou'rt. O. Edd. thou'rt in Wint. I, 2, 211. Meas. I, 2 , 3 3 etc. th'hast, Tim. IV, 3, 394. Lr. V, 3 , 3 5 . 173. th'hadst: Tim. IV, 3, 309; M. Edd. thou hadst), objective case thee; personal pronoun of the second person in the singular number; oftener used than at present, as being the customary address from superiors to inferiors, and expressive, besides, of any excitement of sensibility; of familiar tenderness as well as of anger; of reverence as well as of contempt. (Thus the constant address of Venus to Adonis in Ven. is thou, of Adonis to Venus you. Tarquin and Lucrece, being both in a state of extreme emotion, constantly address each other with thou. The swaggering host in Wiv. uses thou to every body, as long as he is in his pride, but you, when he is crestfallen, Wiv. IV, 6, 6. In a solemn style even princes are addressed with thou: Err. V, 191. H5 IV, 7, 74. H8 V, 1, 162. Cymb. Ill, 1, 5; whereas Falstaff uses you even to Jove: Wiv. V,5, 6. cf. Abbott's Shakespearian Grammar p. 153 sq.). Thou and you alternating: for you, most wicked sir, ... I do forgive thy rankest fault, and require my dukedom of thee, Tp. V, 133. sir, by your leave; hast thou or word or wit etc. Meas. V, 368. what is in youl why doest thou tear itt L L L IV, 3,200. what wilt thou dot ...get you in, As I, 1, 80. your father were a fool to give thee all, Shr. II, 403. you notorious villain, didst thou never see thy master's father t V, 1, 54. come you, my lord, to see my open shame t now thou dost penance too, H6B II, 4, 20 (you in the first sentence preferred on account of the appellative 'my lord'), seal you this league with thy embracements, R3 II, 1, 29 (Qq thou; ci. my peace we will begin, Cymb. V, 5, 459). thou wouldst be gone to join with Richmond; I will not trust you, sir, IV, 4, 491 ('when the appellative sir is used, even in anger, thou generally gives place to you'. Abbott). if you plead as well for them as I can say nay to thee for myself, 111, 7, 53. you play the spaniel, ... but whatsoever thou takest me for, thou hast a cruel nature, H8 V, 3, 128. you are kindly met, sir: fare thee well, Tim. Ill, 2, 31. if thou beest not immortal,

look about you, Caes. II, 3, 7. as in the rest you said thou hast been godlike perfect, Per. V, 1, 208 etc. Joined with other words; with an adjective: by cruel cruel thee quite overthrown, Rom. IV, 5, 57. good thou, save me a piece of marchpane, 1,5,9. With substantives in the vocative case: thou dearest Perdita, Wint. IV, 4, 40. thou Icarus, H6A IV, 6, 55. fellow thou, awake, Caes. IV, 3, 301. thou drone, thou snail, Err. II, 2, 196. 0 thou thing, Wint. II, 1, 82. thou dotard, II, 3, 74. why, thou loss upon loss, Merch. Ill, 1, 96. thou unadvised scold, John II, 191. thou full dish of fool, Troil. V, 1,10. thou disease of a friend, Tim. III, 1,56. Preceding and following terms of reproach (in O. Edd. without the comma employed by M. Edd.) : thou deboshedfish thou, Tp.lll, 2,29. thou jesting monkey thou, 52. thou drunkard thou, Err. Ill, 1, 10. thou gaoler thou, IV, 4, 112. thou dissembler thou, Ado V, I, 53. thou knave thou, H4A III, 3, 141. 147. thou thing of no bowels thou, Troil. II, 1, 54. I shall forestall thee, Lord Ulysses thou, IV, 5,230. thou damnable box of envy thou, V, 1, 29. thou tassel of a prodigals purse thou, 36 etc. Redundant after imperatives: wipe thou thine eyes, T p . I, 2, 25. know thou, for this I entertain thee, Gent. IV, 4, 75. follow thou thy desperate sire, H 6 A IV, 6. 54 etc. As a dativus commodi : although thou steal thee all my poverty, Sonn. 40,10. made thee no mis takings, Tp. I, 2, 248. thou wilt never get thee a husband, Ado II, 1, 20. I'll devise thee brave punishments for him, V, 4, 130. get thee a sword, H6B IV, 2, 1 etc. Thee reflexively: withdraw thee, Gent. V, 4, 18. get thee away, Err. 1, 2, 16. bear thee well, Ado 111, 1, 13. set thee down, LLL IV, 3, 4. prepare thee, Merch. IV, 1,324. till thou canst quit thee, As 111,1,11. scratch thee but with a pin, III, 5, 21. warm thee, Shr. Ind. 1, 10. uncase thee, 1, 1, 212. betake thee to't, Tw. Ill, 4, 240. disease thee, Wint. IV, 4, 648. yield thee to my hand, John II, 156. submit thee, 159. cloister thee, R2 V, 1, 23. unbuttoning thee, H4A I, 2, 3. to hide thee, 11, 4, 291. thou bearest thee like a king, V, 4, 36. employ thee for our good, H6A III, 3, 16. no way canst thou turn thee, IV, 2, 25. hide thee from their looks, H6B II, 4, 23. hast thought thee happy, IV, 1, 55. hide thee from the bear, V, 2, 2. address thee instantly, 27. resolve thee, H6C I, 1, 49. bethink thee, I, 4, 44. hie thee to hell, R 3 I, 3, 143 (cf. Hie), defend thee, 111, 5, 19. guard thee well, Troil. IV, 5, 253. do not chafe thee, 260. speed thee, Cor. IV, 5, 93. hast thou hurt thee, Tit. II, 3, 203. calm thee, IV, 1, 83. lay thee all along, Rom. V, 3, 3 etc. Thou for thee: nothing this wide universe I call, save thou, my rose, Sonn. 109, 14. Thee for thou: to breed another thee, Sonn. 6, 7. 'tis thee, myself, that for myself I praise, 62,13. if this should be thee, Tw. II,5,113. how agrees the devil and theef H 4 A I , 2 , 1 2 7 . here's none but thee and I , H6B I, 2, 69. it is thee I fear, IV,1,117. Iam notthee, Tim. IV,3,277. Iwould not be thee, Lr. I, 4, 204. Particularly after imperatives: look thee, Gent. 11,5,30. Wint. 111,3,116. Cor. V, 2, 77. Tim. IV, 3, 530. hark thee, Gent. Ill, 1, 127. run thee to the parlour, Ado 111, 1,1. stand thee close, III, 3, 110. IV, 1, 24. sit thee down, L L L I, 1, 317. Mids. IV, 1, 1. hear thee, Merch. II, 2, 189. hold thee that to drink, Shr. IV, 4,17. All's IV, 5, 46. hang thee, Tw. II, 5, 114. return thee, HGA 111, 3, 56. stay thee, H6C III, 2, 58. take thee that, Mcb. II, 1, 5. break thee

T

1215

o f f , Hml. I, 1, 40. come thee on, Ant. IV, 7, 16 etc. fact: tears harden lust, t. marble wear with raining, ef./are thee well, sub Fare. Lucr 560. t. his false finger have profaned the ring, Thou easily omitted, as the second person it suffi- mine shall not do his Julia so much wrong, Gent IV, 4, ciently indicated by the inflexion of the verb: then 141. cf. below t. that in Tw. I, 2, 48. Lr. IV, 6, 219. earnest in smiling, Tw. V, 357. prateit, Bom. IV, 5, Be and were often fonnd so (but cf. Be, with respect 135. 138 (Q2 prates; the surreptitious Ql and most to their being used as indicative forms), f. i.: only M. Edd. pretly). shouldst have kept one to thyself, Tim. Collatinus finds hit wife, t. it were late in the night, I, 1, 275. Particularly in questions: why dost abhor spinning amongst her maids, Lucr. Arg. 9. by whose met Ven. 138. why didst not tell me soonert Gent. Ill, aid, weak masters t. ye be, I have bedimmed the ran, 1, 390. art not ashamedf Ado 111, 4, 28. hast any Tp. V, 41. and true he swore, t. yet forsworn he were, philosophy in theel As III, 2, 22. ioast ever in count Err.IV, 2,10. V,311. Mids. 111,2,325. Merch. IV, 1, 34. wast born in the forest heret V, 1, 24. art richt 198. H6C II, 6, 34 etc. 27. All's IV, 1, 10. Tw. II, 3, 26. 122. V, 202. Wint. No marvel t. (with the subjunctive) = it is not I, 2, 121. 325. Ill, 2, 176. Ill, 3, 81. IV, 3, 78. IV, 4, strange that: no marvel t. thy horse be gone, Ven. 390. 262. II4A II, 1, 34. II, 4, 3. H6A I, 3, 22. V, 3, 68. no marvel then t. I mistake my view, Sonn. 148.11. no H8 I, 2, 202. Tit. II, 3, 209. II, 4, 21. V, 1, 46. Tim. marvel t. he pause, Err. 11, 1, 32. Mids. II, 2, 96. B3 I, 1, 206. 223. 226. 235. II, 2, 84. IV, 3, 221. 480. 1, 4, 64. Troil. II, 2, 33. Lr. II, 1, 100. Caes. 1,1, 31. Hml. 11!, 2,298. V, 2, 83. Lr. II, 2,1. I care not or I reck not t. (with the subjunctive) 114. II, 4, 196. Ill, 4, 4. Oth. II, 1, 260. Ill, 3, 110. = it is all one to me, it does not signify: I care not A n t V, 2, 296. Cymb. Ill, 5, 125. IV, 2, 81. 382. V, t. he burn himself in love, Gent. II, 5, 55. I reck not t. 5, 110 etc. I end my life to-day, Troil. V, 6,26. Elliptically, what T h a u , vb. to address with the pronoun thou (which t. = what should I care? never mind; and hence — was thought indecent, when done to strangers): if thou though alone: what t. the rose have prickles», yet 'tit —est him some thrice, it shall not be amiss, Tw. III, 2,48. plucked, Ven. 574. what t. her frowning brows be bent, T h a a f h , conj. 1) notwithstanding that, however: her cloudy looks will calm, Pilgr. 311. what t. she strive travellers ne'er did lie, I. fools at home condemn 'em, to try her strength, her feeble force will yield, 317. what Tp. Ill, 3, 27. t. the seas threaten, they are merciful, t. care killed a cat, Aou hast mettle enough in thee to V, 178. Gent. II, 1, 178. II, 4, 64. V, 4, 20. Wiv. I, kill care, Ado V, 1,132. what t. he love your Hermiat I, 174. II, 1, 148. Err. I, 1, 70 etc. etc. Elliptically: Lord, what t.t Mids. II, 2, 109. what t. I be not so in governed him in strength, t. not in lust, Ven. 42. thou grace as you,... this you should pity rather, III, 2,232. art no man, t.of a man's complexion, 215. lovers' hours As III, 5, 37. H6A V, 3,101. H6B 1,1,158. H6C V, are long, t. seeming short, 842. Tp. II, 1, 251. Gent. 4, 3. B3 I, 1, 154. H8 111, 2, 97. Ant. Ill, 13, 4. what III, 1, 103. Ado II, 1, 215. Wint. I, 2, 284 etc. t. alone, without a following clause, = I do not care; Followed by the indicative, in speaking of things it is all the same to me: I keep but three men, ... but founded on fact: my woes are tedious, t. my words are what t.t yet I live like a poor gentleman born, Wiv. I, brief, Lucr. 1309. thy vile race, t. thou didst learn, 1, 286. but what t.t courage I As HI, 3, 51. by chance had that in't ..., Tp. I, 2, 359. t. thou canst swim like but not by truth; what 1.1 John 1,169. it (my iron) is a a duck, thou art made like a goose, II, 2, 135. t. I am simple one, but what t.t it will toast cheese, H5 II, 1,9. struck to the quick, yet ... 'gainst my fury do I take T. that = though (cf. That): t. thai nature with a part, V, 25. I do forgive thee, unnatural t. thou art, 79. beauteous wall doth oft close in pollution, yet of thee I thy letter» may be here, t. thou art hence, Gent. Ill, 1, will believe ..., Tw. I, 2, 48. John III, 3,57. Cor. I, 248. (. Page stands so firmly on his wife's frailty, yet I, 144. Lr. IV, 6, 219. Oth. I, 1, 71. Ill, 3, 261. I cannot put off my opinion, Wiy. II, 1, 241. t. we are 2) as t. = as if: I thank you at much at 1.1 did, justices ..., we have some salt of our youth in us, II, 3, Wiv. 1,1, 291. shall I be appointed hours, at 1.1 knew 48. the law hath not been dead, t. it hath slept, Meas. not what to leave and what to taket Shr. 1,1,104. I'll II, 2, 90. t. he hath fallen by prompture of the blood, give her thanks, at t. the bid me stay by her a week, yet hath he in him such a mini of honour, II, 4, 178. II, 179. not of this country, t. my chance it now to use it, III, 2, T h « u | h , adv. however, yet your hands than mine 230. Err. 1,1,147. V, 3. Merch. II, 3,18. As 1,2,48. are quicker for a fray, my legs are longer t. to run W i n t II, 1, 189. IV, 4, 732. R2 I, 2, 24. H6A I, 4, away, Mids. Ill, 2, 343. would Katharint had never 82. H6B 111, 2, 230. H6C II, 2, 166 etc. seen him t. Shr. Ill, 2, 26. I would not be so sick t.for Followed by the subjunctive in hypothetical cases: his place, H8 II, 2, 83. t. they be outstripped by every pen, reserve them for my T h a u g h t , 1) any thing formed in the mind; an love, Sonn. 32, 6. t. thou repent, yet I have still the idea, a conception, a reflection, a fancy, an opinion, loss, 34, 10. which t. it alter not love's sole effect, yet a recollection, an expectation, a design etc.: the endoth it steal sweet hours, 36, 7. the summer's flower is gine of her —s, Ven. 367; i. e. her tongue; cf. Tit. to the summer sweet, t. to itself it only live and die, 94, III, 1, 82. all my mind, my (., my busy care, is how to 10. I love not lest, t. leu the show appear, 102, 2. I'll get my poifrey from the mare, Ven. 383. whose vulture warrant him for drowning, t. the ship were no stronger t. doth pitch the price so high, 551. the t. of it doth than a nutshell, Tp. 1,1,49. he'll be hanged yet, t. every make my faint heart bleed, 669. the one (hope) doth drop of water swear against it, 62. t. this island seem flatter thee in —s unlikely, in likely —s the other (deto be desert, II, I, 35. IV, 213. V, 41. Wiv. II, 1, 4. spair) kills thee quickly, 989. even in this t. through the 11, 2, 230. Meas. II, 2, 134. Err. Ill, 1, 28. Ill, 2, 13. dark night he stealeth, Lucr. 729. within hit t. her IV, 2, 28. Mids. II, 2, 84. Ill, 1, 138. Merch. 1,1, 56. heavenly image sits, 288. I think good—s whilst other Tw. II, 5, 136. H6A IV, 1,102. Lr. Ill, 3,18 etc. The write good words, Sonn. 85,5. more to know did nevel subjunctive also expressing real things founded on meddle with my — s, Tp. I, 2, 22. I wish mine eyet

1216 would ... shut up my —s, II, 1, 192. thy —* I cleave to, IV, 165. I do begin to have bloody —s, 220. every third t. shall be my grave, V, 311. the table wherein all my —t are charactered, G e n t II, 7, 3. his —* immaculate, 76. my —$ do harbour with my Silvia nightly, III, 1,140. one Julia, thai hit changing — t forget, IV, 4, 124. heaven make you better than your — t , W i r . III, 3,219. I was three or /our times in the t. they were not fairies, V, 5,129. throw away that t. Mens. I, 3,1. let ii not sound a t. upon your tongue against my brother's life, II, 2, 140. —s are no subjects, V, 458. let this be duly performed, with a t. that more depends on it, IV, 2, 127. I speak my t. Ado I, 1, 226. to think so base a t. Merch. II, 7,50. punish me not with your hard — s , As I, 2, 196. never so much as in a t. unborn did I offend your highness, I, 3, 53. there teas no U of pleasing you when she was christened, III, 2, 283. let your highness lay a more noble t. upon mine honour, All's V, 3, 180. I come to whet your gentle —s on his behalf, Tw. Ill, 1, 116. ail the unmuzzled —s that tyrannous heart can think, 130. with t. of such affections, step forth mine advocate, Wint. V, 1, 220. where I may think the remnant of my —s in peace, John V, 4, 46. those —s which honour and allegiance cannot think, B2 II, 1, 207. an no t. I think, II, 2,31. swayed your majesty's good —s away from me, H4A III, 2,131. a power much smaller than the smallest of his —s, H4B I, 3, 30 ( = hopes, expectations). I think you are Sir John Falstaff, and in that t. yield me, IV, 3, 19. question your royal —s, V, 2, 91. we have now no t. in iis but France, H5 I, 2, 302. a name that in my —s becomes me best, 111,3,6. R3I, 1,59. Troil.l, 1,30. II, 3,156. IV, 1,53. Tit. Ill, 1,204 (later Ff a a d t h (O. Edd. thousand), the ordinal of thousand: As IV, 1, 46. Per. V, 1, 136. T h r a c l a n , adj. native of, or pertaining to, Thrace: the T. singer (Orpheus) Mids. V, 49. Tit. II, 4, 51. the T. fatal steeds, H6C IV, 2, 21 (the horses of King Rhesus), the T. tyrant, Tit. I, 138 (Polyinestor, who had murdered Priam's son Polydore). the T. king Adallas, Ant. Ill, 6, 71. T h r a U t m , bondage, slavery: he delivers thee from this world's t. to the joys of heaven, B3 I, 4, 255. T h r a l l , subst. 1) a slave, one subject to another: I , my mistress't. Sonn. 154, 12. look gracious on thy prostrate t. H6A 1, 2, 117. long time thy shadow hath been t. to me, for in my gallery thy picture hangs, II, 3, 36. make me die the t. of Margaret's curse, R 3 IV, 1, 46. that were the slaves of drink and —s of sleep, Mcb. Ill, 6, 13. 2) slavery: love hathforlorn me, living in (. Pilgr. 266. T h r a l l , adj. enslaved, bound in servitude: love makes young men t. and old men dote, Ven. 837. brought in subjection her immortality, and made her t. to living death and pain perpetual, Lucr. 725. T h r a l l , vb. to enslave: nor falls under the blow of —ed discontent, Sonn. 124, 7. that maid whose sudden sight hath —ed my wounded eye, Shr. I, 1, 225. sense to ecstasy was ne'er so — ed but it reserved some quantity of choice, Hml. 111,4,74. cf. Enthralled, which is, almost exclusively, used of the servitude of love. T h r a s h , to beat out from the husk with a flail: first t. the corn, Tit. II, 3, 123. = to drub: thou art here but to t. Trojans, Troil. II, 1, 50. T h r a a h e r , one who thrashes grain: H6C 11,1,131. T h r a n n l c i l , boastful, hectoring: his general behaviour vain, ridiculous and t. L L L V, 1, 14. Caesar's t. brag of'I came, saw, and overcame', As V, 2, 34. T h r e a d , subst. a small twist drawn out to considerable length: golden — s , Lucr. 400. a silken t.

Ado V, 1, 25. Rom. II, 2, 181. thou t. Shr. IV, 3, 108. a skein of t. 111. with needle and t. 121. a bottom of brown t. 138. weave their t. with bones, Tw. II, 4, 46. any silk, any t. Wint. IV, 4, 325. the smallest t. that ever spider twisted, John IV, 3, 127. one t., one little hair, V,7, 54. Emblem of life, as being spun and cut by the Parcae: you have shore with shears his t. of silk, Mids. V, 348 (Thisbe's speech). O Fates, come, come, cut t. and thrum, 291 (Pyramus' speech), let not Bardolph's vital t. be cut, H5 III,6,49 (Pistol's speech), his t. of life had not so soon decayed, H6A 1,1,34. their t. of life is spun, H6B IV, 2, 31. grief shore his old t. in twain, Oth. V, 2, 206. cut his t. of life, Per. I, 2, 108. Figuratively: he draweth out the t. of his verbosity, L L L V, 1, 18. In Tp. IV, 3 O. Edd. I have given you here a third of mine own life; M. Edd. a thread or thrid. T h r e a d , vb. to pass as a thread through the eye of • needle: for a camel to t. the postern of a needle's eye, R2 V, 5, 17. they would not t. the gates, Cor. Ill, 1, 124. — ing dark-eyed night, Lr. II, 1, 121 (the adjective dark-eyed evidently formed in allusion to the eye of a needle, cf. unthread the rude eye of rebellion, J o h n V, 4, 11). T h r e a d b a r e , having the nap worn off, shabby: a t. juggler, Err. V, 239. 'tis t. H6B IV, 2, 8. T h r e a t e n , made of thread: her I. fillet, Compl. 33. the t. sails, H5 III Chor. 10. T h r e a t , subst., used only in verse and in the plur. —s = menaces: Tp. I, 2, 488. G e n t 111, 1, 236 (with many bitter —* of biding there). Mids. Ill, 2, 250. As IV, 3, 110. Wint. Ill, 2, 92. H6C I, 1, 72. 101. Troil. IV, 5, 261. Tim. Ill, 5, 43. Caes. IV, 3, 66. Hml. IV, 1, 14. Lr. IV, 2, 57. T h r e a t , vb. (used only in verse and in the present time), to menace, to threaten; absol.: no more than he that — s , John 111, 1, 347. —est where's no cause, H6B 1,4, 51. Tim. IV, 2, 21. Caes. V, 1, 38. Mcb. II, I, 60. An inf. following: who —s to do as much as ever Coriolanus did, Tit. IV, 4, 67. A clause: whose crooked beak —s if he mount he dies, Lucr. 508. Transitively, a) the person menaced as object: that ever L his foe*, Ven. 620. Lucr. 331. 547. R2 III, 3 , 9 0 . Tit. II, 1, 40. Ant. Ill, 5 , 1 9 . Cymb. IV, 2 , 1 2 7 . t. you me with telling of the king f R3 1,3,113. and t. me I shall never come to blist, Tit. Ill, 1, 273. b) the evil to be inflicted as object: every one did t. to-morrow'* vengeance on the head of Richard, R 3 V, 3, 205. T h r e a t e n , to menace; absol.: though the seas t , they are merciful, Tp. V, 178. Meas. I, 3, 24. Err. 1,1, 10. Merch. II, 7 , 1 8 . Ill, 2 , 1 0 5 . Shr. V, 2, 136. John III, 4,120. V, 2,73. R2 III, 3, 51. H 5 11,4,110. H6B IV, 1, 107. H6C I, 3 , 1 7 . II, 6, 58. V, 3, 4. Tit. 1,134. 11, 1, 4. IV, 2, 94. Tim. V, 1,169. Caes. I, 3, 8. Hml. I I I , 4 , 5 7 . Ant. 1,3,52. 111,13,171. With an inf.: hath —ed to put me into everlasting liberty, Wiv. Ill, 3, 30. IV, 2, 89. Lr. II, 1, 68. Transitively; 1) the thing or person menaced as object: the twigs that t. them, All's III, 5, 56. Wint. Ill, 2, 165. J o h n II, 225. 481. V, 1, 49. H4A V, 4, 42. Hft II, 4, 70. IV Chor. 10. Cor. I, 6, 36. Tit. Ill, 1, 224. Caes. 11, 2, 10. Mcb. II, 4, 6. Per. V, 1, 201. An inf. following: —ed me to strike me, Mids. Ill, 2, 312. With following: —ing Ilion with annoy, Lucr. 1370. Wint. V, 1, 201. H6C V 4, 23. R3 I, 4, 193. Rom. V, 3, 276. Hml. II, 2, 528. Cymb. V, 6, IT. 2) the evil to be inflicted as object:

1218

T

the skies t. present blusters, Wint. Ill, 3, 4. the law that —ed death, Rom. Ill, 3, 139. no less is — ed me, Lr. Ill, 3, 19. — s life or death, Per. I, 3, 25. Threatener, one who menaces: J o h n V , I, 49. T h r e a t e n i n g l y , in a menacing manner: All's II, 3, 87. T h r e e , two and one: Yen. 1064. Sonn. 104, 3. Pilgr. 211. Tp. I, 2, 41. II, 1, 283. Ill, 2, 7. Ill, 3, 53. 104. V, 136. 272. Gent. HI, 2, 33. IV, 4, 4. 19. V, 1, 11. Wiv. 1, 1, 13. II, 2, 327. Ill, 5, 110. Meas. I, 2, 50. T, 362. Err. I, 1, 111. Ado II, 1, 278. Mids. Ill, 2,193. H4A 1,3, 102. Lr. I, 1, 39 etc. etc. the picture of'we t.' Tw. II, 3, 17 (Malone: a common sign, in which two wooden heads are exhibited with this inscription under it, 'We three loggerheads be'; the spectator being supposed to make the third). Substantively: now here is t. studied, L L L I, 2, 54. / a l w a y s took t.—s for nine, V, 2,495. by twos and —s, Wint. I, 2, 438. these four —s of herdsmen, IV, 4, 344. one t. of them hath danced before the king, 345. by ones, by twos, and by —s, Cor. II, 3, 47. Misapplied by Evans for third: Wiv. I, 1, 142. Three-farthlngs • my face so thin that in my ear I durst not stick a rose lest men should say 'Look where t. goes', John I, 143. Dyce: an allusion to the threefarthing silver pieces of Queen Elizabeth, which were very thin, and had the profile of the sovereign with a rose at the back of her head: and we most remember that in Shakespeare's time sticking roses in the ear was a court-fashion. T b r e r - f a r t h l n g - w s r t h , a quantity of the value of three farthings: t. of silk, L L L III, 150 (Ff Q2 three farthings worth). Threefold, three-double, thrice repeated, triple; 1) adj.: a torment thrice t. Sonn. 133, 8. this t. perjury, Gent. II, 6, 5. with t. love, L L L V, 2, 835. according to our t. order ta'en, H4A III, 1,71. t. vengeance, H6B III, 2, 304. a t. death, H6C V, 4, 32. the t. world divided, Caes. IV, 1, 14. 2)adv.: 'tis t. loo little, Gent. 1,1,116. t. renowned, H6C V, 7, 5. t. distressed, R3 II, 2, 86. Three-fast, having three legs: t. stool, Mids. II. 1, 52. Cymb. Ill, 3, 89. T h r e e - h e a d e d , having three heads: Cerberus, that t. cam's, L L L V, 2, 593. Three-heaped: the t. pot shall have ten hoops, H6B IV, 2, 72. Douce: the old drinking-pots, being of wood, were bound together, as barrels are, with hoops; whence they were called hoops. Cade promises that every can which now had three hoops shall be increased in size so as to require ten. T h r e e - h e a r s , of three hours' standing: thy t. wife, Rom. Ill, 2, 99. Three-Inch, three inches high: you t. fool, Shr. IV, 1, 27. T h r e e - l e g g e d , having three legs: to comb your noddle with a t. stool, Shr. 1, 1, 64. T h r e e - m a m t. song-men, Wint. IV, 3, 44 (i. e. singers of songs in three parts), a t. beetle, H4B I, 2, 255 (a rammer managed by three men). T h r e e - n s s k e d , having three corners: the t. word shall bear the olive freely, Ant. IV, 6, 6 (cf. the three corners of the world, John V, 7, 116). Three-pence, a coin of three times the value of a penny: Meas. II, 1,95. 107. 255. H8 II, 3, 36 (at. bowed would hire me), cf. Cor. II, 1, 80.

T h r e e - p i l e , the richest and most costly kind of velvet (called so probably from a richer accumulation of the pile): and in my time wore t. Wint. IV, 3, 14. Name: ¡faster T. mercer, Meas. IV, 3, 11. Three-piled, set with a thick, rich pile; of firstrate quality: thou art good velvet; thou 'rt at. piece, Meas. I, 2, 33 (perhaps with a hidden meaning similar to the German dreihdrig, or with an allusion to peeled, 1. e. stripped of hair). Metaphorically, = superfine, exaggerated: t. hyperboles, L L L V, 2, 407. Threescore, sixty: Sonn. 11, 8. Ado I, 1, 201. H4A II, 4, 467. H5 IV, 3, 3 (t. thousand). H6C III, 3, 93. Hml. II, 2, 73 (Ff three), t. and ten, H4A II, 2, 27. Mcb. II, 4, 1. TkiM"flQl(c41 a bast, proud, shallow, beggarly, t. ... knave, Lr. II,2,16. Three suits as well as "a hundred pounds a year" (the smallest income of a juryman) and "worsted stockings" seem to have been proverbial to denote what might have been an object of envy to extreme poverty (cf. Lr. 111,4,141 and Ado IV, 2,88) but of contempt in a wooldbe gentleman who sought the society of the great. See Ben Jonson s Epicoene A. Ill Sc. I: "who allows you ... your three suits of apparel a yeartyourfourpairof stockings, one silk,threeworstedt T h r e n e (the following superscription has the Greek form threnos) lamentation, funeral song: whereupon it made this t. to the phoenix and the dove, Phoen. 49. Thresh and Thresher, see Thrash and Thrasher. Threshold, the plank that lies at the bottom of a door: Lucr. 306. L L L III, 118. Merch. I, 3, 120. H6C IV, 7, 11. Cor. I, 3, 82. IV, 5, 124. Thrice, three times: Gent. 1,2, 117. Ill, 1, 365. Wiv. II, 1,26. V, 5 , 5 4 . Ado III, 2, 11. L L L 1,2,41. 54. Merch. II, 2, 173. IV, 1, 227. 234. 318. Shr. Ill, 2, 44. All's II, 5, 33. Tw. Ill, 2, 48. Wint. III. 3, 24. V,2,115. H4A III, 1,137. Ill, 2, 112. B4B IV,4.125. H5 1, 2, 217. IV, 6, 4. V, I, 79. Cor. II, 3, 135. Rom. 1, 1, 98. Tim. Ill, 3, 22. Caes. I, 2, 226. 228. II, 2, 2. Ill, 2, 101. 102. Mcb. I, 3, 35. IV, 1, 1. 2. Hml. I, 2, 202. II, 1, 93. Ill, 2, 269. Lr. Ill, 4, 125. three times and t. alternating: H4A 111, 1, 65. H6B V, 3, 9. H6C I, 4, 10. three times t. L L L V, 2, 488. H6B III, 2, 358. i. three times, Merch. I, 3, 160. the t. three Muses, Mids. V, 52. Used by way of general amplification: makes summer's welcome t. more wished, Sonn. 56, 14. gain by ill t. more than I have spent, 119, 14. a torment t. threefold, 133, 8. he is t. a villain, As I, 1, 61. my limbs are t. themselves, H4B I, 1, 145. t. is he armed that hath his quarrel just, H6B III, 2, 233. Often before adjectives and participles (sometimes hyphened by O. and M. Edd.,but without consistency): t. blessed, Mids. 1,1, 74. t. crowned queen of night, As III, 2, 2 ('alluding to the triple character of Proserpine, Cynthia, and Diana.' Johnson), a t. double ass, Tp. V, 295. my t. driven bed of down, Oth. 1, 3, 232. t.fair lady, Merch. Ill, 2, 147. t. fairer than myself, Ven. 7. t. famed, H6B III, 2, 157. Troil. II, 3, 254. t. gentle, Otb. Ill, 4, 122. (. gorgeous, H5 IV, 1, 283. t. gracious, R2 II, 2, 24. H4A III, 2, 92. t. noble, Shr. Ind. 2,120. R2 III, 3,103. H6B III, 1, 266. Tit. 1, 120. t. nobler, Ant. IV, 14, 95. t. puissant, H5 I, 2, 119. t. renowned, R3 IV, 2, 13. t. repured, Troil. Ill, 2, 23 (Ff t. reputed), t. valiant, H5 IV, 6, 1. Tit. V, 2, 112. t. victorious, H6A IV, 7, 67. t. welcome, Tw. V, 248. H6A I, 2, 47. t. wider, H4B V, 5, 58. t. worse, R2 III,

T

1219

2, 132. t. worthy, LLL V, 1, 151. H5 IV, 4, 66. Troil. as I may, Merch. II, 7, 60. to wive and t. Shr. 1,2, 56. II, 3, 200. he cannot t., unless her prayers ... reprieve him, All's T h r l i , writing of some M. Edd. for third of O. III,4,26. by foolery t. IV,3,374. wouldnothave knaves Edd. in Tp. IV, 3; others thread, q. v. I, long, V, 2, 34. by swaggering could 1 never t. Tw. V, Thrift, 1) frugality, good hnsbandiy: t., t., Ho- 408. the unjust man doth t. Wint. IV, 4, 689. my inratio! the funeral baked meats did coldly furnish forth nocency and Saint George to t. R2 I, 3, 84. as York tie marriage tables, Hml. I, 2, 180. —s to beat back Bolingbroke, II, 2, 144. as 1 intend to 2) profit, gain: I am note about no waste, I am t. in this new world, IV, 78 .ill mayst thou t., if thou grant about t. Wiv. I, 3, 47. French t., you rogues, 93. my any grace, V, 3, 99. we shall t., I trust, H4A I, 3, 300. bargains and my well-won t. Merch. 1,3,51. t. is blessing, say that he t. H6B III, 1, 379. if we mean to t. and do if men steal it not. 91. to see alike mine honour as their good, IV, 3, 17. if you t. well, bring them to Baynards profits, their own particular —s, Wint. I, 2,311. how, castle, B3 III, 5, 98. a jolly —ing wooer, IV, 3, 43. i the name oft., does he rake this together1 B8 III, 2, who —s and who declines, Cor. I, 1, 197. live and t. 109. from myfirst have been inclined to t. Tim. 1,1,118. IV, 6, 23. if 11. well, III visit thee again, Tim. IV, 3, where t. may follow fawning, Hml. Ill, 2,67. the instances 170. seek to t. by that which has undone thee, 210. to that second marriage move are base respects of t. 193. have us t. in our mystery, 457. if ever thou wilt t, bury 3) success, prosperity in any way: I have a mind my body, Lr. IV, 6, 253. I. by other means, V, 3, 34. presages me such t. Merch. 1, 1, 175. you snatch some how I did t. in this fair lady's love, Oth. I, 3, 125. hence for little faults; that's love, to have them fall no Pompey —s in our idleness, Ant. I, 4, 76. if you t. Per. more: you some permit to second ills with ills, each elder II, 1, 157. so he—d, that he is promised to be wived to worse, and make them dread it, to the doers' t. Cymb. fair Marina, V, 2, 9. — to be victorious, to conquer: V, 1, 15 ( = to their advantage). if Lord Percy t. not, H4A IV, 4, 36. as I intend to t. Thriftless, 1) prodigal, extravagant: he shall to-day, H6B V, 2,17. if we t. II6C II, 3, 52. B3 V, 3, spend mine honour with his shame, as t. sons their scra- 267. Lr. V, 2, 2. Ant. IV, 3,10. IV, 4, 9. so 1.1, as a ping fathers'gold, B2 V,3,69. t.ambition,that wilt ravin form of solemn assurance: so t. I at I truly swear the like, R3 II, 1, 11. so t. I and mine, 24. so t. I in my up thine own life's means, Mcb. II, 4, 28. 2) unprofitable: an all-eating shame and t. praise, enterprise, IV, 4, 235. 398. cf. so t. it (greatness) in Sonn. 2, 8. what t. sighs shall poor Olivia breathe! Tw. your game, John IV, 2, 95. so t. Richard as thy foes may fall, H6A III, 1,174. so t. my soul, Bom. U, 2,153. II, 2, 40. Thrifty, frugal, economical, intent on profit: like 4) to succeed (used of things), to go on or turn a t. goddess,she determines herselfthe glory of a creditor, out well, to have a good issue: how —s your love f both thanks and use, Meas.l, 1,39. a proverb never stale Gent. II, 4, 125. your undertaking cannot miss a —ing in t. mind, Merch. II, 5, 55. the t. hire I saved under issue, Wint. II, 2,45. I will not wish thy wishes t. John your father, As II, 3, 39. they are t. honest men, H6B III, 1, 334. I wish your enterprise may t. Caes. Ill, 1, IV, 3,196. at. shoeing-horn in a chain, Troil. V, 1, 61. 13. if this letter speed, and my invention t. Lr. I, 2, 20. Thrill, 1) to affect with a sharp, shivering sen- his comforts t.,his trials well are spent, Cymb. V, 4,104. sation running through the system: to reside in —ing Thrlver, one who makes profit: pitiful—s, in their region of thick-ribbed ice, Meas. Ill, 1, 123. —edwith gazing (Staunton gaining) spent, Sonn. 125, 8. remorse, Lr. IV, 2, 73. T h r e a t , the forepart of the neck, which is the 2) to have a shivering sensation running through passage for food and breath (oftenest used as the best the system, to be chilled: to t. and shake even at the assailable part of an enemy): Tp. I, 1, 43. Ill, 3,45. crying of your nation's crow, John V, 2, 143. doth not Meas. II, 4, 153. IV, 3, 26. LLL III, 15. As 1,1,63. thy blood t. at itt B4A II, 4, 407. I have a faint cold Tw. I, 3,42. H5 II, 1, 24. IV, 4, 15. H6C V, 6, 9. B3 fear — • through my veins, Bom. IV, 3, 15. 1, 3, 189. Troil IV, 4, 56 (my heart will be blown up Thrive (impf. —d, Per. V, 2, 9. partic. — d, Ant. by my t.; Ff. by the root). Cor. IV, 5, 102. V, 4, 8. 59. I, 3, 61) 1) to grow, to increase, to flourish, to take V, 6, 31. 53. Tit. V, 2,197. Tim. 1,2, 53. V, 1,182. well (German gedeihen): love —s not in the heart that Hml. V, 1, 283. Lr. I, 1, 168. A n t II, 5, 35. II, 6, shadows dreadeth, Lucr. 270. truth and beauty shall 144. Ill, 5, 19. Cymb. IV, 2, 150. in the t. of death together t. Sonn. 14, 11. honours t., when rather from = in the jaws of death: LLL V, 2, 865. B3 V, 4, 5. our acts we them derive, All's II, 3,142. wholesome ber- to cut one's t.— to kill, to murder him: Wiv. 1,4,115. ries t. and ripen beet, H5 I, 1, 61. why should it (meat) H4A II, 2,88. H5 II, 1, 73. 96. Ill, 2,119. IV, 4,34. t. and turn to nutriment, Tim. Ill, 1,61. let copulation t. IV, 7, 10. 66. H6B IV, 1, 20. IV, 2, 29. Troil. IV, 4, Lr. IV, 6, 116. 131. Tit. V, 2, 182. Bom. I, 4, 83. Tim. Ill, 5, 44. 2) to prosper in business, to increase in goods and IV, 1, 10. IV, 3, 121. 452. Caes. I, 2, 268. Mcb. Ill, estate: blessed bankrupt, that by love so —th, Ven. 466. 4,16. Hml. IV, 7, 127. Cymb. Ill, 4, 35. fly... toour I will t. Wiv. I, 3, 22. 81. this was a way to t. Merch. enemies' —s, H6A I, 1, 98. fall to their —s, Ant. II. 1, 3, 90. now t. the armourers, H5 II Chor. 3. do well 7, 78. catch each other by the t. B3 I, 3, 189. Oth. V, t. by them, Oth. I, 1, 53. such as have not —d upon the 2, 355. Lies or slanders thrown back into the throat present state, Ant. 1,3,51. letting them (debtors) t. again, from which they proceeded: until it had returned these Cymb. V, 4,20. terms of treason doubled down his t. B2 I, 1, 57. as low 3) to prosper, to succeed in any way, to be fortu- as to thy heart, through the false passage of thy t., thou nate, to be happy: they that t. well take counsel of their liest, 125. I'll turn my part thereof into thy t. H6A II, friends, Ven. 640. that his beauty may the bettert. 1011. 4, 79. the solus in thy teeth, and in thy t. H5 II, 1,51. if he t. and I be cast away, Sonn. 80, 13. love still and thrust these reproachful speeches down his t. Tit. II, 1, t. therein, Gent. I, 1, 9. if these four Worthies in their 55. till aU these mischiefs be returned again even in their first show t. LLL V, 2, 541. here do I choose, and 1.1 —s that have committed them, III, 1, 275. that it did

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(give me the lie) Cthe very t. on me, Mcb. II, 3,43. gives IV, 4, 96. to the shore t. many doubtful friends, 435. me the lie Cthe t., at deep at to the lungs, Hml. II, 2, all several sins... t.to the bar, V, 3, 199. many mazed 601. even in hit t. . . 1return the lie, Per. II, 5, 56. considering! did t. and pressed in with this caution, H8 Hence the following phrases: I lie in my t. L L L IV, II, 4, 185. I have seen the dumb men t. to see him, Cor. 3, 13. Shr. IV, 3, 133. Tw. Ill, 4, 172. H4B I, 2, 94. II, 1, 278. I'll say th'hait gold: thou wilt be —ed to, B3 1, 2, 93. Oth. Ill, 4, 13. that's a lie in thy t. H5 Tim. IV, 3, 395. IV, 8,17 (Fluellen's speech), with a foul traitor't name 2) trans, a) to press (in a crowd): here one being »tuff I thy t. B2 I, 1, 44. —ed heart back, all bollen and red, Lucr. 1417. = voice: and turn hit merry note unto the tweet b) to crowd abont: variable passions t.her constant bird"11. As II, 5, 4. my t. of war be turned ... into a woe, as striving who should best become her grief, Ven. pipe mail at an eunuch, Cor. Ill, 2, 112. the cock... 967. Hence = to fill with a crowding multitude: t. with hit lofty and shriU-sounding t. Hml. 1,1,151. whose our large templet with the shows of peace, and not our rude —» Jove's dreadful clamourt counterfeit, Oth. III. streets with war, Cor. Ill, 3, 36 (O. Edd. through), the 3, 355. blind mole casts copped hillt towards heaven, to tell the Threfc, to beat violently as the heart), to palpitate: earth is —ed by men's oppression. Per. 1,1, 101 (the Ven. 1186. H6B IV, 4,5. Tit.V, 3,95. Mcb. IV, 1,101. earth is completely taken a p and filled by the encroachT h r e e (O. Edd. throne) snbst extreme pain, pang, ing avidity of man). With up, - to fill completely, to agony: that gave to me many a groaning t. H8 II, 4, possess entirely: aman—ed up with cold, Per.ll, 1,77. 199. other incident —i that nature's fragile vessel doth T h r e e t l e , the thrush, Turdus musicus: Mids. Ill, sustain, Tim. V, 1, 203. Lucina toot me in my —t, 1, 130. Merch. I, 2, 65 (O. Edd. trassell). Cymb. V, 4, 44. T h r e t t l e , to choke: t. their practised accent in T h r e e , vb. ( 0 . Edd. throw or throve) to pain, to their fears, Mids. V, 97. put in agony: a birth indeed which —t thee much to T h r e n g h , prepos. 1) in all, throughout; locally yield, Tp. II, 1, 231. with newt the time's with labour, and temporally: fear t. all her sinews spread, Ven. 903. and —s forth each minute some, Ant. Ill, 7, 81 (but t. the length of times he slants disgraced, Lucr. 718. t. this may be throws forth = brings forth). all the signories it was the first, Tp. I, 2, 71. this is T h r e n e , snbst. a royal seat: Lucr. 413. Tp. Ill, enough to be the decay of lust t. the realm, Wiv. V, 0, 3, 23. Meas. V, 295. All's IV, 4, 3. Tw. 1,1, 38. John 153. t. Athens I am thought as.fair as the, Mids. I, 1, 111, 1, 74. H6A I, 1,149. II, 5 , 6 9 . H6B 11, 3, 38. IV, 227. I, 2, 5. seek t. this grove, II, 1, 259. a merchant 9,1. H6C 1,1,74. 11,1,93.193. Cor.lV,6,32. Oth. Ill, of great traffic t. the world, Shr. I, 1, 12. seek t.your 3 , 4 4 8 etc. Preceded by in: Ven. 1043. H6A III, 1, 44. camp to find you, H5 IV, 1, 303. so much applauded t. H6C I, 1, 22. 84. 124. IV, 3, 64. V, 7, 1. R3 II, 2, 100. the realm of France, H6A II, 2, 36. we will make thee Ill, 7, 216. Rom. V, 1, 3 etc. By on: H5 I, 2, 117. IV, famous t. the world, III, 3, 13. levy great sums of money 1,281. Troil. V, 10, 7. t. the realm, H6B 111, 1, 61. proclaimed a coward t. the T h r e n e , vb. 1) intr. to be enthroned: he wants world, IV, 1,43. those maims of shame seen t. thy country, nothing of a god but eternity and a heaven to t. in, Cor. Cor. IV, 5, 93 etc. V, 4, 26. 2) Denoting way or passage from end to end, or 2) trans, to enthrone: as who have not, that their from side to side: two doves will draw me t. the sky, great stars —d and set hight Lr. Ill, 1,23. Partic. — d: Ven. 153. he .. I. the dark laund runs apace, 813. a—d queen, Sonn. 96, 5. a fair vestal —d by the west, conveyed t. the empty skies, 1191. wandered t. the forest, Mids. II, 1,158. Merch. IV, 1, 189. Tw. II, 4, 22. H8 Gent. V, 2, 38. roaming clean t. the bounds of Asia, I, 1, 11. Tim. I, 1, 64. Ant. I, 3, 28. Err. I, 1, 134. he hurried t. the street, V, 140. followed T h r e n e , subst. a crowd pressing forward to some t. toothed briars, Tp. IV, 179 etc. Emphatically repurpose: a short knife and a t. Wiv. II, 2, 18 (cf. Lr. duplicated : thy slander hath gone t. and t. her heart, Ill, 2, 88). to play the foolish —s with one that swoons, AdoV,1,68. I'llt. andt.you, Troil. V, 10, 26. carries Meas. II, 4, 24. strange fantasies which, in their t. and them t. and t. the most fond and winnowed opinions, press to that last hold, confound themselves, John V, 7, Hml. V, 2, 200. 19. nor the t. of words that come with such more than 3) Denoting a medium passed: a dive-dapper peerimpudent sauciness from you, H4B II, 1, 122. troop in ing t. a wave, Ven. 86. t. hit mane and tail the high wind the — s of military men, IV, 1, 62. to smother up the sings, 305. hers (eyes) which t. the crystal tears gave English in our —s, H5 IV, 5, 20. I'li to the t. 22. fol- light, 491. the brambles... t. whom he rushes, 630. the lowed with the general t. and sweat of thousand friends, many musets t. the which he goes, 683. this dismal cry H8 Prol. 28. flamens do press among the popular —s, rings sadly in her ear, t. which it enters, 890. t. the Cor. II, 1, 230. 6« abhorred all feasts, societies, and — s floodgates breaks the silver rain, 959. t. little vents... of men, Tim. IV, 3, 21. fellow, come from the t. Caes. the wind wars with hit torch, Lucr. 310. the very eyes 1, 2, 21. the t. that follows Caesar at the heels, II, 4, 34. of men t. loopholes thrust, 1383. might I but t. my prison nor cutpurses come not to s, Lr. Ill, 2, 88. once a day behold this maid, Tp. I, 2, 490. here's a T h r e n g , vb. 1) intr. to crowd and press forward maze trod indeed t. forth-rights and meanders, III, 3, 3 . to some purpose: which (her breath) — ing through her these follies are within you and shine t. you like the lips,to vanisheth as smoke from Aetna, Lucr. 1041. much water in an urinal, Gent. II, 1, 40. I'll convey thee t. like a press of people at a door, t. her inventions, which the city-gate, III, 1,252. go you t. the town to Frogmore, shall go before, 1302. through hit lips do t. weak words, Wiv. II, 3, 78. do but behold the tears that swell in me, so thick come..., 1783. wherefore t. you hither 1 Err. and they thy glory t. my grief will show, LLL IV, 3, 37. V,38. in their roomt come —ing soft and delicate desires, thrust thy sharp wit quite t. my ignorance, V, 2, 398. Ado I, 1, 305. they ttwho should buy first, Wint. IV, 4, half his face must be seen t. the lion's neck, Mids. Ill, 612. where be the —ing troops that followed theet B3 1, 38. that the moon may t. the centre creep, III, 2, 54.

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pierced t. the heart, 59. some that will evermore peep t. Gent. I, 2, 115. if he had been t. moved, W i r . 1, 4, 95. their eye*, Mercb. I, 1,52. thy casement 1 need not open,we'll do it t. Meas. T, 260. to quit me of them t. Ado for I look t. thee. All's II, 3, 226. thrust t. the doublet, IT, 1, 202. Jam informed t. of the cause, Merch. IT, H4A II, 4, 185. these (i. e. lips) t. whom a thousand 1, 173. noio do your duty t. Shr. IT, 4, 11. you scarce sighs are breathed for thee, H6B 111, 2, 345 etc. can right me t. then, Wint. II, 1, 99. most t. to be win4) Denoting instrumentality, = by means of, by: nowed, H8 T, 1, 111. I'll be revenged most t. Hml. so him I lose t. my unkind abuse, Sonn. 134, 12. falls IT, 5, 136. my point and period will be t. wrought, Lr. t. wind, before the fall should be, Pilgr. 136. my masterIT, 7, 97. Lucius trill do's commission t. Cymb. II, 4, t. his art foresees the danger, Tp. II, 1, 297. sluiced 12. Iam t. weary, III, 6, 36. T h r * D ( h * a t , prep, in every part of, in all: a man out his innocent soul t. streams of blood, R2 1, 1, 103. thou wouldst have me drowned on shore, with tears as well known t. all Italy, Shr. II, 69. every sovereign state salt as sea, t. thy unkindness, H6B III, 2, 96. begun t. the world, John T, 2, 82. ne'er t. the year to church t. malice of the bishop's men, H6A III, 1, 76. whether thou goest, H6A I, 1, 42. (. the town, I, 6, 11. t. every it be t. force of your report, V, 5, 79. the interview town proclaim them traitors, H6B IT, 2, 186. follow betwixt England and France might, t. their amity, breed thee t. the world, Bom. II, 2, 148. him some prejudice, H8 I, 1, 181. make sacred even T k r * i i | k s a t , adv. in every place, from first to his stirrup, and t. him drink the free air, Tim. I, 1, 82. last: tell my friends, tell Athens, in the sequence of something you may deserve of him t. me, Mcb. IT, 3, degree from high to low t. Tim. T, 1, 212. 16. when Antony is gone, t. whom I might command it T h r e w , subst. a cast of dice or of a bowl in ga(Herod's bead) Ant. Ill, 3, 6 etc. ming: abate I. at novum, L L L T, 2,547. if Hercules and Hence denoting a source, a cause, = ont o f , on Lichas play at dice, the greater t. may turn from the account o f : thou art like enough, t. vassal fear, tofight weaker hani, Merch. II, 1,33. Metaphorically: like to against me, H4A III, 2,124. some fatting merely t.fear, a bowl upon a subtle ground, I have tumbled past the t. Cymb. V, 3, 11. if this law of nature be corrupted t. (in praising Coriolanus) Cor. T, 2, 21. you can fool affection, Troil. II, 2, 177. I love the king and t. him no more money out of me at this t. T w . T, 45 (by this what is nearest to him, Wint. IT, 4, 533. Iam pressed device, by this trick). T h r e w , vb. (impf. threw, partic. thrown) 1) to fling, to death t. want of speaking, B2 III, 4, 72. the subjects' to cast, to drive to a distance: which one by one she in grief comes t. commissions, H8 I, 2, 57 etc. T h r e n f h , adv. 1) from side to side, from begin- a river threw, Compl. 38. 11. thy name against the ning to end, to the end: who, half (., gives o'er, H4B bruising stones, Gent. I, 2, 111. t. it thence into the I, 3, 59. the happiest youth, viewing his progress t. Ill, raging sea, 122. t. us that you have about ye, IT, 1, 3. I, 54. give the word t. H5 IT, 6, 38. Iam halft. Cor. a stone to t. at his dog, Wiv. 1,4, 119; cf. As I, 3, 3. II, 3,130. my good intent may carry t. itself to that full 5. t. foul linen upon him, Wiv. Ill, 3, 139. —ing him issue, Lr. 1,4, 3. I ran it t. Oth. I, 3, 132. when shall into the water, 194. HI, 5,6.37. 122. 128. they threw I hear all t.t Cymb. T, 5, 382. with sighs shot t. Per. me off from behind one of them, IT, 5, 68. how far that IV, 4, 26. to got. = to do one's utmost, not to stick little candle —s his beams, Merch. T, 90. he will t. a at any thing: I do it for some piece of money, and go figure in her face, Shr. I, 2, 114. threw the sops in the t. with all, Meas. II, 1,285.1have gone t.for this piece, sexton's face, III, 2, 175. burs —n upon thee in holiday Per. IT, 2, 47. Similarly: if a man is t. with them in foolery, As I, 3, 13. the name of her that threw it, All's honest taking up, then they must stand upon security, V, 3,95. you threw it him out of a casement, 229. you H4B I, 2,45 (i. e. if a man does his ntmost in borrow- peevishly threw it to her, Tw. II, 2, 14. I'll t. your ing, or rather if a man condescends to borrow, in an dagger o'er the house, IT, 1, 30. there It. my gage, R2 honourable manner). Sometimes = fully, completely: 1,1,69. IT, 46. t. down your gage, 1,1, 161. 162.186 he's not yet t. warm, Troil. II, 3, 232. I would revenges (Qq t. up). IT, 84. t. the rider headlong in the lists, I, ... would seek us t. and put us to our answer, Cymb. 2, 52. the king hath —n his warder down, I, 3, 118; H4B IT, 1, 125. 126. threw dust on Richards head, IT, 2, 160. Emphatically reduplicated: I will t. and t. cleanse B2 T, 2,6.30; H4B 1,3,103. i. the quean in the channel, the foul body of the infected world, As II, 7, 59. blasts H4B II, 1, 51. (. none away, H5 T, 1, 56. threw it of January would blow you t. and t. W i n t IT, 4,112. (a jewel) towards thy land, H6B III, 2, 108. t. them into Thames, IT, 8, 2. he that —s not up his cap for my buckler cut t. and t. H4A II, 4, 186. 2) Denoting a way or passage: were beauty under joy, H6C II, 1, 196; Cor. IT, 6, 135; Caes. I, 2, 246. twenty locks kept fast, yet love breaks t. Yen. 576. he they threw their caps, Cor. I, 1,216. our masters may himself must speak t. (t. the lion's skin) Mids. Ill, 1, t. their caps at their money, Tim. Ill, 4, 101 (whistle 39. show me thy chink, to blink t. with mine eyne, V, for it, give it np for lost). It. my infamy at thee, H6C 178. our soldiers shall march t. H4A IT, 2,3. life looks V, 1, 82. I'll t. thy body in another room, T, 6, 92. / t. and will break out, H4B IT, 4, 120. he had made two will t. my glove to Death himself, Troil. IT, 4,65; Tim. holes... and so peeped I. II, 2, 89. m this place ran T, 4, 49. t. it (my dust) against the wind, Cor. Ill, 2, Cassius' dagger t. Caes. Ill, 2, 178. giants may jet t. 104. in the poisoned entrails t. Mcb. IT, 1, 5. 66. your Cymb. Ill, 3, 6. leafy screens t. down, T, 6, 1. —n out his angle for my T h r « a | k f a r e , a thoroughfare, an open and un- proper life, Hml. T, 2, 66. to t. my sceptre at the inobstructed passage: the vasty wilds of wide Arabia are jurious gods, Ant. IT, 15, 76. threw her in the sea, as —s now for princes to come view fair Portia, Merch. Per. Ill, 2, 80. V, 3, 19 etc. II, 7, 42. his body 's a passable carcass, if he be not Applied to dice: I had rather be in this choice than hurt: it is a t.for steel, Cymb. I, 2, 11. t. ames-ace for my life, All's II, 3, 84. set less than thou T h r a a g b l r , thoroughly: the next advantage will —est, Lr. I, 4, 136. Figuratively: who sets me elsel we take t. Tp. Ill, 3, 14. till thy wound be t. healed, by heaven, I II t. at all, B2 IT, 57.

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Used of fluids, = to cast, to p o o r : they threw on him great pails of fuddled mire, Err. Y, 172. t. cold water on thy choier, Wiv. II, 3, 89. upon thy eyes 11. alt the power this charm doth owe, Mids. II, 2,78. Metaphorically: t. this report on their incensed rage, J o h n IV, 2, 261. Often implying the idea of haste, or of negligence and contempt: —ing the base thong from his bending crest, Ven. 395. note he — s that shallow habit by, Lucr. 1814. in so profound abysm It. all care of others' voices, Sonn. 112,9. threw her sun-expelling mask away, Gent. IT, 4, 158. t. away that thought, Meas. I, 3, 1. I'ld t. it (life) down for your deliverance as frankly as a pin, III, 1,105. the grosser manner of these worlds delights he —s upon the gross worlds baser slaves, L L L I, 1, 30. t. away that spirit, V, 2, 877. unregarded age in corners —n, As II, 3, 42. the duke hath . . . — n into neglect thepompous court,V, 4,188. off with that bauble, t. it under foot, Shr.V, 2, 122. these warlike principles do not t. from you, All's II, 1, 2. I will t. thee from my care for ever, II, 3, 169. some achieve greatness, and some have greatness —n upon them, T w . V, 379. what reverence he did t. away on slaves, R2 I, 4, 27. t. away respect, tradition, 111,2,172. I have — n a brave defiance in king Henry's teeth, H 4 A V, 2, 4 2 ; cf. Oth. Ill, 4, 184. thus king Henry —s away his crutch, H6B III, 1, 189. wilt thou, OGod, fly from such gentle lambs and t. them in the entrails of the wolft R 3 IT, 4, 23. the remainder viands we do not t. in unrespective sieve, Troil. II, 2, 71. meal and bran together he —s without distinction, Cor. Ill, 1, 323. how much salt water —n away in waste, Rom. II, 3, 71. you icould t. them off (my accounts) Tim. II, 2, 143. were I like thee, I'ld t. away myself, IV, 3, 219. to t. away the dearest thing he owed (viz. life) Mcb. I, 4, 10. t. physic to the dogs, V, 3, 47. t. to earth this unprevailing woe, Hml. I, 2, 106. there has been much —ing about of brains, II, 2, 375. thy dowerless daughter, — n to my chance, Lr. 1,1, 259. I see that nose of yours, but not that dog 1 shall t. it to, Oth. IV, 1,147. t. your vile guesses in the devil's teeth, III, 4, 184 (cf. H4A V, 2, 42). threw a pearl away, V, 2,347. you therein t. away the absolute soldiership you have by land, Ant. Ill, 7,42. now t. me again, Cymb. V, 5, 263. With up, = to give np, to resign: t. up your gage, R2 I, 1, 186 (Ff t. down). 2) to drive with force: what tempest threw this whale ashore, Wiv. II, 1, 65. P e r . II Prol. 38. V, 3, 23. t. him (the devil) out, Hml. Ill, 4, 169. — n from Leonati seat, Cymb. V, 4, 59. 3) to bring down from an erect station: Charles in a moment threw him and broke three of his ribs, As I, 2, 135. t. their power {"the dust, Cor. Ill, 1, 171. Cimber —s before thy feet an humble heart, Caes. Ill, 1, 34. With down, in a proper and figurative sense: my better parts are all —n down, As I, 2, 262. the crown, which waste of idle hours hath guile —n down, R2 III, 4, 66. to t. down Hector, Troil. Ill, 3, 208. hath —n down so many enemies, T i t . Ill, 1,164. Refl.: Lucrece' father ... himself on her body threw, Lucr. 1733. myself I did the sea t. up upon our shore this chest, Per. Ill, 2, 50 (M. Edd. t. upon our shore), so huge a billow as — ed it upon shore, 59. Especially, == to throw upward: I will t. the rogue in a blanket, H4B II, 4, 240. And = to throw up and down, to cause to rise and fall, to move to and fro: what book is that she -eth sol Tit. IV, 1, 41. particularly used of the rolling and tumbling motion of waves (cf. Seatost): he by waves from coast to coast is — ed, Per. II Prol. 34. on the sea tumbled and — ed, V Prol. 13 (Ql we there him left, most M. Edd. we there him losi). participle and gerund passively: your mind is — ing on the ocean, Merch. I, 1 , 8 . after your late — ing on the breaking seas, R2 III, 2, 3. Metaphorically: madly ed between desire and dread, Lucr. 171. such a deal of spleen as you are —ed with, H4A II, 3, 82. often up and down my sons were — cd, R3 II, 4, 58. thou hadst been — edfrom wrong to injury, Per. V, 1, 131. 2) to carry triumphantly on a pike or anything similar: good enough to t. H4AIV, 2, 71. a sceptre... on which I'll t. the flower-de-luce of France, H6B V, I, 11. the soldiers should have —ed me on their pikes, H6C I, 1, 244. T e n - p e t , a toper: Tw. V, 412. T e t a l , adj. complete, entire: head to foot now is he t. gules, Hml. II, 2, 479. T e t a l , rabst. the whole sum or amount: may soon bring his particulars to a t. Troil. I, 2, 124. T e t a l l y , completely: he doth but mistake the truth t. Tp. II, 1, 57. T e t h e r , see Other. T e t t e r , 1) to shake so as to threaten a fall, to vacillate, to stagger: if th' other two be brained

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like u , the stale —s, T p . Ill, 2, 8. our — ing state, B 3 III, 2, 37. 2) to waver, to balance, to be uncertain: many likelihoods ... which hung so — ing in the balance that I could neither believe nor misdoubt, Alls I, 3, 129. to be thirsty after —ing honour, Per. Ill, 2, 40. Tattering (M. Edd. tattered or tattering) hanging in rags: wound our t. colours clearly up, John V,5,7. Tattered, (M. Edd. tattered) torn, ragged: from this castle's I. battlements, R2 III, 3, 52 (Ff tattered). an hundied and fifty t. prodigals, H4A IV, 2, 37. T e t t e r s ( F f tatters) rags: tear a passion to t. Hml. Ill, 2, U . T e a c h , snbst. 1) contact, reach of any thing so that there is no space between: scape the dreadful t. of merchant-marring rocks, Merch. Ill, 2, 273. the t. of holy bread, As III, 4, 15. whose simple t. is powerful to araise King Pepin, All's II, 1, 78. their t. affrights me as a serpent's sting, H6B III, 2, 47. 325. Rom. I, 5, 98. Mcb. IV, 3, 143. Hml. V, 2, 297. Ant. II, 2, 215. Cymb. 1, 6, 100. 2) the act of touching, a contact sought and performed; either for an injurious purpose: let go that rude uncivil t. G e n t V, 4, 60. 130. a sweet t., a quivk venue of icit, L L L V, J, 62 ( = hit? cf. Hml. V, 2, 297. Armado's speech), whose (adders') double tongue may with a mortal t. throw death upon . . . , R2 III, 2, 21 .the least word that might be to the prejudice of her present stale, or t. of her good person, H8 II, 4, 155. or out of love: what is ten hundred —es (i. e. kisses) unto thee? Ven. 519. enforced hate, instead of love's coy t., shall rudely tear thee, Lucr. 669. - es so soft still conquer chastity, Pilgr. 50. Err. II, 2, 118. H5 V, 2, 303. Oth. IV, 3, 39. Cymb. Ill, 4, 165. Hence euphemistically, = sexual commerce: to base - es prone, Sonn. 141, 6. from their beastly—es 1 drink, I eat, Meas. Ill, 2, 25. free from t. or soil with her, V, 141. to preserve this vessel from every Other foul unlawful t. Oth. IV, 2, 84. 3) the sense of feeling: the ear, taste, t. and smell, Tim. I, 2, 132. might I but live to see thee in my t. Lr. IV, 1, 25. 4) affection, sensation, feeling: hast thou a t., a feeling of their afflictions, Tp. V, 21. didst thou but know the inly I. of love, Gent. II, 7, 18. have you no modesty, no maiden shame, no t. of bashfulness, Mids. Ill, 2, 286. this she delivered in the most bitter t. of sorrow that e'er I heard virgin exclaim in, All's I, 3, 122. no beast so fierce but knows some t. of pity, R3 1, 2, 71. some —es of remorse, Troil. II, 2, 115. I know no t. of consanguinity, IV, 2, 103. he wants the natural t. Mcb. IV, 2, 9. the death of Fulvia, with more urgent —es, do strongly speak to us, Ant. I, 2, 187. I am senseless of your wrath; a t. more rare subdues all pangs, all fears, Cymb. 1, 1, 135. 5) touchstone: to-morrow is a day wherein the fortune of ten thousand men must bide the t. H4A IV, 4, 10. now do I piny the (., to try if thou be current gold indeed, R3 IV, 2, 8. thou t. of hearts (viz. gold) Tim. IV, 3, 390. Hence = test, proof: hast thou killed him sleeping 9 O brave t.! could not a worm, an adder, do so much ? Mids. Ill, 2,70 ( = test or proof of bravery), my friends of noble t. Cor. IV, 1, 49 (of tried nobleness). 6) any single act in the exercise of an art; a) a stroke of a pen: what strained —es rhetoric can lend,

Sonn. 82,10. b) the act of the hand on a musical instrument: whose heavenly t. upon the lute doth ravish human sense, PilgT. 107. Orpheus' lute, whose golden t. could soften steel and stones, G e n t III, 2, 79. stillness and the night become the —es of sweet harmony, Merch. V, 57. with sweetest —es pierce your mistress' ear, 67. put into his hands that knows no t. to tune the harmony, R2 1,3, 165. I know no t. of it (a recorder) Hml. Ill, 2, 371. c) a stroke of a pencil: such heavenly —es ne'er touched earthly faces, Sonn. 17, 8. here is a t., is't goodt Tim. I, 1, 36. artificial strife lives in these — es, 38. 7) trait: to have the —es dearest prized, As 111, 2, 160. some lively —es of my daughter's favour, V, 4, 27. one of the prettiest —es of all, Wint. V, 2, 89. one t. of nature makes the whole world kin, that all with one consent praise new-born gawds, Troil. Ill, 3, 175. Hence 8) a dash, a spice, a smack: I perceive in you so excellent a t. of modesty, Tw. II, 1, 13. behold ...a little t. of Harry in the night, H5 IV Chor. 47. I have a t. of your condition, which cannot brook the accent of reproof, R3 IV, 4, 157. give your friend some t. of your late business, H8 V, 1, 13 ( = hint). T a u c h , vb. 1) to come in contact with in any manner, but particularly by means of the hand: t. but my lips with those fair lips of thine, Ven. 115. to t. the fire, 402. though neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor see, yet should I be in love by —ing thee, 438. but to t. the crown, Lucr. 216. the boy for trial needs would t my breast, Sonn. 153, 10. Pilgr. 49. Tp. II, 2, 105. V, 286. Wiv. V, 5, 88. Err. II, 1, 111. II, 2, 120. Ado III, 3, 60. Merch. I, 1, 32. Shr. IV, 1, flfi. Tw. II, n, 171. R 2 I , 3, 43. 11,3,91. H4B IV, 1, 17 (t. ground and dash themselves to pieces). H5 III Chor. 33. Ill, 7, 17. H6A II, 5, 39. V, 3, 47. H8 1, 4, 75. Troil. I, 3, 304. Ill, 1, 164. Rom. I, 5, 53. 101. II, 2, 25. Caes. I, 2, 7. 8. Ant. V, 2, 246. Cymb. V, 3, 78. Per. I, 1, 28.80.87. V,3,75. Used of kissing and other amorous actions: that you have —ed his queen forbiddenly, Wint. 1, 2, 416. I. her soft mouth and march, H5 II, 3, 61. the sun no sooner shall the mountains t. Hml. IV, 1, 29 (cf. below def. 8). that I might t ! but kiss, one kiss, Cymb. II. 2 , 1 6 . on the — ing of her lips, Per. V, 3,42. 2) to take as food or drink, to taste: she —ed no unknown baits, Lucr. 103. Pilgr. 53. to t. no food, L L L I, 1, 39. he dies that —es any of this fruit, As II, 7, 98. I will not t. a bit, 133. I am forbid to t. it (burnt meat) Shr. IV, 1, 174. before you t. the meat, IV, 3,46. or t. one drop of it, V, 2, 145. ready to starve and dare not t. his own, H6B I, 2, 229. Similarly: never durst poet t. a pen to write, L L L IV, 3, 346. 3) to strike, to hurt, to injure: no loss shall t. her by my company, Meas. Ill, 1, 181. that no particular scandal once can t. IV, 4,30. this —es me in reputation, Err. IV, 1, 71. t. her whoever dare, Shr. Ill, 2, 235. they shall not t. thee, 240. do not t. my lord, All's III, 2, 114. he will not t. young Arthur's life, John 111,4, 160. I will not t. thine eye, IV, 1, 122. the lion will not t. the true prince, H4A 11,4, 300. that face of his the hungry cannibals would not have —ed, HOC I, 4, 153. he would not then have — ed them, Tit. II, 4, 47. he that —es this my son, IV, 2, 92. J have —ed thee to the quick, IV, 4, 36. t. not the boy, V, 1, 49. seeing his reputation —ed to death, Tim. Ill, 5, 19. shall no man else be —ed but only Caesarf Caes. II, 1, 154. what villain — ed his body, IV, 3, 20. nor steel, nor poison

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... can t. him further, Mcb. Ill, 2, 26. he hath not senses: if any air of music t their ears, Mercb. V, 76 — ed you yet, IV, 3, 14. they cannot t. me for coining, (is heard by them), they (her words) —ed not any Lr. IV, 6. 83. with shame — the first that ever —ed stranger sense, All's I, 3, 114. my name ktUh —edyour him —, Cymb. Ill, 1, 25. heavens, how deeply you at ears, Cor. V,2,11. if the drink ... t.my palate adversely, once do t. me, IV, 3, 4. some mortally, some slightly 11, 1, CI. — ed, V, 3, 10. b) = to infect: that lam — ed with madness, Meas. 4) to hit, to come near: a loss in love that — es V, 51. to be —ed with so many giddy offences. As III, me more nearly, Sonn. 42, 4. ay, t. him, there's the 2,366. —ed with that malignant cause, All's II, 1,113. vein, Meas. II, 2, 70. you — ed my vein at first, As II, the life of all his blood is —ed corruptibly, John V, 7, 7, 94. when his holy state is — ed so near, H6A III, 1, 2. I'll t. my point with this contagion, Hml. IV, 7, 147. 58. to t. his growth nearer than he ed mine, R3 II, cf. sub d: Ado III, 2, 19. Shr. I, 1, 166. 4, 25. there you — ed the life of our design, Troil. II, c) to more, to rouse: which —ed the very virtue 2, 194. t. me not so near, Oth. II, 3, 220. of compassion in thee, Tp. I, 2, 26. my patience here 5) to land, to come to shore; absol.: our ship is —ed, Meas. V, 235. their familiarity, which was as hath — ed upon the deserts of Bohemia, Wint. III, 3, 1. gross as ever — ed conjecture, Wint. II, 1, 176. Trans.: by his command have I here — ed Sicilia, Wint. d) to moke an impression on, to move, to strike V, 1, 139. shortly mean to t. our northern shore, R2 II, mentally, to fill with passion or a tender feeling: how 1, 288. he — ed the ports desired, Troil. II, 2, 76. seems he to be - tdf Meas. IV, 2, 148. how dearly 6) to reach, to attain: — ing now the point of would it t. thee to the quick, Err. II, 2, 132. if love human skill, Mid«. II, 2, 119. where fathom-line could have — ed you, nought remains but so, Shr. I, 1, 166. never t. the ground, H4A I, 3, 204. 1 have - ed the he it -ed to the noble heart, Wint. Ill, 2, 222. this highest point of all my greatness, H8 III, 2, 223. if he deep disgrace in brotherhood — es me deeper than you will t. the estimate, Tim. I, 1, 14 (pay the price at can imagine, B3 I, 1,112. his curses and his blessings which it is estimated), hills whose heads t. heaven, t. me alike, H8 II, 2, 54. insupportable and - ing loss, Oth. I, 3, 141. thy thoughts t. their effects in this, A n t Caes. IV, 3, 151. how Antony is —ed with what is V, 2, 333 (are realized). spoke already, Ant. II, 2, 142. Caesar is —ed, V, 1, 7) to test by the touchstone, to probe, to try: 33. J think the king be — ed at very heart, Cymb. 1,1, which, being •- ed and tried, proves valueless, John 111, 10. Followed by with, to denote the passion or feeling I, 100. had —ed his spirit and tried his inclination, inspired: — ed with anger, Tp. IV, 145. if so your Cor. II, 3, 199. they have all been —ed and found base heart were —ed with that remorse, Meas. II, 2, 54. to metal, Tim. Ill, 3, 6. t. them with several fortunes, IV, be truly —ed with love, Ado 111, 2, 19. —ed with 3, 5. a suit wherein I mean to t.your love indeed, Oth. human gentleness and love, Merch. IV, 1, 25. —ed with Ill, 3 , 8 1 . choler, H5 IV, 7, 188. t. me with noble anger, Lr. II, 8) to handle in a skilful manner; a) to play on as 4, 279. —es us not with pity, V, 3, 232. a musician: before you t. the instrument, Shr. Ill, 1, T s a c k i n g , concerning, see Touch vb. 10. 64. t. thy instrument a strain or two, Caes. IV, 3, 257. T « u e h a t « n e , a stone by which gold is tried: gold b) to paint or to form as an artist: such heavenly that's by the t. tried, Per. II, 2, 37. touches ne'er —ed earthly faces, Sonn. 17, 8. spirits Name of the clown in As II, 4, 19. Ill, 2, 12. 46. are not finely — ed but to fine issues, Meas. I, 1, 36. T r a s h , 1) not soft and flexible, bat stiff and uncf. whose beard the silver hand of peace hath —ed, impressible: my t. senior, L L L I, 2, 10. 11. 17. 18. H4B IV, 1,43; the sun no sooner shall the mountains t. 2) not easily worn or broken: we are —er than Hml. IV, 1,29 (gild their summits. In both the latter you can put us to't, W i n t I, 2, 15. thy t. commixture passages a combination of different significations). melts, H6C II, 6, 6. O sides, you are too t. Lr. II, 4, 9) to mention in speaking: but t. this sparingly, 200. upon the rack of this t. world, V, 3, 314. K3 III, 5,93. — edyou the bastardy ofEdwartfschildrenf T r a c h n e u , strength of texture, durability: cables III, 7 , 4 . nearer than your particular demands will t. it, of perdurable t. Oth. I, 3, 343. Hml. II, 1, 12. t. you the sourest points with sweetest T r a r a l n e , French province: John I, 11. II, 152. terms, Ant. II, 2, 24. 487. at T., in Saint Katharine's churchyard, 116A I, 10) to relate to, to concern: some affairs that t. 2, 100. me near, Gent. Ill, 1, 60. the contempts thereof are as T r a r n a m e n t , tilt, joust: tilts and — s , G e n t — ing me, L L L I, 1, 191. it —eth us both ... to labour I, 3, 30. and effect one thing specially, Shr. I, 1, 118. to treat T r a r a e r , vb. to tilt in the lists: to just and t./or of high affairs — ing that time, J o h n 1,101. the quarrel her love, Per. II, 1, 116. wilt thou t. for the ladyt 150. eth none but us alone, H6A IV, 1,118. R3 I, 3, 262. T e a r s , French town: H6A IV, 3, 45. H6B 1, 1, II, 3, 26. Ill, 2, 23. Troil. II, 2, 9. 126. Cor. HI, 1, 5. 1 , 3 , 5 3 . 123. Caes. Ill, 1, 7. 8. Hml. I, 3, 89. Ill, 2, 252. IV, T r a a e (cf. toaze), to pull, to tear, to rend: to the 5,207 {if they find us — ed; i. e. accessary to the deed). rack with him ! we'll t. you joint by joint, Meas. V, 313. Lr. V, 1, 25. Oth. IV, 1, 209. T a w , to drag through the water by means of a — ing = concerning: we may soon our satisfaction rope; writing of M. Edd. in Ant. Ill, 11, 58: thou have —ing that point, Meas. I, 1, 84. H5 II, 2, 174. knewest too well my heart was to thy rudder tied by the H6A III, 1, 50. H6B II, 3, 89. H6C II, 1, 119. Ill, 3, strings, and thou shouldst t. me after. O. Edd. stowe. 136. Cor. I, 1, 155. Hml. I, 1, 25. I, 5, 137. Oth. II, T « w a r 4 , adj. 1) willing, apt, ready to do; opposed I, 32. Cymb. Ill, 5, 100. as - ing, in the same sense: to froward: perverse it (love) shall be where it shows L L L IV, 1, 123. H5 I, 1, 79. Ill, 2, 102. 107. R3 most t. Ven. 1157. then fell she on her back, fair queen V, 3, 271. and t. Pilgr. 55. 'tis a good hearing when children are 11) to affect in any manner: a) applied to the t. Shr. V, 2, 182.

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2) forward, bold: that is spoken like a t. prince, T a w a r d s , adv. in preparation, at band: we have H6C II, 2, 66. a trifling foolish banquet t. Rom. I, 5, 124. t » w » r i , adv. in preparation and expectation, T a w a r d s , prep, (usually monosyll., sometimes near at band: a plan t. Mids. Ill, 1,81. there is, sure, dissyll.), 1) in a direction to: t. thee I'll run and give another flood t. As V, 4, 35. here's some good pastime him leave to go, Sonn. 51, 14. as the waves make t. t. Shr. I, 1 , 6 8 . some cheer is t. V, 1, 14. here's goodly the pebbled shore, 60, 1. cutting the clouds t. Paphos, stuff t. H4B II, 4, 214. here's a noble feast t. Tim. Tp. IV, 93. always bending t. their project, 175. his III, 6, 68. what might be t. Hml. I, 1, 77. what feast intent t. our wives, W i r . II, 1, 181. if he should intend is t. V, 2, 376. have you heard of no likely wars t. Lr. this voyage t. my wife, 189. was carried t. Corinth, II, 1, 11. there is some strange thing t. Ill, 3, 21. do Err. I, 1, 88. some unborn sorrow is coming t. me, R2 you hear aught of a battle *. IV, 6, 213. four feasts II, 2, 11. with what wings shall his affections fly t. aret. A n t 11,6, 75. fronting peril, H4B IV, 4 , 6 6 . blow t. Englands blessed T a w a r d , prep, (usually monosyll., sometimes shore, H6B III, 2, 90. threw it t. thy land, 108. glided dissyll.), 1) in a direction to: leads t. Mantua, Gent. t. your majesty, 260. we'll forward t. Warwick, H6C V, 2, 47. runnest t. him still, Meas. Ill, 1, 13. I. that IV, 7, 82 (i. e. to oppose him), it ripens t. it, Ant. II, shade addrest, L L L V, 2, 92. sighed his soul t. the 7, 103 etc. Grecian tents, Merch. V, 5; cf. I have t. heaven breathed Equivalent to to: a reverend man ...t. this afflicted a secret vow, III, 4, 27. my father's (house) bears more fancy drew, Compl. 61. if you can carry her your det. the market-place, Shr. V, 1, 10. the clear stones t. sires l. her, Wiv. I, 1, 245 (Evans' speech), t. Florence the south north, Tw. IV, 2, 41. what incidency of harm is het All's III, 2, 71. pace softly t. my kinsman's, is creeping t. me, Wint. I, 2, 404. H6B IV, 2, 198. Wint. IV, 3, 121. It. the north, ... my wife to France, H3 1,4, 13. H8 II, 4, 165. Mcb. II, 1, 34. Ant. Ill, R2 V, 1, 76. you ... t. York shall bend you, II4A V, 10, 31. Cymb. II, 2, 20 etc. 5, 36. the king is now in progress t. Saint Albans, II6B Often quite equivalent to to: and then go It. Arragon, 1, 4, 76. let's march t. London, IV, 3, 20. t Berwick Ado III, 2,2. I must away this night t. Padua, Merch. post amain, H6C II, 5, 128. he comes t. London, IV, IV, 1, 403. flu t. Belmont, 457. his big manly voice, 4, 26. now t. Chertsey, R3 I, 2, 29. 226. the mayor t. turning again t. childish treble, As II, 7, 162. once Guildhall hies him, III, 5, 73. t. London they do bend more t. our Jather's, Shr. IV, 5, 1. go thou t. home, their course, IV, 5, 14. gallop apace ... t. Phoebus' All's II, 5, 95. upon which errand I now go t. him, lodging, Rom. Ill, 2, 2. strike up the drum t. Athens, Wint. V, 1, 232. it draws t. supper in conclusion so, Tim. IV, 3, 169. we first address t. you, Lr. I, 1, 193. John I, 204. away t. Bury, to the Dauphin there, IV, and t. himself... we must extend our notice, Cymb. II, 3, 114. tell him, t. Swinstead, to the abbey there, V, 3, 64 etc. 3, 8. arrows fled not swifter t. their aim, H4B I, 1, 2) tending to, aiming at, for: t.our assistance we 123. now dispatch we t. the court, IV, 3, 82. it now do seize to us the plate, R2 II, 1, 160. quick is mine draws t. night, H5 III, 6, 179. in travel t. his warlike ear to hear of good t. him, 234. certain issue strokes father, H6A IV, 3,36. to-morrow t. London back again, must arbitrate, t. which advance the war, Mcb. V, 4,21. H6B II, 1, 201. marched t. Saint Albans, H6C II, 1, 3) to, in a moral sense: which sorrow is always t. 114. they hold their course t. Tewksbury, V, 3, 19. ourselves, not heaven, Meas. II, 3,32. what warmth is post t. the north, K3 III, 2, 17. shall we t. the Tower ? there in your affection t. any of these suitors ? Merch. 1, 91.119 (Qq to), when mine oratory drew t. end, III, 7, 2, 37. there is some ill a brewing t. my rest, II, 5, 17. 20 (Qq yew to an end), let us t. the king, Mcb. I, the rather will I spare my praises t. him, All's II, 1, 3, 152 etc. 106. if the duke continue these favours t.you, Tw. I, 2) tending to, aiming at and contributing lo; for: 4, 1. the manner of your bearing t. him, Wint. IV, 4, t. the education of your daughters I here bestow a 569. a heart that wishes t. you honour and plenteous simple instrument, Shr. II, 99. to use 'em t. a supply safety, H8 I, 1, 103. like her true nobility, she has of money, Tim II, 2, 200. if it be aught t. the general carried herself t. me, II, 4, 143. his malice t. you, Cor. good, Caes. I, 2, 85. by doing every thing safe t. your II,3,197. Rome,whose gratitude t.her deserved children, love and honour, Mcb. I, 4, 27. cf. H5 IV, 8, 4 and III, 1, 292. our graces t. him, Mcb. I, 6, 30. if there Tim. V, 1,23. be any good meaning t. you, Lr. I, 2, 190. our intents, 3) to, in a moral sense: no love t. others in that which t. you are most gentle, Ant. V, 2, 127. the malice bosom sits, Sonn. 9, 13. in his love t. her ever most t.you, Cymb. V, 5, 419. kind and natural, Meas. Ill, 1, 229. wherein t. me my 4) with (cf. toward, prep. 4): make trial it'hat your homely stars have failed, All's II, 5, 80. this was a love can do for Some t. Marcius, Cor. V, 1, 41. ice great argument of love in her t. you, Tw. Ill, 2, 13. shall have need to employ you t. this Roman, Cymb. disobedience and ingratitude to you and t. your friend, II, 3, 68. Wint. Ill, 2, 70. have misdemeanedyourself t. the king, 5) about: t. three or four o'clock, R3 III, 5, 101. 118 V, 3, 15. they confess t. thee forgetfulness, Tim. T a w e r , subst. 1) a very high and strong building: V, 1, 147. cold-hearted t. me, Ant. Ill, 13, 158. Lucr. 945. 1382. Sonn. 6J, 3. Filgr. 327. Tp. IV, 4) Denoting a person referred to in a question, = 152. Gent. Ill, 1, 35. 119. John 11,325. H4A III. 1, with: I will be thy adversary t. Anne Page, Wiv. II, 33. H6A I, 4, 11. 76. Ill, 2, 23. IV, 2, 13. Tioil. I, 3, 99. your loving motion t. the common body, to yield 2, 2. IV, 5, 220. Rom. IV, 1, 78. Tim. V, 4, 25. Cacs. what passes here, Cor. II, 2, 57 (cf. towards: Cor. I, 1, 44. 1,3, 93. Lr. Ill, 4, 187. Per. I, 4, 24. Symbol V, 1, 41. Cymb. II, 3, GS). of strength: strong as a t. in hope, R2 I, 3, 102. the T a w a r d l y , ready to do or learn, docile, tractable: king's name is a t. of strength, U3 V, 3, 12. I have observed thee always for a t. prompt spirit, 2) name of the ancient castle of London used a9 Tim. Ill, 1, 37. ' i a citadel, an arsenal, and a state-prison: R2 IV, 316.

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V, 1, 52. H6A I, 1, 167. I, 3, 1. 61. H6B IV, 5, 5. knack, a t., a truk, a baby's cap, IV, 3, 67. a foolish IV, 6, 17. IV, 9, 38. H6C III, 2, 120. IV, 8, 57. V, thing was but a I. Tw. V, 400. dreams are —s, Wint. 5, 50. R3 I, 1, 45. H8 I, 1, 207. I, 2, 194. V, 1, 107. III, 3, 39. shall we fall fottl for —si H4B II, 4, 183. V, 3, 54 etc. at the T. H6A III, 1, 23 R3 III, 1, 65. for a t., a thing of no regard, H6A IV, 1, 145. being 139 etc. in the T. H6B V, 1,41. R3 IV, 2, 76. V, 3, but a t., which is no grief to give, R3 III, 1,114. there's 151 etc. Said to have been built by Julius Caesar: nothing serious in mortality; all is but —s, Mcb. II, 3, R2 V, 1, 2. R3 III, I, 68. 99. each t. seems prologue to some great amiss, Hml. T e w e r , vb. to fly high, to »oar as a bird of prey: IV, 5, 18. light-winged —s of feathered Cupid, Oth. I, which like a falcon —ing in the skies coucheth the Jowl 3, 269 (cf. the verb to toy). some lady trifles,... imbelow, Lucr. 506. ha, majesty! how high thy glory —s, moment —s, Ant. V, 2, 166. triumphs for nothing and John II, 350. and tike an eagle o'er his aery —s, V, lamenting —i is jollity for apes and grief for boys, 2, 149. my lord protector's hawks do t. so well, II6B Cymb. IV, 2, 193. II, 1, 10. a falcon —ing in her pride of place, Mcb. 3) an idle fancy, an odd conceit, a folly: the triks II, 4, 12. —ing —- very high: the bravery of his grief and —s that in them (women) lurk, Pilgr. 337. there's did put me into a — ing passion, Hiul. V, 2, 80. —s abroad, Johnl,232(there are follies in the world). T « w e r e 4 , having towers: a t. citadel, Ant. IV, such like —s as these have moved his highness to com14, 4. mit me now, R3 I, 1, 60. if no inconstant t. nor woT a w e r h i l l , meeting-place of the Puritans in the manish fear abate thy valour in the acting it, Rom. IV, poet's time: the tribulation of T. 118 V, 4, 65. 1, 119. hold it a fashion and a t. in blood, Hml. I, 3, T i w n , a collection of houses larger than a vil- 6. the very place puts —s of desperation ... into every lage: Pilgr. 327. Gent. V, 4, 3. Wiv. I, 1, 299. I, 3, brain, I, 4, 75. no conception nor no jealous t. corcern39. II, 1, 149. II, 2, 198. II, 3, 78. V, 5, 112. Err. ing you, Oth. HI, 4, 156. I, 1, 15. I, 2 , 6 . 12. 22. 97. II, 2, 151. Ado 111,4,102. Tey, vb. to trifle, to dally amorously: with leaden L L L 1, 1, 147. Mids. I, 1, 165. II, 1,238. As 111, 3,59. appetite, unapt to t. Ven. 34. to t., to wanton, 106. V, 4, 149. 152. H6A I, 1, 63. 91. H6B I, 3, 138. II, T«se, see Toaze. 1, 164. Ill, 1, 63. H6C1V, 2, 15 etc. etc. the peasant T r a c e , subst. mark left, vestige: no t. of him, —s, H4B Ind. 33 (German: Landstädte), our—s of Cymb. V, 5, 12. tear, H5 II, 4,*7. Oth. II, 3,213. through every market Plur. — s = harness for beasts of draught: the t. H6B II, 1, 159. Lr. Ill, 6, 78. seven walled —s of —s of the smallest spider's web, Rom. I, 4, 61. strength, H6A III, 4, 7. — s of garrison, V, 4, 168. T r a c e , vb. 1) to follow by footsteps or other this enemy t. Cor. IV, 4,24. With of: ourt. ofCicester, marks left: why may not imagination t. the noble dust R2 V, 6, 3. the t. of Orleans, H6A I, 6, 9. H6C I, 4, of Alexander 1 Hml. V, 1, 224. the search so slow, 180. II, 2, 1. R3 V, 2, 12. Leicester I. R3 V, 5, 10. that could not t. them, Cymb. I, 1, 65. Ludst. Cymb. 111,1,32. IV, 2, 99. V, 5,481. With2) to follow: can t. me in the tedious ways of art, out the article: at —'s end, H4A IV, 2, 10 (Ff at the H4A 111, 1, 48. all my joy t. the conjunction, H8 III, —'s end\ in field and t. Mids. Ill, 2, 398. there's a 2, 45. his wife, his babes, and all unfortunate souls nobleman in t. Rom. II, 4, 213. Oth. I, 3, 44. what that t. him in his line, Mcb. IV, 1, 153. good sport is out of t. Troil. I, 1, 116. come to t. Wiv. 3) to put on the track: this poor trash of Venice, IV, 5, 78. Shr. I, 1,47. II4B II, 2, 108. 177. Distin- whom It. for his quick hunting, Oth. II, 1, 312 (most guished from city: razeth your cities and subverts your M. Edd. trash). —s, H6A II, 3, 65. Ill, 3, 45. Ill, 4, 7. R3 I, 4, 146. 4) to delineate, to draw: who else would t. him, his Confounded with city: Tw. Ill, 3, 19. 24. Cor. IV, 4, umbrage, nothing more, Hml. V,2,125 (or = follow?). 1. 24. = the inhabitants of the town: the t. will rise, 5) to walk over, to pace: as we do t. this alley up Oth. II, 3, 161. the t. might fall in fright, 232. and down, Ado III, 1, 16. to t. the forests, Mids. II, Compounds: t. armoury, Shr. Ill, 2, 47. t. bull, 1, 25. H4B II, 2, 172. (. crier, Hml. Ill, 2, 4. t. gate, L L L T r a c k ( F f tract) course, way; used of the sun: I, 2, 75. t. way, Wiv. Ill, 1, 7. the envious clouds are bent to dim his glory and to T a w n - c r l e r , a public crier who makes procla- stain the t. of his bright passage to the Occident, R2 III, mation : Hml. Ill, 2, 4. 3, 66. the weary sun hath made a golden set and, by T e w n a h l p , the body of the inhabitant« of a town: the bright t. of his fiery car, gives signal of a goodly 1 am but a poor petitioner of our whole t. H6B I, 3,27. day, R3 V, 3, 20. T a w n a m e n , the inhabitants of a town: John II, T r a c t , 1) trace, track: flies an eagle flight, bold 361. H6B II, 1, 68. and forth on, leaving no t. behind, Tim. I, 1, 50 (by Tay, subst. 1) any thing liked and affected, though which to trace and follow it). of little worth; a bawble: haply your eye shall light 2) course, way (of the sun): the eyes now convertupon some t.you have desire to purchase, Tw. 111,3, 44. ed are from his low t. Sonn. 7, 12. R2 III, 3, 66 and any silk, any thread, any — I for your head, Wint. IV, R3 V, 3, 20 (Qq and M. Edd. track). 4, 326. cf. Ant. V, 2, 166. 3) course, proceeding: the t. of every thing would 2) a futile thing, a nothingness: sells eternity to by a good discourser lose some life, H8 I, 1, 40. get a t. Lucr. 214. (set) as little by such —s as posT r a c t a b l e , manageable, governable, compliant: sible, Gent. I, 2, 82. I do not like des —s, Wiv. I, 4, thou shall find me t. to any honest reason, H4A III, 3, 46 (Dr. Caius' speech), silence, you airy —s, V,5,46. 194. if thou dost find him t. to us, R3 III, 1, 174. this critic Timon laugh at idle —s, L L L IV, 3, 170. a t., t. obedience, H8 1, 2, 64. Troil. II, 3, 160. Tit. I, 470. my liege, 201. I never may believe these antique fables Per. IV, 6, 211. nor these fairy —s, Mids. V, 3. even a t. in hand here, T r a d e , subst. 1) traffic, commerce: the t. and As 111, 3, 77. tut, a t.t Shr. II, 404 ( = nonsense!), a ¡profit of the city consisteth of all nation«, Merch. Ill, 3,

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T

30. others, like merchants, venture t. abroad, H5 I,, 2, 192. 2) frequent resort and intercourse: some way of' common t. R2 III, 3, 156. where most t. of danger ranged, H4B I, 1, 174. stands in the gap and t. of moe preferments, 118 V, 1, 36. 3) business of any kind: if your t. be to her, Tw. III, 1, 83. have you any further t. with ust Hml. Ill, 2, 346. 4) business pursued for procuring subsistence; occupation, profession, particularly mechanical employment: Wiv. I, 3, 18. Meas. I, 2, 111. II, 1, 237. 238. 270. IV, 2, 53. 58. IV, 3, 20. Shr. Ill, I, 69. Troil. V, 10, 52. Cor. Ill, 2, 134. IV, 1, 13. Tim. IV, 1,18. IV, 3, 133. 460. Caes. 1, 1, 13. Mcb. II, 3, 121. Hml. V, 1, 187. lit. IV, 1, 40. IV, 6, 15. Otb. I, 2, 1 Per. IV, 2, 12. 42. IV, 6, 74. 7G. what t. are you off Meas. II, 1, 206. what t. art thout IJ4B III, 2, 160. Caes. 1, 1 , 5. 9. 12. had been but two hours at the t. Lr. II, 2, 65. how long have you been at this t.t Per. IV, 6, 73. 5) standing practice, custom, habit: thy sin's not accidental, but a t. Meas. Ill, 1, 149. T r a d e , vb. to traffic, to carry on commerce, to deal: they shall be my East and West Indies, and I will t. to them both, Wiv. I, 3, 79. the common ferry which —s to Venice, Mercli. Ill, 4, 54. roe shall have good —ing that way, H4A II, 4, 401. how did you dare to t. and traffic with Macbeth in riddles and affairs of death, Mcb. Ill, 5, 4. music, moody food of us that t. in love, Ant. II, 5, 2. Traded, professional: villany is not without such rheum (tears), and he, long t. in it, makes it seem like rivers of remorse, J o h n IV, 3, 109. eyes and ears, two t. pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of will and judgment, Troil. II, 2, 64. Trade - f a l l e n , fallen, brought low in one's business: revolted tapsters and ostlers t. H4A IV, 2, 32. Traders, persons engaged in trade or commerce: I'll view the manner« of the town, peruse the /., gaze upon the buildings, Err. I, 2, 13. the embarked t. on the flood, Mids. II, 1, 127. t. riding to London with fat purses, H4A I, 2, 141. good t. in the flesh, Troil. V, 10, 46 ( = dealers). Tradesman, probably a shopkeeper: I meddle with no —'s matters, nor women's matters, but with awl, Caes. I, 1, 25. Plnr. tradesmen: it (lying) becomes none but tradesmen, Wint. IV,4,745. our tradesmen singing in their shops, Cor. IV, 6, 8. Tradltlen, old custom: the courtesy of nations allows you my better, ...but the same t. takes not away my blood, As I, 1, 51. throw away respect, t., form and ceremonious duty, R2 111, 2, 173. will you mock at an ancient t., begun upon an honourable respect, H5 V, 1, 74. Traditional, attached to old customs, oldfashioned: too ceremonious and t. R3 111, 1, 45. Traduce, to censure, to decry, to defame: a divulged shame —d by odious ballads. All's II, I, 175. — d by ignorant tongues, H8 1, 2, 72. —d and taxed of other nations, Hml. I, 4, 18. beat a Venetian and —d the state, Oth. V, 2, 354. he is already —d for levity, Ant. Ill, 7, 14. T r a d a c e m e n t , obloquy: 'twere a concealment worse than a theft, no less than at., to hide your doings, Cor. 1,9, 22. T r a f H e , subst. 1) trade, commerce: having t. with

thyself alone, thou of thyself thy sweet self dost deceive, Sonn. 4, 9. no kind of I. would I admit, Tp. II, I, 148. to admit no t. to our adverse towns, Err. I, 1, 15. a merchant of great t. through the world, Shr. I, 1, 12. which for —'s sake most of our city did, Tw. Ill, 3,34. my t. is sheets, Wint. IV, 3,23. t. confound thee, Tim. I, 1, 244. 246. 247. 2) business, transaction: I give thee kingly thanks, because this is in t. of a king, II6A V,3,164. the fearful passage of their love ... is now the two hours' t. of our stage, Rom. Prol. 12. Traffle, vb. 1) to practise commerce: despair to gain doth t. oft for gaining, Lucr. 131. 2) to have business, to deal, to hare to do: since dishonour —s with man's nature, he is but outside, Tim. I, 1, 158. to trade and t. with Macbeth in riddles and affairs of death, Mcb. Ill, 5, 4. Trafficker, trader, mcrclinnt: Merch. I, I, 12. Tragedian, an actor of tragedy (or actor, player, in general t): has led the drum before the English —s. All's IV, 3, 299. I can counterfeit the deep t. R3 111, 5, 5. those you were wont to take delight in, the —s of the city, Hml. II, 2, 342. Tragedy, 1) a dramatic representation of a serious action: Mids. V,367. IJml.II,2,416. 111,2,159. 2) a mournful and dreadful event: Lucr. 766. H5 I, 2, 106. H6A I, 4, 77. H6B III, 1, 153. Ill, 2, 194. H6C II, 3, 27. R3 III, 2, 59. Tit. II, 3,465. IV, 1, 60. Tragic, of the nature of tragedy, mournful, calamitous: Compl. 308. Phoen. 52. Err. I, 1, 65. H4B I, 1, 61. H6B IV, 1,4. I16C V, 6, 28. R3 II, 2, 39. IV, 4, 68 (Ff frantic). Tit. IV, 1, 47. Oth. V, 2, 363. Tragical, the same: Mids. V, 57. 66. II6A 111, 1, 125. R3 IV, 4, 7. tragical-historical, tragical-comical-historical-pasloral, Hml. 11, 2, 417. 418. Trail, sabst. trace, track, scent: if I cry out thus . upon no t. Wiv. IV, 2, 208 (if I bark, like a hound, on a wrong sccnt). or else this brain of mine hunts not the t. of policy so sure, Hml. II, 2, 47. how cheerfully on the false t. they cry, IV', 5, 109. this is an aspic's (., and these fig-leaves have slime upon them. Ant. V, 2, 354. Trail, vb. to draw along the ground: —est thou the puissant piket Ho IV, 1,40 Pistol's speech), along the field I will the Trojan t. Troil. V, 8, 22. beat thou the drum, that it speak mournfully: t. your steel pikes, Cor. V, 6, 152. Train, subst. 1) something drawn along behind; the end of a robe: Gent. II, 4, 159. H6B I, 3, 88. 118 II, 3, 98 (honour's t. is longer than his foreskirt). IV, I, 51. the tail of a peacock: we'll pull his plumes and take away his t. H6A III, 3, 7. Applied to the tail ol' a comet: stars with —s of fire, Hinl. I, 1, 117. 2) a retinue, a number of attendants: Tp. V, 300. L L L 111, 166. Mids. II, 1, 25. Wint. II, 1, 33. V, 1, 92. 163. H6A V, 4, 100. R3 II, 2, 120 H8 IV, 1, 37. Tit. II, 3, 75. Caes. I, 2, 184. Lr. I, 4, 270. 274. 285. II,4,64 (Ftnumber). 161. 177. 207. 308. = company: which of this princely t. call ye the warlike Talbot * I16A II, 2, 34. = troops, army: let our —s march by us, H4B IV, 2, 93. 3) something used to allure and entice; a bait: Macbeth by many of these —s hath sought to win me into his power, Mcb. IV, 3, 118. Train, vb. 1) to draw, to entice, to allure: t. me not with thy note, to drown me, Err. Ill, 2, 45. t. our

T intellect» to vain delight, LLL 1, 1, 71. as a catt to t. ten thousand English to their side, John III, 4, 175. we did t. him on, H4A V, 2,21 .for that cause I —ed thee to my house, I1GA II, 3, 35. you t. me to offend you, Troil. V, 3,4. I —ed thy brethren to that guileful hole, Tit. V, 1, 104. 2) to bring up, to educate, to teach: never —ed to offices of courtesy, Merch. IV, 1, 32. you have —ed me like a peasant, As I, 1, 72. they were —ed together, Wint. I, 1, 24. Henry the Fifth he first —ed to the wars, H6A I, 4, 79. nobly —ed, Rom. Ill, 5, 182 (Ff and later Qq allied). he must be taught and —ed, Caes. IV, 1, 35. by Clean —ed in music, Per. lYProl 7. With up: I teas —ed up in the English court, H4A III, 1, 122. he was never —ed up in arms, R3 V, 3, 272. Tit. I, 30. Cymb. Ill, 3, 82. V, 5,338. Training = education: H8 f, 2, 112. Per. Ill, 3,16. IV, 6,119. Traitor, one guilty of treason: Lncr. 361. 877. 888. 1686. Tp. I, 2, 460. 469. V, 128. Meas. I, 4, 77. LLL IV, 3, 212. V, 2, 604. As I, 3, 54. All's I, 1, 50. H6A I, 3, 15. II, 1, 19. II, 4, 97. IV, 3, 27. H6B I, 3, 177. 182. 197. I, 4, 44. II, 3,103. HI, 1, 174. IV, 2, 115. 177. R3UI, 4, 77. H8 I, 2, 214. Tit. V, 2,178 etc. With to before the person or canse betrayed: Gent. IV, 4, 110. Err. Ill, 2, 167. As II, 3, 13. Shr. V, 2, 160. R2 I, 3, 24. 39. IV, 135. H6C I, 1, 79. R3 I, 4, 210. Cor. Ill, 3, 66. Used as a feminine: As I, 3, 58. 74. Shr. V, 2, 160. All's II, 1, 99. Wint. II, 1, 89. In Wir. Ill, 3, 65 the spurious Qq and M. Edd. t., Ff tyrant. Adjectively: his t. eye, Lncr. 73. a t. coward, R2 I, 1, 102. a t. villain, H6A IV, 3, 13. their t. father, H6B V, 1, 116. the t. murderer, Rom. Ill, 5, 85 (Ff and later Qq om. murderer). Traltorly, treacherous: Wint. IV, 4, 821 (Autolycus' speech). Traitor*», treacherous: H6A IV, 1, 173. H6B III, 2, 240. Cor. Ill, 1, 175. Tit. I, 302. 452. IV, 1, 93. IV, 4, 53. Hml. I, 5, 43. Lr. Ill, 7, 8. Traitorously, treacherously, perfidiously: All's IV, 3, 339. H6B II, 2, 27. Ill, 2, 123. IV, 7, 35. Trait r e » , a woman who betrays; apparently nsed as a term of endearment: a counsellor, a t. and a dear, All's I, 1, 184. Trammel up, either to tie op or to net op (a trammel meaning both a kind of long net and a contrivance nsed for regnlating the motions of a horse): if the assassination could t. up the consequence and catch with his surcease success, Mcb. I, 7, 3. Trample, to stamp, to paw: a breeding jennet... Adonis' —ing courser doth espy, Ven. 261. With on, - - to tread on in contempt: —ing contemptuously on thy disdain, Gent. I, 2, 112. t. on their sovereign's head, R2 HI, 3, 157. oerrun and —d on, Troil. Ill, 3, 163. Trans, in the same sense: which with usurping steps do t. thee, R2 III, 2, 17. Trance, want of self-consciousness, a state of being beside one's self; 1) ecstasy: 'tis time to stir him from his t. Shr. I, 1,182. 2 ) bewilderment: disturb his hours of rest with restless —s, Lucr. 974. both stood, like old acquaintance in a t., met far from home, wondering each other's chance, 1595. Tranced, seemingly dead, insensible: Lr. V, 3, 218. cf. Entranced. Tranect, a word probably corrupted from the Italian traghetto ( = ferry): bring them... unto the (.,

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to the common ferry which trades to Venice, Merch. Ill, 4, 53. Irani«, name in Shr. I, 1, 1. 17 etc. Tranquil, peaceful, calm: t. mind, Oth.Ill,3,348. Tranquillity, ease, freedom from care: with nobility and t., burgomasters and great oneyers, H4A II, 1,84. Transcend, to be superior to others: that praise, sole pure, —s, Troil. I, 3, 244. Transcendence, supereminence: in a most weak and debile minister great power, great t. All's II, 3, 40. Transfer, to transport or remove from one situation to another, to transform, to change: penee, a coin of the value of two pence: if you do not all show like gilt —s to me, H4B IV, 3, 55. T y b a l t , name in Rom , passim. Tybert or Tybalt was the name of the cat in the History of Reynard the F o x ; this circumstance alluded to: what is T.I More than prince of cats, Rom. II, 4, 18. T., thou ratcatcher, III, 1, 78. good king of cats, 80. T j k n r n , the usual place of execution in Middlesex: the shape of Love's T. L L L IV, 3, 54 ( t h e triungular form of the gallows). T y m h r l a , writing of M. Edd. inTroil. Prol. 16; Ff Timbria, Qq Thymbria. Type, distinguishing mark, sign,badge: so (loyal) am I now: 0 no, that cannot be; of that true t. hath Turquin rifled me, Lucr. 1050. thy father bears the t. of king of Naples, H6C I, 4, 121 (i. e. the crown), the high imperial I. of this earth's glory, R3 IV, 4, 244. tall stockings, short blistered breeches, and those —s of travel, H8 I, 3, 31. T y p h a n , Typhoeus, a giant of ancient fable, who attempted to dethrone J o v e , but was defeated and imprisoned under Mount Aetna: roaring T. Troil. 1, 3, 160. his threatening band of —'s brood, Tit. IV, 2, 94. T y r a n n i c a l , despotic, arbitrary: t. power, Cor. Ill, 3, 2. power t. 65. T y r a n n i c a l l y , dreadfully, violently: and are most t. clapped for it, Hml. II, 2, 356. T y r a n n i z e , to play the tyrant, to be cruel, to inflict pain and torment: shame folded up in blind concealing night, when most unseen, then most doth t. Lucr. 676. there the poison is as a fiend confined to t. on unreprievable condemned blood, John V, 7, 47. this poor right hand of mine is left to t. upon my breast, Tit. Ill, 2, 8. on him that thus doth t. o'er me, IV, 3, 20.

T T y r a n n * « » , 1) despotic, unjustly severe: were he mealed with that which he corrects, then were he t. Meas. IT, 2, 87. fear you his t. passion more, Wint. II, 3, 28. let us be cleared of being t. Ill, 2, 5. 2) cruel, inhuman, pitiless: thou art as t. ...as those whose beauties proudly make them cruel, Sonn. 131, 1. it is excellent to have a giant's strength, but it is t. to use it like a giant, Meas. II, 2, 108. all the thoughts that t. heart can think, Tw. Ill, 1, 131. the t. and bloody deed is done, R3IV, 3,1. thai love ... should be so t. and rough, Rom. 1,1,176. lend a t. and damned light to their lord's murder, Hml. II, 2, 482. this t. night, Lr. Ill, 4, 156. to t. hate, Oth. Ill, 3, 449. and like the t. breathing of the north shakes all our buds from growing, Cymb. I, 3, 36. I knew him t. Per. I, 2, 84. T y r a n n y , 1) hard and arbitrary exercise of power: with a bitter invective against the t. of the king, Lucr. Arg. 24. that part of t. that I do bear I can shake off at pleasure, Caes. I, 3, 99. so let high-sighted t. range on, II, 1, 118. Wint. 11,3, 120. 111,2,32. 180. n 6 A II, 5, 100. H6B IV, 1, 96. R3 II, 4, 51. V, 2, 2. Caes. Ill, 1, 78. Mcb. IV, 3, 32. 67. V, 8, 67. Lr. I, 2, 52. Oth. I, 3, 197. 2) cruelty, injurious violence: subject to the t. of mad mischances, Ven. 737. why, fearing of time's (., might I not then say, Sonn. 115, 9. whether the t. be in his place or in his eminence, Meas. I, 2, 167. 'twould be my t. to strike and gall them for what 1 bid them do, I, 3, 36. to suffer ... the very t. and rage of his, Merch. IV, 1 , 1 3 . the I. of her sorrows takes all livelihood from her cheek, All's I, 1, 57. waste for churlish winter's t. H4B 1, 3, 62. t. which never quaffed but blood, would have washed his knife with gentle eye-drops, IV, 5, 86. H6A II, 3, 40. IV, 2, 17. IV, 7, 19. H6B III, 1, 123. 149. Ill, 2, 49. R3 III, 7, 9. V, 3, 168. Cor. V, 3, 43. Tit. II, 3, 145. 267. Ill, 2, 55. Lr. Ill, 4, 2. T y r a n t , 1) a hard, despotic, or lawless ruler: Sonn. 107, 14. Tp. II, 2, 166. Ill, 2, 49. Meas. II, 4, 114. Mids. I, 2, 24. 31. 42. As II, 1,61. Wint. 11,3, 116. 122. Ill, 2, 135. 176. 208. H5 I, 2, 241. H6C III, 3,69. 71 (== the Greek rvQavvof, usurper? cf. As II, 1, 61). 206. IV, 4, 29. R3 V, 3, 246. 255. 256. Tit. I, 138. Tim. Ill, 5, 9. Caes. I, 3, 92. 103. Ill, 2, 74. V, 4, 5. Mcb. Ill, 6, 22. 25. IV, 3, 12. 36. 45. 104. 178. 185 etc. Lr. IV, 6, 63. Oth. I, 3, 230 (the t. custom). Cymb. IV, 2, 265. Per. I, 2, 79. 84. 103. 2) one pitiless and cruel: which (beauty) the hot t. (lust) stains, Ven. 797. hard-favoured t. (death) 931. make war upon this bloody t. Time, Sonn. 16, 2. and I, a t., have no leisure taken to weigh how once I suffered in your crime, 120, 7. when I forgot am of myself, all t.,for thy sake, 149,4. Meas. Ill, 2, 207. L L L IV, 3, 349. As III, 5, 14. IV, 3, 39. Tw. V, 127. H4B Ind. 14 (the stem t. war). H6B V, 2, 54. R3 I, 3, 185. IV, 4, 52 (that excellent grand t. of the earth). Troil. III, 2, 127. Rom. I, 1, 26. Ill, 2, 75. Hml. II, 2, 502. Cymb. I, 1, 84. In Wiv. Ill, 3, 65 Ff thou art a t. to say so, perhaps with a pun on the preceding tire; the spurious Qq and M. Edd. traitor. With to: those hours ... will play the —s to the very same, Sonn. 5, 3. I'll prove a t. to him, Meas. II, 4, 169. a professed t. to their sex, Ado I, 1, 170. Adjectively: or t. folly lurk in gentle breasts, Lucr. 851. fowl oft. wing, Phoen. 10. As 1, 2, 300. J o h n V, 3, 14.

u

1275

T y r r e l or T l r r e l , name in R3 IV, 2, 40. 68. 80. Name of a dog: Tp. IV, 258. Tyre, the town of Tyrus in Phoenicia: P e r . I, 1, 85. IV, 3, 24. T y r o s , town in Phoenicia: Per. Ill Prol. 26. Ill, 1. 156. I, 2, 115 etc. T y r l a n , pertaining to Tyrus: T. tapestry, Shr. II, 1, 80. Ill, 3, 2. IV, 4, 36. V, 3, 82. T y t h e and T y t h l n c , see Tithe and Tithing. 351. our T. »hip, Per. V l'rol. 18.

u. r , the fifth vowel of the English alphabet: L L L V, 1, 60 (pronounced like you). Tw. II, 5, 96. U d d e r , teat, d a g : a lionets, with —s all drawn dry, As IV, 3, 115. (Jgly, deformed; contrary to beautiful, in a moral as well as a physical sense: Ven. 931. 1041. Lucr. 459. 925. 1082. Sonn. 33, 6. Tp. IV, 191 (—er). Mids. II, 2, 94. Merch. Ill, 2, 28. As II, 1, 13. J o h n III, 1, 37. 44. IV, 3, 123. H2 I, 1, 42 (—er). H4A I, 2, 226. H4B I, 1, 66 (—at). IV, 1, 39. H 5 IV Chor. 21. H6A V, 3, 34. 189. B3 I, 2, 23. 1,3, 227. I, 4, 3. 23. H8 I, 2, 117. Troil. V, 8, 6. Tim. Ill, 5, 25. 100. Hml. Ill, 1, 52. Lr. 1, 4, 289. Oth. V, 1, 20. Ant. II, 5, 97. Cymb. V, 3, 70. Dicer, an open sore: Troil. 1,1,53. Hml. IV, 7,124. 171 r e r a n « , 1) having the nature of an ulcer: u. sores, Tim. IV, 3,39. 2) affected with an nicer: people all swoln and u. Mcb. IV, 3, 151. the u. place, Hml. Ill, 4, 147. U l l e r x a , an apocryphal name which has been a whetstone to the sagacity of emendators: Tim. HI, 4, 112 (Globe: all, sirrah, all; Collier all, look, sir; Walker Valerius, alt, etc.). Ulysses, the famous king of Ithaca: Lucr. 1394. 1399. H6C III, 2, 189. IV, 2, 19. Troll. 1, 3, 58. 69 etc. Cor. I, 3, 93. Not mentioned by name, but spoken of in Tit. I, 380. U m b e r , a species of ochre, of a brown colonr: with a kind of u. smirch my face, As I, 3, 114. U m b e r e d , embrowned, darkened: through their paly flames each battle sees the other's u. face, H5 IV, Chor. 9. U m b r a g e , shadow: his semblable is his mirror, and who else would trace him, his u., nothing more, Hml. V, 2, 125 (a speech tainted with Euphuism). U m f r c v l l c , name in H4B I, 1, 34. U m p i r e , one to whose arbitration a question is referred: Wiv. 1, 1, 139. L L L I, 1, 170. H6A IV, 1, 151. Applied to death as the general peace-maker: H6A II, 5, 29. Rom. IV, 1, 63. U n a b l e , 1) with an inf., = not having the power or means: u. to support this lump of clay, H6A II, 5, 14. we are u. to resist, Per. I, 4, 84. 2) absol. weak, impotent: making both it (the heart) u. for itself, Meas. II, 4,21. you froward and u. worms, Shr. V, 2, 169. with rough and all u. pen, H5 Epil. 1. sapless age and weak u. limbs, H6A IV, 5, 4. a love that makes breath poor, and speech u. Lr. I, 1, 61. [ ' n u c s m m t d a t H , unsupplied with conveniences: u. man is no more but such a poor, bare, forked animal, Lr. Ill, 4, 111. U n a c c o m p a n i e d , without a companion: which honour must not u. invest him only, Mcb. I, 4, 40. U n a c c n s t e m e d , nnusual, extraordinary, strange: leave this peevish broil and set this u. fight aside, H6A

III, 1,93. what u. cause procures her hithert Rom. Ill, 5, 68. shall give him such an u. dram, that he shall soon keep Tybalt company, 91. an u. spirit lifts me above the ground, V, 1 , 4 . the u. terror of this night, Caes. II, 1, 199. U n a c k i n g , not giving pain: Cor. II, 2, 152. U n a c « n a l n t e d , 1) not having familiar knowledge of things: am become as new into the world, strange, u. Troil. Ill, 3, 12. 2) not familiarly known, strange, foreign: kiss the lips of y. change, John III, 4, 166. follow u. colours, V, 8, 32. U n a c t e d , not executed: the fault unknown is as a thought u. Lucr. 527. U n a e t l v e , not doing any thing, idle: it did remain i'the midst o'the body, idle and u. Cor. I, 1, 102. Unadvised, 1) not directed by certain knowledge, ignorantly done: friend to friend gives u. wounds, Lucr. 1488 (not seeing whom he strikes). I have u. delivered you a paper that I should not, Gent IV, 4, 127 (without previously looking at it). 2) inconsiderate, rash, imprndent: stay for an answer to your embassy, Ust u. you stain your swords with Hood, John II, 45. thou u. scold, 191. this harnessed mask and u. revel, V, 2,132. although our mother u. gave you a dancing - rapier, Tit. 11, 1, 38. it is too rash, too u., too sudden, Bom. II, 2, 118. U n a d v i s e d l y , inconsiderately: men shall deal u. sometimes, R3 IV, 4, 292. U n a g r e e a b l e , unsuitable, not adapted: the time is u. to this business, Tim. II, 2, 41. U n a n c l e d , not having received extreme unction: unhouseled, disappointed, u. Hml. I, 5, 77. U n a n s w e r e d , not replied t o : your petition is yet u. Wint. V, 1, 229. U n a p p e a s e d , not pacified: that so the shadows be not u. T i t I, 100. U n a p p r o v e d , not justified and confirmed by proof: what u. witness dost thou bear, Compl. 53. U n a p t , 1) unfit: the full-fed hound or gorged hawk, u. for tender smell or speedy flight, Lncr. 695. why are our bodies soft and weak and smooth, u. to toil and trouble in the world, Shr. V, 2, 166. 2) not prepense or ready: with leaden appetite, u. to toy, Ven. 34. my blood hath been too cold and temperate, u. to stir at these indignities, H4A I, 3, 2 (cf. Apt sub 2). I am a soldier and u. to weep, H6A V, 3, 133. we pout upon the morning, are u. to give or to forgive, Cor. V, 1, 52. U n a p t n e s s , disinclination: Tp. II, 2, 140. U n a r m , 1) tr. to disarm, to strip of armour or arms; absol.: u., Eros, Ant. IV, 14, 35 (take off my armour). With an accns.: to help u. our Hector, Troil. Ill, 1, 163. Refl.: there he —s him, Troil. 1, 2, 300. u. thee, V, 3, 35.

u

1275

T y r r e l or T l r r e l , name in R3 IV, 2, 40. 68. 80. Name of a dog: Tp. IV, 258. Tyre, the town of Tyrus in Phoenicia: P e r . I, 1, 85. IV, 3, 24. T y r o s , town in Phoenicia: Per. Ill Prol. 26. Ill, 1. 156. I, 2, 115 etc. T y r l a n , pertaining to Tyrus: T. tapestry, Shr. II, 1, 80. Ill, 3, 2. IV, 4, 36. V, 3, 82. T y t h e and T y t h l n c , see Tithe and Tithing. 351. our T. »hip, Per. V l'rol. 18.

u. r , the fifth vowel of the English alphabet: L L L V, 1, 60 (pronounced like you). Tw. II, 5, 96. U d d e r , teat, d a g : a lionets, with —s all drawn dry, As IV, 3, 115. (Jgly, deformed; contrary to beautiful, in a moral as well as a physical sense: Ven. 931. 1041. Lucr. 459. 925. 1082. Sonn. 33, 6. Tp. IV, 191 (—er). Mids. II, 2, 94. Merch. Ill, 2, 28. As II, 1, 13. J o h n III, 1, 37. 44. IV, 3, 123. H2 I, 1, 42 (—er). H4A I, 2, 226. H4B I, 1, 66 (—at). IV, 1, 39. H 5 IV Chor. 21. H6A V, 3, 34. 189. B3 I, 2, 23. 1,3, 227. I, 4, 3. 23. H8 I, 2, 117. Troil. V, 8, 6. Tim. Ill, 5, 25. 100. Hml. Ill, 1, 52. Lr. 1, 4, 289. Oth. V, 1, 20. Ant. II, 5, 97. Cymb. V, 3, 70. Dicer, an open sore: Troil. 1,1,53. Hml. IV, 7,124. 171 r e r a n « , 1) having the nature of an ulcer: u. sores, Tim. IV, 3,39. 2) affected with an nicer: people all swoln and u. Mcb. IV, 3, 151. the u. place, Hml. Ill, 4, 147. U l l e r x a , an apocryphal name which has been a whetstone to the sagacity of emendators: Tim. HI, 4, 112 (Globe: all, sirrah, all; Collier all, look, sir; Walker Valerius, alt, etc.). Ulysses, the famous king of Ithaca: Lucr. 1394. 1399. H6C III, 2, 189. IV, 2, 19. Troll. 1, 3, 58. 69 etc. Cor. I, 3, 93. Not mentioned by name, but spoken of in Tit. I, 380. U m b e r , a species of ochre, of a brown colonr: with a kind of u. smirch my face, As I, 3, 114. U m b e r e d , embrowned, darkened: through their paly flames each battle sees the other's u. face, H5 IV, Chor. 9. U m b r a g e , shadow: his semblable is his mirror, and who else would trace him, his u., nothing more, Hml. V, 2, 125 (a speech tainted with Euphuism). U m f r c v l l c , name in H4B I, 1, 34. U m p i r e , one to whose arbitration a question is referred: Wiv. 1, 1, 139. L L L I, 1, 170. H6A IV, 1, 151. Applied to death as the general peace-maker: H6A II, 5, 29. Rom. IV, 1, 63. U n a b l e , 1) with an inf., = not having the power or means: u. to support this lump of clay, H6A II, 5, 14. we are u. to resist, Per. I, 4, 84. 2) absol. weak, impotent: making both it (the heart) u. for itself, Meas. II, 4,21. you froward and u. worms, Shr. V, 2, 169. with rough and all u. pen, H5 Epil. 1. sapless age and weak u. limbs, H6A IV, 5, 4. a love that makes breath poor, and speech u. Lr. I, 1, 61. [ ' n u c s m m t d a t H , unsupplied with conveniences: u. man is no more but such a poor, bare, forked animal, Lr. Ill, 4, 111. U n a c c o m p a n i e d , without a companion: which honour must not u. invest him only, Mcb. I, 4, 40. U n a c c n s t e m e d , nnusual, extraordinary, strange: leave this peevish broil and set this u. fight aside, H6A

III, 1,93. what u. cause procures her hithert Rom. Ill, 5, 68. shall give him such an u. dram, that he shall soon keep Tybalt company, 91. an u. spirit lifts me above the ground, V, 1 , 4 . the u. terror of this night, Caes. II, 1, 199. U n a c k i n g , not giving pain: Cor. II, 2, 152. U n a c « n a l n t e d , 1) not having familiar knowledge of things: am become as new into the world, strange, u. Troil. Ill, 3, 12. 2) not familiarly known, strange, foreign: kiss the lips of y. change, John III, 4, 166. follow u. colours, V, 8, 32. U n a c t e d , not executed: the fault unknown is as a thought u. Lucr. 527. U n a e t l v e , not doing any thing, idle: it did remain i'the midst o'the body, idle and u. Cor. I, 1, 102. Unadvised, 1) not directed by certain knowledge, ignorantly done: friend to friend gives u. wounds, Lucr. 1488 (not seeing whom he strikes). I have u. delivered you a paper that I should not, Gent IV, 4, 127 (without previously looking at it). 2) inconsiderate, rash, imprndent: stay for an answer to your embassy, Ust u. you stain your swords with Hood, John II, 45. thou u. scold, 191. this harnessed mask and u. revel, V, 2,132. although our mother u. gave you a dancing - rapier, Tit. 11, 1, 38. it is too rash, too u., too sudden, Bom. II, 2, 118. U n a d v i s e d l y , inconsiderately: men shall deal u. sometimes, R3 IV, 4, 292. U n a g r e e a b l e , unsuitable, not adapted: the time is u. to this business, Tim. II, 2, 41. U n a n c l e d , not having received extreme unction: unhouseled, disappointed, u. Hml. I, 5, 77. U n a n s w e r e d , not replied t o : your petition is yet u. Wint. V, 1, 229. U n a p p e a s e d , not pacified: that so the shadows be not u. T i t I, 100. U n a p p r o v e d , not justified and confirmed by proof: what u. witness dost thou bear, Compl. 53. U n a p t , 1) unfit: the full-fed hound or gorged hawk, u. for tender smell or speedy flight, Lncr. 695. why are our bodies soft and weak and smooth, u. to toil and trouble in the world, Shr. V, 2, 166. 2) not prepense or ready: with leaden appetite, u. to toy, Ven. 34. my blood hath been too cold and temperate, u. to stir at these indignities, H4A I, 3, 2 (cf. Apt sub 2). I am a soldier and u. to weep, H6A V, 3, 133. we pout upon the morning, are u. to give or to forgive, Cor. V, 1, 52. U n a p t n e s s , disinclination: Tp. II, 2, 140. U n a r m , 1) tr. to disarm, to strip of armour or arms; absol.: u., Eros, Ant. IV, 14, 35 (take off my armour). With an accns.: to help u. our Hector, Troil. Ill, 1, 163. Refl.: there he —s him, Troil. 1, 2, 300. u. thee, V, 3, 35.

1276

U

2) intr. to put off one's arms: I'U u. again, Troil. 1, 1, 1. u. and do not fight to-day, V, 3, 3. 25. U n a r m e d , having DO arms, not furnished with weapons: he leaves hit back u. LI4B 1, 3, 79. our bare u. heads, II, 4, 394. R 3 IV, 4, 436. Troil. I, 3, 235. III, 3, 237. 276. IV, 5, 153. V, 8, 9. Unaaked, not begged, not sought by entreaty: begged for that which thou u. shah have, Ven. 102. Unassailable, not to be tempted and seduced: that u. hold» on hit rank, Caes. Ill, 1, 69. U n a s s a l l e d , not attacked: HCB V, 2, 18. Unattalnted, not infected, sound: with u. eye compare her face with tome that Ithall show, Rom. 1,2,90. Unattempted, not tempted: my hand, at u. yet, like a poor beggar, raileth on the rich, John II, 591. U n a t t e s t e d , unaccompanied, left alone: your constancy hath left you u. Mcb. II, 2, 69. Unansplelans, unfavourable, not propitious: to whote ingrate and u. altars my toul the faithfullest offerings hath breathed out, T w . V, 116. U n a n t h e r l s e d , unjustifiable: an u. kiss, Oth. IV, 1, 2. Unavelded, 1) not avoided or shunned: whose u. eye is murderout, R3 IV, 1, 56. 2 ) inevitable: and u. is the danger note, R2 II, 1, 268. a terrible and u. danger, H 6 A IV, 5, 8. all u. is the doom of destiny, R 3 IV, 4, 217. U n a w a r e , inadvertently: as one that u. hath dropped a precious jewel in the flood, Ven. 823. nuzzling in hit flank, the loving twine sheathed u. the tusk in his soft groin, 1116. cf. Unwaret. U n a w a r e s , unexpectedly, by surprise: Pucelle . . hath wrought this hellish mischief u. H 6 A III, 2, 39. take the great-grovcn traitor u. H6C IV, 8, 63. at u., in the same sense: so we ... at u. may beat down Edward's guard, H6C IV, 2, 23. or by his foe surprised at u. IV, 4,9. like vassalage at u. encountering the eye of majesty, Troil. Ill, 2, 40 ( Q at unwaret). Unbacked, never mounted, not taught to bear a rider: Ven. 320. T p . IV, 176. U n b a k e d , not baked: whose villanout saffron would have made all the u. and doughy youth of a nation in his colour, All's IV, 5, 3. Unhanded, having no band: your bonnet u. A s III, 2, 398. U n b a r , to unfasten, to open: the key to u. these locks, Cymb. V, 4, 8. Unbarbed, unharnessed, bare: must I go show them my u. sconcet Cor. Ill, 2, 99. U n b a s h f u l , shameless: As II, 3, 50. Unbated, 1) undiminished: doth untread again his tedious measures with the u. fire that he did pace them first, Merch. II, 6, 11. 2 ) unblunted (without a button on the point): you may choose a sword u. Hml. IV, 7, 139. V, 2, 328. Unbattered, not bruised or injured by blows: or else my tword with an u. edge I sheathe again undeeded, Mcb. V, 7, 19. Unbecoming, improper, indecorous: Mcb. Ill, 1, 13. Unbefitting, unbecoming: love is full of u. strains, L L L V, 2, 770. Unbeget, not yet generated: your children yet unborn and u. R 2 111, 3, 88. Unbegetten, the same: the yet u. sin of times, John IV, 3, 54.

Cnbelleved, not finding credit: as I, thus wronged, hence u. go, Meas. V, 119. Unbend, to free from flexure (as a bow); to remit from a strain, to relax: you do u. your noble strength, to think so brainsickly of things, Mcb. II, 2, 45. The physical and moral significations joined: why hast thou gone to far, to be unbent when thou hast ta'en thy stand, the elected deer before theet Cymb. Ill, 4, 111. a brow unbent = a brow not knit, not frowning: Lucr. 1509. Unbewalled, not lamented: Ant. Ill, 6, 85. Cnbld, (unhid, because placed before the subst.) uninvited, unwelcome: O u. spite ! is sportful Edward comet H6C V, 1, 18. U n b i d d e n , uninvited: u. guests are often welcomest when they are gone, H 6 A II, 2, 55. Unbind, to untie, to loose: now am I Dromio and his man unbound, Err. V, 290 (or = not bound?), u. my hands, Shr. II, 4. unbound the rest, H 4 A 11,4,201. u. my sons, T i t . Ill, 1, 24. Unbltted, unbridled: our u. lusts, Oth. I, 3, 335. U n b l e u , to neglect to make happy; to make unhappy: thou dost beguile the world, u. somemother, Sonn. з,4. Partic. or adj. unblessed or unblest — unhappy, cursed, wretched: every inordinate cup it unblessed, Oth. II, 3, 311. your unblest fate hies, V, 1, 34. Unbleedled, not made bloody: u. beak, II6B 111, 2, 193. Unblewed ( F i ) or U n b l e w n (the rest of O. Edd.) not blown, not having the bud expanded: my u. flowers, R3 IV, 4, 10. Unbedled, not having a corporeal shape: thai u. figure of the thought that gave't surmised shape, Troil. I, 3, 16. Unbelt, to unfasten, to open: he shall u. the gates, Troil. IV, 3, 3. Figuratively, = to open, to reveal: I will u. to you, T i m . I, 1, 51. Unbelted, unsifted, coarse: I will tread this u. villain into mortar, L r . II, 2, 71. Unbenneted, having no bonnet on: u. he runs, Lr. Ill, 1,14. Difficult passage: my demerits may speak и. to as proud a fortune as this that I have reached, Oth. I, 2, 23. Steevens: 'unbonneted may signify, without taking the cap o f f ' ( c f . the verb Bonnet). The common explanation is: without the addition of patrician or senatorial dignity; the bonnet, as well as the toge, being at Venice a badge of aristocratic honours. But nowhere, not even in those plays, the scene of which is Venice, the word bonnet is found in this sense. Perhaps the meaning of unbonneted is simply: I may say so with all courtesy and humility; and Othello's words must perhaps be accompanied by a corresponding gesture, as the writing of 0 . Edd. seems to imply, by placing the word unbonneted in a parenthesis. U n b e o k U h , ignorant, unskilled: his u. jealousy must construe poor Cassios smiles ... quite in the wrong, Oth. IV, 1, 102. Unbern (unbdrn; but when placed before the subst., unborn) 1) not born, not brought into life, not existing: never so much as in a thought u. did I offend your highness, A s I, 3, 53. the accusation uhich they have often made against the senate, all cause u. Cor. Ill, 1, 129. 2) not yet born, future, to come: some u. sorrow, ripe in fortune's womb, is coming towards me, R2 II, 2,

ü

1277

10. Ill, 3, 88. IV, 322. H4A V, 1, 21. H5 I, 2, 287. Caes. Ill, 1, 113. Per. IV Prol. 45. l i h t B t m , to disclose, to reveal: their several counsels they u. shall, LLL V, 2, 141. C i b t n n i , not bound; with a quibble: thy precious book of love, this u. lover, to beautify him, only lacks a cover, Rom. I, 3, 87. cf. Err. V, 290. Unbennded, unlimited, infinite: H8 IV, 2, 34. Enbewed, not bent: with stiff u. knee, 1I6B III, 1, 16. In a moral sense, = not pnt under the yoke, not subjugated: bend the dukedom yet u. to most ignoble stooping, Tp. I, 2, 115. Unbraced, loosened, ungirt, unbuttoned: thus u. have bared my bosom to the thunder-stone, Caes. I, 3, 48. to vaUc u. and suck up the humours of the dank morning, II, 1,262. with his doublet all u. Hull. II, 1,78. IJnbrmlded, perhaps = not counterfeit, sterling, but probably the clown's blunder for embroidered: has he any u. waresf Wint. IV, 4, 204. Unbreathed, unexercised, unpractised: have toiled M«iru.m, 62. V, 2 , 1 5 1 . H 6 A I, 3, 43. 78. II, 1, 81. H 6 C II, 2, 65. IV, 1, 42. V, 5, 45. R 3 I, 3, 353. IV, 4, 396. V, 3, 309. Troil. V, 1, 104. Tim. I, 2, 87 (that you would once u. our hearts). II, 2, 188. 200 (my occasions have found time to u. 'em toward a supply of money). Ill, 1, 39. Ill, 2, 56 ( / was sending to u. Lord Timon myself, i. e. to borrow money of him). IV, 3, 83 (they love thee not that u. thee; cf. Gent. V, 3, 14 and Oth. V, 2, 70). Mcb. II, 1, 43. V, 5, 29. Hml. II, 2, 3. Oth. V, 2, 70. Cymb. Ill, 5, 111 etc. b) to practise customarily, to make a practice of: do nothing but u. their abuses, Meas. II, 1,42 (Elbow's

U speech), he hath not —d it before, IV,2,121. borrows money in God's name, the which he hath —d so long, Ado V, 1, 3 2 0 . I do never u. it, Merch. I, 3, 71 (viz to lend or b o r r o w u p o n advantage), so long I daily vow to u. it (this exercise) W i n t . Ill, 2, 243. thou hast caused printing to be — d , H 6 B IV, 7, 39. all several sins, all —d in each degree, R 3 V, 3, 198. if thou u. to beat me, I will ...tell what thou art, Troil. II, 1,52. to give forth the corn o'the storehouse gratis, as 'twas —d sometime m Greece, Cor. Ill, 1, 114. a trade that I may u. with a safe conscience, Caes. 1, 1, 14. shows a most pitiful ambition in the fool that —s it, Hml. Ill, 2, 50. I have —d it (to be f u l l of songs) ever since thou modest thy daughters thy mothers, L r . I, 4, 187. going shall be —d with feet, III, 2, 94. they have —d their dearest action in the tented field, Oth. I, 3, 84. Hence —d = accustomed: a beggar that was —d to come so smug upon the mart, Merch. Ill, 1, 48. your greatness hath not been —d to fear, W i n t . IV, 4, 18. —d to command, untaught to plead for favour, H6B IV, 1, 122. the people were not —d to be spoke to, R 3 111, 7, 29 (Qq wont), the madams too, not —d to toil, H8 I, 1, 24. they were —d to bend, Troil. Ill, 3, 71. o'erbear what they are —d to bear, Cor. Ill, 1, 250. he hath been —d ever to conquer, III, 3, 25. you were —d to say extremity was the trier of spirits, Cor. IV, 1, 3 . 9. my so —d a guest, P e r . I, 2, 3. c) to practise in general, to do, to make, to apply t o ; joined with the most different nouns almost periphrastically: so thou wilt buy and pay and u. good dealing, V e n . 514. they that fawned on him before u. his company no more, Pilgr. 422. more mickle was the pain that nothing could be —dto turn them both to gain, 220. they cannot u. such vigilance, T p . 111,3,16. treachery —dto Valentine, G e n t . I I , 6 , 3 2 . u. your patience, Wiv. Ill, 1, 8 3 (Evans' speech), an you u. these blows long, E r r . II, 2, 37. you u. this dalliance to excuse your breach of promise, IV, 1, 48. 1 make all use of it (my discontent), for I u. it only, A d o I, 3 , 4 1 ( = harbour it, have it), this civil war of wits were much better —d on Navarre, L L L II, 226. she should not u. a long one (passion) for such a Pyramus, Mids. V, 322. u. all the observance of civility, Merch. II, 2, 204. u. your pleasure, III, 2, 3 2 3 (do as you please), u. thou all the endeavour of a man in speed to Padua, III, 4, 48. you may as well u. question with the wolf, IV, 1,73. therefore u. thy discretion, As 1, 1, 152 (do as you please). the stern brow and waspish action which she did u. as she was writing of it, IV, 3, 10. u. your manners discreetly in all kind of companies, Shr. I, 1, 247. u. a more spacious ceremony to the noble lords, All's II, 1, 51. do not u. it oft (tempting him thus) H 4 A III, 1, 176. rendered such aspect as cloudy men u. to their adversaries, III, 2, 83 (Ff u. to do to), u. lenity, H 5 111,2,26. u. mercy to them all, 111, 3 , 5 4 . to u. his good pleasure, III, 6, 57. what treachery was — d t H 6 A I, 1,68. u. no entreaty, for it is in vain, V, 4, 85. words and threats shall be the war that Henry means to u. H6C 1, 1, 73. while I u. further conference with Warwick, 111,3,111. if we u. delay, cold biting winter mars our hoped-for hay, IV, 8, 60. u. careful watch, R 3 V, 3, 54. we are ready to u. our utmost studies in your service, H 8 III, 1, 174. to u. so rude behaviour, IV, 2, 103. we must u. expostulation kindly, Troil. IV, 4, 62. thou dost affect my manners and dost u. them, T i m . IV, 3, 199. that thou wilt u. the wars as thy redress and

u not as our confusion, V, 4, 51. nor with such fret and friendly conference as he hath —d of old, Caes. IV, 2, 18. the rest is labour, which is not —dfor you, Mcb. I , 4 , 4 4 . —ing those thoughts which should indeed have died, III, 2, 10. u. all gently, Hml. III, 2, 6. to u. some gentle entertainment to Laertes before you fall to play, V, 2, 215. knavery's plain face is never seen till —d, Oth. 11,1,321. Antony will «. his affection where it is, Ant. II, 6, 139. d) to treat: how Tarquin must be —d, Locr. 1195. I have —d thee with humane care, Tp. 1,2,345. V,72. Gent. IT, 4, 207. Wiy. 111,3,42 [we'll u. this unwholesome humidity; with reticence of the adverb). 215. IV, 4, 26. V, 5, 173. Err. II, 2, 155. Ill, 2, 6. Midfl. II, 1, 2 0 5 . 2 1 0 . Ill, 2,45.152. Shr. 1,1,65. I, 2, 32. 11,111. All'« I, 1, 229. V, 2, 23. Tw. II, 5, 31. Ill, 4 , 1 7 1 . IV, 2, 37. John IV, 1, 55. H4B II, 2, 150. V, 1, 33. H5 III, 2, 138. 139. H6A II, 5,35. H6B II, 4, 82. H6C III, 2, 1 2 3 . 1 2 4 . IV, 3 , 3 6 . 38. R3 111, 2 , 3 3 . IV, 1, 103. Tit. IV, 2, 40. Tim. Ill, 1, 39. Cymb. Ill, 3, 8 etc. e) to h a r e , posses«, occupy or enjoy for a time: why dost thou u. so great a ram of sums, yet canst not lioef Sonn. 4, 7. some necessaries that I needs must u. G e n t II, 4,188. not of this country, though my chance is now to u. it for my time, Meas. 111,2,231. 1 then did u. the person of your father; the image of his power lay then in me, H4B V, 2, 73. having great and instant occasion to u. fifty talents, Tim. Ill, 1, 19. heaven's bounty towards him might be —d more thankfully, Cymb. I, 6, 79. cf. Ado I, 3, 41. 2) refl. to behave: forgive me, if I have —d myself unmannerly, H8 III, 1, 176. 3) intr. a) to be accustomed, to be wont: where Adon —d to cool his spleen, Pilgr. 76. the unstained sword thai you have —d to bear, H4B V, 2, 114. Tp. II, 1,175. Wiv. IV, 2, 58. As II, 3, 23. Tw. II, 4, 47. II, 5, 104. H4A III, 2, 83 (Ff u. to do to their adversaries, Qq u. to their a.). Ho IV,7,70. H6BIV,2,107. 109. H6C V.5,75. Troil. 111,3,73. Rom. II Chor. 10. III,5,191. Caes. 1,2,72.262. Hml. 11,2,48. Ant. II, 5, 32. Ill, 7 , 6 6 . Per. II, 1 , 6 6 etc. b) to do, to deal, to dispose: brought him hither, to use as you think needful of the man, Tit. V, 1,39. U s e f u l , profitable, helpful: u. serving-man, J o h n V, 2, 81. Adverbially: which thou hast worn most u. for thy country, Ant. IV, 14, 80. D m I « « , answering no purpose, unserviceable: T p . V, 60. Adverbially: and u. barns the harvest of his wits, Lucr. 859. I l m , one who uses (cf. the verb use): beauty's waste hath in the world an end, and kept unused, the а. so destroys it, 8onn. 9 , 1 2 . Caller, tobst. one whose business is to milk before and introduce another: Cor. II, 1,174. Ant. Ill, б,44. C a b e r , vb. to introduce as a forerunner or harbinger: that full star that —s tn the even, Sonn. 132, 7. tn —ing mend him who can, L L L V , 2, 328. no sun shall ever u. forth mint honours, H8 III, 2, 411. Usual, customary, common: Mids. V, 35. Merch. IV, 1, 72. Shr. Ill, 1, 12. H6C IV, 5 , 1 1 . H8 1,2,132. Hml. II, 1, 22. U s u a l l y , customarily, ordinarily: H 6 B I V , 7 , 4 3 . Mcb. Ill, 3, 12. U s u r e r , one who lends money and takes interest for it (which was thought disreputable, at any rate,

1305

in the poet's time): Sonn. 4, 7. 134, 10. Ado II, 1, 197 (like an —'» chain). Merch. Ill, 1, 50. Wint. IV, 4, 266. 271. H6A III, 1,17. Cor. 1,1, 84. Rom. Ill, 3, 123. Tim. II, 2, 62. 97. 101. 103. IV, 3, 112. Lr. Ill, 2, 89. IV, 6, 167. C a n r l n f , usurious: the balsam that the u. senate pours into captains' wounds, Tim. Ill, 5, 110. a u. kindness, IV, 3, 516. Usurp, 1) intr. to be in a place contrary to right: if aught possess thee from me, it is dross, —ing ivy, Err. II, 2, 180. it mourns that painting and —ing hair should ravish doters, L L L IV, 3, 259 ( = false hair). the treacherous feet which with —ing steps do trample thee, R2 III, 2, 17. With on, — to enter on illegitimately, to encroach on, to intrude: this sorrow is an enemy and would u. upon my watery eyes, Tit. Ill, 1, 269. thy natural magic . . . on wholesome life v. immediately, Hml. 111,2,271. death may u. on nature many hours, Per. Ill, 2, 82. Especially = to hold regal power without right: As I, 2, 286. II, 1. 27. John II, 119.121. Ill, 1, 61: R2 III, 3, 81. H6A I, 3, 31. H6C 1,1, 81.169. H, 2, 165. Ill, 3, 79. R3 V, 2, 7. V, 3 , 1 1 2 . H8 II, 1, 108. 2) trans, to seize or take or assume falsely or against right: a sudden pale —s her cheek, Yen. 591. sweating lust —ed his (love's) nam«, 794. thou doe it here n. the name thou owest not, Tp. I, ?, 453. to steal from the state and u. the beggary he was never born to, Meas. HI, 2, 99. the boy will well u. the grace, voice, gait and action of a gentlewoman, Shr. Ind. 1, 131 ( = counterfeit). —ing his spurs so long, All's IV, 3, 119. are you the lady of the houset If I do not u. myself, I am, Tw. I, 5, 198. 200. my masculine —ed attire, V, 257. R2 IV, 257. V, 5, 89. H6A IV, 1, 40. H6C II, 2, 12. R3 1,3,173. IV, 4 , 2 7 . Hml. 1 , 1 , 4 6 . Lr. IV, 2, 28. V, 3, 317. Oth. I, 3, 346 (an —ed beard — a false beard). Especially applied to regal rights: John II, 118. 175. Ill, 1, 160. R2 V, 1, 65. Ho I, 2, 69. 95 (—ed from you; cf. From). H6A V, 4, 151. H6B I, 1, 244. H6C I, 1, 23. I, 2, 25. HI, 3, 28. IV, 7,66. V,4, 77. V, 5, 37. V, 6,73. R 3 IV,4,109.110. 367. 371. V,6,4. U s u r p a t i o n , illegal occupation: so looks the strand whereon the imperious flood hath left a witnessed u. H4BI,1,63. Especially illegal possession of royalty: J o h n II, 9. H6A II, 5, 68. U s u r p e r , one who occupies a place, especially a throne, without right: Lucr. 412. As II, 1,61. J o h n II, 120. H5 1,2,78. H6B I, 3, 36.188. IV, 4 , 3 0 . H6C I, 1, 114. Ill, 3, 76. H8 I, 2, 196. Mcb. V, 8, 55. G a u r p l n f l y , by usurpation, illegitimately: J o h n I, 13. Usury, the practice of taking interest for money: that use is not forbidden u. Sonn. 6,5. like «. applying wet to wet, Compl. 40. 'twas never merry world since of two - es the merriest was put down, and the worser allowed by order of law a furred gown, Meas. 111,2,7. make edicts for v., to support usurers, Cor. I, 1, 84. banish u., that makes the senate ugly, Tim. Ill, 5, 99. did you but know the city's —es and felt them knowingly, Cymb. Ill, 3, 45. Ut, the first note in Guido's musical scale: ut, re, sol, la, mi, fa, L L L IV, 2, 102. Shr. Ill, 1, 76. Utensil, a household implement, any thing for daily use: T p 111, 2, 104. Tw. I, 5, 264. Utility, usefulness: H5 V, 2, 53. 83*

V

1306

C t l i (from the French huii; originally the time between a festival and the eighth day after it) merrim e n t f n n : here will be oldu. H4B 11,4,22 (the drawer's speech). I t a M t , 1) being at the furthest point, extreme: that u. corner of the vest, J o h n 11,29. here is my butt and very tea-mark of my u. tail, Oth. V, 2, 268. Substantively: that't the u. of kit pilgrimage, Meas. II, 1,36. 2) being in the highest degree or quantity: iite our commution in hit ».force, J o h n III, 3, 11. l i z or seven thousand it their >. power, R 3 V, 3, 10. H8 III, 1, 174. Cor. Ill, 1, 326. Per. V, 1, 76 (Ff and later Qq uttermost). Substantively: try him to the u. H8 V, з,146. though he perform to the u. of a man, Cor. 1,1, 272. that't the «. of your having, V, 2, 61. toe have tried the u. of our friendt, Caes. IV, 3, 214. 3) most accurate, computed with absolute exactness; last: when at thy love hath cast hit u. ram, Sonn. 49, 3. how much your chain weight to the u. carat, Err. IV, 1, 28. what they weigh, even to the u. scruple, Ado V, 1, 93. extend to you what further becomes hit greatnett, even to the u. syllable of your worthiness, All's 111, 6, 74. the very litt, the very u. bound of all our fortunes, H4A IV, 1, 51. that we now possessed the u. man of expectation, H4B I, 3, 65. he weight time even to the u. grain, H5 II, 4, 138. given to captivity me and my u. hopes, Oth. IV, 2, 51 (none excepted, Qq om.l. I ' I t e r , adj. complete, total: the son of u. darkness, H4A 111, 3, 42. I foretee with grief the u. loss of aU the realm of France, H6A V, 4, 112. to thy foul disgrace and u. ruin of the house of York, H6C I, I, 254. U t t e r , vb. 1) to emit, to send forth (German: von sich geben): pecks up wit •.. and —s it again, LLL V, 2, 316. —ing such dulcet and harmonious breath, Mids. II, 1, 151. eat no oniont,for we are to u. tweet breath, IV, 2, 44. cons state without book and —s it by great swarths, Tw. II, 3, 161. he —sthem 'tunes) as he had eaten ballads, Wint. IV, 4, 185. —ed such a deal of slinking breath, Caes. I, 2, 247. 2) to cause to pass from one band to another (not exactly = to sell, as the commentators explain it, but the German unter die Leute bringen, or an den Mann bringen): beauty is bought by judgement of the eye, not —ed by base sale of chapmen's tongues, L L L II, 16. money's a medler, that doth u. all men's ware-a, Wint. IV, 4, 330. Mantua's law is death to any he that —s them, Kom. V, ], 67. 3) to disclose, not to keep secret: my tongue shall и. all, Lucr. 1076. to u. that which else no worldly good should draw from me, Gent. Ill, 1, 8. the vile conclusion I now begin with grief and shame to u. Meas. V, 96. Err. I, 1, 36. Ado I, 1, 217. Ill, 3, 112. IV, 1,

14. H4A II, 3, 114. H4B V, 3, 115. H8 I, 2, 167. Hml. II, 1, 119. Oth. Ill, 3, 136. Cymb. V, 5, 141. 4) to pronounce, to speak: the —t this, Lucr. 1721. —ing foolish things, 1813. —ing bare truth, Sonn. 69, 4. his backward voice is to u. foul speeches, Tp. II, 2, 95. there it not chattily enough in language, without offence to u. them, Ado IV, 1, 99. I have drunk poiton whiles he uttered it, V, 1, 253. graves, yawn and yield your dead, till death be —ed, heavily, heavily, V, 3 , 2 0 (i. e. the cry 'graves, yawn' etc. shall be raised till death). L L L V, 2, 524. Merch. 11, 8, 14. Shr. II, 177. All's V, 3, 208. Wint. I, 2 , 1 0 4 . 4 1 0 . 4 4 3 . John 111, 4, 43. V, 7, 66. H4A I, 1, 107. II, 4, 272. H4B V, 3, 138. H5 111, 6, 66. H6A V, 5, 13. H6C IV, 1, 98. H8 I, 2, 136. II, 4, 171. V, 5, 16. Troil. II, 1, 75. Cor. II, 1, 58. II, 2, 87. V, 2, 25. Tit. V, 2, 169. V, 3, 89. Bom. II, 2, 59 ( -ing; most M. Edd., following the surreptitious Ql, utterance). Ill, 1, 160. Ill, 5, 175. Caes. Ill, 1, 235. Hml. Ill, 4, 142. Lr. I, 4, 354. Ant. I, 2, 113. II, 2, 133. With forth: there my father s grave did u. forth a voice, Meas. Ill, 1, 87. that my tongue may u. forth the malice of my heart, Tit. V, 3, 12. U t t e r a n c e , extremity (Fr. outrance): come fate into the list, and champion me to the u. Mcb. Ill, I, 72. which (honour) he to seek of me again perforce, behoves me keep at u. Cymb. Ill, 1, 73. U t t e r a n c e , 1) emission, asending forth (of sound): these cannot I command to any u. of harmony, Hml. Ill, 2, 378. 2) the act of speaking or expressing: I tpealc ... as mine honesty puts it to u. Wint. I, 1, 22. the u. of a brace of tongues must needs want pleading for a pair of eyes, J o h n IV, 1, 98. he has a merit to choke it in the u. COT. IV, 7, 49. floods of leart will ... break my very u. Tit. V, 3, 91. the voice and u. of my tongue, Caes. Ill, 1, 261. In Rom. 11, 2, 59 the spurious Ql and most M. Edd. «., the authentic O. Edd. uttering. 3) elocution: with all the gracioutu. thou hast, R2 III, 3, 125. I have neither wit, nor tcords, nor worth, action, nor u. Caes. Ill, 2, 226. U t t e r l y , completely, entirely: Wiv. IV, 2, 43. H4A II, 4, 516. H4B IV, 5, 218. H6A I, 1, 163. H6B III, 1, 85. H8 II, 4, 81. Ill, 1, 160. Ant. II, 2, 238. P e r . Ill, 1, 59. U t t e r m a s t , extreme, being in the highest degree, last, utmost: my u. power, H5 III, 6, 9 (Fluellen's speech), my u. skill, Per. V, 1, 76 (Ql.s utmott). Everywhere else substantively: making question of my u. Merch. I, 1, 156 (doubting that I will do my utmost), that shall be racked even to theu. 181. I will be free even to the u. Shr. IV, 3, 80. to the u. Troil. IV, 5, 91. by the eighth hour: is that the u.f Caes. II, 1, 213. 214 ( = latest), to effect it to my u. Oth. Ill, 4, 167.

V. V a c a n c y , 1) empty space, vacuity: that you do bend your eye on t>. Hml. Ill, 4, 117. whistling to the air, which, but for v., had gone to gaze on Cleopatra too and made a gap in nature. Ant. II, 2, 221. 2) empty and idle time: if he filled his v. with his voluptuousness, Ant. I, 4, 26.

3) intermission: no interim, not a minute's v., but day and night did we keep company, Tw. V, 98. Vacant, empty, not filled: the v. leaves thy ntind's imprint will bear, Sonn. 77, 3. war-thoughts have left their places v. Ado I, 1, 304. stuffs out his v. garments with his form, John III, 4, 97. with a body filled and

V

1306

C t l i (from the French huii; originally the time between a festival and the eighth day after it) merrim e n t f n n : here will be oldu. H4B 11,4,22 (the drawer's speech). I t a M t , 1) being at the furthest point, extreme: that u. corner of the vest, J o h n 11,29. here is my butt and very tea-mark of my u. tail, Oth. V, 2, 268. Substantively: that't the u. of kit pilgrimage, Meas. II, 1,36. 2) being in the highest degree or quantity: iite our commution in hit ».force, J o h n III, 3, 11. l i z or seven thousand it their >. power, R 3 V, 3, 10. H8 III, 1, 174. Cor. Ill, 1, 326. Per. V, 1, 76 (Ff and later Qq uttermost). Substantively: try him to the u. H8 V, з,146. though he perform to the u. of a man, Cor. 1,1, 272. that't the «. of your having, V, 2, 61. toe have tried the u. of our friendt, Caes. IV, 3, 214. 3) most accurate, computed with absolute exactness; last: when at thy love hath cast hit u. ram, Sonn. 49, 3. how much your chain weight to the u. carat, Err. IV, 1, 28. what they weigh, even to the u. scruple, Ado V, 1, 93. extend to you what further becomes hit greatnett, even to the u. syllable of your worthiness, All's 111, 6, 74. the very litt, the very u. bound of all our fortunes, H4A IV, 1, 51. that we now possessed the u. man of expectation, H4B I, 3, 65. he weight time even to the u. grain, H5 II, 4, 138. given to captivity me and my u. hopes, Oth. IV, 2, 51 (none excepted, Qq om.l. I ' I t e r , adj. complete, total: the son of u. darkness, H4A 111, 3, 42. I foretee with grief the u. loss of aU the realm of France, H6A V, 4, 112. to thy foul disgrace and u. ruin of the house of York, H6C I, I, 254. U t t e r , vb. 1) to emit, to send forth (German: von sich geben): pecks up wit •.. and —s it again, LLL V, 2, 316. —ing such dulcet and harmonious breath, Mids. II, 1, 151. eat no oniont,for we are to u. tweet breath, IV, 2, 44. cons state without book and —s it by great swarths, Tw. II, 3, 161. he —sthem 'tunes) as he had eaten ballads, Wint. IV, 4, 185. —ed such a deal of slinking breath, Caes. I, 2, 247. 2) to cause to pass from one band to another (not exactly = to sell, as the commentators explain it, but the German unter die Leute bringen, or an den Mann bringen): beauty is bought by judgement of the eye, not —ed by base sale of chapmen's tongues, L L L II, 16. money's a medler, that doth u. all men's ware-a, Wint. IV, 4, 330. Mantua's law is death to any he that —s them, Kom. V, ], 67. 3) to disclose, not to keep secret: my tongue shall и. all, Lucr. 1076. to u. that which else no worldly good should draw from me, Gent. Ill, 1, 8. the vile conclusion I now begin with grief and shame to u. Meas. V, 96. Err. I, 1, 36. Ado I, 1, 217. Ill, 3, 112. IV, 1,

14. H4A II, 3, 114. H4B V, 3, 115. H8 I, 2, 167. Hml. II, 1, 119. Oth. Ill, 3, 136. Cymb. V, 5, 141. 4) to pronounce, to speak: the —t this, Lucr. 1721. —ing foolish things, 1813. —ing bare truth, Sonn. 69, 4. his backward voice is to u. foul speeches, Tp. II, 2, 95. there it not chattily enough in language, without offence to u. them, Ado IV, 1, 99. I have drunk poiton whiles he uttered it, V, 1, 253. graves, yawn and yield your dead, till death be —ed, heavily, heavily, V, 3 , 2 0 (i. e. the cry 'graves, yawn' etc. shall be raised till death). L L L V, 2, 524. Merch. 11, 8, 14. Shr. II, 177. All's V, 3, 208. Wint. I, 2 , 1 0 4 . 4 1 0 . 4 4 3 . John 111, 4, 43. V, 7, 66. H4A I, 1, 107. II, 4, 272. H4B V, 3, 138. H5 111, 6, 66. H6A V, 5, 13. H6C IV, 1, 98. H8 I, 2, 136. II, 4, 171. V, 5, 16. Troil. II, 1, 75. Cor. II, 1, 58. II, 2, 87. V, 2, 25. Tit. V, 2, 169. V, 3, 89. Bom. II, 2, 59 ( -ing; most M. Edd., following the surreptitious Ql, utterance). Ill, 1, 160. Ill, 5, 175. Caes. Ill, 1, 235. Hml. Ill, 4, 142. Lr. I, 4, 354. Ant. I, 2, 113. II, 2, 133. With forth: there my father s grave did u. forth a voice, Meas. Ill, 1, 87. that my tongue may u. forth the malice of my heart, Tit. V, 3, 12. U t t e r a n c e , extremity (Fr. outrance): come fate into the list, and champion me to the u. Mcb. Ill, I, 72. which (honour) he to seek of me again perforce, behoves me keep at u. Cymb. Ill, 1, 73. U t t e r a n c e , 1) emission, asending forth (of sound): these cannot I command to any u. of harmony, Hml. Ill, 2, 378. 2) the act of speaking or expressing: I tpealc ... as mine honesty puts it to u. Wint. I, 1, 22. the u. of a brace of tongues must needs want pleading for a pair of eyes, J o h n IV, 1, 98. he has a merit to choke it in the u. COT. IV, 7, 49. floods of leart will ... break my very u. Tit. V, 3, 91. the voice and u. of my tongue, Caes. Ill, 1, 261. In Rom. 11, 2, 59 the spurious Ql and most M. Edd. «., the authentic O. Edd. uttering. 3) elocution: with all the gracioutu. thou hast, R2 III, 3, 125. I have neither wit, nor tcords, nor worth, action, nor u. Caes. Ill, 2, 226. U t t e r l y , completely, entirely: Wiv. IV, 2, 43. H4A II, 4, 516. H4B IV, 5, 218. H6A I, 1, 163. H6B III, 1, 85. H8 II, 4, 81. Ill, 1, 160. Ant. II, 2, 238. P e r . Ill, 1, 59. U t t e r m a s t , extreme, being in the highest degree, last, utmost: my u. power, H5 III, 6, 9 (Fluellen's speech), my u. skill, Per. V, 1, 76 (Ql.s utmott). Everywhere else substantively: making question of my u. Merch. I, 1, 156 (doubting that I will do my utmost), that shall be racked even to theu. 181. I will be free even to the u. Shr. IV, 3, 80. to the u. Troil. IV, 5, 91. by the eighth hour: is that the u.f Caes. II, 1, 213. 214 ( = latest), to effect it to my u. Oth. Ill, 4, 167.

V. V a c a n c y , 1) empty space, vacuity: that you do bend your eye on t>. Hml. Ill, 4, 117. whistling to the air, which, but for v., had gone to gaze on Cleopatra too and made a gap in nature. Ant. II, 2, 221. 2) empty and idle time: if he filled his v. with his voluptuousness, Ant. I, 4, 26.

3) intermission: no interim, not a minute's v., but day and night did we keep company, Tw. V, 98. Vacant, empty, not filled: the v. leaves thy ntind's imprint will bear, Sonn. 77, 3. war-thoughts have left their places v. Ado I, 1, 304. stuffs out his v. garments with his form, John III, 4, 97. with a body filled and

V

1307

r. mind, H5 IV, 286. special dignities, tchtch v. lie nothing but v. fantasy, Rom. 1,4,98. not with v. Hanks, for thy best use and wearing, Tim. V, I, 145. With Oth. Ill, 3, 470. O v. boast, V, 2, 264. of = devoid of: being of those virtues v. H8 V, 1,126. 2) unwise, foolish, silly: my father would mforce Vm«U«d , the time of nonterm: As III, 2, 349. me marry v. Thurio, Gent. IV, 3, 17. schoolmaids Vade, to fade: untimely plucked, soon —d, plucked change their names by v. though apt affection, Meas. I, in the bud, and —d in the spring, Pilgr. 131. 132. a 4, 48. there's no man is so v. that would refuse to fair shining gloss that —th suddenly, 170. a glots ... —d, an offered chain, Err. Ill, 2, 185. one whom the music 174. 176. his summer leaves all —d, B2 I, 2, 20 of his own v. tongue doth ravish, LLL I, 1, 167. it (Q. shall be such that Valentine, name 1) of the saint, on whose day every slight and false-derived cause ... shall to the king (Febr. 14) birds began to couple and mates were taste of this action, H4B IV, 1, 189. since of your lives chosen by the different sexes: Saint V. is past: begin you set so slight a v. Cymb. IV, 4, 49. these wood-birds but to couple nowt Mids. IV, 1, 144. Valoe, subst.worth; price: Wiv. Ill, 4, 15. Meas. to-morrow is Saint —'s day, Hml. IV, 5, 48. to be I, 1, 56. Ado IV, 1, 222. Merch. 1, 3, 160. II, 7, 25. your V. 51 (i. e. your true-love), cf. there's not a hair II, 9, 91. Ill, 2, 289. IV, 1, 366. 434. V, 151. R2 II, on's head but 'tis a V. Gent. Ill, 1, 192. no V. indeed 3, 19. H6A V, I, 44. H8 V, 3, 108 (how mu. upon the charged chambers, H4B II, 4, 56. I play a merchant's part, and v. madly on a desperate mart, Shr. II, 329. we —d on such dangerous seas, H4B I, 1, 181. 2) trans, a) to pnt to hazard, to risk, to stake: I'll v. so natch of my hawk or hound, but twenty times so much upon my wife, Shr. V, 2, 72. 1'ld v. the welllost life of mine on his grace's cure, All's I, 3, 253. qpon thy certainty and confidence what darest thou v. t II, 1, 173. so dare we t>. thee, H4A V, 1, 101. and v. maidenhood for't, H8 II, 3, 25. he had rather v. all his limbs for honour, Cor. II, 2, 84. b) to run the hazard o f : J'U v. it, J o h n IV, 3 , 5 . others t>. trade abroad, H5 I, 2, 192. I'll v. one haveat-him, H8 II, 2, 85. for little England you'ld v. an embaUing, II, 3, 47. I should v. purgatory for't, Oth. IV, 3, 77. W i t h an inf.: I may v. to depart alone, Gent. IT, 3, 36. how thou darest v. to be drunk, Wint. V. 3, 184. H 8 V, 1, 40. Cor. I, 1, 94. Lr. Ill, 4,157.

1313

V e n t u r e u e , daring, bold: Mids. IT, 1,39. E6A II, 1, 45. H 6 B III, 2, 9. R3 IT, 4, 170. H8 I, 2. 54. V e n u e , see Venew. V e n u s , 1) the goddess of beauty and love: Ten. 5.180.187.248.816.859. 1057. Lucr.58 (—'dotes). Pilgr. 143. Tp. IT, 87. Ado IV, 1, 61. L L L II, J56. Mids. I, 1, 171 (—' doves). Merch. II, 6, 5 '' pigeons). As IT, 1, 216. Troil. Ill, 1, 34. IT, 1.22. IT, 5, 49. 179. T, 2, 165. Rom. II, 1, 11. IT, 1, 8. A n t I, 5, 18. II, 2, 205. Cymb. T, 5, 164. 2) name of a planet, the evening star: Mid& III, 2, 61. 107. H4B II, 4, 286. H6A I, 2, 144. Tic. II, 3, 30. V e r t , a part of speech that expresses existence or any modification of i t : H6B IT, 7, 43. V e r b a l , 1) literal, havingword answering to word: aU the neighbour caves ... make v. repetition of her means, Ven. 831. 2) spoken, not written: she told me in a swat v. brief, All's V, 3, 137. 3) expressed or conveyed in words: made sle no v. question? Lr. IT, 3, 26 ( = did Bhe not speak!)4) plain-spoken, wording one's thoughts wiftont reserve: you put me to forget a lady's manners, by king so v. Cymb. II, 3, 111 (according to others, — verbose). Verbatim, orally: or am not able v. to rehearse the method of my pen, H6A III, 1, 13. Verfc«alty, exuberance of words: he draweh out the thread of his v. finer than the staple of his argunent, L L L T, 1, 18 (Holofernes' speech). V e r d i c t , judgment, decision: but quickly o% this side the v. went, Compl. 113. whereto my tongte a party v. gave, R2 I, 3, 234. giving my v. on the vhite rose side, H6A II, 4, 48. must your bold v. enter talk with lordst III, 1, 63. let us kill him, ... is't a v.t Cor. I, 1, 11. Specially, the determination of a j u r j declared to a judge: to 'cide this title is impannekd a quest of thoughts, ... and by their v. is determines ..., Sonn. 46, 11. what lawful quest have given their e>. up unto the frowning judge 1 R3 I, 4, 189. not ever the justice and the truth o'the question carries the due o'the v. with it, H 8 T, 1, 132. V n t a n , Lord V. of Alton, one of T a l b o f s taronial title«: H6A IT, 7, 65. V e n t u r e , freshness, life and vigoar: their (your \ipa')v.still endure, to drive infection from the dangirous year, Ven. 507. the ivy which had hid my princely trunk and sucked my v. out on't, T p . I, 2, 87. by Cm the young and tender wit is turned to folly, blasting h the bud, losing his e. even in the prime, Gent. I, 1, 49. V e r e i Lord Aubrey V., name in H6C III, 3,102. Verge, 1) brink, edge, margin, border: ot the extremest v. of the swift brook, As II, 1, 42. b the furthest v. that ever was surveyed by English eye, R2 I, 1, 93. upon the beached v. of the salt flood, Tin. V, 1, 219. nature in you stands on the very v. of her confine, Lr. II, 4, 149. you are now within a fool if the extreme v. IT, 6, 36. 3) compass, circle: (thy crown) incaged in so imall a v. R2 II, 1, 103. whom we raise, we will mala fast within a hallowed v. H6B I, 4, 25. the inclusive v. of golden metal that must round my brow, R3 IT, 1,59. Verges, name of tbe headborough in Ado II, 5, 10. 19. 39. V e r i f y , 1) to prove to be true, to confirm:to v. our title with their lives, John II, 277. then Ipeiceivt

1314

V

that will be —td Henry the Fifth did sometime prophesy, H6A V, 1, 30. unlet! the adage mutt be —ed that beggar» mounted run their horte to death, H6C I, 4,126. the common voice it —ed of thee, H8V, 3,176. 2) to back, to support the / r e d i t of: 1 have ever —ed my friendt ... with aU the size that verity would without lapsing suffer, Cor. V, 2, 17. 3) to affirm, to maintain: they have —ed unjust things, Ado V, 1, 222 (Dogberry's speech). I will v. at much in hit beard, H5 III, 2,75 (Fluellen's speech). more truly now may this be —ed, H6A I, 2, 32. V e r i l y , in troth, really: there wat a noise, thai't v. Tp. II, 1, 321 (i. e. that is to say, in fact, not only in my dream. Some M. Edd. verity). I think v. he had been hanged Jor't, Gent. IV, 4, 16. / v. did think that her old gloves were on, As IV, 3, 25. v., I speak it in the freedom of my knowledge, Wint. I, 1, 12. I may not, v. I, 2, 45. 46. 49. 50. 55. that those veins did v. bear blood, V, 3, 65. v. and in truth, H5 V, 1, 64. v., I swear, 'tit better to be lowly born, H8 II, 3, 18. v., / do not jett with you, Cor. 1, 3, 103. V e r i t a b l e , tree: it't truet Most v. Oth. Ill,4,76. V e r i t y , 1) truth, fact, reality: which you thall find by every syllable a faithful v. Meas. IV, 3, 131. to the full arming of the v. All's IV, 3, 73. the v. of it is in strong suspicion, Wint. V, 2,31. 'twould prove the v. of certain words, H8 1,2,159. with all the size that v. would without lapting suffer, Cor. V, 2, 18. by the —et on thee made good, Mcb. Ill, 1, 8. in the v. of extolment, Hml V, 2, 121. in v. = in truth: Err. IV, 4, 80. in sincere v. Lr. II, 2, 111. — In Tp. II, 1, 321 O. Edd. verily, some M. Edd. v. 2) faith, honesty: I think he it not a pickpurte nor a horsestealer, but for his v. in love, I do think him as concave as a covered goblet, As 111, 4, 25 (or = his really being in love?), justice, v., temperance, Mcb. IV, 3, 92. V e r m l U a n , a beautiful red colour: praise the deep v. in the rose, Sonn. 98, 10. V e r m l a , noxious little animals: Lr. Ill, 4, 164. V e r a » B | 1) Sir Richard V.: H4A IV, 1, 86. IV, 3, 20. IV, 4, 24. V, 2,1. V, 5, 14. 2) Master V . : H6A II,4, 43. 128. V e r a l e a , French name in Per. IV, 2, 115. V e r a n a , town in Italy: Gent. Ill, 1, 81. IV, 1,17. 47. V, 4,129. Shr. I, 2, 1. 22. 49. 191. 11,1,47. Bom. Prol. 2. I, 1, 99. I, 2, 35. 89. I, 3, 70. 77. I, 5, 69. III, 1, 92 ("in V. streets). Ill, 3, 15. 17 (without V. walls). V, 1, 12. V, 3, 300. V e r a n e a a * , (Fl Verennessa, later Ff Veronesso, M. Edd. Veronesa), a ship of Verona (or equipped by the city of Verona): Oth. II, 1, 26. Veraal, the nurse's blunder for universal in Rom. II, 4, 219. Verae, 1) a metrical line: 'tis a v. in Horace, Tit. IV, 2, 22. 24. a blank v. (not in rhyme): Ado V, 2, 34. As IV, 1, 32. Hml. II, 2, 339. Plur. — s: L L L IV, 2, 105. 156. 164. V, 2, 50. As III, 2, 119. 175. H6A I, 1, 27. —s = poetical compositions: to no other pass my —s tend, Sonn. 103, 11. he writes —t, Wiv. Ill, 2. 69. LLL V, 2, 34. Mids. 1, 1, 31. As III, 2, 172. 177. 278. 411. Ill, 3, 12. Ill, 4, 44. H5 V, 2, 137. Caes. Ill, 3, 34. 2) a short division of a poem, a strophe, couplet: a staff, a tlanze, a v. LLL IV, 2, 107. but one v. Tw. II, 4, 7.

3) poetry, poetical composition: who will believe my v. Sonn. 17,1. my love thall in my v. ever live young, 19,14. stirred by a painted beauty to his v. 21.2. 38, 2. 54, 14. 60, 13. 71, 9. 76, 1. 78, 2. 86, 1. 103, 13. As II, 5, 48. Ill, 2 , 1 . 1 7 9 . 1 8 0 . Wint. V, 1,101. Troil. III, 2,189. IV, 4, 24. V, 10, 40. Tim. 1,1,16. V, I, 87. V e r a l a s , telling in v e n e : v. love to amorous Phillida, Mids. II, 1, 67. V e r y , adj. originally — rentable, true, real: there would appear the r . eyes of men through loopholes thrust, Lucr. 1383. thou art v. Trineulo indeed, Tp. II, 2,109. two of them have the v. bent of Aonour, Ado IV, 1, 188. here is the v. remuneration I had of thy master, LLL V, 1, 76. this it the v. falte gallop of verses, As III, 2, 119. what would you tay to me now, an I were your v. v. Rosalind? IV, 1, 71. to many of hit thadowt thou halt met and not the v. king, H4A V, 4, 31. hath the Prince John a full commission, in v. ample virtue of hit father, to hear and absolutely to determine . . . . » H4B IV, 1, 163. I have found the v. cause of BamUet lunacy, Hml. 11,2,49. Cor. IV,6,70. rather blamed as mine own jealout curiosity than as a v. pretence and purpose of unkindness, Lr. I, 4, 75. I am abtohtte 'twas v. Cloten, Cymb. IV, 2, 107. she it thy v. princess, Per. V, 1, 220. Hence = full, complete, perfect; cf. the following instances: a bliss in proof, and proved, a r . woe, Sonn. 129, 11. v. rogues, Wiv. II, 1, 182. you have paid ...the v. debt of your calling, Meas. Ill, 2, 264. he it a v. paramour for a sweet voice, Mids. IV, 2, 12. a v. fox for hit valour, V, 234. a v. beadle to a humorous sigh, L L L III, 177. my master's a v. Jew, Merch. II, 2, 112. stay the v. riping of the time, II, 8, 4 0 . thinkest thou any man is so v. a fool to be married to hellf Shr. 1, 1, 129. such an injury would vex a v. saint, III, 2,28. I find report a t>. liar, II, 246. a i>. monster in apparel, III, 2, 71. an I were not a v. coward, All's IV, 3, 356. thy mind it a v. opal, Tw. II, 4, 77. he's a v. fool, I, 3, 25. words are v. rascals since bonds disgraced them, III, 1, 24. he is a v. man per se, and stands alone, Troil I, 2, 15. I should make v. forget of my cheeks, Oth. IV, 2, 74 etc. Compar. and snperl.: wat not my lord the —er wag o'the twof Wint. I, 2, 66. there are —er knaves desire to live, Cymb. V, 4, 209. were he the —est antic in the world, Shr. Ind. 1, 101. thou hast the —est threw of all, V, 2, 64. lam the —est varlet that ever chewed with a tooth, H4A II, 2, 25. yield me to the —est hind that shall once touch my shoulder, Cymb. V, 3, 77. Generally placed before substantives to indicate that they must be understood in their full and unrestricted sense: now is she in the v. lists of love, Ven. 595. so shall I state at first the v. worst of fortune's might, Sonn. 90, 12. the cry did knock against my v. heart, Tp. I, 2, 9. which touched the v. virtue of compassion in thee, 27. he is a stone, a v. pebble stone, Gent. II, 3, 11. 'tis an ill office for a gentleman, especially against his v. friend, III, 2, 41 (one who is indeed , and in the full sense of the word, his friend, cf. Merch. Ill, 2, 226). he grieves my v. heart-strings, IV, 2, 62. whom my v. soul abhors, IV, 3,17. that with his v. heart despiseth me, IV, 4, 99. would I might be dead if 1 in thought felt not her t>. sorrow, 177. there's the point, the point of it, Wiv. 1, 1, 230. the v. yea and the no it ..., 1,4,98. thote that know the v. nerves of state, Meas. I, 4, 53. a man whose blood is v. snow-

V broth, 58. upon the v. siege of justice Lord Angelo hath professed the contrary, IV, 2,101. time is a v. bankrupt, E r r . IV, 2, 58. the v. sum of all is ..., LLL V, 1, 115. the v. best at a beast, Mids. V, 232. the Jew is the v. devil incarnal, Merch. II, 2 , 2 8 . the bog was the v. staff of mg age, my v. prop, 70. 'confess and love' had been the v. sum of my confession, 111,2,36. I bid mg v. friends and countrgmen, dear Portia, welcome, 226 (indeed my friends, though met here very unexpectedly), to suffer ... the v. tyranny and rage of his, IV, 1, 13. contrived against the v. life of the defendant, 360. he that did uphold the v. life of mg dear friend, V, 214. till that the weary v. means do ebb, As II, 7,73. they are in the v. wrath of love, V, 2, 44. I came thence for v. shame, Shr. Ill, 2, 182. in pure white robes, like v. sanctity, W i n t . Ill, 3 , 2 3 . this is the v. sum of all, J o h n II, 151. in v. sincerity of fear, H 4 A II, 3, 32. France should have torn and rent my v. heart, H6B I, 1, 126. it irks mg v. soul, H 6 C II, 2, 6. in the v. pangs of death he cried, II, 3, 17. eges sparkling for v. wrath, II, 5, 131. he shall split thy v. heart with sorrow, R3 1, 3, 300. even of your mettle, of your v. blood, IV, 4 , 3 0 2 . a curse begin at v. root on's heart, Cor. II, 1, 202. I hold it v. stuff o'the conscience to do no contrived murder, Oth. I, 2, 2. you could not lack ...v. necessity of this thought, A n t . II, 2, 58. I think the king be touched at v. heart, Cymb. 1, 1, 10 etc. very sooth, Wint. I, 2, 17. in v. truth, H 4 B III, 2, 237. Before adjectives used substantively : in v. brief, the suit is impertinent to myself, Merch. 11,2,146. to grace him only ... a v. little I have yielded too, Cor. V, 3, 16 ( = a mere trifle). Similarly denoting exact conformity with what is expressed by the word: when thou reviewest this, thou dost review the v. part was consecrate to thee, Sonn. 7 4 , 6 (exactly that part), even her v. words didst thou deliver to me, Err. II, 2 , 1 6 5 . Hero was in this manner accused, in this v. manner refused, Ado IV, 2, 65. in v. likeness of a roasted crab, Mids. II, 1, 48. I dote on his v. absence, Merch. I, 2, 120 (his absence is just what I wish for), those are the v. words, IV, 1, 254. H 6 C IV, 1, 92. I-will be point-devise the v. man, T w . II, 5,177. when we have marked with blood those sleepy two and used their v. daggers, Mcb. I, 7, 76. to hold my v. course, L r . I, 3, 26. Temporally: the hour's now come; the v. minute bids thee ope thine ear, T p . I, 2, 37. spring come to you at the farthest in the v. end of harvest, IV, 115 (as soon as the harvest is ended), the v. instant that I saw you, did my heart fly to your service, III, 1, 64. when would you use it? This v. night, Gent. Ill, 1, 124. it is about the v. hour that Silvia should meet me, V, 1,2. at the v. instant of Falstaff s and our meeting, Wiv. V, 3, 16. he this v. day receives letters, Meas. IV, 2, 215. that v. hour, Err. I, 1, 54. this v. dag, 1,2,3. the v. night before the wedding, A d o l I , 2 , 4 5 etc. Hence denoting identity: on this grass-plot, in this v. place, T p . IV, 73. I am Prospero and that v. duke which was thrust forth of Milan, V, 159. all the kind of the Launces have this v. fault, Gent. II, 3, 3. that v. person, Wiv. I, 1, 50. this is the v. same, the v. hand, the v. words, II, 1, 84. Master Troth here, this v. man, Meas. II, 1, 104. we do condemn thee to the v. block where Claudio stooped to death, V, 419. unless you were the v. man, A d o II, 1, 123. that v. time I saw ... Cupid all armed, Mids. II, 1, 155. this v. sword entrenched it, All's II, 1, 45. not three hours' travelfrom this v. place, T w . 1,2,23. whose fair flower

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being once displayed, doth fall that v. hour, II, 4, 40 etc. the v. same (cf. Same): S o n n . 5, 3. 1 0 8 , 6 . All's II, 3, 29. Cymb. IV, 2, 380 etc. with this same v. iron, J o h n IV, 1, 125. this same v. day, R 3 III, 2, 49. Equivalent to the adverb even: thou away, the v. birds are mute, Sonn. 97, 12. in the v. refuse of thy deeds there is such strength, 150, 6. the v. rats instinctively had quit it, Tp. I, 2, 147. a life whose v. comfort is still a dging horror, Meas. II, 3, 41. the v. mercy of the law cries out, V, 412. my v. visor began to assume life, Ado II, 1,248. Idoaffect the v.ground... where her shoe doth tread, L L L I , 2 , 1 7 2 . lhave deceived even your v. eyes, Ado V, 1, 238 (cf. Even, adv. 5). swearing till my v. roof was dry, Merch. Ill, 2, 206. if we walk not in the trodden paths, our v. petticoats will catch them, As I, 3, 15. consumes itself to the v. paring, All's I, 1, 155. v. envy and the tongue of loss cried fame and honour on him, T w . V, 61. v. infants prattle on thy pride, H6A III, 1, 16. the v. parings of our nails shall pitch a field, 102. chaste and immaculate in v. thought, V, 4, 51. v. force entangles itself with strength, A n t . IV, 14, 48 etc. Equivalent to alone, mere: say that ... nothing but the v. smell were left me, Ven. 441. now can I . . . dine upon the v. naked name of love, Gent. II, 4, 142. 'tis the v. riches of thg self that now I aim at, Wiv. Ill, 4, 17. mine were the v. cgpher of a function, Meas. 11, 2, 39. the. v. stream of his life ... must give him a better proclamation, III, 2, 150. a' turns back for v. fear, Err. IV, 2, 56. thou feedest me with the v. name of meat, Shr. IV, 3, 32. whose v. naming punishes me, W i n t . IV, 2, 24. may we cram within this wooden O the v. casques that did affright the air at Agincourt1 H 5 Prol. 13. all our general force might with a sally of the v. town be buckled with, H 6 A IV, 4, 4. the v. train of her worst gown was better worth, H 6 B I, 3, 88. with the v. shaking of their chains they may astonish thesecurs, V, 1,145. the v. beams will drg those vapours up, H 6 C V, 3, 12. with the v. noise I trembling waked, R 3 I, 4, 60. this is the v. coinage of your brain, Hml. III, 4, 137. a v. riband in the cap of youth, IV, 7, 78. the v. conveyances of his lands will hardly lie in this box, V, 1, 119. v. nature will instruct her in it, Oth. II, 1, 237 etc. V e r y , adv. modifying adjectives and adverbs; originally used to signify that the resp. word is to b e understood in its full and unrestricted sense, = quite, just: is the axe upon the block, sirrah1 V. ready, sir, Meas. IV, 3 , 4 0 . L r . V, 3 , 2 9 4 . now, v. now, an old black ram is tupping your white ewe, Oth. I, 1, 88. Usually denoting a high degree: Ven. 531. T p . II, 1, 67. 139. 142. 189. Gent. I, 1, 74. II, 1, 114. 128. IV, 2, 129. Wiv. I, 1, 146. 199. 261. 278. 311. II, 1, 36. II, 2, 49. 93. 191. 197. 249. Ill, 1, 51. 101. Ill, 3, 98. 181. IV, 1, 4. 31. IV, 4, 81. Meas. I, 4, 50. II, 1, 23. 97. 106. 113. 116. 118. 131. 137. 157 etc. etc. V e s p e r , the evening: black —'s pageants, Ant. IV, 14, 8. V e s s e l , 1) a ship: T p . I, 2, 31. 211. Meas. Ill, I, 225. Merch. Ill, 2, 273. T w . V, 57. W i n t . IV, 4, 512. H 8 1, 2, 79. Cor. II, 2, 110. Oth. II, 1, 37. Ant. II, 7, 77. Cymb. II, 4, 29. P e r . I, 4, 67. Ill Prol. 44. V, 1, 23. fem.: T p . 1, 2, 6. Merch. I, 1, 32. neut.: Merch. II, 8, 30. A n t . I, 4, 53. P e r . V, 1, 18. F i g u ratively, applied to m a n : believing thee a v. of too great a burthen, All's II, 3, 215. though thy tackle's

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V

torn, thou showest a noble e. Cor. IV, 5, 68. from this most bravest v. »truck the mam-top, Cymb. IV, 2, 319. 2 ) a cask or other ntensil for holding liquors and the like: the empty p. makes the greatest sound, Ho IV, 4, 73 (proverb). your — s and your spells provide, Mcb. Ill, 5, 18. strike the —s, Ant. II, 7,103 ( = tap them). Figuratively applied to human affairs: that the united v. of their blood... shall never leak, H 4 B IV, 4, 44. if I would broach the —s of my love, Tim. II, 2, 186 (i. e. my friends), put rancours u> the v. of my peace, Mcb. Ill, 1, 67. Hence denoting the state of man: other incident throes that nature's fragile v. doth sustain, Tim. V, 1, 204. to preserve this v. for my lord from any foul touch, Oth. IV, 2, 83. a tempest, which his mortal v. tears, Per. IV, 4, 30. And even = a person: I never saw a v. of like sorrow, so filled and «o becoming, Wint. III, 3, 21. now is that noble v. full of grief, Caes. V, 5, 13. the weaker v. = a woman: for Jaquenetta, — so is the weaker v. called..., I keep her as a v. of thy law's fury, L L L I, 1, 276. I must comfort the weaker v. A s II, 4, 6. you are the weaker v., as they say, the emptier v. H 4 B II, 4, 66. 67. women, being the weaker — s , Rom. I, 1, 20. Strange application o f a microcosmical metaphor to the macrocosm of the nnirerse: creeping murmur and the poring dark Jills the wide v. of the universe, H5 IV Chor. 3. V e s t a l , a priestess of Vesta: Y e n . 752. Lncr. 883. A n t III, 12, 31. Per. IV, 5, 7. a chaste woman in general: a fair v. throned by the west, Mids. II, 1, 158 (viz Queen Elizabeth). Ironically: the kitchen v. scorned you, Err. IV, 4, 78. Adjectively: her v. livery, Rom. I], 2, 8 (i. e. her chastity), in pure and v. modesty, 111,3,38. a v. livery will I take me to, Per. Ill, 4, 10. V e s t m e n t » , garments: Err. II, 1, 94. Tim. IV, 3, 125. Vestnr«, dress, garment: Gent. II, 4, 160. Cor. II, 1, 250. Caes. Ill, 2, 200. Metaphorically, the human body as that in which the soul is dressed: this muddy v. of decay, Merch. V, 64. in the essential v. of creation, Oth. II, 1, 64. Vetches, the plant V i c i a sativa: T p . IV, 61. V e i , 1) to plague, to torment, to harass, to afflict, to molest: thou canst not v. me with inconstant mind, Sonn. 92, 9. more than enough am I that v. thee still, 135, 3. how can love's eye be true, that is so —ed with watching and with tearsf 148, 10. it hath no tongue to v. you, T w . Ill, 4, 229. hyperbolicalfiend, how —est thou this mant IV, 2, 29. a twice-told tale, —ing the dull ear of a drowsy man, John III, 4, 109. a trespass that doth v. my grieved soul, R2 I, 1, 138. Ill, 1, 2. H 4 A III, 1, 29. H 6 A I, 4, 13. H8 V, 3, 107. Lr. Ill, 4, 62. V, 3, 313. 2) to disturb, to agitate: the still —ed Bermoothes, Tp. I, 2, 229. as mad as the —ed sea, L r . IV, 4, 2. cf. Rom. I, 1, 198 and John II, 336. 3 ) to afflict or agitate in mind; a) to distress: to misuse the prince, to v. Claudio, A d o II, 2, 29. a sight to v. the father's soul withal, Tit. V, 1, 52. 'twill v. thy soul to hear what I shall speak, 62. love,... being —ed, a sea nourished with lovers' tears, Rom. I, 1, 198. my poor heart, so for a kinsman —ed, III, 5, 96. to v. her, Cymb. Ill, 5, 147. cf. soul-vexed in Wint. V, 1, 59. b ) to disquiet: with my —ed spirits I cannot take a truce, John III, 1, 17. v. not yourself, R2 II, 1, 3.

-ed I am of late with passions of some difference, Caes. I, 2, 39. vAen grief and blood ill-tempered —sth him, IV, 3, 115. c ) to fret, to irritate: lam —ed, T p . IV, 158. stayest thou to v. me heret Gent. IV, 4, 66. such an injury would v. a very saint, Shr. Ill, 2, 28. All's III, 5, 92. John II, 336. H 6 B I, 3, 78. H6C II, 6, 68. H8 II, 4, 130. Ill, 2, 104. Cor. IV, 2, 2. Rom. II, 4, 170. T i m . IV, 3, 236. Ant. I, 2, 20. Cymb. II, 1, 19. V e x a t i a n , 1 ) torment, affliction, suffering: all thy —s were but my trials of thy love, T p . IV, 5. your children were v. to your youth, R 3 IV, 4, 305. 2 ) any state o f being troubled or afflicted in mind; a ) agitation: the fierce v. of a dream, Mids. IV, 1, 74. b ) disquiet, trouble, great uneasiness: to appoint mytelf in this v. W i n t . I, 2, 326. throw such changes of v. on it, Oth. I, 1, 72. c ) grief: the deep ». of Us inward soul, Lucr. 1779. it would be much v. to your age, Gent. Ill, 1, 16. v. almost stops my breath, H 6 A IV, 3, 41. those repeated —s of it, Cymb. I, 6, 5. e) anger, mortification: full of v. come I, Mids. I, 1, 22. you do me most insupportable v. All's II, 3, 244. give him deserved v. Cor. Ill, 3, 140. harm not yourself with your v. Cymb. I, 1, 134. V i a , an interjection of encouragement (from the Italian. Florio: ' Via, an adverb of encouraging much used by commanders, as also by riders to their horses') : Mistress Ford and Mistress Page, have I encompassed you f go to; v. W i v . II, 2, 159. v., goodman Dull! thou hast spoken no word all this while, L L L V, 1, 156. another, with his finger and his thumb, cried V., we will do't, V, 2, 112. the most courageous fiend bids me pack: v., says the fiend; away, says the fiend, Merch. II, 2, 11. v.I les eaux et la terre, H5 IV, 2, 4. why, v., to London will we march amain, H6C II, 1,182. V i a l (O. Edd. viol, violl, violte; some M. Edd. phial), a glass vessel or bottle: Sonn. 6, 3 (cf. 5, 10). Wint. V, 3, 122. R 2 I, 2, 12. 17. Rom. IV, 1, 93. IV, 3, 20. Hml. I, 5, 62. Ant. I, 3, 63. Per. Ill, 2, 90. V i a n d , meat dressed, f o o d , victuals: still cupboarding the v. Cor. I, 1, 103. Plur. — s : T p . Ill, 3, 41. Merch. IV, 1, 97. H6C II, 5, 52. Troil. II, 2, 70. Ant. Ill, 11, 73. Cymb. V, 5, 156. Per. II, 3, 31. V l e a r , a parish priest: W i v . IV, 6, 48. 52. As III, 3, 43. Shr. III, 2, 170. V i c e , subst. 1) an habitual transgression of moral duties: Lucr. 604. 1546. Sonn. 95, 9. Meas. II, 2, 5. 29. 136. II, 4, 42. Ill, 2, 24. 106. 109. 284. 291. IV, 2, 115. Err. Ill, 2, 12. L L L V, 2, 349. Merch. III, 2, 81. T w . Ill, 4, 390. Wint. Ill, 2, 56. IV, 3, 96. 100. John II, 596. R2 V, 3, 67. H 4 A II, 4, 499. H4B III, 2, 326. H 6 A V, 4, 45. R3 II, 2, 28 ( F f deep v., Qq foul guile). Ill, 5, 29. Troil. II, 3, 246. Cor. I, 1, 43. Rom. II, 3, 21. 22. Mcb. IV, 3, 47. 51. L r . IV, 6, 168. 258. V, 3, 170. Oth. I, 3, 123. II, 3, 128. Cymb. II, 5, 21. 29. 31. Per. I, 1,96. 103. Personified as masc.: Hml. Ill, 4, 154. 2) a single transgression, a sin: rather proved the sliding of your brother a merriment than a v. Meas. II, 4, 116. wilt thou be made a man out of my v.? Ill, 1, 138. unless self-charity be sometimes a v. Oth. II, 3, 202. she holds it a v. in her goodness not to do more, 326. livest to make thine honesty a v. Ill, 3, 376. did you perceive how he laughed at his v.f IV, 1, 181. it is a great price for a smalt v. IV, 3, 70. cf. also W i n t . Ill, 2, 56 and R2 V, 3, 67.

V 3) an imperfection, a defect, a f a u l t : your own v. still; mistake the word, G e n t . Ill, 1, 283. here follow her — s , 324. 338. on that v. on him (vanity) will my revenge find notable cause to work, T w . II, 3, 165. your air of France hath blown that v. in me (to brag) H 5 III, 6, 161. it is my v., my fault, Troil. IV, 4, 104. you have a v. of mercy in you, V, 3, 37. 39. 'tis a v. to know him, Hml. V, 2, 87. it is a v. in her ears, Cymb. II, 3, 33 ( 0 . E d d . voice), cf. also Troil. II, 3, 246. 4) the buffoon of the old moralities ( a l i a s Iniquity): like to the old V., who with dagger of lath, in his rage and his wrath, cries ah ha! to the devil, Tw. IV, 2, 134. now is this — ' s dagger become a squire, H 4 B III, 2, 343. like the formal v., Iniquity, I moralize two meanings in one word, R 3 III, 1, 82. a v. of kings, Hml. Ill, 4, 98. cf. also H 4 A II, 4, 499. V i c e , subst. an iron press with a screw, for holding things fast: you must put in the pikes with a v. A d o V, 2, 21 ( q u i b b l i n g ) , an I but fist him once, an a come but within my v. H 4 B II, 1,24 ( = my grasp). V i c e , to screw: as he had seen't or been an instrument to v. you to't, W i n t . I, 2, 416 ( c f . I partly know the instrument that screws me from my true place in your favour, T w . V, 125). V i c e g e r e n t , substitute, one having a delegated power: the welkin'sv. L L L 1,1,222 (Armado'sletter). V i c e r o y , substitute of a k i n g : T p . Ill, 2, 116. H6A V, 4, 131. 143. V i c i o u s , 1 ) devoted to vice, morally corrupt: Err. IV, 2, 21. H 6 A V, 4, 35. H 8 I , 2, 117. T i m . IV, 3 , 2 1 3 . L r . I, 1 , 2 3 0 . V, 3, 172. 2) defective, faulty : for some v. mole of nature in them, Hml. I, 4, 24. 3) w r o n g : though I perchance am v. in my guess, as, I confess, it is my nature's plague to spy into abuses, Oth. Ill, 3, 145. it had been v. to have mistrusted her, Cymb. V, 5, 65 ( = blameable). V i c i o u s n e s s , state of being vicious, corruptness: Ant. Ill, 13, 111. V i c t o r , one who vanquishes another (never followed by an objective genitive): Lucr. 730. 1211. Sonn. 70, 10. 86, 11. P i l g r . 223 (v. of the day). J o h n II, 324. R2 I, 1, 203. H 4 B IV, 1 , 1 3 4 . H6A I, 2, 4. H 6 C II, 3, 53. II, 5, 11. V, 2, 6. Troil. IV, 5, 67. Lr. V, 3, 132 (thy v. sword). Cymb. V, 3,43. V,5,460. V i c t o r e s s , a female who conquers: she shall be sole v., Caesar's Caesar, R 3 I V , 4 , 3 3 6 (F4 and M . E d d . victress). V i c t o r i o u s , 1) having conquered, or wont to conquer: J o h n V, 2, 146. H 5 II, 4, 63. H 6 A II, 3, 67. I I I , 4 , 1 6 . IV, 7, 67. H 6 B I, 1, 86. V, 1 , 2 1 1 . H 6 C I, 1, 21. R 3 I, 4, 242. V, 5, 1. T i t . I, 70. 105. 163. Ant. IV, 2 , 4 3 . 2) emblematic of conquest: v. wreaths, R 3 I, 1, 5. V i c t o r , s w o r d , writing of Ff in L r . V, 3, 132; Qq and M. Edd. in two words. V i c t o r y , success in contest, conquest: Ven. 1014. Lucr. A r g . 11. Lucr. 110. S o n n . 2 5 , 1 0 . Compl. 258. Ado I, I , 8. 11,3,172 (hath the v.). L L L I V , 1 , 7 5 . As IV, 2, 6. J o h n II, 307. 394. R2 I, 3, 72. H 4 A IV, 3, 97. H 4 B Ind. 23. IV, 2, 88. H 6 A I, 1, 20. I, 6, 31. I I I , 2 , 1 1 7 . IV, 1, 172. IV, 6, 1. 12. H 6 B I V , 3, 12. IV, 8, 54. IV, 10, 78. H 6 C I, 1 , 2 6 1 . 1 , 2 , 7 3 . 11,2, 174. II, 3, 55. II, 5, 15. IV, 1, 147. V, 1, 70. 113. V, 3 , 2 . R 3 111, 7, 15. IV, 4 , 1 9 3 . V, 3, 79. 106. 114. 165.

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231. 270. 351. Troil. IV, 5, 66. Cor. II, 1, 135. V, 3, 108. 186. V, 6, 98. Rom. IV, 1, 30 (the tears have got small v.). T i m . Ill, 5, 81. Caes. V, 3, 82. Mcb. I, 2, 58. L r . V, 1, 41 (if you have v.). A n t . I, 3, 100. IV, 7, 12. Cymb. V, 5, 24. P e r . II, 3, 10. Victress, see Victoress. V i c t u a l , subst. provisions: he hath done good service in these wars. You had musty v., and he hath holp to eat it, Ado I, 1, 50. Plur. — s — f o o d : am nourished by my — s, Gent. II, 1, 180. eat your —s, H 5 V, 1, 35. it eats our —s, Cymb. Ill, 6 , 4 1 . V i c t u a l , vb. to supply with provisions: As V, 4, 198. H 6 A I, 5, 14. V i c t u a l l e r (Qq vitlar), a tavern-keeper: H4B II, 4 , 3 7 5 (Steevens: 'the brothels were formerly screened under pretext of being victualling houses and taverns'). V i d e l i c e t , see Latin in the Appendix. Vie, to show or practise in competition, to contend with respect to: nature wants stuff to v. strange forms with fancy, Ant. V, 2, 98 ( t o contend with, to rival, fancy in producing strange forms), we here below recall not what you give, and therein may v. honour with you, P e r . Ill, 1, 26 (may contend with you, i. e. the gods, in honour), so with the dove of Paphos might the crow v. feathers white, IV P r o l . 33. kiss on kiss she —d so fast, Shr. II, 311 (i. e. as if to outdo me), cf. Outvie. V i e n n a , the capital of A u s t r i a : Meas. 1,1, 23. 45. 1 , 2 , 9 8 . 1 , 3 , 1 3 . II, 1, 203. 241. 254. V, 269. 319. Hml. Ill, 2, 249. V i e w , subst. 1) perception by the eye, sight (subjectively and objectively: the seeing a9 well as the being seen): her eyes, as murdered with the v. Ven. 1031. at his bloody v. her eyes are fled, 1037. that eye which him beholds, as more divine, unto a v. so false will not incline, Lucr. 292. presents thy shadow to my sightless v. Sonn. 27, 10. that, when they see return of love, more blest may be the v. 56, 12. who in despite of v. is pleased to dote, 141, 4. no marvel then though I mistake my v. 148, 11. on the first v. to swear I love thee, Mids. Ill, 1, 144. then I will her charmed eye release from monster's v. Ill, 2, 377. greater than shows itself at the first v. All's II, 5, 73. the first v. shall kill all repetition, V, 3, 21. shall not behold her face at ample v. T w . I, 1, 27. when the dusky sky began to rob my earnest-gaping sight of thy land's v. H6B III, 2, 105. Host fair England's v. 110. to affright thee with the v. thereof, V, 1, 207. whose aspect may fright the hopeful mother at the v. R 3 I, 2, 24. then you have lost the v. of earthly glory, H 8 I, 1,14. order gave each thing v. 44 (let it be seen i n d e e d ; set it off). which when the people had the full v. o f , IV, 1, 71. mine eyes are cloyed with v. of tyranny, Tit. Ill, 2, 55. love, whose v. is muffled still, Rom. I, 1, 177. which on more view, of many mine being one, may stand in number, I, 2, 32. soar above the v. of men, Caes. I, 1, 79. invite you to my sister's v. Ant. II, 2, 170. the sweet v. on't might well have warmed old Saturn, Cymb. II, 5, 11. we, poor unfledged, have never winged from v. o'the nest, III, 3, 28. you should tread a course pretty and full of v. Ill, 4, 150 (offering many opportunities of seeing and observing). Applied to letters, = perusal: would not force the letter to my v. Gent. I, 2, 54. on the v. and knowing of these contents, Hml. V, 2, 44.

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V

In v. = ill sight: the enemy's in v. Lr. V, 1, 51. they lie in v., but have not spoke at yet, Cor. 1, 4, 4 (can see each other), to deRver the head in the v. of Angelo, Meas. IV, 2, 177 (that Angelo may see it). wrecked... in the v. of the shepherd, Wint. V, 2, 76. have I not hideout death within my v. t John V, 4, 22. here in the v. of men I «¡ill unfold, R2.III, 1, 6. that in common v. he may surrender, IV, 155. H6C I, 1, 138. Cor. I, 9, 85. II, 2, 97. Hector, in v. of Trojans and of Greekt, thatt make it good, Trail. 1,3,273. Similarly: before this royal t>. H5 V, 2 , 3 2 (in presence of these royal persons). To the v. = so as to be seen by everybody; in public: made mytelf a motley to the v. Sonn. 110,2. that thete bodies high on a stage be placed to the v. Hml. V, 2, 389. shall uplift ut to the v. Ant. V, 2, 211. 2) look, regard: sometimes they do extend their v. right on, Compl. 26. the beam of her v. gilded my foot, Wiv. I, 3, 69. that ever turned their backs to mortal - t, LLL V, 2, 161. 163. gives all gaze and bent of amorous v. on the fair Crettid, Troil. IV, 5, 282. turn the office and devotion of their v. upon a tawny front, Ant. I, 1, 5. could not endure a further v. Ill, 10, 18. 3) surrey, inspection, examination by the eye: she made good v. of me, Tw. II, 2, 20. to behold hit visage, even to my full of v. Troil. Ill, 3, 241. I have with exact v. perused thee, IV, 5, 232. 4) look, appearance, show: you that choote not by the v. Mercb. Ill, 2, 132. love, to gentle in hit c. Rom. 1, 1, 175. View, vb. 1) to perceive by the eye, to see: to v. how the came, Ven. 343. where they —ed each other's sorrow, 963. what face remains alive that's worth the —ing, 1076. which Tarquin —ed, Lncr. 72. 454. 632. 1101. 1261. 1526. Sonn. 3 , 1 . 31, 13. 4 3 , 2 . 69, 1. Meas. II, 4,125. LLL I, 1, 246. Merch. II, 7 , 4 3 . Ill, 2, 59. 62. IV, 1, 270. H6B V, 1, 69. H6C I, 4, 46. II, 1,67. R3 1,2, 53. H8 1,4,71. 111,2,405. Oth. II, 1, 16. Per. 1,1,30. 73. II, 5, 17. Applied to writings, = to read: t>. these letters, H6A I, 1, 89. IV, 1, 48. the first he —ed, H8 111, 2, 79. 2) to look on, to surrey, to examine with the eye: I'll e. the manners of the town, Err. I, 2, 12. 31. feed your knowledge with —ing of the town, Tw. Ill, 3, 42. to v. the tick and feeble parts of France, H5 II, 4, 22. IV, 3, 2. IV, 7,85. H6AI, 1, 168. 1,4,61. 84. H6B III, 2, 132. 149. Troil. IV, 5, 238. = to survey or examine with the eye of the mind: the happiest youth, —ing hit progress through, H4B III, 1, 54. tell o'er your woes, again by —ing mine, R3 IV, 4, 39. in—ing o'er the rest o' the selfsame day, Mcb. I, 3, 94. V i e w l e s s , invisible: to be imprisoned in the v. winds, Meas. Ill, 1, 124. Vigil, the ere of a holiday: on the v. H5IV,3,45. V i g i l a n c e , watchfulness: Tp. Ill, 3, 16. H6B I, 1,96. Lr. 11,3,4. V i g i l a n t , watchful: H4A IV, 2, 64. H6AII, I, 1. Cor. I, 1, 119. Corrupted to vigilant by Dogberry in Ado III, 3, 100. Vlgltant, see Vigilant. Vlgeur, 1) force, strength: Ven. 953. Tp. 1,2, 485. Err. IV, 4,81. LLL IV, 3, 308. John III, 1, 104. B2 I, 3, 71. Troil. II, 3, 257. Ill, 3, 172. Tit. IV,

2, 108.

2) efficacy, efficiency: never could the strumpet, with all her double v., art and nature, once stir my

temper, Meas. II, 2, 184. with a sudden v. it doth posset and curd... the blood, HmL I, 5, 68. to try the v. tf them (compounds) Cymb. 1,5,21. VIM, see Vile. VIMly, see Vilely. V i l e (almost as often spelt riId, or viid, or tilde, in O. Edd. In some plays, f. i. Rom. and Caes., vile predominant, in others, f. i. Lr. and Oth , vild. Ff vild, Qq vite: Tit. V, 2, 201. Hml. II, 2, 111. IV, 5, 115. Oth. Ill, 3, 136), originally = low, mean: ft« v., unlets it may be quaintly ordered, Merch. II, 4, 6. in v. apparel, H4B I, 2, 20. why liett thou with the v. in loathiome beds, III, 1, 15. be he ne'er so v., this day shall gentle hit condition, H5 IV, 3, 62. great men oft die by v. bezonians, H6B IV, 1, 134. Sometimes = evil, mischievous: 'tit a v. thing to die, R3 III, 2, 64. to dare the contagion of the night, Caes. II, 1, 26i. the v. blowt and buffet! of the world, Mcb. Ill, 1, 109. But in general used as a vague term of contempt, = base, bad, abject, villanous: Lucr. Arg. 23. Lucr. 202. 631. Sonn. 71, 4 (—it). 121, 1. Tp. I, 2,358. Gent. IV, 1, 73. Wiv. I, 3, 106. Ill, 4, 32. V, 5, 87. Meas. V, 95. Err. I, 1, 35. V, 67. 236. Ado III, 3, 134. IV, 1, 94. LLL IV, 3, 276. 280. Mids. I, 1, 232. II, 2, 34. 107. Ill, 2, 260. V, 133. 144. Merch. II, 5, 30. Asili, 2, 17. V, 1,6. Shr. II, 159. V, 2, 93. All's II, 1, 177 C — i t ) . 11,3,159. Ill, 5,87. Tw. 111,4,399. Wint. II, 1, 92. John II, 509. 577. 586. Ml, 1, 165. Ill, 4, 19. 138. IV, 1,96. IV, 2, 241. IV, 3, 48 (—st). R2 II, 1, 25. H4A 1, 3, 63. 241. Ill, 2, 87. V,4,39. H4BII, 2 , 5 2 . 11,4,171. V, 2,18. V, 3, 145. H5 II, I, 49. 64. II, 4, 74. Ill, 6, 50. IV Chor. 50. H6A I, 4 , 3 3 (vile etteemed, O. Edd. pil'd esteemed ). 111,1, II, 111,2,45. IV, 1,97. IV, 3, 33. V, 3, 112. V, 4, 1C. H6B V, 2, 40. B3 I, 3. 89. Troil. II, 1, 99. V, 10, 23. Cor. I, 1, 188. Tit. V, 2, 173. 201. Rom. I, 4, 111. II, 3, 17. 111, 1,76. 146. 111,2,59.83. 111,3,106. V, 3, 54. Tim. I, 1,15. IV, 3 , 4 7 0 (vilder). Caes. I, 3, 111. III, 2, 35. IV, 3, 71. 74. V, 1. 39. 104. V, 5, 38. Hml. 1, 5, 72. II, 2, 111. 483 ( F f their vild murthers, Q. Mids. him v. Meas. Ill, 2, 255. nothing but peace and gentle I, 2, 54. to him in thine own v. Tw. IV, 2, 71. haunts v. L L L V, 2, 181. in loving v. was with me a young poor Tom in the v. of a nightingale, Lr. Ill, 6, 32. doctor, Merch. IV, 1, 153. means to pay Bohemia the Applied, metaphorically, to lifeless things: what v. Wint. I, 1, 7. what colour for my v. shall I hold up, warlike e. is thist (viz cannon discharged) H8 I, 4, IV, 4, 566. 'tis not a v. framed, but forced by need, V, 50. thy (the trumpet's) brass v. Troil. I, 3, 257. 1,91. in cradle of the rude imperious surge and in the 2) be who, or that which, speaks in the name of v. of the winds, H4B III, 1, 21 (cf. visit in Hml. I, 2, another: all tongues, the v. of souls, give thee that due, 142). neglectthev.of my friends, R3 III, 7,107. Charles Sonn. 69, 3. I , now the v. of the recorded law, Meas. the emperor ... here makes v. H8 1,1, 179. your queen II, 4, 61. the imagined v. of God himself, H4B IV, 2, desires your r. V, 1, 169. to give thee nightly v. Troil. 19. in my v. = in my name: implore her in my v. that IV, 4, 75. I take all and your several —s so kind to she make friends to the strict deputy, Meas. I, 2, 185. heart, Tim. I, 2, 224. what have you now to present but what is, come see, and in my v. most welcome shall unto him? Nothing but my v. V, 1, 20. your v. shall you be, A s II, 4, 87. cf. in second v. we'll not be satisreceive such thanks, Hml. II, 2, 25. is it a free v.1 fied: we come to speak with him, Troil. II, 3, 149. 284. this v. is but to whet thy purpose, III, 4, 110. 3) words, speech, language: the hardest v. of Iter Vlsltlnga, accessions, attacks, fits: that no com- behaviour, to be Englished rightly, is '/ am Sir John punctious v. of nature shake my fell purpose, Mcb. Falstaff's' Wiv. I, 3, 51. let me have thy v. in my I, 5, 46. behalf, I, 4, 167 ( = speak for me), there my father's Visiter, one who comes to see another: Wint. grave did utter forth a v. Meas. Ill, 1, 87. too rude II, 2, 11. Tim. I, 1, 42. Used of one who administers and bold of v. Mcrch. II, 2, 190. what plea so tainted spiritual comfort: he receives comfort like cold por- and corrupt but, being seasoned with a gracious v., obridge. The v. will not give him o'er so, Tp. II, 1, 11. scures the show of evilt III, 2, 76. now we speak upon Vlsar or VIih (cf. Vizard), a mask for men: our cue, and our v. is imperial, H5 III, 6, 131. haply Ado 11, 1, 99. 101. 164. 248. L L L V, 2, 227. R3 II, a woman's v. may do some good, V, 2, 93. well didst .2. 28 (Qq vizard). Rom. I, 4, 30. I, 5, 24. Per. IV, thou, Richard, to suppress thy v. H6A IV, 1, 182. more 4, 44. deaf than adders to the v. of any true decision , Troil. II, 2, 172. is there no v. more worthy than my ownv Name in H4B V, 1, 42. 45. Vital, pertaining to life, being the cause or effect Caes. Ill, 1, 49. my v. is in my sword, Mcb. V, 8, ".. of life: the v. commoners and inland petty spirits, H4B you cannot speak of reason to the Dane and lose your v.. IV, 3, 119. let not Bardolph's r. thread be cut, H5 Hml. 1, 2, 45. shouldst not want my v. for thy prefer-

V

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3) to avoid, to shun: of all the men {the wtrld I men«, Cymb. Ill, 5, 115. I have drawn her picture with would have —ed thee, Cor. IV, 5, 88. my v. Per. IV, 2, 102. Velable (Ff Qi voluble) nimble-witted: LLL1II, With one v. = unanimously: H6B I, 1, 36. Troil. I, 3,221. cf. all the country, in a general v., cried hate 67 (Anuado's speech). Valce and Valelan, see Volsce and Volscian. upon him, H4B IV, 1, 136. the common v. do cry 'it Valley, subst. a discharge of many fireanu at shall be so\ T i t V. 3, 140. they answer in a joint and corporate v. Tim. II, 2, 213. whose —s I desire once: John V, 5, 5. Hml. V, 2, 363. Metaphorically: aloud with mine: 'Hail, king of Scotland, Mcb. V, 8,58. a fine v. of words, and quickly shot o f f , Gent. 11,4,33. Valley, vb. to discharge or throw out as with the 4) that which is said or spoken; talk, report: in so profound abysm / throw all care of others' —s, noise of fire-arms; to thunder forth, to roar forth Sonn. 112, 10. in —s well divulged, Tw. I, 5, 279. another flap-mouthed mourner ... against the velkin the v. is now only about her coronation, H8 III, 2, 406. —s out his voice, Ven. 921. the holding every man the p. goes, IV, 2, 11. the common v., I see, is verified shall bear as loud as his strong sides can v. Ait. II, of thee, V, 3, 176. buy men's —s to commend our deeds, 7, 118. Velqaeaaen, the country of Vexin in Frince: Caes. II, 1, 146. 5) opinion expressed, judgment: hath got the v. in John II, 527. Velace, (O. Edd. Voice), one of the Volati, a hell for excellence, H5 II, 2, 113. committing freely your scruple to the v. of Christendom, H8 II, 2, 88. Latin people, often at war with Rome: Cor. I, 4, 28. mho ... opinion crowns with an imperial v. Troil. I, 3, I, 10, 5. Plur. —s: I, 1, 228 (O. Edd. VoUcies). 232. 187. till by some elder masters ...J have a v. and pre- 253 etc. Valaelan, (O. Edd. Vokian or Volcean), l)mbst. cedent of peace, Hml. V, 2, 260. 6) vote, suffrage: wanting your father's v. Mids. = Volsce, q. v.: Cor. IV, 5, 64. 249. IV, 6, 89. V, 3, 1, 1, 54. the offender's life lies in the mercy of the duke 178 (fem.). V, 6, 116. 2) adj. pertaining to the Vtlsci: only, 'gainst all other v. Merch. IV, 1,356. o'er whom IV, 3, 11. IV, 7, 22. V, 2, 91. V, 3, 3. V e l t i m r a « , name in Hml. I, 2, 34. II, 2, £9. both sovereign power and father's v. I have to use, All's Velafelllty, fluency of speech: Shr. II, 176. All's II, 3, 60. that I'll give my v. on Richards s. B3 III, 2, 53. in the duke's behalf I'll give my v. HI, 4, 20. IV, 3, 284. VelaMe, fluent: v. and sharp discourse, Eir. II, pronounced your part, I mean your v., for crowning of the king, 29. I have no farther gone in this than by a 1, 92. so sweet and v. is his discourse, LLL II, 76. Applied to persons, = having fluency of speech single v. H8 I, 2, 70. have their free —», II, 2, 94. it stands agreed by all —s, V, 3, 88. divided by any and a nimble wit: a most acute juvenal; v. anifree v. or order of the field, Troil. IV, 5, 70. the people of grace, LLL III, 67 (Armado's speech. Ql voltb/e). must have their —s, Cor. II, 2,144. II, 3, 1.41 (give). a Icnave very v. Oth. II, 1, 242. Velame, 1) as much printed or written paper as 50 (give). 84. 87. 112 (give). 116. 119. 132. 133. 134. 136. 137. 140. 145. 147. 164 (have). 167. 177. is folded and bound together and forms a whole book: 178. 179. 180. 184. 196.219. 223 (of no more v. than —s of report run with these false guest», Meas. IV, 1, dogs). HI, 1, 30. 103. 119. 120. IV, 6, 147 etc. Tit. 61. I am for whole —s in folio, LLL I, 2, 191. the 1, 21. 218. Rom. I, 2, 19. Tim. Ill, 5, 1. Caes. Ill, 1, hand of time shall draw this brief into as huge a v. 177 (your v. shall be as strong as any man's). IV, 1, John II, 103. a v. of farewells, R2 I, 4, 18. uould 16. Hml. I, 3, 23. 28. V, 2, 367. 403. Oth. I, 2, 13 make a v. of enticing lines, H6A V, 5, 14. will bear the knave by the v. Cor. Ill, 3, 33 (will bear a »hole (hath a v. potential). I, 3, 226. 246. Valce, vb. 1) to report, to proclaim: is this the book full of insnlts). 2) a book: furnished me from mine own ISrary Athenian minion whom the world —d so regardfullyt with —s, Tp. I, 2,167. this man's brow, like to atitleTim. IV, 3, 81. 2) to vote, to nominate: to v. him consul, Cor. II, leaf, foretells the nature of a tragic v. H4B I, 1, 61. such indexes, although small pricks to their subsequent 3, 242. VaM, adj. 1) empty, not occupied: I'll get me to —s, Troil. I, 3, 344. read o'er the v. of young Pari»' face, Rom. I, 3, 81. 85. threescore and ten I cat rea place more v. Caes. II, 4, 37 ( = less crowded). 2) ineffectual, vain, null: by this alliance to make member well, within the v. of which time I have seen hours dreadful, Mcb. II, 4, 2. thy commandmest all v. my suit, H6C III, 3, 142. 3) destitute: v. and empty from any dram of mercy, alone shall live within the book and v. of my brain, Hml. Merch. IV, 1, 5. With of: v. of all profanation, Meas. I, 5, 103. {the world's v. our Britain seems as i f f it, II, 1, 55 (Elbow's speech), v. of truth, Merch. V, 189. but not in it, Cymb. Ill, 4, 140. to place upon the v. of your deeds, as in a title-page, your worth in arms, v. of pity, H6B IV, 7, 69. V«M, vb. 1) to evacuate, to emit (saliva and ex- Per. II, 3, 3. Velamnla, mother of Coriolanus: Cor. V, 4, 55. crementitioos matter): did v. your rheum upon my Valnmalna, name in Caes. V, 5, 15. 16. 21. 22. beard, Merch. I, 3, 118. whose low vassal seat the Alps doth spit and v. his rheum upon, H5 111, 5, 52. to drink 25. 31. Voluntary, adj. 1) acting or done by choici and those men upon whose age we v. it up again, Tim. I, free will: the right of v. choosing, Merch. II, 1, 16. 2, 143. 2) to evacuate, to leave empty, to quit: bid them have put themselves into v. exile, As I, 1, 107. we swear come down or v. the field, H5 IV, 7, 62. —ing lobby, a v. zeal and an unurged faith, John V, 2, 10. giving = anteroom, a waiting-room for persons not admitted myself a v. wound, Caes. II, 1, 300. Adverbially: it is but v. John V, 1, 29. / terve to the presence-chamber: how in our —ing lobby hast thou stood and duly waited for my coming forth f H6B here o. Troil. 11, 1,103. 'twas not v.; no man is Uaten v. 105. IV, 1, 61. cf. Avoid.

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...my Substantively: fiery—es, John 11, 67 ( = volun- to excuse, L L L V, 2, 741. that you have —d poor house to visit, W i n t . V, 3, 4. — i n g here to visit teers). Ajax was here the v. T r o i l . II, 1, 106. 2 ) spontaneous, proceeding f r o m an internal im- me, A n t . V, 2, 160. Err. V, 393. L L L II, 109. V, 2, pulse: by their own importunate suit, or v. dotage of 165. 201. 205. 238. John II, 416. 523. H 5 V, 2, 99. H 6 A II, 2, 40. Ill, 1, 27. V, 3, 103. V, 5, 89. H 6 C some mistress, Oth. IV, 1, 27. 3 ) willing, ready: thy v. oath lives in this bosom, III, 3, 55. 110. 203. R 3 I, 2, 75. 78. 202. H8 II, 3, John III, 3, 23. that thou wilt be a v. mute to my design, 71. A n t . I, 4, 8 ( F l v., later F f did v.). Cymb. Ill, 5, 158. 2 ) to grant in condescension; a) with a subordiV o l u p t u o u s l y , luxuriously, with indulgence of nate clause: v. my prayer may know, T p . I, 2, 422. v. to those that have not read the story, that I may prompt sensual pleasure: Cor. I, 3, 27. V o l u p t u o u s n e s s , luxuriousness, intemperance in them, H 5 V Chor. 1. if Brutus will v. that Antony may sensual gratification: Mcb. IV, 3, 61 ( = lust). A n t . safely come to him, Caes. Ill, 1, 130. b ) with an accus.: v. a word, Meas. Ill, 1, 152. 1, 4, 26. V o m i t , subst. matter thrown up f r o m the stomach: do but v. one change, L L L V, 2, 209. v. some motion to it, 216. our ears v. it, 217. 344. to your own most H 4 B I, 3, 99. Oth. II, 3, 86. T w . HI, 1, 100. 101. the French V o m i t , vb. to throw up f r o m the stomach: Lucr. pregnant and—dear, 703. T i t . HI, 1, 232. Cymb. 1, 6, 45. W i t h forth: R 3 amazed v. a parle, John II, 226. that you v. your rest here in our court, H m l . II, 2,13. if your lordship would V, 3, 318. V o t a r e s s (trisyll. in P e r . ; dissyll. and spelt votresse v. the answer, V, 2, 176. she —s no notice, Cymb. in M i d s . ) a woman that has taken a v o w : Mids. II, 1, II, 3, 45. 123. 163. P e r . IV P r o l . 4. W i t h accus. and dative: v. me but this loving V o t a r l s t , v o t a r y , one who has taken a v o w ; thought, Sonn. 32, 9. v. me your picture, Gent. IV, 2, masc.: T i m . IV, 3, 27. fem.: Meas. 1, 4, 5. Oth. IV, 121. v. me one fair look, V, 4, 23. that she v. me audience, L L L V, 2, 313. if you v. me hearing and 2, 190. V o t a r y , the same; masc.: Gent. I, 1, 52. Ill, 2, respect, H 4 A IV, 3, 31. will you v. me a few disputa58. L L L II, 37. IV, 2, 141, V, 2, 892. f e m . : Sonn. tions with you, H o 111, 2, 101. to v. one glance unto the ground, H 6 B 1, 2, 16. will you v. me a word, T r o i l . 154, 5. HI, 1, 64. T i m . I, 2, 183. H m l . Ill, 2, 307. that you 11 V o t r e s s , see Votaress. V o u c h , subst. testimony, attestation: my v. against v. me raiment, L r . II, 4, 158. Improperly used by Mrs you, Meas. II, 4, 156. and make my v. as strong as Q u i c k l y : W i v . II, 2, 42. 45. shore of rock, H8 I, 1, 157. to beg of Hob and Dick W i t h accus. and inf., = to a l l o w : v. me speak a ... their needless —es, Cor. II, 3, 124. one that in the word, Err. V, 282. T h e inf. understood, though not authority of her merit did justly put on the v. of very expressed: I'11 bring you thither, if you'll v. me, A d o malice itself, Oth. II, 1, 147. III, 2, 4. cf. L L L V, 2, 888. V o u c h , vb. 1 ) to bear witness, to give testimony: 3) to receive or accept in condescension: our prayers v. with me, heaven, I therefore beg it not, Oth. 1,3,262. come in, if thou v. them, John 111, 1, 294. if your back 2 ) to warrant, to be surety f o r : most fain would cannot v. this burthen, H8 II, 3, 43. v. my labour, T i m . steal what law does v. mine own, A l l ' s II, 5, 87. will 1, 1, 152. v. good morrow from a feeble tongue, Caes. his vouchers v. him no more of his purchases, Hml. V, II, 1, 313. 1, 117. V o w , subst. 1 ) a solemn promise: V e n . 425. L u c r . 3 ) to answer f o r , to make good (cf. avouch): we 809 (wedlock v.). 1843. Sonn. 152, 7. Compl. 173. here receive it a certainty, —ed from our cousin Austria, 179. 263. P i l g r . 35. 239. T p . IV, 54. 96. Gent. Ill, A l l ' s I, 2, 5. where I will v. the truth of it, Cor. V, 6, 2, 70. IV, 2, 9. 98. W i v . II, 2, 259 (marriage v.). 5. what villain was it spake that word? He that would Meas. Ill, 1, 235. IV, 2, 180 (the v. of my order). IV, v. it in any place but here, T i t . 1, 360. 3, 149. V, 228. Err. II, 2, 140. L L L IV, 3, 66. 68. 4 ) to maintain, to assert: almost beyond credit, as 70. 113. 311. 319. Mids. Ill, 2, 124. 130. Merch. Ill, many—ed rarities are, T p . II, 1, 60. a man that never 4, 27. A l l ' s II, 3, 97. Ill, 4, 7. IV, 2, 14. V, 3, 142. yet did, as he —es, misreport your grace, Meas. V, 171 (heavens— s). 173. T w . II, 4, 121. 111,4,329. 148. what canyou v. against him? 326. which, to the W i n t . IV, 4, 497 (it does fulfil my v.). V, 3, 138. John spire and top of praises —ed, would seem but modest, HI, 1, 229. 288. IV, 3, 67. H 6 A II, 2, 7. HI, 2, 85. Cor. 1, 9, 24. which, I dare v., is more than that he H 6 B V, 1, 184. H 6 C II, 3, 34. Ill, 3, 250 (to pledge hath, HI, 1, 300. the feast is sold that is not often my v.). IV, 1, 141. R 3 III, 7, 180. H8 II, 1, 88. T r o i l . —ed, while 'tis a-making, 'tis given with welcome, M c b . IV, 4, 39. V, 1, 49. V, 2, 139 V, 3, 16. 23. T i t II, Ill, 4, 34. 1 therefore v. again that with some mixtures 3, 125 (nuptialv.). R o m . I, 1, 229. II, 2, 127. II, 3, ... he wrought upon her, Oth. I, 3, 103. 106. this 62. T i m . IV, 2, 11. H m l . 1, 3, 114 (all the holy —s gentleman —ing ... his to be more fair, Cymb. 1,4, 63 of heaven). 1 1 7 . 1 2 7 . 111,1,164. 111,4,44. IV, 5, (cf. Disvouch). 131. L r . IV, 6, 267. Oth. I, 3, 362. Ill, 3, 461. Cymb. V o u c h e r , witness, attestation: with his his recognizances, his fines, his double —s, coveries, Hml. V , 1 , 1 1 4 . willhis—s vouch him 117. on her left breast a mole •.., here's a v. than ever law could make, Cymb. II, 2, 39. V o u c h s a f e , 1) with to d e i g n : v. to alight thy some present speed, Lucr. v. to hide my will in thine,

statutes, his renomore, stronger

an inf., = to condescend, steed, V e n . 13. v. to afford 1305. wilt thou ... not once Sonn. 135, 6. that you v...

III, 2, 47. Ill, 4, 56. P e r . Ill, 3, 27. T h e thing promised with of: a v. of single life, Mids. I, 1, 121. —s of faith, Merch. V, 19. your —s of love, Caes. II, 1, 272. T h e person to w h o m a promise is made, with to: your —s to her and me, Mids. Ill, 2, 132. T r o i l . I, 3, 270. To break a v., Sonn. 152, 3 (thy bedv. broke). Gent. II, 6, 11. L L L IV, 3, 63. 72. 178. Mids. I, 1, 175. H 4 A III, 2, 159. R 3 I, 4, 211. L r . I, 1, 171. A n t . I, 3, 30. cf. Lucr, 809. so hold your v.

V L L L V, 2, 345 (intr.? cf. Troil. V, 3, 24). to infringe a v. H6C II, 2, 8. Cor. V, 3, 20. to keep a v. John III, 1, 279. H5 IV, 7, 146. 151. to make a v. Lucr. 1847. LLL II, 22. IV, 3, 318. As 111, 5, 73. R2 I, 1, 118. H6C IV, 3, 4. Troil. Prol. 7. I, 2, 308. Cor. I, 6, 57. Tit. Ill, 1, 280. Hml. II, 2, 70. Cymb. II, 4, I I I , to make a v. to: J o h n III, I, 265. H4A IV, 3, 75. Hml. I, 5, 49. Cymb. Ill, 2, 12. the — s we made each other, Tw. V, 221. to swear a v. Rom. II Prol. 10. to violate a v. As III, 2, 141. a v. vowed, All's IV, 2, 22. 2) a solemn asseveration: / may not, verily. Verily! you put me off with limber —s, Wint. I, 2, 47. as surely as my soul intends to live I do believe that violent hands were laid upon the life of this thrice-famed duke. What instance gives Lord Warioick for his v.? II6B III, 2, 159. heaven, set ope thy everlasting gates, to entertain my —s of thanks and praise, IV, 9, 14. cf. R3 II, 1, 42. V, 3, 98. Lr. I, I, 171. Vow, vb. 1) to promise in a solemn manner; absol.: till now did ne'er invite, nor never v. Compl. 182 (M. Edd. woo, for the sake of the rhyme), tohen you have —ed, you must not speak with men, Meats. 1, 4, 10 (i. e. when you have made your profession). when I v., I weep, Mids. Ill, 2, 124. 153. With an accus. denoting the thing promised: now he —s a league, and now invasion, Lucr. 287. that he may v. revenge on him, 1179. Sonn. 89, 13. 123, 13. 152, 4. Gent. IV, 3, 21. All's III, 6, 87. John II, 237. R2 I, 3. 49. H6A 111, 1, 167. II6B IV, 2, 70. H6C I, 1, 55. II, 1, 30. Troil. Ill, 2, 93. V, 5, 31. Cor. IV, 6, 67. Oth. 111,3,21. Per. 11,5,11. With to before the person to whom something is promised: never faith could hold, if not to beauty —ed, Pilgr. 58 and L L L IV, 2, 110. I have —ed to Jaquenetta to hold the plough, V, 2, 892. All's IV, 3, 260. H6C II, 3, 29. Followed by an infinitive: Ven. Ded. 3. Lucr. Arg. 22. Sonn. 154, 3. Err. V, 182. L L L IV, 3, 296. V, 2, 892. Shr. IV, 2, 28. Wint. Ill, 2, 243. II6A III, 2, 77. IV, 1, 14. V, 5, 31. H6B IV, 4, 31. H6C 1, 1, 160. Troil. Ill, 2, 84. Tit. V, 1, 81. Rom. Ill, 3, 129. By a clause: Merch. IV, I, 442. Shr. IV, 5, 15. H6B I, 3, 203. H6C I, 1, 24. 11, 3, 29. Tit. II, 3, 296. 2) to asseverate, to protest solemnly: or else, by Jove I v., I should have scratched out your eyes, Gent. IV, 4, 208. when thou unurged ivouldst v. that never words were music to thine ear, Err. II, 2, 115. she thought, I dare v. for her, they touched not any stranger sense, All's I, 3, 113. he heard him swear and v. to God he came but to be duke of Lancaster, H4A IV, 3, 60. we v. to heaven and to his highness that what we did was mildly as we might, Tit. 1, 474. 3) Partic. —ed = a) confirmed by oath, sworn to: with a —ed contract, Meas. V, 209. heavenly oaths, —ed with integrity, LLL V, 2, 356. the plain single voiv that is —ed true, All's IV, 2, 22. b) sworn, constant, inveterate: so mighty are his —ed enemies, H6B 111, 1, 220. you were —ed Duke Humphrey's foes, III, 2, 182. thy —ed friend, H6C III, 3, 50. Vowel, a letter which represents a simple sound: the five —s, LLL V, 1, 56. Rom. Ill, 2, 46. Vow-fellow, one bound by the same vow: L L L II, 38. Vox, in the Latin of the clown, = a full and loud voice: I do but read madness: an your ladyship will

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have it as it ought to be, you must allow V. Tw. V, 304 (cf. voce opus est, in Terentius). Voyage, a travel by sea: Tp. V, 208. Gent. II, 3, 47. 48. 56. Err. I, 1, 41 (make). IV, 1, 4. Mids. II, 1, 134. As II, 7, 40. Tw. II, 1, 11. II, 4, 81. R2 V, 6, 49. H8 I, 3, 6. Hull. Ill, 3, 24. IV, 7, 63. Cymb. V, 3,44. Per. IV, 1,37. IV, 6, 49. A walk taken on land called so by the seaman Antonio: Tw. Ill, 3, 7. Metaphorically: thy loving v. is but for two months victualled, As V, 4, 197. in life's uncertain v. Tim. V, 1, 205. all the v. of their life is bound in shallows, Caes. IV, 3, 220. Used, in jest, of any way or course taken: if he should intend this v. towards my wife, Wiv. II, 1, 189; cf. if you make your v. upon her, Cymb. I, 4, 170. is there no young squarer now that will make a v. with him to the devil? Ado I, 1, 83. 1 am bound to your niece; I mean, she is the list of my v. Tw. HI, 1, 86. V u l c a n , the god who presided over the art of forging: Ado I, 1, 187. Tw. V, 56. Troil. 1, 3, 168 (V. and his wife, i. e. Venus). V, 2, 170. Tit. II, 1, 89 (—'s badge, i. e. the horns of cuckoldom). Hml. Ill, 2, 89. V u l g a r , adj. common; 1) pertaining or suiting to the common people, plebeian: he that buildeth on the v. heart, H4B 1,3, 90 (on the heart of the people). talk like the v. sort of market-men, H6A 111, 2, 4. Jive tribunes to defend their v. wisdoms, Ccr. I, 1, 219. puff to win a v. station, II, 1, 231 (among the crowd), is no less apparent to the v. eye, IV, 7, 21. 2) low, mean: too excellent for every v. paper to rehearse, Sonn. 38, 4. the prey of every v. thief, 48, 8. stale and cheap to v. company, II4A 111, 2, 41. stand uncovered to the v. groom, H6B IV, 1, 128. be thou familiar, but by no means v. Hml. 1, 3, 61 (German: mache dich nicht gemein). 3) ordinary, common-place: 'tis a v. proof, Tw. III, 1,135. as common as any the most v. thing to sense, Hml. I, 2, 99. 4) of general circulation-, public: the impression which v. scandal stamped upon my brow, Sonn. 112, 2. a v. comment will be made of it, Err. Ill, 1, 100. most sure and v.: every one hears that, Lr. IV, 6, 214. unregistered in v. fame, Ant. Ill, 13, 119. 5) general, common to all: as naked as the v. air, John II, 387. Misapplied by Costard: most incony v. wit, L L L IV, 1, 144. Vulgar, subst. 1) the common people: which the base v. do call three, L L L 1,2,51. so do our v. drench their peasant limbs in blood of princes, H5 IV, 7, 80. drive away the v. from the streets, Caes. I, 1, 75. —s, in the same sense: as bad as those that —s give boldest titles, Wint. II, 1, 94. 2) the common and vernacular tongue (in the language of Armado and Touchstone 1 : which to annothanize in the v. — 0 base and obscure v.! L L L IV, 1, 69. 70. abandon, which is in the v. leave, As V, 1, 53. Vulgarly, before all the people, publicly: so v. and personally accused, Meas. V, 160. V u l n e r a b l e , susceptible of wounds: let fall thy blade on v. crests, Mcb. V, 8, 11. V u l t u r e , the bird Vultur; emblem of voracity: there cannot be that v. in you to devour so many, Mcb. IV, 3, 74. Adjectively: whose v. thought doth pitch the

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price so high, that she will draw his lips' rich treasure dry, Ven. 551. her sad behaviour feeds his v. folly, L u c r . 556. Emblem of internal torments (in allusion to the fable of Prometheus): let —s gripe thy guts, Wiv. I,

3, 94. let —s vile seise on his lungs, H4B V, 3, 145. while the v. of sedition feeds in the bosom of such great commanders, H6A IV, 3, 47. to ease the gnawing v. of thy mind, T i t . V, 2, 31. she hath lied sharp-toothed unkindness like a v. here, Lr. II, 4, 137.

w . W a d d l e , to walk in a vacillating manner, to toddle: she could have run and —d all about, Rom. I, 3, 37. W a d e , to walk through a substance that yields to the feet like water: Shr. IV, 1, 80. Wint. V, 2, 50. J o h n II, 42. R2 I, 3, 138. Mcb. Ill, 4, 137. W a f e r - c a k e , a thin cake: men's faiths are —s, H 5 II, 3, 53 (i. e. very fragile. Pistol's poetry). W a f t (impf. and partic. waft: Merch.V, 11. J o h n II, 73) 1) to beckon: who —s us yonder? Err. II, 2, I I I , andw. her love to come againto Carthage, Merch. V, 11. whom Fortune with her ivory hand —s to her, T i m . 1,1,70. it —s me still, Hml. I, 4, 78 (Qq waves). 2) to cast, to turn quickly: —ing his eyes to the contrary, Wint. I, 2, 372. cf. H 6 B IV, 1, 116. 3) to carry or send over the sea: a braver choice of dauntless spirits than now the English bottoms have w. o'er, J o h n II, 73. w. me safely cross the Channel. ... I must w. thee to thy death, H 6 B IV. 1, 114. 116. shall w. them over with our royal fleet, 1I6C 111,3,253. xv. her hence to France, V, 7, 41. W a f t a g e , passage by water: a ship you sent me to, to hire w. Err. IV, 1, 95. a strange soul upon the Stygian banks staying for w. Troil. Ill, 2, 11. W a f t u r e (O. Edd. wafter) the act of waving: with an angry w. of your hand, Caes. II, 1, 246. W a g , subst. a merry droll: Gent. V, 4, 86. L L L V, 2, 108. W i n t I, 2, 66. H4A I, 2, 18. 26. 50. IV, 2, 55. H 4 B I, 2, 200. Perhaps also in Ado V, 1, 16: if such a one will smile and stroke his beard, and sorrow, w. (O. Edd. wagge), cry hem, when he should groan; i. e. and if sorrow, a merry droll, will cry hem etc. A passage variously corrected by the commentators on the supposition, thatui. must be the homonymous verb. W a g , vb. 1) to stir, to move; a) intr.: tremble and start at —ing of a straw, R 3 111,5,7. the empress never —s but in her company there is a Moor, T i t . V, 2, 87. b) trans.: no discerner durst w. his tongue in censure, H 8 1,1,33. think with —ing of your tongue to move me, V, 3 , 1 2 7 . let me see the proudest ... but w. his finger at thee, 131. what have I done, that thou darest w. thy tongue in noise so rude against me? Hml. Ill, 4, 39. 2) to move up and down, or from side to side; a) intr.: his beard ... —ed up and down, Lucr. 1406. 'tis merry in hall when beards w. all, H 4 B V, 3, 37 (when there are only men present), when you speak best unto the purpose, it is not worth the —ing of your beards, Cor. II, 1, 96. until my eyelids will no longer w. Hml. V, 1, 290. b ) trans.: forbid the mountain pines to w. their high tops, Merch. IV, 1,76. zephyrs blowing below the violet, not - ing his sweet head, Cymb. IV, 2, 173. 3) to go one's way: let them w.; trot, trot, W i v . I, 3, 7. here, boys, here, here! shall we w.f II, 1, 238. I will provoke him to't, or let him w. II, 3, 74. let us

w. then, 101 (all the mad host's speeches), thus may we see, quoth he, how the world —s, As II, 7, 23. As for Ado V, 1, 16, see the preceding article. W a g e , 1) trans, a) to stake, to bet: the king hath —d with him six Barbary horses, Hml. V, 2, 154 (Qq wagered), my life I never held but as a pawn to w. against thine enemies, L r . I, 1, 158. 1 will w. against your gold, gold to it, Cymb. I, 4, 144. b) to hazard, to attempt, to venture o n , to encounter: against whose fury ... the aweless lion could not w. the fight, J o h n 1,266. too weak to w. an instant trial with the king, H 4 A I V , 4,20. neglecting an attempt of ease and gain, to wake and w. a danger profitless, Oth. I, 3, 30. dared him ... to w. this battle at Pharsalia, Ant. 111,7,32. Hence = to undertake, to carry o n : he hath —d new wars 'gainst Pompey, Ant 111,4,3. c) to pay wages to, to remunerate: he —dme with his countenance, as if I had been mercenary, Cor. V, 6, 40. 2) intr. a) to be opposed in combat, to contend, to strive: choose to w. against the enmity o'the air, Lr. II, 4, 212. b) to be opposed as a stake, to be equal: his taints and honours —d equal with him, Ant. V, 1, 31. the commodity —s not with the danger, Per. IV, 2, 34. W a g e r , subst. something staked upon a chance; a bet: T p . II, 1, 28. 32. Shr. V, 2, 70. Cor. 1, 4, 1. Hml. V, 2, 271. Cymb. I, 4, 181. Ill, 2, 73. I'll hold thee any w. Merch. Ill, 4, 62. to play a w. Hml. V, 2, 264. to lay a w. Hml. V, 2,106 (on). Cymb. II, 4,95. if the gods should play some heavenly match and on the w. lay two earthly women, Merch. 111,5,85. to make a w. Hml. IV, 7, 156 (on). Cymb. 1, 4, 120 (against), to lose a w. Hml. V, 2, 219. Cymb. I, (3, 18. to win a w. Shr. V, 2, 69. 112. 116. 186. W a g e r , vb. to bet: and w. on your heads, Hml. IV, 7 , 1 3 5 . Ant. II, 5,16. hath —ed with him six Barbary horses, Hml. V,2,154 (Ff waged). Cymb. V, 5,182 (later Ff waged). I durst to w. she is honest, Oth. IV, 2, 12. P e r . V, 1, 43. W a g e s , pay given for service: Gent. I, 1, 94. 95. III, 1, 270. As II, 3, 67. II, 4, 94. W i n t . I, 2, 94. H 4 B V, ], 25. H8 IV, 2, 150. T i m . Ill, 2, 77. L r . V, 3, 303 (all friends shall taste the w. of their virtue). Cymb. IV, 2, 261 (home art gone, and ta'en thy w.). W a g g i s h , frolicsome, wanton, roguish: Mids. I, 1, 240. Cymb. Ill, 4, 160. W a g g l i n g , wagging, shaking, moving from side to side: I know you by the w. of your head, Ado II, 1, 119. W a g g o n , a carriage; a chariot: we must away, our w. is prepared, All's IV, 4 , 3 4 . from Dis's w. W i n t . IV, 4, 118. to hale thy vengeful w. swift away, Tit. V, 2, 51. by the w. wheel trot all day long, 54. her w. spokes made of long spinners' legs, Rom. I, 4, 59.

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price so high, that she will draw his lips' rich treasure dry, Ven. 551. her sad behaviour feeds his v. folly, L u c r . 556. Emblem of internal torments (in allusion to the fable of Prometheus): let —s gripe thy guts, Wiv. I,

3, 94. let —s vile seise on his lungs, H4B V, 3, 145. while the v. of sedition feeds in the bosom of such great commanders, H6A IV, 3, 47. to ease the gnawing v. of thy mind, T i t . V, 2, 31. she hath lied sharp-toothed unkindness like a v. here, Lr. II, 4, 137.

w . W a d d l e , to walk in a vacillating manner, to toddle: she could have run and —d all about, Rom. I, 3, 37. W a d e , to walk through a substance that yields to the feet like water: Shr. IV, 1, 80. Wint. V, 2, 50. J o h n II, 42. R2 I, 3, 138. Mcb. Ill, 4, 137. W a f e r - c a k e , a thin cake: men's faiths are —s, H 5 II, 3, 53 (i. e. very fragile. Pistol's poetry). W a f t (impf. and partic. waft: Merch.V, 11. J o h n II, 73) 1) to beckon: who —s us yonder? Err. II, 2, I I I , andw. her love to come againto Carthage, Merch. V, 11. whom Fortune with her ivory hand —s to her, T i m . 1,1,70. it —s me still, Hml. I, 4, 78 (Qq waves). 2) to cast, to turn quickly: —ing his eyes to the contrary, Wint. I, 2, 372. cf. H 6 B IV, 1, 116. 3) to carry or send over the sea: a braver choice of dauntless spirits than now the English bottoms have w. o'er, J o h n II, 73. w. me safely cross the Channel. ... I must w. thee to thy death, H 6 B IV. 1, 114. 116. shall w. them over with our royal fleet, 1I6C 111,3,253. xv. her hence to France, V, 7, 41. W a f t a g e , passage by water: a ship you sent me to, to hire w. Err. IV, 1, 95. a strange soul upon the Stygian banks staying for w. Troil. Ill, 2, 11. W a f t u r e (O. Edd. wafter) the act of waving: with an angry w. of your hand, Caes. II, 1, 246. W a g , subst. a merry droll: Gent. V, 4, 86. L L L V, 2, 108. W i n t I, 2, 66. H4A I, 2, 18. 26. 50. IV, 2, 55. H 4 B I, 2, 200. Perhaps also in Ado V, 1, 16: if such a one will smile and stroke his beard, and sorrow, w. (O. Edd. wagge), cry hem, when he should groan; i. e. and if sorrow, a merry droll, will cry hem etc. A passage variously corrected by the commentators on the supposition, thatui. must be the homonymous verb. W a g , vb. 1) to stir, to move; a) intr.: tremble and start at —ing of a straw, R 3 111,5,7. the empress never —s but in her company there is a Moor, T i t . V, 2, 87. b) trans.: no discerner durst w. his tongue in censure, H 8 1,1,33. think with —ing of your tongue to move me, V, 3 , 1 2 7 . let me see the proudest ... but w. his finger at thee, 131. what have I done, that thou darest w. thy tongue in noise so rude against me? Hml. Ill, 4, 39. 2) to move up and down, or from side to side; a) intr.: his beard ... —ed up and down, Lucr. 1406. 'tis merry in hall when beards w. all, H 4 B V, 3, 37 (when there are only men present), when you speak best unto the purpose, it is not worth the —ing of your beards, Cor. II, 1, 96. until my eyelids will no longer w. Hml. V, 1, 290. b ) trans.: forbid the mountain pines to w. their high tops, Merch. IV, 1,76. zephyrs blowing below the violet, not - ing his sweet head, Cymb. IV, 2, 173. 3) to go one's way: let them w.; trot, trot, W i v . I, 3, 7. here, boys, here, here! shall we w.f II, 1, 238. I will provoke him to't, or let him w. II, 3, 74. let us

w. then, 101 (all the mad host's speeches), thus may we see, quoth he, how the world —s, As II, 7, 23. As for Ado V, 1, 16, see the preceding article. W a g e , 1) trans, a) to stake, to bet: the king hath —d with him six Barbary horses, Hml. V, 2, 154 (Qq wagered), my life I never held but as a pawn to w. against thine enemies, L r . I, 1, 158. 1 will w. against your gold, gold to it, Cymb. I, 4, 144. b) to hazard, to attempt, to venture o n , to encounter: against whose fury ... the aweless lion could not w. the fight, J o h n 1,266. too weak to w. an instant trial with the king, H 4 A I V , 4,20. neglecting an attempt of ease and gain, to wake and w. a danger profitless, Oth. I, 3, 30. dared him ... to w. this battle at Pharsalia, Ant. 111,7,32. Hence = to undertake, to carry o n : he hath —d new wars 'gainst Pompey, Ant 111,4,3. c) to pay wages to, to remunerate: he —dme with his countenance, as if I had been mercenary, Cor. V, 6, 40. 2) intr. a) to be opposed in combat, to contend, to strive: choose to w. against the enmity o'the air, Lr. II, 4, 212. b) to be opposed as a stake, to be equal: his taints and honours —d equal with him, Ant. V, 1, 31. the commodity —s not with the danger, Per. IV, 2, 34. W a g e r , subst. something staked upon a chance; a bet: T p . II, 1, 28. 32. Shr. V, 2, 70. Cor. 1, 4, 1. Hml. V, 2, 271. Cymb. I, 4, 181. Ill, 2, 73. I'll hold thee any w. Merch. Ill, 4, 62. to play a w. Hml. V, 2, 264. to lay a w. Hml. V, 2,106 (on). Cymb. II, 4,95. if the gods should play some heavenly match and on the w. lay two earthly women, Merch. 111,5,85. to make a w. Hml. IV, 7, 156 (on). Cymb. 1, 4, 120 (against), to lose a w. Hml. V, 2, 219. Cymb. I, (3, 18. to win a w. Shr. V, 2, 69. 112. 116. 186. W a g e r , vb. to bet: and w. on your heads, Hml. IV, 7 , 1 3 5 . Ant. II, 5,16. hath —ed with him six Barbary horses, Hml. V,2,154 (Ff waged). Cymb. V, 5,182 (later Ff waged). I durst to w. she is honest, Oth. IV, 2, 12. P e r . V, 1, 43. W a g e s , pay given for service: Gent. I, 1, 94. 95. III, 1, 270. As II, 3, 67. II, 4, 94. W i n t . I, 2, 94. H 4 B V, ], 25. H8 IV, 2, 150. T i m . Ill, 2, 77. L r . V, 3, 303 (all friends shall taste the w. of their virtue). Cymb. IV, 2, 261 (home art gone, and ta'en thy w.). W a g g i s h , frolicsome, wanton, roguish: Mids. I, 1, 240. Cymb. Ill, 4, 160. W a g g l i n g , wagging, shaking, moving from side to side: I know you by the w. of your head, Ado II, 1, 119. W a g g o n , a carriage; a chariot: we must away, our w. is prepared, All's IV, 4 , 3 4 . from Dis's w. W i n t . IV, 4, 118. to hale thy vengeful w. swift away, Tit. V, 2, 51. by the w. wheel trot all day long, 54. her w. spokes made of long spinners' legs, Rom. I, 4, 59.

w

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W a n e n e r , charioteer: Tit. V, 2, 48. Rom. I, 4, —ing in the court, H4A I, 2, 78. to to. at my heels, H4B I, 2, 18. where be these warders, that theyw. not 64. Ill, 2, 2. W a g g e n - s p a k e and W t | | U - w h e e l , see her el H6A 1 , 3 , 3 . how often hast thou - ed at ny cup, H 6 B IV, 1, 56. your —ing vassals, R3 II, 1, 111. the Waggon. W a g t a i l , the bird Motacilla: spare my gray two great cardinals to. in the presence, H8 111,1, 17. who —s theret V, 2, 4. I must hence to to. Ron. I, 3, beard, you w.1 Lr. II, 2, 73. W a M , lection of O. Edd. in Shr. Ill, 2, 56: to. 103. I will not to. pinioned at your master's cout>, Ant. in the back and shoulder-shotten. M. Edd. swayed or V, 2, 53. weighed. With on, — to pay attendance to, to atteid as a W a l l , to lament, to moan, to mourn; absol.: servant; or to be at the service of: wrath, envy, treason, begins a —ing note, Ven. 835. buy's a minute's mirth rape, and murder's rages, thy heinous hours to. in them low. a week, Liter. 213. eyes—ing still, 1508. Sonn. as their pages, Lucr. 910. I must w. on myselj, Wiv. 42, 3. Gent. II, 3, 7. R2 IV, 301. II6A 1, 1, 86 ( ing I, 1, 208. go to. upon my cousin Shallow, 282. Shr. I, robes). R3 II, 2, 34. Rom. Ill, 2, 128. IV, 5, 31. 1, 213. 238. All's I, 1, 116. H4B II, 2, 190. Tit. II, Hml. II, 2, 151 (Qq mourn). Lr. Ill, 6, 74 (Tom will 1, 10. Ant. IV, 2, 20. it (the music) —s upoi some make them, i. e. dogs, weep and w•). IV, 6, 184 (Ff god o'the island, Tp. I, 2, 388. I w. upon his pltasure, Gent. 11,4, 117. we'll to. upon your grace til after waujl). Trans., = to bewail: to w. his death, Ven. 1017. supper, III, 2, 96. in every thing I to. upon ks will, —s his case, Lncr. 711. 994. 1799. Sonn. 9, 4. 30, 4. All's II, 4, 55. rebuke and dread correction w.on us, Err. IV, 2, 24. LLL V, 2,759. R2 II, 2, 22. Ill, 2, 178. H4A V, 1, 111 (are at onr service), the noble troops H6A I, 1, 51. H6B III, 1, 216. H6C II, 3, 26. V, 4, 1. that —ed upon my smiles, H8 III, 2, 412. I pirpose R3 I, 3, 204. II, 2, 11. 102. 103. Ill, 5, 61. IV, 4, 99. not tow. on fortune till these wars determine, C. hence withW i n t . Ill, 3, 17. were I the ghost that —ed, V, 1, 63. that, Gent. Ill, 1, 246. as we w. along, V, 4, 162. I 80. spirits w. H 6 B I, 4, 22. affairs that w., as they pray you, sir, w. in, Wiv. I, 1, 292. fear ... to w . by say spirits do, at midnight, H 8 V, 1. 13. in all shapes this Heme's oak, IV, 4, 40. you must w. by us on our ... this spirit —s in, T i m . II, 2, 121. Caes. I, 3, 25. other hand, Meas. V, 17. let him w. from whence he V, 3, 95. Mcb. II, 3, 84. V, 5, 24 (life's but a —ing came, Err. Ill, 1, 37. pleaseth you w. with me down to shadow). Hml. I, 1, 138. 161 (Ff can w., Qq dares his house, IV, 1, 12. yonder, as I think, he — s , V, 9 stir). I, 2, 202. 243. I, 4, 6. 1, 5, 10. Lr. Ill, 4, 121. ( = he comes; cf. Merch. II, 2, 183). will you w. in Similarly : ive should hold day with the Antipodes, if to see their gossiping? 419. Ado II, 1, 93. Mids. Ill, you would w. in absence of the sun, Merch. V, 128. now 1, 126. Merch. II, 2, 183. As I, 3, 14. Shr. IV, 1, 149. heaven —s on earth, T w . V, 100. T w . Ill, 4, 295. W i n t . IV, 4, 855. J o h n 111, 4, 91. 5) to g o , to be dressed in a particular manner: H 4 A II, 2, 8. 63. 116. 1 1 , 4 , 5 5 0 . Ill, 3 , 4 9 . H4B she will veiled w. T w . 1, 1, 28. when I have —edlike I, 1, 4. 170. I, 2, 12. H5 II, 1, 61. IV Chor. 30. H 6 A a private man, Tit. IV, 4, 75. you ought not w. without I, 4, 54. H8 IV, 1, 116. Troil. 111,2, 7. 64. 107. IV, 3, 5. 12. IV, 4, 140. Horn. IV, 1, 79. IV, 2, 44. Caes. II, 2, 8. Ill, 1, 108. Mcb. II, 1, 57. Hml. II, 2, 185. Oth. V, 2, 30. Cymb. V, 5, 119. Figuratively: foolery does w. about the orb like the sun, T w . Ill, 1, 43. how wildly then —s my estate in France, J o h n IV, 2, 128. he's —ed the way of nature, II4B V, 2, 4 ( = has died), thou hast so long —ed hand in hand with time, Troil. IV, 5, 203 (— hast lived so long), that craves wary —ing, Caes. II, 1 , 1 5 . the morn ... —s o'er the dew of yon high eastward hill, Hml. I, 1, 167. with a larger tether may he w. than may be given you, I, 3, 125. Often, like to go, = to go a w a y , to come away, to withdraw: wilit please you w. aside? Meas. IV, 1, 59. come, we will w. IV, 5, 12. will you w.? dinner is ready, Ado II, 3, 218. w. aside with me, III, 2, 73. w. aside the true folk, and let the traitors stay, L L L IV, 3, 212. you may go w. and give me leave awhile, Shr. III, 1, 59. we two will w. and leave you to your graver steps, W i n t . 1, 2, 172. will you w. on, my lord? T r . IV, 5, 291. pray you, w. near; I'll speak with you anon, T i m . II, 2, 132 (leave m e , but remain in the vicinity), will't please your highness w.? Lr. IV, 7, 83. will you w., sir ? Oth. IV, 3, 4. w , let's see if other watchmen do hear what we do, A n t IV, 3, 17. pray, w. awhile, Cymb. I, 1, 176. cf. Ff in L r . Ill, 4, 121. 2 ) to move or go about for recreation or any other purpose: a turn or two I'll w., to still my beating mind, T p . IV, 1 6 2 . 1 had rather w. here, Wiv. I, 1, 293. I love to w. by the Counter-gate, III, 3, 85. come, w. in the Park, 240. will you w. with me about the town? E r r . I, 2, 22. HI, 2, 156. Ado I, 2, 9. Ill, 1 , 5 . L L L 1, 1, 237. 242. Shr. Ind. 2, 42. II, 112. J o h n V, 6, 17. H 4 A III, 1, 257. H 6 B 1, 3, 156. R 3 I, 4, 12. H 8 V, 1 , 9 4 . 117. Troil. Ill, 2, 17. Rom. I, 1, 127. 130. Caes. I, 3, 40. 46. 127. II, 1, 239. Ill, 2, 256. Mcb. Ill, 6, 5. 7. Hml. 41, 2, 160. 208. Ill, 1, 43. V, 2, 180. Lr. IV, 6, 17. Oth. Ill, 2, 3. Ill, 4, 165. IV, 3, 2. Ant. Ill, 5, 17. Cymb. 1, 1, 104. P e r . IV, 1, 28. 30. 40. 46. 49. Used of a tour in dancing ( a t a m a s q u e r a d e ) : Lady, will you w. about with your friend? Ado II, 1, 89. 91. ladies that have their toes unplagued with corns will w. about with you, Rom. I, 5, 19 (the surreptitious Ql and most M. Edd. have a bout). Hence applied to fighting: Tybalt, you rat-catcher, will you w.? R o m . Ill, 1, 78 ( G e r m a n : willst Du einen Tanz machen?). 3) to act and move on the feet in sleep: tvhen was it she last — ed, Mcb. V, 1, 3. 13. 66. 4} to move abont as a spirit or spectre: Heme the

the sign of your profession, Caes. I, 1 , 3 . is it physical to w. unbraced, II, 1, 262. in his livery —ed crowns and crownets, Ant. V, 2, 91. 6) to live and follow one's pursuits: 'tis pity that thou livest to w. where any honest men resort, Err. V, 28. those that w. and wot not what they ( t h e stars) are, L L L I, 1, 91. I will buy with you, sell with you, talk with you, w. with you, Merch. 1,3,37. do not then w. too open, Tw. Ill, 3, 37. who dares not stir by day, must w. by night, J o h n I, 172. nor attend the foot that leaves the print of blood where'er it —s, IV, 3, 26. for ever will Iw. upon my knees, R 2 V, 3, 93 ( F f kneel), o'er whose acres —ed those blessed feet, H4A I, 1, 25. we w. invisible, II, 1, 96. 99. we petty men w. under his huge legs, Caes. I, 2, 137. to w. alone = to be an outcast, to be forsaken: to w. alone, like one that had the pestilence, Gent. II, 1, 21. when wert thou wont to w. alone, dishonoured thus, Tit. 1, 339. his poor self ... —s, like contempt, alone, T i m . IV, 2, 15. Simil a r l y : methinks you w. like a stranger, Shr. II, 87. 7) Transitively, a) to pass or go through: do not without danger w. these streets, T w . Ill, 3, 25. if that same demon... should with his lion gait w. the whole world, H 5 II, 2, 122. (In T p . IV, 165. Ado II, 3, 16. Hml. I, 5, 10 not trans., but with an accus. of the measure, see Wing vb.). b) to cause to step slowly, to lead or ride with a slow p a c e : I will rather trust ...a thief to to. my ambling gelding, Wiv. II, 2, 319. W a l k i n g - s t a f f , a staff carried for support in w a l k i n g : a palmer's w. R2 III, 3, 151. W a l l , subst. a structure raised to enclose and defend a p l a c e : Mids. Ill, 1, 64. 66. 67. 69 etc. V, 133 etc. 210 (when — s are so wilful to hear without warning). W i n t . IV, 4, 818. H 6 B IV, 10, 7. 37. H 6 C II, 4, 4 (a brazen w.). Tit. V, 1, 24. Rom. I, 1, 20. 22. II, 1, 5. P r o v e r b i a l : hunger broke stone •—«, Cor. I, 1, 210. how has the ass broke the w., that thou art out of the city? T i m . IV, 3, 354. I will take the w. of any man or maid, Rom. 1, 1, 15 ( = get the better o f ) ; cf. 21. the weakest goes to the w. 18 ( c f . the Life and D e a t h of T h o m a s Lord Cromwell, 111, 3 : though the drops be small, yet have they force to force men to the wall). = fortification: J o h n IV, 3, 1. R 2 II, 1, 47. Ill, 2, 170. H 5 111, 1, 2. H 6 A IV, 2, 2. H6C V, 1, 17. T i m . IV, 1 , 1 . 38. Plur. — s: Lucr. 1429. T p . II, 1 , 8 7 . Merch. V, 4. Shr. II, 369 (Pisa —s). J o h n II, 198. 201 etc. H 5 V, 2, 349. H 6 A I, 2, 40. I, 6, 1. 11, 1, 3. 11,2, 25. Ill, 2 , 6 9 . H 6 C V, 1,16. R3IV, 1,100. Troil. 1, 1, 2 etc. Cor. I, 4, 13. 1,8,8 (Corioli—s) etc. R o m .

1330 III, 3, 17 f* Verona - s ) . T i m . V, 1, 170. V , 4 , 2 2 . Mcb. V, 5, l e t c . Figuratively: rude ram, to batter such an ivory w. Lucr. 464. 723. they of those marches ... shall be a w. sufficient to defend our inland, H 5 I, 2, 141. take thou my soldiers, prisoners, patrimony: dispose of them-, the walls are thine, L r . V, 3, 77 ( = I surrender at discretion. F l the walls is thine-, Qq om ). the heavens hold firm the —s of thy dear honour, Cymb. 11, 1, 68. = the structure enclosing a building and its several rooms: L L L V, 2, 922 (when icicles hang by the w.). Merch. II, 9, 29. R2 I, 2, 68. V, 2, 15. V, 5 , 2 1 . I I 4 B II, 1, 156. H5 P r o l . 19. Ill, 3, 37. II6A I, 4, 49. R 3 III, 3, 11. Ill, 5, 17. Rom. I, 3, 27. Hml. V, 1, 239. L r . II, 2, 72. to hang by the w. = not to be made use o f , to be neglected: the enrolled penalties which have, lilce unscoured armour, hung by the w. Meas. I, 2, 171. than picture-like to hang by the w. Cor. I, 3, 12. I am richer than to hang by the — s , Cymb. Ill, 4, 54. Figuratively: through crystal—s each little mote will peep, Lucr. 1251. a liquid prisoner pent in —s of glass, Sonn. 5, 10. Used of the human body as the external part of m a n : painting thy outward —s so costly gay, Sonn. 146, 4. nature with a beauteous w. doth oft close in pollution, T w . I, 2, 48. within this w. of flesh, J o h n III, 3, 20. ye white-limed—s, T i t . IV, 2, 98. cf. out-wall in Lr. Ill, 1, 45. W a l l , vb. to enclose and defend with a wall: this flesh which —s about our life, R2 HI, 2, 167. —ed = surrounded with walls, fortified: As III, 3, 59. H 6 A 111,4,7. Lr. V, 3, 18. Cymb. V, 3, 14. a lady —ed about with diamonds, L L L V, 2, 3. cf. Sea-walled. W i t h from, = to hinder as by a wall opposed: on either hand thee there are squadrons pitched, to w. thee from the liberty of flight, H 6 A IV, 2, 24. W a l l e t , 1) any thing protuberant and swagging: whose throats had hanging at 'em —s of flesh, T p . III,3, 46. 2) a knapsack: Troil. Ill, 3, 145. W a l l - e y e d , g l a r i n g - e y e d , fierce-eyed: w. wrath or staring rage, J o h n IV, 3, 49. say, w. slave, Tit. V, I, 44 (As for the origin of the expression, Nares observes: Whally, applied to eyes, means discoloured, or, what are now called wall-eyes; from whaule, or whall, the disease of the eyes called glaucoma). W a l l - n e w t , a sort of lizard: the w. and the water, Lr. Ill, 4, 135. W a l l o o n ( 0 . Edd. Wallon), 1) the bolder-country between the Netherlands and F r a n c e : the regions of Artois, W. and Picardy, H6A II, 1, 10. 2) a native of i t : a base W. I, 1, 137. W a l l o w , to roll one's b o d y : w. in December snow, R 2 I, 3, 298. in the lily-beds, Troil. Ill, 2, 13. W a l n a t , the fruit of J u g l a n s r e g i a : Wiv. IV, 2, 171. a w. shell, Shr. IV, 3, 66. W a l t e r , name of 1) Sir W . B l u n t : H 4 A 1 , 1 , 6 3 . 69. IV, 3, 32. 107. V, 3, 32. 63. 2) Sir W . Herbert: R 3 IV, 5, 9. 3) W . L o r d Ferrers: R 3 V, 5, 13 ( Q q Water). 4 ) W . W h i t m o r e : HCB IV, 1, 14. 31. 38. 115. 5 ) a servant of P e t r u c h i o : Shr. IV, 1, 92. 138. W a n , a d j . pale: H 4 A I, 1, 1. pale and w. Err. IV, 4, 111. Tit. II, 3, 90. W a n , vb. to turn pale: that from her working all his visage —tied, Hml. II, 2, 580 (Ff warmed). In Ant. II, 1, 21 0 . Edd. her wand lip; M. Edd. waned: perhaps wanned.

W a n d , 1) a small twig, a rod: Gent. II, 3, 23. Merch. I, 3, 85. 2) a staff of authority: H6B I, 2, 28. W a n d e r , to go here and there without a certain object, to roam, to ramble: in thy weak hive a —ing wasp hath crept, Lucr. 839. to make it w. in an unknown field, Err. Ill, 2, 38. a —ing knight, Mids. I, 2, 47. H 4 A I, 2, 16. he gives them good leave to w. As I, 1, 109. when I w. here and there, W i n t . IV, 3, 17. a grain, a dust, a gnat, a —ing hair, J o h n IV, 1, 93. R2 I, 3, 270. 308. II, 3, 120. V, 6, 43. H6A V, 3, 188. R3 I, 4, 39 (the —ing air). Troil I, 1, 105 (the —ing flood). Tit. II, 3, 22. Per. I, 1, 96 (the —ing wind). Used of celestial bodies: swifter than the —ing moon, Mids. IV, 1, 103. by Phoebus, he, the —ing knight so fair. H4A I, 2, 16. ruled like a — ing planet over me, H6B IV, 4, 16. when the planets in evil mixture to disorder w. Troil. I, 3, 95. conjures the —ing stars, Hml. V, 1, 279. Used of spirits and walking ghosts: w., a word for shadows like myself, Pilgr. 191. whither w. you ? (viz P u c k ) Mids. II, 1, 1. I do w. every where, 6. ghosts —ing here and there, III, 2, 381. one of our souls had —ed in the air, R21, 3,195. then came —ing by a shadow, R 3 I, 4, 52. cf. sits Sin, to seize the souls that w. by him, Lucr. 882. nor shall Death brag thou —est in his shade, Sonn. 18, 11. Implying the idea of error, = to go astray, to deviate: here we w. in illusions, Err. IV, 3, 43. how now, wit! whither w. you1 As 1, 2, 59 (quibbling), to cast thy —ing eyes on every stale, Shr. Ill, 1,90. wherein my youth hath faulty —ed, H 4 A III, 2, 27. return, thou —ing lord, II6A III, 3, 76. you w. from the good we aim at, 118 III, 1, 138. Often = to travel, to w a l k , to g o : it is the star to every —ing bark, Sonn. 116, 7. again to make me w. thither, P i l g r . 190. as he in penance —ed through the forest, Gent. V, 2, 38. w. up and down to view the city, Err. I, 2, 31. the heedful slave is —ed forth in care to seek me out, II, 2, 3. you faint with —ing in the wood, Mids. II, 2, 35. and w. we to see thy honest son, Shr. IV, 5, 69. —ed hither to an obscure plot, Tit. II, 3, 77. what cursed foot —s this way? Rom. V, 3, 19. R2 III, 2, 49. H 5 IV, 7, 75. R 3 IV, 1, 3. IV, 4, 514. T i m . V, 4, 7. Caes. Ill, 3, 3. Ant. I, 1, 53. Cymb. Ill, 5, 105. IV, 2, 371. W a n d e r e r , one that wanders; used of creatures stirring but by n i g h t : I am that merry w. of the night, Mids. II, 1, 43. hast thou the flower there? welcome, w. 247. the wrathful skies gallow the very —s of the dark, L r . Ill, 2, 44. cf. Night-wanderer and Nightwandering. W a n d e r l n g l y , writing of some M. Edd. for wondringly of O. Edd. in Per. Ill, S, 7. W a n d - l i k e , like a rod or staff: w. straight, P e r . V, 1, 110. W a n e , subst. decrease: he is in the w. (viz the m a n representing the moon) Mids. V, 258. W a n e , vb. to decrease; to decline: in —ing age, Lucr. 142. Shr. Ind. 2, 65. II, 403. as fast as thou shalt w., so fast thou growest in one of thine, Sonn. 11, 1. who hast by —ing grown, and therein showest thy lovers withering as thy sweet self growest, 126, 3. how slow this old moon —s, Mids. I, 1, 4. I seek not to wax great by others' —ing, H6B IV, 10, 22 (O. Edd. warning. I shall interche ge my —d state for Henry's regal crown, H 6 C IV, 7, 4. to watch the —ing of my

W

adversaries, R3 IV, 4, i. In Ant. II, 1, 21 O. Edd. thy wand tip; M. Edd. waned; perhaps wanned cf. Beautywaning. W a n t o n or W a n n l a n , 'used only in the phrase with a bnt totally unexplained, though exceedingly common in use; seemingly equivalent to with a vengeance, or with a plague' (Nares): come away, or I'll fetch thee with a w. Per. II, 1, 17. W a n t , subst 1) the state of not having; absence of a necessary thing or quality: spites me more than all these —», Shr. IV, 3, 11. the wants nothing, to name w., if w. it be not that she is not he, John II, 435. what that to. might ruin, Cor. Ill, 2, 69. Lr. 1,1, 282 (exclusion from the inheritance). With of or a genitive: how w. of love tormenteth, Ven. 202. no WJ. of conscience hold it, Sonn. 151, 13. whose w. and whose delay is strewed with sweets, All's II, 4, 45. Wint. II, 1, 109. R2 III, 4, 1G. 72. H4A III, 1,184. IV, 1, 44 (his present to. — the present w. of him, i. e. his being absent at present). H5 V, 2, 69. H6A I, 1, 69. H6B IV, 8, 65. H6C I, 4,133. V, 2, 8 etc. for w. of: Lucr. 153. 1099. Tp. II, 1,146. Gent. II, 1, 31. 172. Wiv. Ill, 2, 14. Err.-II, 2, 181. LLL V, 2, 719. Mids. I, I,130. All's IV, 1, 77. Tw. I, 5, 70. H5 V, 2,57. H6B III, 1, 33 etc. 2) indigence, state of being without means: where w. cries some, Compl. 42. no man will supply thy w. Pilgr. 410. scarcity and to. shall shun you, Tp. IV, 116. feel to. R2 III, 2, 175. one that surfeits thinking on a w. H6B III, 2, 348. Tim. II, 2, 63. Hml. Ill, 2, 218. Ant. Ill, 12,30. 3) need, necessity, occasion for sth.: nothing wants that w. itself doth seek, LLL IV, 3, 237. to supply the ripe —s of my friend, Merch. I, 3, 64. 141. R2 I, 4, 51. my master's—s, Tim. II, 2,29. 190. your greatest w. is, you want much of meat, IV, 3, 419. the w. is but to put those powers in motion, Cymb. IV, 3, 31. W a n t , vb. 1) not to have, to be without: that golden hap which their superiors to. Lucr. 42. to to. his bliss, 389. —ing the spring that those shrunk pipes had fed, 1455. eyes this cunning to. to grace their art, Sonn. 24, 13. how can my Muse to. subject to invent, 38, 1. those parts of thee ... to. nothing that the thought of hearts can mend, 69, 2. unripe years did to. conceit, Pilgr. 51. much lets take what I shall die to to. Tp. III, 1, 79. Ill, 3, 25. 38. IV, 58. Epil. 13. Gent. II, 4, 112. II, 6, 12. Ill, 1, 147. Wiv. II, 2, 268. 270. V, 5, 144. Err. I, 1, 8. II, 2, 153. IV, 1, 4. Ado III, 2, 20. L L L IV, 2,81. Mid». I, 1, 54.11,1,101. Merch. V, 205. As III, 2, 26. Ill, 3,64. Shr. Ind. 1, 104. Ill, 2, 5. All's I, 1, 81. II, 4, 4. Wint. I, 2, 128. Ill, 2, 56 (—ed less, = had less; see Appendix). IV, 2,15. IV, 4, 617. John II, 435. R2 III, 3, 179. R4A I, 2, 225. H6A I, 1, 76: Trail. Ill, 3, 25. Per. 1,4,19 etc. did w. of what I was in the morning, Ant. II, 2, 76 (of used partitively, = part of what; cf. Of), —ing of thy love, Rom. 11,2, 78 (cf. Of). As for the phrase the want that you have —ed, Lr. I, 1, 282, see 22uin, vb., and cf. wrong in Err. II, 2, 174. 2) to need, to have occasion for; abs.: what help we have that to your —ing may be ministered, As II, 7, 126. Trans.: what thou —est shall be sent after thee, Gent. I, 3, 74. a man of such perfection as we do in our quality much to. IV, 1, 58. Meas. IV, 2, 154. Err. II, 2, 57. Ill, 1, 77. L L L V, 2, 887. Mids. I, 2, 108. Wint. IV, 3, 87. John IV, 3,187. H4AI,2,175. H6A

1331 1,2,27. 111,2,41. H6B 111, 1, 236. H6C V , l , 6 6 . R3 HI, 4, 5. 89. Per. I, 4, 11. II, 3, 101. Heice = to wish for: such things that to. no ear but yours,Hess. IV, 3, 109. I w. more uncles here to welcome ne, R 3 III, 1, 6. those uncles which you w. are dangerots, 12. cf. Per. II, 3, 101. 3) to suffer indigence: but, poorly rich, so—eth in his store, Lucr. 97. a swallowing gulf that e>en in plenty —eth, 557. why should you w.t Tim. IV, L, 420. if heaven slumber while their creatures to. Pei I, 4, 16. With for: he cannot to. for money, Tim.ltl, 2, 10 ( = he cannot want money). 4) to be wanted, to be missed, not to be in sufficient quantity: the cause of this fair gift in me is—ing, Sonn. 87, 7. there —eth but a man to fill yarn song, Gent. I, 2, 95. there to. not many that do feat ...to walk by this Berne's oak, Wiv. IV, 4, 39. whre nothing -8 that want itself doth seek, LLL IV, i, 237. Shr. Ill, 2, 248. 250. All's I, 1, 11. R2 111,4, 13. H6A I, 1, 82. H6C II, 6, 102. R3 II, 1, 43. Cbr. II, I, 217. 271. Lr. IV, 6, 269. Cymb. IV, 3, 20. (Perhaps also in LLL V, 2, 887 and R3 III, 4, 5). W a n t a n , adj. 1) playful, sportive, frolieome: to. modesty, Lucr. 401. playing in the to. air,Pilgr. 230 and LLL IV, 3, 104. all to. as a child, slipping and vain, V, 2, 771. make such to. gambols wth the wind, Merch. HI, 2, 93. a wild and to. herd, 7, 71. Wint. I, 2, 126. John 111, 3, 36. R2 V, 1, 101 H4A IV, 1, 103. H4B IV, 1, 55. H6C 1, 4, 74. H81II, 2, 359. Rom. II, 6, 19. Hml. II, 1,22. Lr. IV, 1,38. 2) loose, light, trifling, petulant, frivolous: dare you presume to harbour to. lines, Gent. 1, 2, 43. the injuries of a w. time, H4A V, 1, 50. every idlt, nice and IO. reason, H4B IV, 1,191. how sleek and r. you appear in every thing may bring my ruin, H8III,!, 241. 3) luxuriant; luxurious: the quaint mazes in the to. green, Mids. II, 1, 99. four lagging wintet and four to. springs, R2 I, 3, 214. on the to. rushes hy you down, H4A 111, 1, 214. a guard too w.for thehead, H4B I, 1, 148. yond towers whose w. tops do bus the clouds, Troil. IV, 5, 220. now comes the to. bbod up in your cheeks, they'll be in scarlet straight it any news, Rom. II, 5, 72. my plenteous joys, to. in fdness, Mcb. I, 4, 34. 4) lustful, lascivious: bewitching like the «. mermaids song, Ven. 777. mine ears that to your ». talk attended, 809. nor could she moralize his w. sight, Lucr. 104. this glove to to. tricks is not inured 320. the teeming autumn ... bearing the to. burden of the prime, Sonn. 97, 7. to have done some to. chart upon this man and maid, Tp. IV, 95. the to. ttinyi and motions of the sense, Meas. I, 4, 59. LLL IV,3, 58. Mids. II, 1, 129. Shr. Ind. I, 47. All's HI, 7, S . V, 3, 211. Tw. Ill, 1, 18. 23. H6A III, 1,19. V,l, 23. H6C III, 3, 210. R3 I, 1, 17. Ill, 7, 187 (Qq listful). Troil. Prol. 10. Ill, 3, 222. IV, 5, 56. Cor. II, \ 233. Oth. I, 3, 270. let the bloat king tempt you aiain to bed, pinch to. on your cheek, Hml. Ill, 4, lffi (cf. Pinch), he hath not yet made to. the night wih her, Oth. II, 3, 16. W a n t a n , subst. 1) one apt to play and dally; a merry rogue, a tomboy: her hair ... played wth her breath; O modest —s! Lucr. 401. nay then, the to. lies, Gent. V, 2, 10. your worship's a to. Wiv II, 2, 57. a whitely to. LLL III, 198. tarry, rash to.Mids. II, 1, 63. shall we play the — s with our woes, 32 III,

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3, 164. let —slight of heart tickle the senseless rushes, R o m . I, 4, 35. no further than a —'s bird, II, 2, 178. down, —s, down, L r . II, 4, 126. 2) one brought up in luxury, an effeminate b o y : a beardless boy, a cockered silken w. J o h n V, 1, 70. young w. and effeminate boy, R 2 V, 3, 10. you make a w. of me, Hml. V, 2, 310. not so citizen a w. as to seem to die ere sick, Cymb. IV, 2, 8. 3) a lascivious w o m a n : not to knit my soul to an approved w. Ado IV, 1, 45. to lip a w. in a secure couch, Oth. IV, 1, 72. Perhaps also in L L L III, 198. W a n t o n , vb. to play, to dally: to toy, to w., dally, smile and jest, Ven. 106. which (sedges) seem to move and u\ with her breath, Shr. Ind. 2, 54. then you'ld w. with us, if we would have you, Wint. II, 1, 18. to it\ with this queen, Tit. II, 1, 21. W a n t o n l y , playfully, frolicksomely: play as w. when summer's breath their masked buds discloses, Sonn. 54, 7. W a n t o n n e s s , 1) sportiveness: young gentlemen would be as sad as night, only for w. J o h n IV, 1, 16. much misconstrued in his w. H 4 A V, 2, 69. 2) triflingness, lightness: how one man eats into another's pride, white pride is feasting in hisw. Troil. Ill, 3, 137. 3) lasciviousness, lechery: some say thy fault is youth, some w. Sonn. 96, 1. the spirit of w. is scared out of him, Wiv. IV, 2, 223. I rather will suspect the sun with cold than thee with w. IV, 4, 8. the blood of youth burns not with such excess as gravity's revolt to w. L L L V, 2, 74. make your w. your ignorance, Hml. Ill, 1, 152 (conceal your lasciviousness under the appearance of innocent simplicity). W a n t - w i t , an idiot: Merch. I, 1, 6. W a p p e n e d , over-worn, stale (see the glossaries of Nares and D y c e ) : this ( g o l d ) is it that makes the w. widow wed again, T i m . IV, 3, 38 (Emendations proposed: waped, wained, wappered, vapid, woepined etc.). W a r , subst. a contest between two powers carried on by force of arms: Ven. 9 8 . 1 1 5 9 . Lucr. 831. Sonn. 55, 5. T p . V, 44. Gent. V, 2, 16. Meas. I, 2, 83. Err. V, 161. L L L II, 132. Mids. I, 1, 142. Shr. V, 2, 2, 162. All's I, 1, 209. 1, 2, 3. II, 1, 44. II, 3, 307. Ill, 1, 2. Ill, 2, 108. Ill, 4, 8. R2 II, 1, 252. 115 II, 4, 7 (towns of w.— fortified towns) etc. etc. Plur. —s in the sense of the singular: some to the — s, to try their fortune there, Gent. I, 3, 8. when I bestrid thee in the —s, Err. V, 192. is Signior Mountanto returned from the — s ? A d o I, 1, 31. 43. 49. 'tis brave —s, All's II, 1, 25. I have seen those — s , 26. I'll to the Tuscan —s, II, 3, 290. 292. in his unlucky Irish —s, H 4 A V, 1, 53. she'll to the —s, III, 1, 195. thou art going to the —s, I14B II, 4, 72. since I have entered into these —s, H 6 A I, 2, 132; cf. I, 1, 74. attend upon Cominius to these —s, Cor. 1, 1, 241 etc. etc. Even: as —smay be said to be a ravisher, Cor. IV, 5, 242. this —s, Oth. 1, 3 , 235. a man of w. = a soldier: R2 II, 1 , 286. II, 3, 52. H 4 B V, 1, 31. at w. = in the state of war (figuratively): Sonn. 46, 1. Meas. II, 2, 33. H 4 A II, 3, 59. Caes. I, 2, 46. at —s, H 4 B 111, 1, 60. in w., in the same sense: Sonn. 15, 3. to go to w. Troil. 11, 3, 145. to go to —s, A d o I, 1, 307. Ant. II, 2, 66. to make w. H 6 A I, 2, 17. to make — s , Ant. II, 2, 9 5 ; cf. II, 1, 13. to make w. against, Lucr. 774. E r r . Ill, 2, 127. to make w. on or upon, Sonn. 16, 2. R 2 III,

2, 133. R 3 II, 4, 62. P e r . I, 2, 45. to make —s on or upon, Cor. I, 4, 40. Ant. II, 2, 43. Ill, 5, 4. IV, 12, 15. to make w. with, H 6 C II, 2, 31. Mcb. II, 4, 18. to make —5 with, Cor. I, 1, 239. to wage —s, A n t . Ill, 4, 3. this civil w. of wits were much better used on Navarre, L L L II, 226. frowns, words and threats shall be the w. that Henry means to use, II6C I, 1, 73. that thou wilt use the —s as thy redress, Tim. V, 4, 51. Figurative use: their silent w. of lilies and of roses, Lucr. 71. a w. of looks, Ven. 355. such civil w. is in my love and hate, Sonn. 35, 12. a kind of merry w. Ado I, 1, 62. such w. of white and red, Shr. IV, 5, 30. Cor. II, 1, 232. the morning's w. H 6 C II, 5, 1 etc. etc. cf. above at w. and in w. Used of a single combat: telling the bushes that thou lookest for — s , Mids 111, 2, 408 (rhyming), law of w. Lr. V, 3, 152 (Qq. I. of arms). W a r , vb. to make war, to fight, to combat, to contend: —ed he hath not, R2 II, 1, 252. teach them how to w. 115 III, 1, 25. lions w. and battle for their dens, H 6 C II, 5, 74. why should I w. without the walls of Troy, Troil. I, 1, 2. those that w. for a placket, II, 3, 22. to be opposed against the —ing winds, L r . IV, 7 , 3 2 (Fi jarring). W i t h against: you w. against your reputation, Err.Ill, 1,86. w. against your own affections, L L L I, 1, 9. — est thou 'gainst Athens? T i m . IV, 3, 102. W i t h upon: his brother —ed upon him, Ant. 11, I, 41. W i t h with: Lucr. 311. Sonn. 8, 2. Gent. I, 1, 68. Mids. II, 2, 4. As IV, 3, 45. R 3 I, 4, 260. T r o i l . Ill, 2, 178. 179. W a r b l e , subst. song, melodious utterance: Philomel had ended the well-tuned w. of her nightly sorrow, Lucr. 1080. W a r b l e , vb. to s i n g : w., child, L L L III, 1. As II, 5, 38. both —ing of one song, Mids. Ill, 2, 206. rehearse your song by rote, to each word a —ing note, V, 405. W a r d , subst. 1) guard, preservation: thq best w. of mine honour is rewarding my dependents, L L L III, 133 (Armado's speech). 2) guard made in fencing, posture of defence: come from thy w. T p . I, 2, 471. what —s, what blows, what extremities he endured, II4A I, 2, 211. thou knowest my old w. II, 4, 215. Metaphorically: I could drive her then from the w. of her purity, Wiv. II, 2, 258. he's beat from his best w. Wint. I, 2, 33. at all these —s I lie, at a thousand watches, Troil. I, 2, 288. 3) state of being under a g u a r d i a n : I must attend his majesty's command, to whom I am now in w. All's I, 1, 5. 4) one under the care of a g u a r d i a n : his son was but a w. two years ago, Rom. I, 5, 42. the father should be as w. to the son, Lr. I, 2, 79. 5) custody, confinement: ere they will have me go to w., they'll pawn their swords for my enfranchisement, H6B V, 1, 112. 6) a prison-cell: prison my heart in thy steelbosom's w. Sonn. 133, 9. if you have any thing to say to me, come to my w. Meas. IV, 3, 66. to lock it in the —s of covert bosom, V, 10. in which (prison) there are many confines, —s and dungeons, Hml. II, 2, 252. 7) that which secures a door; a b o l t : the locks, ... each one by him enforced, retires his w. Lucr. 303. how careful was I . . . each trifle under truest bars to thrust, that it might stay ...in sure —s of trust, Sonn. 48, 4. doors that were ne'er acquainted with their —s

w many a bounteous year, T i m . Ill, 3, 38. cf. Meas. V, 10. 8) a district of a town: are there not men in your w. sufficient to serve it? Meas. II, 1, 281. the deputy's wife of the w. H 4 A III, 3, 130. Proverbial: one knows not at what w. you lie, Troil. I, 2, 283. W a r d , vb. to protect: God will in justice w. you as his soldiers, R 3 V, 3, 254. if I cannot w. what I would not have hit, Troil. 1, 2, 292. a hand that ed him from thousand dangers, T i t . Ill, 1, 195. W a r d e n , a baking-pear: saffron to colour the w. pies, W i n t . IV, 3, 48. W a r d e r , 1) a guard, a keeper, a sentinel: where be these —s, that they wait not here? H6A I, 3, 3. memory, the w. of the brain, Mcb. I, 7, 65. though castles topple on their —s' heads, IV, 1, 56. 2) a sort of truncheon, by the throwing down of which further proceedings in a combat were stayed: the king hath thrown his w. down, R2 I, 3, 118. H 4 B IV, 1, 125. W a r d r o b e , 1) a place where clothes are kept: Sonn. 52, 10. H 5 II Chor. 2. yeoman of the w. T w . II, 5, 45. 2) a store of clothes: T p . IV, 222. II4A I, 2, 82. V, 3, 27. W a r e , subst. merchandise: doth utter all men's ware-a, Wint. IV, 4, 330. Plur. — s : L L L V, 2, 317. W i n t . IV, 4, 204. Troil. 1, 3, 359. W a r e , town in England, at an inn of which a large bed (of about eleven feet square) attracted the curiosity of travellers: although the sheet were big enough for the bed of W. in England, Tw. Ill, 2, 51. W a r e , vb. (used only in the imperative) to beware, to take heed of: w. pencils, ho! L L L V, 2, 43. w. horns, ho! Troil. V, 7, 12. W a r e , adj. a w a r e : Troil. IV, 2, 57. Rom. II, 2, 103. W i t h of: As II, 4, 58. 59. Rom. I, 1, 131. W a r i l y , cautiously: L L L V, 2, 93. H5III, 7,61. W a r l i k e , 1) having the qualities of a good soldier, or becoming a good soldier: Wiv. II, 2, 237. All's II, 1, 1. W i n t . V, 1, 157. J o h n V, 1. 71. V, 2, 176. R2 III, 3, 109. H 4 A IV, 4, 30. H 5 Prol. 5. I, 2, 104. H 6 A II, 2, 35. 11, 5, 70. Ill, 2, 118 (w. and martial). IV, 3, 22. 36. IV, 6, 13. V, 2, 3. H 6 B I, 1, 125. H 6 C I, 1, 5. II, 1, 19. 123. R 3 I, 2, 160. I, 3, 175. V, 3, 302. Troil. Prol. 13. IV, 5, 175. T i t . II, 1, 61. Ill, 1, 256. IV, 4, 69. Mcb III, 6, 31. Hml. I, 1, 47. I, 2, 9. L r . V , 3, 142. Oth. II, 1, 27. 43. II, 3, 59. Cymb. Ill, 1, 53. Ill, 3, 41. 90. 2) pertaining to war, military: the w. band, Lucv. 255 ( = the band of warriors), the w. god, Pilgr. 147 ( = the god of war), unfold to us some w. resistance, All's I, 1, 128. in w. march, J o h n II, 242. if thou receive me for thy w. mate, H 6 A I, 2, 92 ( = thy mate in war), w. enterprise, II, 1, 44. what w. voice, H 8 I, 4, 50. the w. service he has done, Cor. Ill, 3, 49. in a most w. preparation, IV, 3, 17. ten thousand w. men, Mcb. IV, 3, 134. J o h n IV, 2, 199. w. appointment, Hml. IV, 6, 15. w. noise, V, 2, 360. volley, 363. stands not in such w. brace, Oth. I, 3, 24. knows a w. charge, Ant. IV, 4, 19. 3) pertaining or belonging to a w a r r i o r : I break my w. word, H6A IV, 3, 3 1 ( = soldier's wold), with thy w. sword, IV, 6, 8. before my body I throw myw. shield, Mcb. V, 8, 33. W a r m , adj. having heat in a moderate degree:

1333 the sun shines w. Ven. 193. your cake is w. Err. Ill, I , 7 1 . w. distilled waters, Shr. I n d . 1, 48. will put thy shirt on u thy precious minutes w. Sonn. 77, 2. my —ing lamps (i. e. the eyes) Err. V, 315. let Benedick ... consume away in sighs, w. inwardly, A d o III, 1, 78. like lamps whose —ing oil is spent, H 6 A II, 5, 8. W a s t e f u l , 1) lavish, p r o f u s e : to add another hue unto the rainbow ...is w. and ridiculous excess, J o h n IV, 2, 16. hath seized the w. king, R 2 III, 4, 55. I have retired me to a w. cock, T i m . II, 2, 171. 2) ruinous, destructive, consumptive: where w. time debateth with decay, Sonn. 15, 11. when w. war shall statues overturn, 55, 5. lean and w. learning, As 111, 2, 341. w. vengeance, H 5 I, 2, 283. the wild, and w. ocean, III, 1, 14. for ruin's w. entrance, Mcb. II, 3, 120. W a t , a term among sportsmen for a h a r e : V e n . 6 9 7 . W a t c h , subst. 1) the state of being awake, forbearance of sleep: fell into a sadness, then into a fast, thence to a to. Hml. II, 2, 148. to lie in w. there and to think on him, Cymb. Ill, 4, 43. cf. R o m . II, 3, 35. H 5 IV, 1 , 3 0 0 . 2) vigilance, attention, close observation: I shot his fellow ... with more advised w. Merch. 1, 1, 142. with catlike w., when that the sleeping man should stir, As IV, 3, 116. what w. the king keeps to maintain the peace, H 5 IV, 1, 300. at all these wards I lie, at a thousand —es, Troil. I, 2, 289. 290. care keeps his w. = to be up for purposes of business or attendance: in every old man's eye, Rom. II, 3, 35. near approaches that 1 might sit all night and w. with you, J o h n IV, 1, the subject of our w. Mcb. Ill, 3, 8. follow her close, 30. for sleeping England long time have I —ed; —ing give her good w. Hml. IV, 5, 74. breeds leanness, R2 11, 1, 77. 78. H4A II, 3, 50. H 4 B Particularly guard kept for military purposes: had IV, 5, 20. 53. H 6 B 111, 1, 110. IV, 7, 90. H 6 C V, 7, your w. been good, this sudden mischief never could 17. Cor. II, 3, 134. Mcb. V, 1, 1. Cymb. V, 5, 53. have fallen, H 6 A II, 1, 58. use careful w. R 3 V, 3, b) to be on the look-out, to be vigilant: I'll go 54. as I did stand my w. upon the hill, Mcb. V, 5 , 3 3 . w. Wiv. I, 4, 7. I must wait, and w. withal, Shr. Ill, the rivals of my w. Hml. I, 1, 13. 71. 106. 168. on 1, 62. IV, 2, 59. J o h n IV, 1, 5. H6A I, 4, 16. 18. II, their w. I, 2, 197. kept the w. 208. hold you the w. to- 1, 7. H 6 B I, 1, 249. T r o i l . I, 2, 295. Tit. Ill, 1, 5. night, 225. Oth. II, 3, 159. A n t . IV, 3, 7 (have care- Lr. II, 1, 22. ful w.). c) to keep g u a r d , to act as sentinel: Ado III, 3, 3) one or more persons set for a g u a r d ; watch- 98. Shr. V, 2, 150. R 3 V, 3, 76. Hml. 1, 2, 213. 242. m a n or watchmen, sentinel, g u a r d : Ado III, 3, 6. 24. L r . IV, 7, 35. Oth. II, 1, 219. 271. II, 3, 56. 30. 36. 40. 87. Ill, 5, 33. 49. IV, 2, 36. 39. V, 1, 316. d) to look with expectation, to wait: when you

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shall please to play the thieves for wives, I'll w. as long for you then, Merch. II, 6, 24. 2) trans, a) to keep from sleep (a term of falconry) : to w. her, as we w. these kites that . . . will not be obedient, Shr. IV, 1, 198. you must be —ed ere you be made tame, Troil. Ill, 2, 45. I'll w. him tame, Oth. III, 3, 23. b) to have in the eye, to observe closely for some purpose: Sonn. 57, 6. Tp. II, 1, 198 ( = guard). Wiv. IV, 2, 53. L L L 111, 195. Mids. II, 1, 177. Merch. I, 1, 150. V, 230. Shr. Ill, 1, 50. Ill, 2, 141. 146. All's V, 3, 11. H 6 A 1, 1, 161. H6B 1, 1, 174. H 6 C II, 1, 12. R 3 IV, 4, 4. Troil. II, 3, 138. Cor. V, 1, 56. Rom. I, 5, 52. IV, 1, 116. Hml. I, 1, 27 (or intr.?). Oth. IV, 2, 241. I'll w. you from such — ing now, Rom. IV, 4, 12 (hinder you by my vigilance); cf. I'll w. you for that, ... lean w. you for telling how I took the blow, Troil. I, 2, 291. 293. c) to take in the fact by lying in wait f o r ; to surprise and baffle : I think we have —ed you now, Wiv. V, 5, 107. I think we —ed you at an inch, H 6 B I, 4, 45. methinks you —ed her well, 58. d) to look for, to wait f o r : thus long have we stood to w. the fearful bending of thy knee, R 2 III, 3, 73. ten is the hour that was appointed me to w. the coming of my punished duchess, H 6 B II, 4, 7. we will stand and w. your pleasure, Caes. IV, 3, 249. W a t c h - c a s e , a s e n t r y - b o x : leavest the kingly couch aw. or a common 'larum-bell, H 4 B III, 1, 17. W a t c h - d o g , a dog kept for guarding the house: T p . I, 2, 383. W a t c h e r , one who is awake: love hath chased sleep from my enthralled eyes and made them —s of mine own heart's sorrow, Gent. II, 4, 135 (of = by, from, in consequence o f ; see O f ) . Mcb. II, 2, 71. W a t c h f u l , 1) lacking sleep: with twenty w., weary, tedious nights, Gent. I, 1, 31. keepest the ports of slumber open wide to many a w. night, H 4 B IV, 5, 25. what w. cares do interpose themselves betwixt your eyes and night? Caes. II, 1, 98. 2) vigilant, careful: R3 111, 7, 77. V, 3, 115. 224. Troil. 111,3,196. w. fires = watch-fires: H 5 I V Chor. 23. In a bad sense, = spying: in despite of brooded w. day, J o h n III, 3, 52. fled the snares of w. tyranny, Mcb. V, 8, 67. 3) Applied to minutes, = marking a portion or time within an hour (cf. the subst. Watch 6, c): and like the w. minutes to the hour, still and anon cheered up the heavy time, J o h n IV, 1, 46 (to the hour — till the hour is full. cf. Hour). W a t c h i n g , subst. wakefulness: Ado II, 1, 388. cf. Watch, vb. W a t c h m a n , 1) one who is awake: mine own true love that doth my rest defeat, to play the w. ever for thy sake, Sonn. 6 1 , 1 2 (quibbling). 2) one careful and vigilant: the special watchmen of our English weal, H 6 A III, 1, 66. I shall the effect of this good lesson keep, as w. to my heart, Hml. I, 3, 46. 3) a g u a r d ; a sentinel: Ado III, 3, 42. Ant. IV, 3, 17. W a t c h - w o r d , p a r o l e , countersign: Lucr. 370. Wiv. V, 4, 3. H 4 B 111, 2, 231. W a t e r , subst. 1) the principal fluid (considered as a substance): Ven. 94. 654. Lucr. 592. Sonn. 109, 8. 154,14. Compl. 287. 291. T p . I, 1 , 6 2 . 1 , 2 , 3 3 4 .

111,2,2. Gent. 11,4, 171. 111,2,8. Wiv. II, 3, 89. Ill, 5, 23. E r r . I, 2, 35. II, 2, 128. Ill, 2, 107. R 2 III, 3, 56. 58. T i m . IV, 3, 425. Ant. IV, 14, 11 etc. etc. with w. and bran, Meas. IV, 3 , 1 5 9 . with bran and w. L L L I , 1 , 303. fresh w. T p . 1, 2 , 1 6 0 . salt w. II, 1, 64. Tw. II, 1,32. holy w. T i t . 1,323 (consecrated by the priest). L r . Ill, 2, 10. IV, 3, 32. Cymb. V, 5, 269. warm distilled —s, Shr. Ind. 1, 48. sweet w. Tit. 11,4, 6. Rom. V, 3, 14. w. that doth eat in steel, Lucr. 755. Earth and w. heavy, air and fire light elements: Sonn. 44, 11 (cf. 4 5 , 1 — 7). Ho 111,7, 23. Emblem of falseness: false ...as wind, as —s, W i n t . I, 2, 132. fall away like w. from ye, H 8 II, 1, 130. as false as air, as w., wind, or sandy earth, Troil. HI, 2, 199. smoke and lukewarn w. is your perfection, T i m . HI, 6 , 9 9 . she was false as w. Oth. V, 2,134. cf. As II, 7,187. Proverbial expressions: would run through fire and w.for such a kind heart, Wiv. Ill, 4, 107. as profitless as w. in a sieve, AdoV, 1,5. fire, fire; cast on no water, Shr. IV, I , 2 1 (allusion to a popular c a t c h : Scotland burnetii, Scotland burneth; fire, fire, fire, fire; cast on some more water), their virtues we write in w. H 8 IV, 2 , 4 6 . more w. glideth by the mill' than wots the miller o f , T i t . II, 1, 85. 2) a collection of w a t e r , a lake, a river, a sea: like the moon in w. seen by night, Ven. 492. he trod the w. T p . II, 1,115. I am standing w. 221 (the sea between the ebb and the flood); cf. 'tis with him in standing w., between boy and man, T w . I, 5, 168. throwing him into the w. Wiv. Ill, 3, 194. the w. swells a man, III, 5, 16. his throwing into the w. IV, 1, 5. never gazed the moon upon the w. Wint. IV, 4, 173. H 6 A I, 2 , 1 3 3 . H6B 111,1,53. Mcb. 1,3,79 etc. by w. — at sea: Ant. II, 6, 89. 94. P l u r . — s : put the wild —s in this roar, T p . I, 2, 2. this music crept by me upon the — s , 391. the still-closing — s , 111,3,64. the roaring — s , Merch. 1,1, 34. 1, 3, 25. V, 97. As 11,7,187. Wint. IV, 4, 578. R3 I, 4, 22. II, 3, 44. Cor. Ill, 1, 249. A n t 1, 2, 153. Cymb. Ill, 1, 20. P e r . 11, 1, 63 etc. Proverbial: thou requestest but moonshine in the w. L L L V, 2, 208 (i. e. a nothing), now will I raise the — s , Merch. II, 2, 52 (play a great scene). I am for all — s , T w . IV, 2, 68 (fit for any thing), smooth runs the w. where the brook is deep, H 6 B III, 1, 53. 3) Used of other fluids; a) of tears: weeping w. Compl. 304. a devil would have shed w. out of fire, W i n t . HI, 2, 194. there will be a world of w. shed, H 4 A III, 1, 94. here's w. to quench it, Cor. V, 2, 78. Rom. II, 3, 71. Oth. IV, 2,104. Ant. I, 3, 64 etc. Plur. —s: I still pour in the —s of my love, All's I, 3, 209. command these fretting —s from your eyes, Meas. IV, 3, 151. J o h n IV, 3, 107. V, 2, 56. H 5 IV, 6, 29 etc. cf. Ven. 94. Compl. 287. 291. T w . II, 1, 33. Wint. V, 2, 91. L r . IV, 3, 32. A n t . I, 2, 153. b) r a i n : whilst on the earth I rain my —s, R2 III, 3, 60. by sudden floods and fall of—s, R 3 IV,4,512. c) urine: the w. in an urinal, Gent. II, 1, 41. carry his w. to the wise woman, T w . Ill, 4, 114. what says the doctor to my w. ? H 4 B I , 2 , 2 . 3. if thou couldst cast the w. of my land, Mcb. V, 3 , 5 1 . to make w. — to discharge urine: Gent. IV, 4, 41. Meas. Ill, 2, 117. T w . I, 3, 139. 4) the lustre of a diamond: here is a w. T i m . 1,1, 18. the diamonds of a most praised w. Per. Ill, 2,102. W a t e r , vb. 1) trans, a) to irrigate, to wet: w. her chamber with eye-offending brine, T w . 1,1,29. he —ed

w his new plants with dews of flattery, Cor. V, 6,23. the tears live in an onion that should iv. this sorrow, Ant. 1, 2, 177. b) to supply with water for d r i n k : I might w. an ass at it, Troil. Ill, 3, 314. his steeds to w. at those springs, Cymb. II, 3, 23. 2) intr. a) to shed tears: your kindred hath made my eyes w. Mids. HI, 1, 200. V, 69. if thine eyes can w. for his death, H 6 C I, 4, 82. mine eyes began to w. Caes. Ill, 1, 285. b) to gather saliva (as a symptom of appetite): a Spaniard's mouth so —ed, Per. IV, 2, 108. c) to d r i n k : when you breathe in your — ing, they cry hem and bid you play it o f f , H4A 11,4, 17. W a t e r - c o l o u r s , colours mixed with water (not with oil): never yet did insurrection want such w. to impaint his cause, H 4 A V, 1, SO. W a t e r - d r o p s , drops of water: Lucr. 959. R 2 IV, 262. Troil. Ill, 2, 193. Used of tears: L r . 11,4, 280; cf. R2 IV, 262. W a t e r - f l o w i n g , flowing like water, copious: my mcrcy dried their w. tears, H6C IV, 8, 43. W a t e r f l y , an insect living on the water (Phryg a n e a ? ) : A n t . V, 2, 59. Emblem of emptiness and vanity: how the poor world is pestered ivith such —es, Troil. V, 1, 38. dost know this v.? Hml. V, 2, 84. W a t e r f o r d ; Earl of W., one of Talbot's titles: 116A IV, 7, 63. W a t e r - g a l l , a rainbow: roundabout her teardistained eye blue circles streamed, like rainbows in the sky: these —s in her dim element foretell new storms to those already spent, Lucr. 1588. W a t e r i s h , 1) abounding with water: ID. Burgundy, Lr. I, 1, 261. 2) t h i n , having no alimentary substance: such nice and w. diet, Oth. Ill, 3, 15. W a t e r - n e w t , a lizard living in w a t e r : the wallnewt and the water, Lr. Ill, 4, 136 (the word newt belonging to water as well as to wall). W a t e r - p o t , a vessel used to sprinkle water on plants: L r . IV, 6, 200. W a t e r - r a t , a rat living in water: Merch 1,3, 23. W a t e r - r u g , a kind of poodle: Mcb. Ill, 1, 94. W a t e r - s i d e , the margin of a river: H8 11,1, 95. W a t e r - s p a n i e l , a sort of spaniel taking the water: she hath more qualities than a w. Gent. Ill, I, 271. W a t e r - s t a n d i n g , perpetually filled with tears: many an orphan's w. eye, H 6 C V, 6, 40. W a t e r - t h i e v e s , pirates: Merch. 1,3,24. cf. A n t . II, 6, 97. W a t e r t o n , name in R2 II, 1, 284. W : a t e r - w a l l e d , fenced by the sea: J o h n II, 27. W a t e r - w o r k , painting executed in water-colour: the German hunting in w. H 4 B II, 1, 158. W a t e r y , 1 ) consisting of water: of that black blood a w. rigol goes, Lucr. 1745. corrupted blood some IO. token shows, 1748. Epithet of the s e a : Sonn. 64, 7. Err. II, 1, 21. Merch. II, 7, 44. T w . V, 241. R2 II, 1, 63. P e r . II, 1, 10. 54. when Phoebe doth behold her silver visage in the w. glass, Mids. I, 1, 210. 2) filled with water: this gross w. ptimpion, Wiv. III, 3, 43. Applied to eves filled with tears: Compl. 281. L L L V, 2, 206. Shr. Ind. 1, 128. Tit. Ill, 1, 269. cf. this pale sican in her w. nest, Lucr. 1611. Merch. Ill, 2, 47. 3) moist; used of the rainbow: T p . IV, 71. of the

1339 m o o n : Mids. II, 1, 162. Ill, 1, 203. W i n t . 1, 2, 1. R 3 11,2,69. Rom. 1,4, 62. 4) watering, vehemently desiring: ichen that the w. palate tastes indeed love's thrice repured nectar, Troil. Ill, 2, 22. W a v e , subst. a swell of water raised above the level, a billow: Ven. 819. Lucr. 1438. Sonn. 60, 1. T p . 1, 2, 205. 379. II, 1, 118. T w . I, 2, 16. Ill, 4, 419. V, 236. Wint. IV, 4, 141. II6C I, 4, 21. II, 6, 36. V, 4, 24. 36. Tit. Ill, 1, 95. Caes. I, 2, 114. Mcb. IV, 1, 53. P e r . II Prol. 34. IV, 1, 60. Figuratively, a throng of people borne along t o g e t h e r : Cymb. V, 3, 48. In the poetical style, = water: like a dive-dapper peering through a w. Ven. 86. spread o'er the silver —s thy golden hairs, Err. Ill, 2, 48. In Armado's language even in prose: by the salt w. of the Mediterraneum, L L L V, 1, 61. W a v e , vb. 1) trans, a) to move loosely one way and the other; absol.: let him w. thus (viz his sword) Cor. I, 6, 74. still —ing (his handkerchief) Cymb. 1, 3 , 1 2 . W i t h an object: thus — ing it (his hat) in scorn, Cor. II, 3, 175. —ing thy head, III, 2, 77. Hml. II, 1, 93. —d his handkerchief, Cymb. I, 3, 6. Used of weapons, = to brandish: Troil. V, 5, 9. Caes. Ill, 1, 109. Cymb. IV, 2, 150. b) to beckon: it —s you to a more removed ground, Hml. 1, 4, 61. 68. 78 (Ft' always wafts). 2) intr. a) to play loosely in the w i n d : Ven. 306. Shr. Ind. 2, 55. Particularly used of ensigns: H6A I, 6, 1. H 6 C II, 2, 173. Cor. Ill, 1, 8. Cymb. V, 5, 480. b to be uncertain, to fluctuate, to waver: he —d indifferently 'twixl doing them neither good nor harm, Cor. II, 2, 19. W a v e d , indented, having on the margin a succession of arched and undulatory segments: horns whelked and w. like the enridged sea, Lr. IV, 6, 71. W a v e r , to be unsettled in opinion, to fluctuate, to be fickle: Compl. 97. Merch. IV, 1, 130. T w . II, 4, 35. R2 II, 2, 129. H 4 B Ind. 19. II6A IV, I, 138. W a v e r e r , one inconstant and fickle: Rom. II, 3, 89. W a v e - w o r n , worn and undermined by the waves: Tp. II, 1, 120. W a w , in pow w., an exclamation of contempt: Cor. II, 1, 157 ( M . E d d . p o a ) wow). W a w l , to cry in distress: the first time that we smell the air, we w. and cry, L r . IV, 6,184 ( Q q wait). cf. Catterwauling. W a x , subst. 1) the substance which bees form into cells for the reception of their honey: All's I, 2, 65. H 4 B IV, 5, 77. H 6 B IV, 2, 89. Quibbling in H 4 B I, 2, 180. Emblem of softness: Ven. 565. Pilgr. 88. H 6 C II, 1, 171. Ill, 2, 51. Tit. Ill, 1, 45. Rom. Ill, 3, 126. Hml. Ill, 4, 84. Used as a cement to attach papers to something: set this up ivith w. upon old Brutus' statue, Caes. 1, 3, 145. to make impressions of things: w. .. wherein is stamped the semblance of a devil, Lucr. 1245. as a form in w. by him imprinted, Mids. 1,1,49. I cannot read: the character I'll take with w. T i m . V, 3, 6. to make figures o f : which bleeds aicay, even as a form of w. resolveth from his figure 'gainst the fire, J o h n V , 4 , 2 4 . he's a man of w. Rom. 1,3,76 (as pretty as if he had been modelled in wax), thy noble shape is but a form of w. digressing from the valour of a man, III,3,126. In the following passage there is probably an allusion to the ancient practice of writing on tablets

1340

W

coated with w a x : my free drift ... moves in a wide sea o/w. T i m . I, 1, 47. 2) sealing-wax: L L L IV,1,59. Tw.11,5,103. II6B IV, 2, 89. L r . IV, 6, 264. Cymb. Ill, 2, 35. Quibbling in L L L V, 2 , 1 0 . 3) F o r the sake of punning, = g r o w t h : a wassail candle, all tallow: if 1 did say of w., my growth would approve the truth, H4B I, 2, 180. W a x , vb. (impf. ibaxed: Gent. Ill, 1, 228. Err. I, 1, 92. Cor. II, 2 , 1 0 3 . partic. waxed: T i m . Ill, 4, 11. waxen: Lucr. 1663. H 6 B 111,2,76) to g r o w ; 1) to increase: that (to seal on his name) was the way to make his godhead w. L L L V,2,10. he —ed like a sea, Cor. II, 2 , 1 0 3 . marks the —ing tide, T i t . Ill, 1, 95. as this temple —es, Hml. I, 3, 12. 2) to become: the colt that's backed and burdened being young loseth his pride and never —eth strong, Ven. 420. lips new —en pale, Lucr. 1663. as if but now they —edpale for woe, Gent. 111,1,228. the seas —edcalm, Err. 1,1,92. oldldow. H 5 V , 1 , 8 9 . a full eye will w. hollow, V, 2, 170. 247. H6A II, 5, 9. H6B HI, 2, 76. IV, 10, 22. Tit. Ill, 1, 223. R o m . I, 5, 128. T i m . 111,4, 11. Hml. I, 4, 87. 111,1, 101. W a x e n , adj. made of w a x : a w. torch, Lucr. 178. image, Gent. II, 4, 201. tapers, Wiv. IV, 4, 50. their (humblebees') w. thighs, Mids. Ill, 1, 172 (used as tapers by the fairies). Figuratively, = soft, and hence a) penetrable: that it may enter Mowbray's w. coat, R2 1,3,75. b) easily effaced: not worshipped with a w. epitaph, H5 1,2,233. c) very impressible: men have marble, women w. minds, Lucr. 1240. how easy is it ... in women's ic• hearts to set their forms, Tw. II, 2, 31. W a x e n , vb. to grow, to increase: andw. in their mirth and neeze and swear a merrier hour was never wasted there, Mids. II, 1, 56. W a x - r e d , red as sealing w a x : set thy seal manual on my w. lips, Ven. 516. W a y , 1) a place of passage; a p a t h , a r o a d , a street, or anything made for passengers: some dark deep desert, seated from the w. Lucr. 1144. the —s are dangerous to pass, Gent. IV, 3, 24. Wiv. Ill, 1, 3. 6. 9. L I J , v , 2, 926 (foul). Mids. II, 2, 36. Merch. II, 2, 35. V, 264 (fair). As II, 7, 52. Shr. IV, 1, 2 (foul). W i n t . IV, 3, 132 (the footpath w.). R2 II, 3, 4. Ill, 3, 156. H 4 A II, 1, 93 (foul). H 4 B I, 1, 39. II, 2, 184. Mcb. II, 3, 21. Hml. II, 2, 277 (beaten w.). L r . IV, 1, 45. 57 etc. 2) passage; any place passed or to be passed through (whether intended for it or not) as well as the act of passing: indenting with the w. Ven. 704. having lost the fair discovery of her w. 828. it is you that have chalked forth the w. which brought us hither, T p . V, 203. Gent. II, 4, 94. II, 7, 8. Wiv. II, 2, 175. III, 3, 175. Meas. II, 4, 19. IV, 1, 37. 41. Err. IV, 3, 92 (shut the doors against his w.). Mids. Ill, 2 , 4 1 7 . Shr. Ill, 2, 237. R2 I, 3, 206. 207. R 3 III, 1, 3. A n t . 11,6,83 (show us the w.) etc. Metaphorically: perdition shall attend you and your — s , T p . Ill, 3, 79. prevent the —s to wail, R2 III, 2, 179. in the tedious —s of art, II4A III, 1,48. trod the — s of glory, H 8 111,2,436 he's walked the w. of nature, H4B V, 2, 4 ( = he h a s died). I knew there was but one w. H 5 II, 3, 16 (i. e. he must die), 'tis the next w. to turn tailor, H4A 111, 1, 264. is the next w. to draw new mischief on, Oth. I, 3, 205 etc.

To bring on the w. = to accompany in setting out on a j o u r n e y or walk: that we may bring you something on the w. Meas. I, 1, 62. we will bring you on your w. L L L V, 2, 883. Wint. IV, 3, 122. R2 1, 3, 304. I, 4, 2. Oth. Ill, 4, 197. Come your w., a n d o f t e n e r come yout—s, — come: come your w., sir, Meas. Ill, 2, 12. come your —s, sir, 84. As I, 2, 221. 11,3,66. All's II, 1, 96. 97. T w . II, 5 , 1 . Troil. Ill, 2 , 4 7 . Hml. 1,3,135. Lr. II, 2, 42. P e r . IV, 2, 44. 158. IV, 6, 134. come on your —s, in the same sense: T p . II, 2, 85 (Stephano's speech). To give w. — a) to make room for passing, to make or suffer to pass: to the brightest beams distracted clouds give w. All's V, 3, 35. open your gates and give the victors w. J o h n II, 324. give w., dull clouds, to my quick curses, K3 I, 3, 196. I will give you w. for these your letters, Hml. IV, 6, 32 (Qq make you w ). Hence = to make room t o , to step back before a n o t h e r : give them w. till he take leave, and presently after him, T w . Ill, 4, 217. so must thy grave give w. to what's seen now, W i n t . V, 1, 98. our country manners give our betters w. J o h n I, 156. if you give w. or hedge aside, Troil. Ill, 3, 157. I will fear to catch it and give w. T i m . IV, 3 , 3 5 8 . give w. there, and go on! Cor. II, 1, 210 (cf. k). alone: a w. there, a w. for Caesar, Ant. V, 2 , 3 3 6 ) . lesser enmities may give w. to greater, Ant. II, 1,43. small to greater matters must give w. II, 2, 11. b) to yield, not to resist, to let do: 'tis a good dulness, and give it w. T p . I, 2, 186. I have given w. unto this course of fortune, Ado IV, 1, 158. give even w. unto my rough affairs, H4B II, 3, 2. I gave bold w. to my authority, V, 2, 82. now is it manhood ...to give the enemy w. H 6 B V, 2, 76. they shall no more prevail than we give w. to, H8 V, 1, 144. it must omit real necessities and give w. the. while to unstable slightness, Cor. Ill, 1, 147. we gave w. unto your clusters, IV, 6, 122. gave him w. in all his own desires, V, 6, 32. security gives w. to conspiracy, Caes.11,3,8. must 1 give w. and room to your rash choler? IV, 3, 39. the cursed thoughts that nature gives w. to in repose, Mcb. II, 1,9. for mine own good all causes must give w. Ill, 4, 136. 'tis best to give him w. Lr. II, 4, 301. that nature thus gives w. to loyalty, 111, 5, 4. all the power of his wits have given w. to his impatience, III, 6, 5. in each thing give him w., cross him in nothing, A n t . 1,3,9. you must give w. Cymb. I, 1, 158. c) to enter into another's thoughts or wishes, to favour, to h u m o u r : though now the time gives w. to us, H 8 III, 2, 16. if he slay me, he does fair justice-, if he give me w., I'll do his country service, Cor. IV, 4, 25. if the peevish baggage would but give w. to customers, P e r . IV, 6, 20. give him w. V, 1, 232 (do as if you also heard the music which h e pretends to hear). Go thy w., go your w., and oftener go thy —s, go you> s, = g o : go your —s and ask ..., W i v . 1,2,1. go your —s and play, 1V, 1,81. go your w. to her and say this to her, As IV, 3, 70. go thy —s, let the horses be well looked to, All's IV, 5 , 6 1 . go thy —s, old Jack, die when thou wilt, H 4 A II, 4, 141. go thy —s to a nunnery, Hml. Ill, 1, 132. go thy —s, good mariner, P e r . Ill, 1,81. Implying reproach: go thy w., thou shalt not from this grove, Mids. II, 1, 146. noio, go thy w. III, 2, 428. go your —s, go your —s, As IV, 1, 186. go thy —s, 1 begin to be aweary of thee, All's IV, 5,59. go thy —s, go, give that changing piece to him, Tit. I, 309. A n d , on the other h a n d , used in a tone of ex-

w

1341

hortation or applause: sayest thou so, old Jack? go lie tumbling in my barefoot w. T p . II, 2, 11. Gent. I, 2, thy —s, W i v . II, 2, 144. Petruchio, go thy —s, the 39. Err. IV,2,61. Merch. V,294. H 4 A V , 3 , 6 0 . N o t i n g field is won, Shr. IV, 5, 23. well, go thy —s, old lad, hinderance and obstruction: thank God, and the good for thou shalt ha't, V, 2, 181. well, go thy w.; if Sir wine in thy master's w. H 6 B II, 3, 99. Toby would leave drinking, thou wert as witty a piece On the w. = in g o i n g or travelling a l o n g : H 4 A of Eve's flesh as any, T w . I, 5, 29. go thy —s, Kate, IV, 2, 39. V, 1, 36. H 4 B 1,1, 30. R 3 111, 1, 4. 21. 160. H 8 II, 4, 133. go thy w., Hector, there's a brave man, IV, 1, 51. H m l . II, 2, 330. Ill, 1, 17. L r . IV, 2, 2. 14. T r o i l . I, 2, 216. 256. go thy —s, wench, serve God, you should have been well on your w. to York, H 4 B II, R o m . II, 5, 45. cf. P e r . IV, 6, 71. 1, 73. every rub is smoothed on our w. H 5 II, 2, 188. To have w. or to have one's w. — to have free let's on our w. in silent sort, H 6 C IV, 2, 28. light thee scope: let me have w. to find this practice out, Meas. V, on thy w. to Mantua, R o m . 111,5,15. she is two months 238. let him have his w. A l l ' s 111,6,2. he'll lade it dry on her w. L L L V, 2, 679 (i. e. with child. Costard's speech). to have his w. H 6 C III, 2, 139. To hold one's w. = to keep one's course, to g o o n : let determined things to destiny hold unbewailed their w. A n t . Ill, 6, 85. To keep one's w. = to g o o n , not to stop: W i v . Ill, 2, 1. A d o I, 1, 144. H8 II, 4, 128. To lead the to. — to g o at the head, to set the

example of goiDg: Tp. II, 2, 177. 192. Wiv. 1,1, 318. Shr. I V , 4, 69. T w . I V , 3, 34. H 6 B I I , 4, 110. H 6 C V , 1, 112. H8 V , 5, 73. T r o i l . Ill, 3, 54. Oth. I I , 3, 207. lead's the w. Per. V , 3, 84.

Out of the w. = a) making r o o m , so as to be no hincterance: out of our w., I say, T p . 1,1, 29. to draw the Moor out of the w. Oth. Ill, 1,40. nor send you out o'thew. I V , 2 , 7 . b ) astray; quite beside the m a r k : lead me out of my w. T p . II, 2, 7. we are much out o'the w. L L L IV, 3, 76. it is clean out of the w. Oth. 1, 3, 366. c) gone, lost: is't lost? is'tgone? speak, is it out o'the way? Oth. Ill, 4, 80. 3) direction, side: he turns his lips another w. V e n . 90. ivhich w. shall she turn? 253. this w. she runs, 905. a thousand spleens bear her a thousand — s , 907. my consent goes not that w. W i v . Ill, 2, 79. I am that w. going to temptation, where prayers cross, Meas. II, 2, 158. which w. looks he? A d o I, 3, 55. you that w., we this w. L L L V, 2, S41. that w. goes the game, Mids. Ill, 2, 289 ( — now I see your drift), fairies, be gone, and be all—s away, IV, 1,46 ( 0 . Edd. always). I shot hin fellow the selfsame w. Merch. I, 1, 142. this w. the coverlet, another w. the sheets, Shr. IV, 1, 205. I come one w. of the Plantagenets, John V, 6, 11 ( i . e. by the father's side), turn not thy scorns this w. H 6 A II, 4, 77. turn thy edged sword another w. I l l , 3, 52. now sways it this w. ... now sways it that w. H 6 C II, 5, 5. 7. plucked all gaze his w. Cor. 1,3,8. nothing, neither w. H m l . V, 2,312 ( o n neither side), to avert your liking a more worthier w. L r . I, 1, 214. though he be painted one w. like a Gorgon, the other w. 's a Mars, A n t . II, 5,116. stands upon the swell... and neither w. inclines, 111,2,50. apes ... would chatter this w. C y m b . 1 , 6 , 4 0 .

There lies your w. — g o i f you please; you had better g o : the door is open, sir: there lies your w. Shr. Ill, 2, 212. will you hoist sail, sir? here lies your w. T w . I, 5, 216. there lies your w., due west, III, 1, 145. cf here lies our w. ~ let us g c , T r o i l . IV, 1, 79. To make w. = a ) to g i v e place, to make r o o m : make w., unruly woman, R 2 V, 2, 110. make w. there for the princess, H 8 V , 4 , 9 1 . C o r . 1 1 , 2 , 4 0 . T i t . 1,64. 89. A n t . V, 2 , 1 1 0 . b ) to form and prepare a passage: when the w. was made and paved toith gold, H81,1,187. c ) to open a path through obstacles: through the instrument my pate made to. Shr. 11,155. my sword shall make w. for me, H 6 B IV, 8,62. make cruel w. through ranks of Grcekish youth, T r o i l . IV, 5,184. I will make you w. for these letters, Hml. IV, 6,32 ( F f give you w ). I have made my w. through more impediments, Oth. V, 2,263. d ) to go, to pass: I make w. from hence to save my life, Shr. I, 1, 239. making their w. with those of nobler bulk, T r o i l . 1,3,36. follow where the game makes w. T i t . II, 2, 24. make a clear w. to the gods, T i m . Ill, This w. often = here, hither: this w. comes he 4,77 (die with a g o o d conscience), e) to advance suc- with it presently, Gent. Ill, 1, 42. come a little nearer cessfully : follow me and mark what w. I make, W i n t . this — s , W i v . II, 2 , 4 7 . 50 ( M r s Quickly's speech). V, 1, 233. the force of his own merit makes his w. H8 yonder he is coming this w. Ill, 1, 27. 33. Err. V, 120. 1, 1. 64. thou dost make thy w. to noble fortunes, L r . T w . I, 5, 324. W i n t . IV, 4, 20. H 6 B I, 3, 2. H 6 C IV, 5, 10. T i m . 1, 2, 137. Mcb. IV, 1, 45. V, 3, 29. Metaphorically, = tendency, character, kind : men of his w. should be most liberal, H8 I, 3, 61. the w. of our profession is against it, III, 1, 157. you're a gentleman of mine own w. V, 1, 28. A n d = respect, point of v i e w : you are gone both — s , Merch. Ill, 5, 20. their residence, both in reputation and profit, was better both — s , H m l . II, 2, 345. one w. I like this well,... another w. the news is not so tart, L r . IV, 2, 83. 86. any w. = in any respect, at all: if the wind blow any w. from shore, Err. Ill, 2, 153. oj 2, 452. W i n t . IV, 4, 255. R 3 II, 2, 148. IV, 5, 15. if I can cross him any w. A d o I, 3, 70. uncertain T r o i l . IV, 4,114. b ) by the b y : I can tell you that by the the issue any w. H 4 A I, 1, 61. if that the king have w. W i v . I, 4, 150. Shr. IV, 2, 115. Cymb. Ill, 2, 61. I any w. your good deserts forgot, IV, 3, 46. will not any hear it by the w. Mcb. Ill, 4, 130 ( i . e. occasionally w. dishonour me, I I 6 A V, 3, 102. nor to betray you and indirectly), c ) with of, = f o r the purpose o f : we any w. to sorrow, H8 111, 1, 56. every w. = in every respect: he will every w. be mocked, W i v . V, 3, 20. 1 come not by the w. of accusation, H 8 III, 1, 54. In the w. = where one passes: he strikes whate'er bless myself every w. A d o I, 3, 71. my fortunes every is in his w. Y e n . 623. the bushes in the w. 871. 879. w. as fairly ranked, Mids. I, 1, 101. is the young Dau• To take a w. or one's w. = to set out, to g o : when 1 took my w. Sonn. 48,1. that presently you take your w. for home, A l l ' s II, 5, 69. take the instant w. T r o i l . Ill, 3, 153. take your own w. Cymb. 1, 5, 31. By the w. = a ) while g o i n g along, on the route: an intent that perished by the w. Meas. V, 458. by the w. we met my wife, Err. V, 235. which accidentally, or by the IU. of progression, hath miscarried, L L L IV, 2, 144 ( H o l o f e r n e s ' speech), by the w. let us recount our dreams, Mids. IV, 1, 204. Merch. Ill, 2, 231. A s III,

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plan every w. complete, J o h n 11, 433. you wrong me every w. Caes. IV, 3, 55. no w. — not at all: if the gentle spirit of moving words can no w. change you, Gent. V, 4, 56. I think nobly of the soul and no w. approve this opinion, T w . IV, 2, 59. you must in no w. say he is covetous, Cor. 1, 1, 43. it comes from them to you and no w. from yourselves, 158. that w. — in that respect, in that point: no hope that w. is another w. so high a hope, T p . II, 1, 240. he is something peevish that w. Wiv. I, 4, 14. too crabbed that w. Meas. Ill, 2, 105. he teas not inclined that w. 130. all that offend that w. II, 1, 252. I shall lessen God's sending that iv. Ado II, 1, 24. Wint. IV, 3, 116. H 4 A II, 4, 401. Cymb. I, 1, 137. 1, 4, 101. this w. = in this point: our breach of duty this w. is business of state, H 8 II, 2, 69. In w. of or in the w. of = 1) with respect t o , in point o f , concerning, the point in question being: Hector s opinion is this in w. of truth, T r o i l . 11,2,189. one that wouldst be a bawd, in w. of good service, L r . II, 2, 21. in the w. of bargain ... I'll cavil on the ninth part of a hair, H 4 A III, 1, 139. that in the w. of loyally ... dare mate a sounder man, H 8 III, 2, 272. what my tongue can do i'the w. of flattery, Cor. Ill, 2, 137. 2) with a view t o , for the purpose of (the modern by way of): a kind.of insinuation ... in w. of explication, L L L IV, 2, 14. they'll not show their teeth in w. of smile, Merch. I, 1, 55. never to speak to lady ... in lo. of marriage, II, 1, 42. never to woo a maid in w. of marriage, II, 9, 13. I will not open my lips so wide as a bris le may enter in w. of thy excuse, T w . I, 5, 3. I do beseech you, as in w. of taste, to give me now a little benefit, Troil. Ill, 3, 13. so 'tis put on me, and that in w. of caution, Hml. I, 3, 95. to speak a marriage, good word for my master ... in the w. of Wiv. 1, 4, 89. I defy all angels ... but in the w. of honesty, II, 2, 75 (but cf. sub 6). he will never in the w. of waste attempt us again, IV, 2, 226. in the w. of argument, H5 III, 2, 104. as a woman should not do, but in the w. of honesty, Ant. V, 2, 253. 4) length of space, distance: the w. is but short, L L L III, 57. it is not half w. to her heart, Shr. I, 1, 62. which is a great w. growing on the south, Caes. II, 1, 107. half w. down hangs one, Lr. IV, 6, 14. 'tis but a little w. that 1 can bring you, Oth. Ill, 4, 199. Metaphorically: think him a great w. fool, All's I, 1, 112 ( = in a high degree), if I cannot recover your niece, 1 am a foul w. out, T w . II, 3, 201. 5) proceeding, course, means: to her will frame all thy — s , Pilgr. 323. my best w. is to creep under his gaberdine, T p . II, 2, 39. the best w. is to slander Valentine, Gent. 111,2, 31. Wiv. II, 1, 67. have you any w. then to unfool me again? IV, 2, 120. admit no other w. to save his life, Meas. II, 4, 88. 'twere the cheaper w. 105. my w. is now to hie home to his house, Err. IV, 3, 93. you go not the w. to examine, Ado IV, 2, 35 (the sexton's speech), this was a w. to thrive, Merch. I, 3, 90. indirect crooked —s, H 4 B IV, 5, 185. I think it is our w., if we will keep in favour with the king, to be her men, R 3 I, 1, 78. those cold —s ... are very poisonous where the disease is violent, Cor. Ill, 1, 220. I knew it the most general w. T i m . II, 2, 209. that's the w. Oth. II, 3, 3 9 3 ; cf. Meas. V, 280. 6) manner, m o d e : a thousand —she seeks to mend the hurt, Ven. 477. pausing for means to mourn some newer w. L u c r . 1365. wherefore do not you a mightier

w. make war ... upon time, Sonn. 16, 1. pity move my father to be inclined my w. Tp. I, 2, 447. I will one w. or other make you amends, Wiv. Ill, 1, 89. after this downright w. of creation, Meas. Ill, 2, 112. that's the w. V, 280 (cf. Oth. II, 3, 393). you must wear it one w. Ado II, 1, 198. use it (your hand) some other re. IV, 1, 329. it must appear in other —s than words, Merch. V, 140. and this w. will I take upon me to wash your liver as clean, As 111, 2, 442. V, 1, 63. All's V, 3, 276 (by none of all these —s). Wint. IV, 4, 33. 151. J o h n I, 181 (thou wast got in the w. of honesty; cf. Wiv. II, 2, 75 and Ant. V, 2, 253). H 4 B IV, 5, 127. T r o i l . IV, 5, 71. Cor. V, 6, 58 (after your w. his tale pronounced). Tit. II, 1, 119. Tim. I, 2, 55 {let it flow this way, = in this manner, i. e. with full cups). Caes. II, 2, 91. Ill, 1, 192. L r . IV, 3, 21 (her smiles and tears were like, a better way; i. e. resembled sunshine and rain, but in a more beautiful manner). Ant. I, 3, 10. V, 2, 359. Cymb. IV, 4, 4 etc. how and which w., pleonastically: how and which w. I may bestow myself, Gent. Ill, 1, 87. how and which w. you will, All's IV, 3, 157. how or which way to order these affairs, R 2 II, 2, 109. how or which way should they first break in? H 6 A II, 1, 71. 73. W a y l a y , to lie in wait for, to ambush: I will w. thee going home, T w . Ill, 4, 176. = to set an ambush f o r : Falstaff... shall rob those men that we have already waylaid, H4A I, 2, 183. W a y w a r d , capricious and obstinate: Ven. 344. Lucr. 1095. Gent. I, 2, 57. Err. IV, 4, 4. Ado II, 1, 65. L L L III, 181. As IV, 1, 162 (the wiser, the —er). Ii2 II, 1, 142. R 3 I, 3, 29. IV, 4, 168. Rom. IV, 2, 47. Mcb. Ill, 5, 11. Oth. Ill, 3, 292. P e r . IV, 4, 10 (w. seas). V, 1, 90 ( w . fortune). W a y w a r d n e s s , capricious obstinacy: Lr.1,1,302. W e (obj. case us; often apostrophized: let's assist them, T p . I , 1 , 5 7 . 67. 11,1,323. 111,2,157. Gent. I, 2, 88. L L L I, 1, 123. Merch. II, 7, 36. Lr. I, 2, 45 etc. speed's A d o V, 3, 32. cram's, make's, W i n t . I, 2, 91. ride's, 94. give's Ant. II, 7, 134. laugh at's, Ant. Ill, 13, 114. between's, W i n t . I, 2, 18. V, 3, 138. Ant. Ill, 4, 25. from's, Cymb. Ill, 1,15. to's, L L L II, 25. W i n t . IV, 4, 65. Ant. IV, 9, 5. upon's, Tp. I, 2, 137. II, 2, 60. Cymb. Ill, 1, 52. with's, Ant. Ill, 1, 36 etc.), personal pronoun, plural of I : Ven. 125. 126. 585. 586. Lucr. 144. 148. 152. 153 etc. us: Ven. 421. 534. Lucr. 151. 1840 etc. We for us: to poor we thine enmity's most capital, Cor. V, 3, 103. let no man abide this deed, but we the doers, Caes. Ill, 1,95. making night hideous, and we fools of nature so horridly to shake our disposition, Hml. I, 4, 54. hath more ministers than we that draw his knives i'the war, Cymb. V, 3, 72. Us for we: shall's attend you there? W i n t . I, 2, 178. shall's to the Capitol? Cor. IV, 6, 148. how shall's get it? T i m . IV, 3, 408. where shall's lay him? Cymb. IV, 2, 233. for this from stiller seats we came, our parents and us twain, V, 4, 70. shall's have a play of this? V, 5, 228. shall's go hear the vestals sing? Per. IV, 5, 7. We for / in the royal style: Meas. V, 2. 5. 17. All's 111, 1, 7. R 3 IV, 4, 472. Ant. II, 7, 134 etc. I and we alternately: 1 am about to weep, but thinking that we are a queen, ... my drops of tears I'll turn to sparks of fire, H8 II, 4, 71. a charge we bear i'the war, and as the president of my kingdom will appear there for a man, Ant. Ill, 7, 17. my peace we will begin, Cymb. V, 5, 459. Sometimes used for I by in-

w ferior persons, f. i. All's III, 3, 5 ; especially in the phrase let us see = let me see, f. i. Gent. I, 2, 88. Merch. II, 7, 36. Lr. I, 2, 45. IV, 6, 263. T h e subjunctive of the present, followed by we, expressing an invitation, = let u s : then go we near her, that her ear lose nothing, Ado 111, 1, 32 ( = let us go). L L L I, 1, 308. trip we after the night's shade, Mids. IV, 1, 101. do we so, Merch. II, 8, 53. but go we in ... and ceremoniously let us prepare some welcome, V, 36. and to cut off all strife, here sit we down, Shr. Ill, 1, 21. let me embrace with old Vincentio, and wander we to see thy honest son, IV, 5, 69. J o h n II, 559. R2 1, 2, 6. H4B V, 2, 134. H 5 I, 1, 95. IV, 8, 118. V, 2, 398. 1I6A II, 1, 13. Ill, 2, 102. HI, 3, 68. H 6 B I, 1, 199. II, 2, 59. 77. II, 4, 106. Ill, 1, 322. IICC II, 3, 56. II, 6, 31. Ill, 1, 8. Ill, 2, 121. V, 1, 62. R 3 1I, 2, 141. Troil. IV, 5, 272. V, 3, 10. Tit. IV, 2, 132. Mcb. II, 2, 66. IV, 1, 127. Hml. I, 1, 33. 168. IV, 5, 106 etc. We omitted: whether we shall meet again I know not; therefore our everlasting farewell take, Caes. V, 1, 116. Us for ourselves, reflectively: we'll rest us, Mids. 11,2,37. we will... disguise us, Merch. II, 4, 2. we could at once put us in readiness, Shr. I, 1, 43. we, poising us in her defective scale, All's II, 3, 161. it is most meet we arm us 'gainst the joe, H 5 11, 4, 15. let's get us from the walls, H 6 A 111, 2, 71. we will repose us here, HSB II, 1, 200. to secure us by what we can, V,2,76, will cast us down, Tit. V , 3 , 1 3 2 . ice will divest us, L r . I, 1, 50. we'll there secure us, Cymb. IV, 4, 8 etc. As dative: shall we go and kill us venison? A s l I , 1,21. we make us comforts of our losses, All's IV, 3, 77. let's make us medicines of our great revenge, Mcb. IV, 3, 214 (cf. the dat. commodi: we have not spoke us yet of torch-bearers, Merch. II, 4, 5. she looks us like a thing more made of malice than of duty, Cymb. Ill, 5, 32). W e a k , 1) having little physical strength (either by n a t u r e , or in consequence of any thing that impairs the natural force): Ven. 1145. Lucr. 555. 1242 ( = soft, pliant, impressible?). 1646. 1647. Pilgr. 163. L L L I, 1, 276 (the —er vessel; cf. Vessel). Merch. II, 1, 34. IV, 1, 115. As II, 4, 6. II, 7, 132. Shr. V, 2, 165. 174. All's II, 1, 140. 179. 11, 3, 39. Ill, 4, 41. 112 111, 2, 62. H4B II, 4, 66. 67. 385. H 6 A II, 3, 23. T r o i l . I, 3, 4 3 ( w. untimbered sides). Caes. I, 3, 108 (w. straws). Mcb. IV, 3, 16. Cymb. Ill, 6, 37 etc. Applied to troops too small in number or not sufficiently prepared: All's IV, 3, 151. E 2 II, 3, 154. H 4 A IV, 4 , 1 9 . H511I,6,164. H6A1,1,158.111,2,7. IV,4,16. H 6 C II, 3, 13. IV, 5 , 7 . cf. A l l ' s l . l , 127. J o h n V , 7 , 7 8 . 2) powerless in operation, inefficacious: my will is strong, past reason's i f . removing, Lucr. 243. w. sights ( = eyes) Compl. 214. w. masters though ye be, T p . V, 41. means much —er, 146. her w. prayers, Mids. Ill, 2, 250. a w. bond holds you, 268. w. wind, J o h n V, 2, 87. H 4 B IV, 5, 100. Cor. V, 2, 50. so w. a composition (small beer) II4B II, 2, 10. a w. and niggardly projection, H5 11,4,46. their villany goes against my w. stomach, III, 2, 56. the w. list of a country's fashion, V, 2, 295. my ancient incantations are too w. H 6 A V, 3, 27. my title's w. H 6 C I, 1, 134. Ill, 3, 145. my w. oratory, E 3 III, 1, 37. a w. and colder palate, Troil. IV, 4, 7. my w. words, Caes. I, 2, 176. motives, II, 1, 116. Mcb. I, 2, 15 etc. 3) slight, inconsiderable, little: so strong a prop

1343 to support so w. a burden, Ven. Ded. 2. my love is strengthened, though morew. in seeming, Sonn. 102, 1. this w. impress of love, Gent. Ill, 2, 6. this w. and idle theme, Mids. V, 434. a w. and worthless satisfaction, Ho 111,6, 141. such things as might offend the —est spleen, Troil. II, 2, 128. holding a w. supposal of our worth, Hml. I, 2, 18. mine own w. merits, Oth. Ill, 3, 187. one (life) is too poor, too w. for my revenge, 443. 4) wanting spirit and moral power: to whose (his soul's temple) w. ruins muster troops of cares, L u c r . 720. in thy w. hive a wandering wasp hath crept, 839. to be afeard of my deserving were but a w. disabling of myself, Merch'. II, 7, 30. w. fear, H4A IV, 3, 11. so w. of courage and in judgment, H6C IV, 1, 12. in this w. piping time of peace, R 3 I, 1, 24. the w. wanton Cupid, Troil. Ill, 3, 222. a w. slave, Rom. I, 1, 17. 5) feeble of m i n d , wanting understanding and discernment: to be of such a w. and silly mind, Ven. 1016. the w. brain's forgeries, Lucr. 460. this lord of w. remembrance, Tp. II, 1, 232 made wit with musing w. Gent. I, 1, 69. my conceit, smothered in errors, feeble, shalloio, w. Err. Ill, 2, 35. their sense thus w. Mids. HI, 2, 27. has a most w. pia mater, T w . I, 5, 123. had our w. spirits ne'er been higher reared, W i n t . 1, 2, 72. sick interpreters, once w. ones, H8 I, 2, 82. conceit in —est bodies ( = persons) strongest works, Hml. Ill, 4, 114 (or in a physical sense?). Almost = stupid: a oery w. monster, Tp. II, 2, 148. her wit values itself so highly that to her all matter else seems w. Ado III, 1, 54. fancies too w.for boys, Wint. Ill, 2, 182. a w. mind and an able body, H 4 B II, 4, 273. that the —er sort may wish good Marcius home again, Cor. IV, 6, 69. it tvere very w. dealing, Rom. II, 4, 180 (the nurse's speech), play the god with his w. function, Oth. II, 3, 354. W e a k - b u i l t , ill founded: w. hopes, Lucr. 130. W e a k e n , 1) tr. to enfeeble, to debilitate: Sonn. 23, 4. R2 V, 1, 27. H 4 B I, 1, 144. Troil. I, 3, 195. Oth. I, 2, 75. 2) intr. to become feeble: his notion —s, his discernings are lethargied, L r . I, 4, 248. W e a k - h e a r t e d , spiritless: to endure more miseries and greater far than my w. enemies dare offer, H8 III, 2, 390. W e a k - h i n g e d , supported by a weak h i n g e , ill founded: your own w. fancy, W i n t . II, 3, 119. cf. hinge in Oth. Ill, 3, 365. W e a k l i n g , a feeble creature: Lucr. 584. H6C V, 1, 37. W e a k l y , 1) without sufficient strength: w. fortressed, Lucr. 28. w. guarded, H 6 A II, 1, 74. you are w. made, H 8 II, 3, 40. 2) indiscreetly, injudiciously, stupidly: I will not adventure my discretion so w. T p . 11, 1, 188. W e a k - m a d e , having by nature little strength: make w. women tenants to their shame, Lucr. 1260. W e a k n e s s , want of strength; 1) in a physical sense: Ven. 892. T p . I, 2, 487. Err. II, 2, 177. As II, 3, 51. Shr. V, 2, 174. J o h n V, 3, 17. H 8 IV, 2, 117. Caes. IV, 3, 276 (the w. of mine eyes). Hml. II, 2, 148. Oth. II, 3, 43. Ant. V, 2, 347. 2) in a military sense: H5 III, 6, 132. H6A 111, 2, 25. Troil. I, 3, 137. Cor. IV, 5, 146. 3) in a moral sense: Sonn. 88, 5. Tp. IV, 159. Meas. II, 4, 123. All's II, 1, 88. Wint. II, 3, 1. 2. R 2 111, 2, 181. II6C V, 4, 38. R 3 1, 3, 28. H 8 V, 3, 72. Troil. Ill, 2, 140.

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W e a l , 1) welfare, prosperity, happiness: our w., on you depending, counts it your w. to have his liberty, J o h n IV, 2, 65. 66. tends to God's glory and my country's w. H 6 A V, 1, 27. touching the w. o'the common, Cor. I, 1, 155. of him that, his particular to foresee, smells from the general w. Tim. IV, 3, 160. that spirit upon whose w. (Ff spirit) depend and rest the lives of many, Hml. Ill, 3, 14. in the tender of a wholesome w. Lr. I, 4, 230. w. and tooe opposed: Ven. 987. H6A III, 2, 92. Rom III, 2, 51. 2) commonwealth, body politic, state (cf. Commonweal): sit at chiefest stern of public w. H6A I, 1, 177. the special watchmen of our English w. III, 1, 66. the charters that you bear i'the body of the w. Cor. I), 3, 189. a foe to the public w. Ill, 1, 176. ere human statute purged the gentle w. Mcb. 111,4, 76 (cf. Appendix, Prolepsis). the medicine of the sickly w. V, 2, 27. W e a l - b a l a n c e d , kept in a state of just proportion by reasons of state: from thence, by cold gradation and w. form, we shall proceed with Angelo, Meas. IV, 3, 104 (not eagerly and passionately, as my personal feelings would prompt me, but with due observance of all forms, which it would be against the public interest not to observe. M. Edd. unnecessarily and somewhat flatly well-balanced). W e a l d , see Wild, subst. 2. W e a l s n i e n , statesmen: two such w. as you are — I cannnot call you Lycurguses, Cor. II, 1, 59. W e a l t h , 1) welfare, prosperity: I once did lend my body for his w. Merch. V, 249. this is the imposthume of much to. and peace, Hml. IV, 4, 27. 2) riches: Lucr. 17. 142. Sonn. 29, 13. 37, 5. 67, 13. 75, 4. 91, 2. Compl. 270. Gent. I, 2, 13. 111,1,362. 376. IV, 1, 11. Wiv. 111,2,78. 111,3, 232 (the w. of Windsor Castle). Ill, 4, 6. 13. Err. I, 1, 40. Ill, 2, 5. 6. V, 8. 49 (lost much w.). Ado 1, I , 70. L L L I, 1, 31. IV, 3, 149. Merch. Ill, 2, 257. Ill, 5, 62 (the whole w. of thy wit). IV, 1, 269. 365. 370. V, 173 (for the w. that the world masters). As I, 3, 136 (get our jewels and our w. together). II, 5, 54. Shr. 1, 2, 68. IV, 2, 98. All's II, 5, 84 J o h n IV, 1, 131 (for the w. of all the world). H4A II, 4, 280 (were masters of their w.). IV, 1, 46. H6A V, 5, 46. H 6 B IV, 1, 82. IV, 10, 23. H 6 C IV, 8, 44. H 8 III, 2, 284. Tim. IV, 3, 495 (whilst this poor w. lasts). L r . 1, 1, 211 etc. W e a l t h i l y , richly: I come to wive it ID. in Padua; if w., then happily in Padua, Shr. I, 2, 75. 76. W e a l t h y , rich: Merch. I, 1, 27. I, 3, 58. V, 15. Shr. IV, 2, 37. IV, 5, 65 (her dowry to.). All's II, 3, 72 (—est). H 6 B I, 1, 154. IV, 7, 68. H6C I, 4, 123. T i m . II, 2, 193 III, 3, 3. Oth. 1, 2, 68. W e a n , 1) to put from the breast, to ablactate: take all and w. it; it may prove an ox, L L L V, 2, 250. she was —ed, Roin. I, 3, 24. 2) to avert, to alienate: I the rather w. me from despair for love of Edward's offspring in my womb, H 6 C IV, 4, 17 ( 0 . Edd. wain). I will restore to thee the people's hearts, and w. them from themselves, Tit. 1, 2 1 1 .

W e a p o n , an instrument of offence, particularly a sword: Lucr. 1432. T p . I, 2, 473. II, 1, 320. 322. Wiv. I, 4, 125. II, 1, 216. HI, 1, 30. 31. 73. 76. Ado V, 2, 22. Mids. IV, 1, l l / M e r c h . Ill, 1, 64. Shr. Ill, 2, 238. H 4 B I, 1, 197. II, 1, 17. II, 4, 222. IV, 3, 123 (skill in the w.). H 5 III, 2, 38. H 6 A I, 3, 78

(any sword, w., or dagger). II, 1, 81. Ill, 1, 79. H6B 1 , 3 , 6 1 . 11,1,180. 11,3,98. 111,1,347. 111,2,237. IV, 2, 131. IV, 8, 18. V, 1 , 1 4 0 . H6C I, 3, 51. 11,1. 129. V, 6, 26. K3 III, 1, 122. Troil. V, 7, 5. Cor. Ill, 1 , 1 8 5 . Tit. II, 1 , 5 9 . IV, 2, 11. V, 1,37. Rom. 1, 1, 39. Caes. Ill, 1, 109. Mcb. V, 7, 12. Hml. V, 2, 148. 151. L r . II, 4, 280 (women's —s, water-drops). Oth. I, 1, 182. V, 2, 252 etc. W e a p o n e d , provided with a weapon (a sword): be not afraid, though you do see me w. Oth. V, 2, 266. W e a r , subst. fashion: your good worship will be my bail. No, indeed, will I not, Pompey; it is not the to. Meas. Ill, 2, 78. motley's the only ui. As II, 7, 34. the composition that your valour and fear makes in you is a virtue of a good wing, and 1 like the w. well, All's I, 1, 219. any toys for your head of the newest and finest w. Wint. IV, 4, 327. W e a r , vb. (impf. wore, partic. worn. In T i t . 1, 6 Qq ware, Ff wore) 1) trans, a) to carry appendant to the body; as clothes or ornaments, in a proper and metaphorical sense: Ven. 163. 415. 1081. 1107. Lucr. 680. 1222. T p . II, 1 , 1 0 3 . Gent. II, 7, 51. 111,1,135. V, 2, 6. Meas. I, 2, 173. Err. V, 17. Ado I, 1, 200. II, 1, 196. L L L IV, 3, 48. V, 2, 130. Mids. II, 2, 71. T w . I, 5, 63. Ill, 4, 228. H 4 A IV, 3, 55 (royalty = crown). H 6 A II, 4, 72. H 6 B I, 3, 88 (her worst —ing gown). 149. R3 111, 2, 95. IV, 2, 5. Troil. V, 2, 93. 95. Tit. I, 6. Mcb. IV, 1, 88 etc. w. their brave state out of memory, Sonn. 15, 8 ( = be forgotten), they w. themselves in the cap of the time, All's II, 1, 54 (not quite = are w o r n , but rather — they place themselves in i t , pretend to be the ornaments of society and the leaders of fashion). Used of weapons (also = to wield, to m a n a g e ) : Wiv. 1, 3, 84. Merch. Ill, 4, 65. T w . Ill, 4, 276. H6A I, 3, 78. H 6 B 111, 2, 197. Caes. I, 3, 89. Hml. II, 2, 359. Lr. II, 2, 78. Oth. V, 1, 2. A n t . IV, 14, 79 etc. Figuratively: great tyranny,... w. thou thy wrongs; the title is affeered, Mcb. IV, 3, 33 (handle them like weapons, perform them fearlessly). Of parts of the body: the web (i. e. downy beard) it (the skin) seemed to w. Compl 95. if these be true spies (the eyes) which I w. in my head, T p . V, 259. does he not w. a great round beard, Wiv. I, 4, 20. he should have worn the horns on his head, Mids. V, 244. w. beards, Merch. Ill, 2, 84. V, 158. — s a precious jewel in his head, As II, 1, 14. see thee w. thy heart in a scarf, V, 2, 23. his right cheek is worn bare, All's IV, 5, 103. where a wasp does w. his sting, Shr. II, 214. shall not w. a head on his shoulders, H 6 B IV, 7, 127. R 3 III, 2, 94. Troil. II. 1, 79. 111,3, 271. Cor. II, 1, 195. IV, 4, 13. V, 3, 38. Mcb. II, 2, 65. Oth. III,3, 198. Cymb. 1, 1, 13. Ill, 1, 14. Ill, 5, 14 etc. Hence applied to any external m a r k or appearance exhibited: the impression of keen whips I'Id w. as rubies, Meas. II, 4, 101. w. the print of it (a yoke) Ado I, 1, 203. he —s his honour in a box unseen, All's II, 3, 296. a countenance as clear as friendship — s at feasts, W i n t . 1, 2, 344. w. the detested blot of murderous subornation, H 4 A I, 3, 162. who —s my stripes impressed upon him, Cor. V, 6, 108. w. the brows of grace, Mcb. IV, 3 , 2 3 . they know not how their wits to w. L r . I, 4, 183. he —s the rose of youth upon him, Ant. Ill, 13, 20. b) = to b e a r , to carry: w. prayer-books in my pocket, Merch. II, 2, 201. Especially, in the same

w manner as to bear (q. v.) = to have, to o w n , to harbour: bestowed her on her own lamentation, which she yet —s for his sake, Meas. Ill, 1, 238. he—s his faith but as the fashion of his hat, Ado I, 1, 75. let none presume to w. an undeserved dignity, Merch. II, 9, 40. J will deeply put the fashion (of sorrow) on and w. it in my heart, H 4 B V, 2, 53. to w. our mortal state to come with her, H8 II, 4, 228 (to spend the rest of our life with her), ne'er did poor steward w. a truer grief for his undone lord than mine eyes for you, T i m . IV, 3, 487. who w. our health but sickly in his life, Mcb. Ill, 1, 107. I will w. him in my heart's core, H m l . l l l , 2, 77. a slave should w. a sword who —s no honesty, L r . II, 2, 79. 1 wore my life to spend upon his haters, Ant. V, 1 , 8 . if you could w. a mind dark as your fortune is, Cymb. Ill, 4, 146. knighthoods and honours, borne as I w. mine, are titles but of scorn, V, 2, 7. the worth that learned charity aye —s, P e r . V, 3, 94. Proverbial: win me c/hd w. me, Ado V, I, 82 ( = he laughs that wins), originally = win me and have or enjoy me. cf. I earn that I eat, get that I w. As III, 2, 78. thou hast me, if thou hast me, at the vorst; and thou shalt w. me, if thou w. me, better and better, 115 V, 2, 250. you may w. her in title yours, Cyinb. I, 4, 96. See also Ado II, 1, 342 and Shr. Ill, 2, 120. c) to use up, to consume, to waste, to destroy by degrees: often touching will w. gold, Err. II, 1, 112. a withered hermit, fivescore winters worn, L L L IV, 3, 242. the morning now is something worn, Mids. IV, 1, 187 (wasted, spent), could I repair what she will w. in me, Shr. Ill, 2, 120. infirmity which waits upon worn times, Wint. V, 1, 142. much rain —s the marble, H 6 C III, 2, 50. when waterdrops have worn the stones of Troy, Troil. Ill, 2, 193. sharp misery hath worn him to the bones, Rom. V, 1, 41 (has made him a skeleton). cf. Outwear, War-worn, Wave-worn. = to weary, to exhaust: —ing thy hearer in thy mistress' praise, As 11, 4, 38 (later F f and M. Edd. wearying), to w. your gentle limbs in my affairs, All's V, 1, 4. they are worn so, that we shall hardly in our ages see their banners wave again, Cor. Ill, 1, 6. = to efface from the memory; to f o r g e t : our fancies are ... sooner lost and worn than women's are, T w . II, 4, 35. this few days' wonder will be quickly worn, H 6 B II, 4, 69. cf. below w. out. W i t h a double accusative denoting an effect: this exceeding posting must w. your spirits low, All's V, 1, 2. whilst some with cunning gild their copper crowns, with truth and plainness I do w. mine bare, Troil. IV, 4, 108. W i t h adverbs and prepositions: well-nigh worn to pieces with age, Wiv. II, 1, 21. to w. away this long age of three hours, Mids. V, 33. age... wore us out of act, All's I, 2, 30. time hath worn us into slovenry, H 5 IV, 3, 114. many years ... not wore him from my remembrance, Cymb. IV, 4, 23. To w. out — 1) to waste or destroy by degrees: w. out thy youth with shapeless idleness, Gent. 1, 1, 8. have worn your eyes almost out in the service, Meas. I, 2, 113. she may w. her heart out first, Ado II, 3, 211. the fashion —s out more apparel than the man, III, 3, 149. All's 1, 2, 73. H 4 B V, 1, 89. Cor. Ill, 2, 18. Rom. II, 4, 66. II, 6, 17. Caes. I, 1, 33. Ant. 1, 2, 171. IV, 15, 40. Cymb. II, 3, 48 (O. Edd. w. on't). 2 ) to spend completely, to come to the end of: long he questioned with Lucrece and wore out the night, Lucr. 123. in the eyes of all posterity that w. this world out to the end of

1345

j doom, Sonn. 55, 12. let not the hours of this ungodly day w. out the day in peace, J o h n III, 1, 110. R2 IV, 258. you w. out a forenoon in hearing a cause, Cor. II, 1, 77. — s out his time for nought but provender, Oth. 1,1,47. you may not live to w. all your true followers out, Ant. IV, 14, 133 ( t o have none left), wornout = past, g o n e : this pattern of the worn -out age, Lucr. 1350. 3 ) to efface or lose f r o m the mind, to forget, to give u p : let her w. it out with good counsel, Ado II, 3, 209. if you urge me farther ... I w. out my suit, H 5 V, 2, 132. their clothes are after such a pagan cut, that sure they've worn out Christendom, H8 1, 3, 15. we'll w. out, in a walled prison, packs and sects of great ones, L r . V, 3, 17. that lady is not now living, or this gentleman's opinion by this worn out, Cymb. I, 4, 68. 2) intr. a) to be worn, to be the fashion: like the brooch and the tooth-pick, which w. not now, All's I, 1, 172. b ) to become fit by wearing ( l i k e a garment); with to: so —s she to him, so sways she level in her husband's heart, T w . II, 4, 31. c) to be wasted: never let their crimson liveries w. Ven. 506. though marble w. with raining, Lucr. 560. thy glass u:ill show thee how thy beauties w. Sonn. 77, 1. what rocky heart to water will not w.f Compl. 291. youth, the more it is wasted the sooner it — s, H 4 A II, 4, 443. how goes the world? It —s as it grows, T i m . 1,1,3. W i t h out: this great world shall so w. out to nought, L r . IV, 6, 138. d) to pass a w a y : time —s, Wiv. V, 1,8. the morning —s, Shr. Ill, 2, 113. W e a r e r , 1) one who has something on his b o d y : the grave — s ( o f the h a b i t s ) Wint. Ill, 1, 6. were I the w. of Antonius' beard, Ant. II, 2, 7. 2) owner: that clear honour were purchased by the merit of the w. Merch. II, 9, 43. W e a r i l y , like one fatigued: you look w. T p . Ill, 1, 32. W e a r i n e s s , state of being tired, fatigue: Lucr. 121. 845. T p . Ill, 3, 5. H4B II, 2, 3. Cymb. Ill, 6, 33. W e a r i n g , subst. (cf. Wear), dress, clothes: a swain's w. W i n t . IV, 4, 9. my nightly w. Oth. IV, 3, 16. W e a r i s o m e , tiresome: Gent.II, 7, 8. R2 II, 3, 5. R 3 III, 1, 5. W e a r y , adj. 1) tired, fatigued: Ven. 495. 529. 559. 705. 914. Lucr. 1542. 1621. Sonn. 7, 9. 27, 1. Gent. II, 7, 35. Err. I, 2, 7. 15. L L L V, 2, 194. 196. Mids. Ill, 2, 442. As II, 4, 1. 3. II, 7, 130. Shr. IV, 1, 4. T w . Ill, 3, 21. J o h n V, 5, 18. R 2 I, 3, 265. II, 3, 16. V, 3, 105. H4A II, 3, 87. H 4 B II, 2, 1. IV, 5, 3. V, 5, 149. H 5 V, 1, 89. H6A IV, 6, 27. H 6 C II, 3, 45. R 3 IV, 4, 112 (Qq w. neck, Ft' wearied head). V, 3, 19. H8 III, 2, 363. IV, 2, 22. Cor. I, 9, 91. Rom. V, 3, 118. L r . II, 2, 177. II, 4, 89. Cymb. Ill, 4, 115. III, 6, 36. T h e cause with of: you sunburnt sicklemen, of August w. Tp. IV, 134. a s you are w. of the weight, R 3 I, 2, 31. 2) tired, impatient of the continuance of sth.: I am longer to live most w. Cor. IV, 5, 101. W i t h of: w. of rest, Ven. 853. of the world, 1189. Mids. V, 255 (Ql aweary). As 111, 2, 302. R 2 V, 5, 104. H 4 B III, 1, 48. IV, 1, 197. H 6 A I, 2, 26. R 3 V, 3, 329. 3) sick, disgusted in general: a true-devotedpilgrbn is not w. to measure kingdoms with his feeble steps, Gent. II, 7, 9. so w. with disasters, Mcb. Ill, 1, 112.

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W

put on what w. negligence you please, Lr. 1, 3, 12. Jobu V, 1, 21. I must make fair w. yet awhile, H6B uherein we are not destitute /or want, but tr. for the V, 1, 30. cf. the proverb: two women placed tojether stateness, Per. V, 1,58. With of: lam w of this charge, makes foul w. H8 I, 4, 22. Weather-beaten, harassed by hard weather: 114 A Tim. Ill, 4,25. life being to. of these worldly bars, Caes. 1, 3, 96. he that keeps nor crust n or crura, w. of all, shall III, 1,67. W e a t h e r - b i t t e n , worn by the weather: like a want some, Lr. I, 4, 218. 4) tiresome, causing weariness: ere he arrive his w. conduit, Wint. V, 2, 60 (F3. 4. weather-beaten). W e a t h e r c e e k , a vane: Gent.II, 1,142. Denoting w noontide prick, Lucr. 781. the w. time she cannot entertain, 1361. my tp. travel's end, Sonn. 50, 2. w. a fantastical person: where had you this pretty w.t night, 61, 2. Gent. I, 1,31. L L L V , 2, 197. Mids. Ill, Wiv. Ill, 2, 18. what plume of feathers is he that in2, 431. V, 381. R2 I, 3, 49. Ho IV Chor. 38. E 3 111, dited this lettert what vanet what w.T did you ever 1,3. H8 II, 1, 133. Troil. Ill, 2, 123. Tit. I, 28. Mcb. hear beUert L L L IV, 1, 97. Weather-rend, to defend from the weather, to 1, 3, 22. Iiml. Ill, 1, 77. not to be tr. with you = not shelter: the line-grove which —s your cell, Tp. V, 10. to weary you, not to be tedious: Meas. I, 4, 25. Weave (impf. weaved: Per. IV Prol. 21; partic. 5) irksome, disgusting: the — est and most loathed worldly life, Mea9.111,1,129. seek the tc beds of people weaved: R2 IV, 229. H4A V, 4, 88. woven: Ven. 266. sick, L L L V, 2, 832. hove tr., stale, flat ... seem to me Merch. I, 1, 14. Ill, 2, 121. H8 IV, 1, 80), to form all the uses of this world, II ml 1,2, 133. Otc. reckoning, by texture; absol ( = to practise weaving): Mids. Oth.Ill, 4,176. cf.H8 11,1,133. Hml. Ill, 1,77. Hence II, 2, 20. Per. IV, 6, 194. tfans.: Ven. 266. Merch. the following expression, which has much puzzled the I, 1, 14. Ill, 2, 121. Tw. II, 4, 46. H6B III, 1, 340. commentators: doth it pride) not flow as hugely as the Per. IV Prol. 21. Metaphorically: must I ravel out sea, tilt that the tc. very means do ebb? As II, 7, 73 my —d up folly, R2 IV, 229. ill —d ambition, H4A (irksome and hateful, as they cannot be dispensed with, V, 4, 88. all were woven so strangely in one piece, H8 and yet are so soon exhausted. German: bis dass es IV, 1, 80. this—5 itself perforce into my business, Lr. mit den leidigen Mitteln selbst auf die Neiye geht). II, 1, 17. cf. Unweave. Weaver, one whose occupation is to weave: Wiv. Weary, vb. 1) to fatigue, to tire: Lucr.737. 1363. 1570. Tp. Ill, 1, 19. Wint. IV, 4, 343. H1B 1, 1, 10S. V, 1, 24 (cf. 1 Samuel XVII, 7). Mids. I, 2, 19. Ill, 11,4,385. R3 IV,4,112 (Ff—erf head, Qqweary neck). I, 23. H6B IV, 2, 30. H8 1, 2, 33. —s snpposed to ! t c good singers and particularly given to singing Caes. IV, 3, 200. cf. Day-wearied, War-wearied. 2) to make impatient of continuance; and hence psalms (being most of them Calvinists and refugees to harass by any thing irksome: Gent. II, 4, 126. from the Netherlands): a catch that will draw three Merch. I, 1, 2. As II, 4, 38 (later Ff wearying, Fl souls out of one w. Tw. II, 3, 61. I would / were a w., wearing). Ill, 2, 164. V, 2, 56. Wint. IV, 4, 342. H4B I could sing psalms or any thing, H4A II, 4, 147. Web, 1) any thing woven, texture: Ven. 991. IV, 5, 94. Compl. 95 (a downy beard called so). All's IV, 3, 83. W r a M n i , see Wezand. Weasel, the animal Mustela vulgaris: Lucr. 307. Ho V, 1, 21. R3 I, 3, 243. H8 I, 1, 63. Troil. II, 3, Hml. Ill, 2, 396. Sucking eggs: As II, 5, 13. H5 I, 19. Rom. I, 4, 61. Oth. II, 1, 169. Ill, 4, 69. 2) the pin and «•., a disorder of the eye, consisting 2, 170. Full of spleen and quarrelsome: II4A II, 3, in a dusky film hindering the sight: all eyes blind 81. Cymb. Ill, 4, 162. Weather, subst. the state of the atmosphere with with the pin and w. Wint. I, 2, 291. he gives the w and respect to any meteorological phenomena: Lucr. 115. the pin, squints the eye, Lr. Ill, 4, 122. Wed (impf. wedded: Wint. V, 1, 13. Cymb. V, 5, Filgr. 159. Tp. II, 2, 19. Shr. IV, I, 11. H5 III, 2, 113. cold w. Ven. 402. foul w. Ven. 972. Tp. II, 1, 341. wed: H8 III, 1, 141. Hml. Ill, 2, 190. panic, 141. 142. As V, 4, 142. R2 III, 3, 161. H4A 111, 1, usually wedded; wed in Err. I, 1, 37. Shr. I, 2, 263. 68. Lr. Ill, 1, 1. 2. hot w. 1MB III, 2, 101. H6B IV, II, 289. Per. II, 5, 92. V, 1, 69. cf. unwed) to marry; 10, 10. loud w. Wint. Ill, 3, 11. rough w. As II, 5, 1) to join or give in marriage: Err. 11, 1, 28. Mids. 8. this w. = in this w. Wint. Ill, 3, 65. H6B IV, 10, IV, 1, 97. Shr. I, 2, 263. Cymb. I, 1, 7. 1, 6, 2. Per. 10. Emphatically, = storm, tempest: they are louder II, 5, 92. V, 1, 69. With to: Err. I, 1, 37. L L L 11, than the w. Tp. I, 1, 40. builds in the w. on the out- 211. Mids. II, 1, 72. Shr. II, 289. H6A V, 3, 137. V, ward wall, Merch. 11, 9, 29. 'twill endure wind and 4, 24. H6B IV, 1, 79. Metaphorically: that noble title w. Tw. I, 5, 256. roaring louder than the sea or w. your master w. me to, H8 111, 1, 141. thou art —erf to Wint. 111,3, 104. extremity of w. continuing, V, 2, 129. calamity, Rom. Ill, 3, 3. pour do ten thy w. John IV, 2, 109. left me bare to w. 2) to take a husband or a wife, to contract matriCymb. Ill, 3, 64. mony; absol.: Ado II, 1, 76. 79. HI, 2, 128. As IV, Metaphorical use: being of an old father's mind, 1, 148. Shr. II, 180. Ill, 2, 11. 17. All s II, 3, 98. many can brook the w. that love not the wind, LLL IV, Wint. V, 1, 24. R3 IV, 1, 74. Rom. Ill, 5, 119. 187. 2, 34 (i. e. one must put up with anything. Nathaniel's 189. Tim. IV, 3, 38. Lr. I, 1, 102. trans. = to take speech), fairw.afteryou, 1,2,149 (Jaquenettu's wish). for husband or for wife Pilgr. 346. Gent. 11, 6, 39. whose honesty endured all —s, Wint. V, 1, 195. mine Err. Ill, 2, 5. Ado III, 2, 118. L L L V, 2, 447. Mids. honour keeps the w. of my fate, Troil. V, 3, 26 ( = has I. 1, 18. 64. 88. As V, 4, 22. 130. Shr. I, 1, 149. I, the advantage of my fate; = wenther-gage, a nautical 2 , 9 2 . IV, 2, 51. All's I, 1,98. 111,2,23. Wint. V, terni) k to make fair w. — to conciliate another by fair 1, 13. Rom. IV, 5, 39. Hml. Ill, 2, 190. 224. IV, 5, word* and a show of friendship: it is impossible you 63. Cymb. V, 5, 341. Per. II, 5, 16. V, 3, 3. my —erf should take true root but by the fair w. that you make mistress, Cor. IV, 5, 123. Cymb. V, 5, 261. my —erf yourself, Ado I, 3, 25. my tongue shall hush again this lord, Per. Ill, 4, 9. Metaphorically: not to woo honour, storm of war and make fair u-. in your blustering land,' but to w. it, All's II, 1, 15. in wooing sorrow let's be

w

1347

brief, since, —ing it, there is such length in grief, R 2 151. IV, 7, 173. Lr. IV, 4, 3. 5. Ant. I, 2, 113. Cymb. V, 1, 94. IV, 2, 390. Peculiar passage: the needful bits and curbs Wedded, adj. nuptial: my w. bed, Rom. I, 5, 137 to headstrong — s , Meas. 1, 3, 20 (Collier: 'weed is a term still commonly applied to an ill-conditioned ( Q q and M. Edd. wedding bed). W e d d i n g , m a r r i a g e ; nuptials: Ado II, 2, 46. Ill, horse.' Emendations proposed: steeds or wills1. 3, 99. As III, 3, 106. V, 2, 15. V, 4, 147. 173. Hml. W e e d , vb. 1) to root out, to take away as noxious I, 2, 178. herbs; in a proper and a metaphorical sense: Meas. W e d d i n g - b e d : R o m . I, 5, 137 (Fl wedded bed). III, 2, 284. L L L I, 1, 96. R2 II, 3, 167. II6B I, 3, III, 2, 136. 102. With up: set hyssop and w. up thyme, Oth. I, 3, W e d d i n g - c h e e r : Shr. Ill, 2, 188. Rom. IV, 5, 87. 326. With from: but say this w.her love from Valentine, W e d d i n g - d a y : Ado III, 2, 117. IV, 1, 255. Mids. Gent. Ill, 2, 49. to iv. this wormwood from your fruitful I, 2, 7. II, 1, 139. Merch. Ill, 2, 313. Shr. II, 33. 300. brain, L L L V, 2, 857. hath —ed from my heart a root 317. Ill, 1, 84. Ill, 2, 99. J o h n III, 1, 300. 118 P r o l of ancient envy, Cor. IV, 5. 108. 32. Rom. Ill, 4, 32. IV, 5, 35. 2) to free from noxious plants; metaphorically: W e d d i n g - d o w e r , m a r r i a g e - p o r t i o n : Gent. Ill, he cannot so precisely w. this land, FI4B IV, 1, 205. W i t h of: w. your better judgements of all opinion ... 1, 78. that lam wise, As II, 7, 45. W e d d i n g - g a r m e n t ; Shr. IV, 1, 51. W e d d i n g - r i n g : Evr. II, 2, 139. W e e d e r - o u t , extirpator: a w. of his proud adW e d d i n g - s h e e t s : Oth. IV, 2, 105. versaries, R 3 I, 3, 123. W e d d i n g - t o r c h : H 6 A III, 2, 26. W e e d i n g , weeds, noxious herbs: he weeds the W e d g e , subst. 1) a mass of m e t a l : — s of gold, corn, but still lets grow the w. L L L I, 1, 96. R 3 I, 4, 26. W e e d y , consisting of weeds: her w. trophies, Hml. 2) a piece of iron or wood driven into timber to IV, 7, 175. cleave it: Troil. I, 3, 316. W e e k , the time from Sunday to S a t u r d a y ; a space W e d g e d , 1) cleft as with a wedge: my heart, as of seven days: Lucr. 213. Sonn. 116, 11. T p . II, 1, w. with a sigh, would rive in twain, Troil. 1, 1, 35. cf. 184. Wiv. I, 3, 8. IV, 3, 12. Err. Ill, 2, 101. V, 45. Unwedgeable. Ado II, 1, 369. L L L I, 1, 39. 303. I, 2, 135. IV, 2, 2) driven in like a wedge: where (in the crowd) 36. 41. Shr. II, 179. IV, 2, 74. All's Ml, 6, 99. Wint. a finger could not be w. in more, H 8 IV, 1, 58. it (your 1, 2, 39. IV, 4, 433. J o h n 1, 113. Ill, 1, 87. H 4 A II, wit) is strongly w. up in a blockhead, Cor. II, 3, 30. 2, 101. Ill, 3, 18. IIGC II, 5, 36. R 3 IV, 1, 97. 118 W e d l o c k , m a t r i m o n y : Lucr. 809. Merch. V, 32. IV, 1, 77. Troil. IV, 1, 9. Tit. IV, 3, 82. Rom. IV, 5, As III, 3, 82. V, 4, 150. W i n t . V, 1, 124. J o h n I, 117. 5. T i m . II, 2, 30. Oth. Ill, 4, 173. Cytnb. Ill, 2, 53. H6A V, 5, 62. II6C III, 3, 243. 118 II, 4, 40. Oth. V, = week-days, working days: does not divide the Sunday 2, 142. from the w. Hml. I, 1, 76. Proverbial: at fourscore it is too late a w. As II, 3, 74. 0 that I knew he were W e d l o c k - h y m n : As V, 4, 143. W e d n e s d a y , the fourth day of the week: Err. I, but in by the v.-. L L L V, 2, 61 (an expression taken 2, 55. Merch. I, 3, 127. W i n t . IV, 4, 280. R2 IV, 319. from hiring servants; = if I had him at my command). H4A I, 1, 103. Ill, 2, 173. V, 1, 138. H 4 B II, 1, 96. W e e k l y , from week to week, every week: whom II. 4, 94. Cor. I, 3, 64. Rom. Ill, 4, 17. 19. IV, 1, 90. I have w. sworn to marry, H4B I, 2, 270. Oth. Ill, 3, CI. W e e n , to fancy, to hope (erroneously): —ing to Wee, little, tiny, t h i n : he hath but a little w.face, redeem, and have installed me in the diadem, H6A II, Wiv. I, 4, 22. 5, 88. w. you of better luck in perjured witness than W e e d , subst. garment: the deed ¿hat spots and your master? H 8 V, 1, 136. cf. Overween. stains lope's modest snow-white w. Lucr. 196. thy youth's W e e p (impf. and partic. wept) to shed tears: Ven. proud livery ... will be a tattered w. Sonn. 2, 4. keep 221. 414. 949. 1062. 1090. Compl. 124. T p . HI, 1, invention in a noted to. 76, 6 (not to dress it new), w. 12. 76. Gent. II, 1, 23. II, 3, 2. 7. 28. 29 (he —s on). wide enough to wrap a fairy in, Mids. II, 1, 256. he IV, 2, 123. IV, 4, 170. 176. Meas. I, 4, 81. II, 2, 122. wore the humble w. Cor. II, 3, 229. I will rob Tellus Err. II, 1, 115. II, 2, 206. Ado II, 3, 153. IV, 1, 257. of her w., to strew thy green ivith floivers, Per. IV, 1, 258. V, 1, 175. V, 2, 82 etc. etc. the —ing philosopher, 14. Plur. — s: Gent. 11, 7, 42. Ado V, 3, 30. L L L Merch. I, 2, 53 (Heraclitus). —ing joys, H 6 B I, 1, V, 2, 811. Mids. II, 2, 71. T w . V, 262. 280. W i n t . 34. —ing water (i. e. tears) Compl. 304. many a dry IV, 4, 1. H 6 C 111, 3, 229. IV, 1, 104. Troil. Ill, 3, drop seemed a —ing tear, Lucr. 1375. said with —ing 239. Cor. II, 3, 161. Tit. I, 70. II, 1, 18. Ill, 1, 43. tears, As II, 4, 53. to w. upon the tainted place, Lucr. V, 3, 196. Rom. V, 1, 39. Hml. IV, 7, 81. Lr. IV, 7, 1746 (to wet it with tears); cf. J o h n V, 2, 29 and H8 III, 2, 399. —ing after this untimely bier, R2 V, 7. Cymb. V, 1, 23. W e e d , subst. a useless or noxious h e r b : they bid 6, 52. P e r . IV, 3, 41. his —ing into the needless stream, thee crop a w., thou pluckest a flower, Ven. 946. no As II, I, 46. Used of animals: let the stricken deer go grass, herb, leaf or w. 1055. the basest w. outbraves w. Hml. Ill, 2, 282. Tom will make them (dogs) w. and 'his dignity, Sonn. 94, 12. H5 IV, 1, 11. H8 V, 1, 52. wail, Lr. Ill, 6 , 7 4 . Figurative use: purple tears that Hml. I, 5, 32. Oth. IV, 2, 67. P l u r . — s : Lucr. 281. his wound wept, Ven. 1054. I have inly wept, T p . V, 870. Sonn. 69, 12. 94, 14. 124, 4. T p . IV, 1, 21. R2 200. my heart—s, H8 III, 2, 335. the dank earth —s III, 4, 38. 50. H 4 B IV, 4, 54. H 6 B III, 1, 31. H 6 C at thy languishment, Lucr. 1130. as the sun had ta'en II, 6, 21. R 3 II, 4, 13 (small herbs have grace, great his last leave of the —ing morn, Ven. 2. thy sun sets —s do grow apace). 15. Ill, 1, 103. Cor. II, 2, 109 —ing in the lowly west, R2 II, 4, 21. the —ing clouds, (as —s before a vessel under sail; i. e. water-plants). H 4 B I, 3, 61. she is the —ing welkin, I the earth, Tit. Rom. II, 3, 8. Mcb. V, 2, 30. Hml. Ill, 2, 268. Ill, 4, Ill, 1, 227. a river ... upon whose —ing margent she

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w u let, Compl. 39. fell in the — ing brook, Hml. IV, take me without —ing, H4B I, 2, 189. they to. not every 7, 176 (cf. Schiller's: du wirst hingehn, wo kein Tag stamp, Cymb. V, 4, 24. Metaphorically: more nor less nekr »eheinet, der Cocytus durch die Witten weinet), to others paying than by self-offences —ing, Meas. Ill, when our vaults have wept with drunken spilth of wine, 2, 280 (by examining his own offences; judging of Tim. II, 2, 168. Peculiar expression: the blood —* others by himself), he would have —ed thy brother by from my heart, H 4 B IT, 4, 58 (cf. — ing tears above). himself, V, 111. to. thy value with an even hand, Merch, The cause expressed by a clause: that he does I II, 7, 25. those that to. their pains in sense, All's I, 1, w. T p . I, 2, 434. to. that Harry's dead, H 4 B V, 2, 59. 240. A d o V, I, 211. R2 III, 4, 84. H 4 B IV, I, 67. H5 H 6 A IV, 3, 28. H6B HI, 2, 121. Per. IV, 2, 129. did II, 4,137. Troil. II, 2,-26. IV, 5, 81. Tit. 1, 55. Caes. tr. that it foresaw, Troil. I, 2, 10. By an infinitive: 1, 2, 146. Hml. I, 2, 13. L r . I, 1, 6. Oth. Ill, 3,119. to. to have that which it fears to lose, Sonn. 64, 14. Cymb. I, 4, 15. Per. V, 1, 89. That by which a thing would have wept to have seen our parting, Gent. II, 3, is counterbalanced, preceded by against or with: in 12. IV, 4, 150. 180. Wint. V, 2, 49. H8 III, 2, 335. that scales let there be —ed your lady's love against Cor. II, 1, 194. T i m . I, 2, 113. Ant. Ill, 2, 3. Per. some other maid, Rom. I, 2, 101. to. our sorrow with our comfort, T p . II, 1, 8. we cannot w. our brother III, 2, 104. Prepositions following; 1' at: to w. at woes, Compl. with ourself, 'Meas. II, 2, 126. to. oath with oath, and 307. to w. at what I am glad of, T p . Ill, 1, 74. to w. you will nothing to. Mids. Ill, 2, 131. Iw. my friend's at joy, A d o 1,1, 28. a deed whereat valour will w. Cor. affection with mine own, T i m . I, 2, 222. to. but the crime V, 6,134. —ing at my woes, T i t . Ill, 1,100. cf. Laer. with this. III, 5, 58. 1130 above. 2 ) for: dost w. for grief of my sustaining, Hence = to consider: to to. how once Isuffered in Laer. 1272. 'twill w.for having wearied you, T p . Ill, your crime, Sonn. 120, 8. the fair soul herself —ed 1,19. —ing for what she saw must come, Err. I, 1, 72. between loathness and obedience, at which end o'the Merch. Ill, 1, 11. As III, 2, 437. IV, 1, 154. John IV, beam should bow, T p . II, 1, 130 (in the dependant 3,106. R2 111, 2, 4 (for joy). V, 1, 87. H5 II, 2, 140. clause she omitted; or should for she would), if that R3 II, 2, 62. IV, 4, 60. H8 III, 1, 150. T i t . Ill, 1, 10. the injuries be justly —ed, T w . V, 375. not —ing well Bom. Ill, 5, 75. 77. Per. IV, 1, 80 etc. will w.for her the end, Wint. I, 2, 258. you w. this well, H4B V, 2, pardon, Ant. IV, 14, 45 ( = will seek to obtain her 102. R 3 III, 1, 46. H8 II, 4, 197. Caes. II, 1, 108. pirdon by tears). 3) over: w. o'er my father's death Mcb. 1,3, 154. Hml. I, 3, 17. 29. IV, 3, 6. IV, 7,150. aitew, All's 1,1,3. seems to w. over his country's wrongs, Ant. II, 6, 32. cf. Unweighed, Unweighing. With a H 4 A IV, 3, 81. the silly owner of the goods —s over double accus., = to estimate, to esteem: her worth them, H6B I, 1, 226. that he does to. too light, All's III, 4, 32. in cases of W i t h an accusative denoting an effect: wept her- defence 'tis best to io. the enemy more mighty than he self blind, Gent. II, 3, 14. I'll w. what's left away, seems, H5 II, 4, 43. Err. II, 1, 115. —ing his welcomes forth, W i n t IV, 4, And — to make account of, to care f o r : eternal 559. will to. my date of life out for his sweet life's loss, love in love's fresh case —s not the dust and injury of John IV, 3, 106. w. the fire out, R 2 V, 1, 48. your eyes age, Sonn. 108, 10. you to. me not f 0 that's you care w. out at Pandar's fall, Troil. V, 10, 49. I could w. not for me, L L L V, 2, 27. for life I prize it as Iw. my spirit from mine eyes, Caes. IV, 3, 99. w. our sad grief, Wint. Ill, 2, 44. Iw. it lightly, were it heavier, bosoms empty, Mcb. IV, 3, 2. he cannot w. it (his for- R3 III, 1, 121. my person, which Iw. not, H8 V, 1,125. tune) back again, Ant. II, 6, 111. Tears, or in general 2 ) to have weight; in a proper and a figurative that which is shed, as object: purple tears that his sense ( = to be worth): you to. equally, Meas. IV, 2, wound wept, Ven. 1054. every tear that I do w. L L L 31. your vows to her and me ... will even w. Mids. IV, 3, 33. my heart wept blood, Wint. V, 2, 97. will III, 2, 133. let every word to. heavy of her worth, A l i a you have them tr. our horses' bloodt H5 IV, 2, 12. he III, 4, 31. well —ing sums of gold, IV, 3, 203. while will w. millstones, R 3 I, 4, 245. orphans' tears wept they to. so even, John II, 332. her dowry shall w. equal on 'em (his bones) H8 III, 2, 399. to w. seas, Troil. with a queen, 486. each — s nor less nor more, Troil. Ill, 2, 84. to. your tears into the channel, Caes. I, 1, IV, 1, 65. I love them as they to. Cor. II, 2, 78. how 63. (cf. where I may to. my fill, H6C II, 5, 113). heavy —s my lord, Ant. IV, 15, 32. With an accus. Transitively, = to lament with tears: she —s of the effect: we shall to. thee to the beam, All's II, 3, Troy's painted woes, Laer. 1492. to. love's woe, Sonn. 162. whose white —s down the airy scale of praise, 30, 7. —ing my fathers wreck, T p . I, 2, 390. All's V, Compl. 226. he —s King Richard down, R2 III, 4, 89. 3,64. R2 II, 2, 25. 27. H 6 A I, 1, 88. H6B 111, 1, 221. thou (sleep) no more wilt w. my eyelids down, H4B III, R3 II, 4, 59. Rom. Ill, 5, 78. Lr. IV, 6, 180. Cymb. 1, 7 (close them by thy heaviness). R3 V, 3,153. T i m . I, 4, 20. V, 1, 154. my friends that must w. out my afflictions, W e e p e r , one who sheds tears, a mourner: to make they that my trust must grow to, live not here, H8 III, the to. laugh, the laugher weep, Compl. 124. 1. 88 ( = outweigh; i. e. make amends for). W e e p l n g l y , with tears: their kind acceptance to. With against or with, — to have the same weight beseeched, Compl. 207. as, to counterbalance: know our own estate, how able W e e p l n g - r l p e , ready to weep: L L L V, 2, 274. such a work to undergo, to to. against his opposite, H 4 B H6C I, 4, 172. I, 3, 55. in every thing the purpose must to. with the W e e p i n g s , lamentations: the incessant to. of my folly, H4B II, 2, 196 (as the purpose is, such the folly wife, Err. I, 1, 71 (later F f weeping). must be; i. e. a foolish purpose requires as foolish a W e e » , to know: I bind, on pain of punishment, behaviour), what you bestow, in him I'll counterpoise, the world to w. we stand up peerless, Ant. I, 1, 39. and make him w. with her, T i m . 1, 1, 146. W e i g h , 1) to ascertain the weight of, to examine Transitively, = to be equivalent to in weight: how by the balance: to to. the flesh, Merch. IV, 1, 255. will much your chain —s, Err. IV, 1, 28. I know them, yea,

w and what they w. Ado V, 1, 93. / to. not you, LLL V, 2, 26 (am not so heavy as you), what four throned ones could have —ed such a compounded one? H81,1, I I . the heads of all thy brother cardinals ... —ed not a hair of his, III, 2, 259. all these are portable, with other graces —ed, Mcb. IV, 3, 90 (counterbalanced by graces; with = by). 3) to be heavy, to press hard: her heart —s sadly, All's 111, 5, 70. that perilous stuff which —s upon the heart, Mcb. V, 3, 45. cf. H4B III, 1, 7. 4) to raise, to lift (an anchor): from whence at first she —ed her anchorage, Tit. I, 73. W e i g h t , 1) a measure by which the gravity of things is ascertained: a w. of carrion flesh, Merch. IV, 1, 41. there was the w. that pulled me down, H8 III, 2,408 (by turning the scale), from whose so many •—sof baseness cannot a dramof worth bedrawn, Cymb. HI, 5, 88. by w., by the w., and in w. = according to the quantity measured by the balance, and hence in just proportion, exactly: make us pay down for our offence by w. the words of heaven, Meas. I, 2, 125. purchased by the w. Merch. Ill, 2, 89. which in w. to re-answer, his pettiness would bow under, H5 III, 6, 136. so much by w. hate I her Diomed, Troil. V, 2, 168. thy madness shall be paid by w. Hml. IV, 5, 156. = measure in general, degree: thou lovest me not vith the full w. that I love thee, As I, 2, 9. that my integrity and truth to you might be affronted with the match andw. of such a winnowed purity in love, Troil. Ill, 2, 173. how much the quantity, the w. as much as I do love my father, Cymb. IV, 2, 17 (how = however). 2) the quantity ascertained by the balance; gravity: a bell, once set on ringing, with his own w. goes, Lucr. 1494. heavier by the w. of a man, Ado III, 4, 26. Shr. II,206. All's II, 3, 126. H4B II, 4, 276. Troil. IV, 1, 71. Metaphorically: know by measure the enemies'vi. Troil. I, 3, 203. 3) heaviness, ponderousness: grief boundeth where it falls, not with the empty hollowness, but w. R2 I, 2, 59. H4B I, 1, 122. Ant. IV, 15, 34. V, 2, 102. 4) burden, load: the beast that bears me, tired with my woe, plods dully on, to bear that w. in me, Sonn. 50, 6. burdened with lesser w. Err. 1,1, 109. burdened with like iv. of pain, II, 1, 36. I would bend under any heavy w. that he'll enjoin me to, Ado V, 1, 286. what passion hangs these —s upon my tongue? As I, 2, 269. J o h n III, 1, 297. R2 III, 4, 31. IV, 204. H4A V, 3, 35. H6C IV, 6, 51. V, 1, 36. V, 7, 24. R3 I, 2, 31. H8 V, 3, 66. Lr. V, 3, 323. Ant. I, 4, 25. I, 5, 21. III, 1, 36. 5) importance, consequence: quittance of desert and merit according to the w. and worthiness, H5 II, 2, 35. full of poise and difficult w. Oth. Ill, 3, 82 (Ql of difficulty), of w. = important, momentous: Ado III, 3, 91. H5 I, 2, 5. H8 III, 1, 71. of no lessw. L L L II, 7. of more w. Ant. I, 2, 71. Weightless, having no weight, light: that light and w. down, H4B IV, 5, 33. Weighty, 1) heavy, ponderous: it is too w. for your grace to wear, R3 III, 1, 120 (Ql heavy). Metaphorically, = grievous, afflictive: how you standminded in the w. difference between the king and you, H8 III, 1, 58. if after two days' shine Athens contain thee, attend our — er judgement, Tim. Ill, 5, 102. 2) important, momentous, forcible: my reasons

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are both good and w. Shr. I, 1, 253. a w. cause of love, IV, 4, 26. that w. charge, H6A II, 1, 62. this w. business, H6B I, 1, 170. 1, 2, 86. Ill, 1, 289. R3 I, 1, 148. 11,2, 144. Ill, 1, 119. H8 Prol. 2. II, 1, 144. Ill, 2, 234. V, 1, 18. Mcb. Ill, 1, 126. Weird ( 0 . Edd. weyard or weyward; later Ff in Mcb. IV, 1, 136 wizard. Monosyll. in 111, 1, 2; dissyll. II, 1, 20 and IV, 1, 136; dubious in I, 3, 32 & III, 4, 133) subservient to Destiny: the w. sisters, Mcb. I, 3, 32. I, 5, 8. II, 1, 20. Ill, 4, 133. IV, 1, 136. w. women, III, 1, 2. W e k e , sound imitative of the voice of a pig: Tit. IV, 2, 146. W e l c o m e , adj. (superl. —st, H6A II, 2, 56) received with pleasure, grateful, agreeable: Gent. II, 5, 4. Meas. II, 2, 26. L L L I, 1, 315. As II, 7, 198. All's II, 1, 211. H4A 1, 1, 66 (w. news). H6A II, 2, 56. H6B II, 3,14. Tim. I, 2, 134. Mcb. IV, 3, 138 (w. and unwelcome things) etc. etc. With to before the person gratified: Gent. II, 4, 113. II, 7, 71. V, 4, 123. Wiv. II, 2, 157. Err. II, 2, 118. Merch. IV, 2, 4. Alls IV, 4, 16. R2 III, 1, 31 etc. before the place where one is received: Gent. II, 5, 6. Tw. II, 3, 106. R3 1, 1, 124. Per. Ill, 1, 30 etc. Used absolutely, in saluting a new comer: Tp. V, 125. 165. Gent, if, 4, 100. Wiv. V, 5, 33. Mids. II, 1, 247. Cor. II, 1, 198. V, 5, 6. Rom. III, 5, 24 etc. etc. With to: LLL II, 90. As II, 7, 105. H6A 1, 2, 47. Gent. II, 5, 1. Merch. V, 139. All's I, 2, 22. H4B II, 4, 316. H6C II, 2, 1. R3 III, 1, 1 etc. With into: w. into our territories, H6A V, 3,146. you're w. into our kingdom, H8 II, 2,76. w. hither: Merch. Ill, 2, 223. As II, 7, 195. Wint. V, 1,151. R2 III, 3, 122. Mcb. I, 4, 27. IV, 3, 161 etc. w. home: Merch. V, 113. Shr. IV, 1, 109. Cor. II, 1, 197. Hml. II, 2, 85. Used as an expression of readiness to serve another, = I am at your service: my business is a word or two with Claudio. And very w. Meas. Ill, 1, 49. you are w., sir, adieu. Farewell to me, sir, and w. to you, L L L II, 213. I mean to shift my bush, and then pursue me as you draw your bow; you are w. all, Shr. V, 2,48. I humbly thank your ladyship. Your honour is most w. Oth.IV,3,4. thus defied, I thank thee for myself. Thou art w., Caius, Cymb. Ill, 1,69. Lord Helicane, a word. With me? and w. Per. II, 4, 22. W e l c o m e , subst salutation or kind reception of a new comer: Meas. Ill, 1, 45. Err. Ill, 1, 23. 25. 26. Mids. V, 94. 100. Merch. V, 38. Wint. IV, 4, 560. R2 I, 3, 212. H8 III, 2, 401. Troil. Ill, 3, 168 (O. Edd. the w., M. Edd. w.). Cor. II, 1, 200. IV, 5, 151. Tim. I, 2,16. Mcb. 111,4,2 etc. With an objective genitive (i. e. expressing the thing or person received): makes summer's w. thrice more wished, Sonn. 56,14. how thou lovest us, show in our brother'sw. Wint. 1,2,174. repeal him with the w. of his mother, Cor. V, 5, 5. whose w. had poisoned mine, Lr. II, 4, 39. With a subjective genitive: find the w. of a noble foe, Troil. I, 3, 309. The possessive pronoun objectively: confirm his w. Gent. II, 4, 101. 102. pray God our good cheer may answer my good will and your goodw. here, Err. Ill, 1, 20. Shr. V, 1, 13. All's IV, 4, 14. R2 V, 2, 29. Troil. IV, 5, 276. Tim. I, 2,135. Mcb. IV, 1, 132. Lr. II, 4, 236. Ant. II, 6, 47. subjectively: I hold your dainties cheap and your w. dear, Err. Ill, 1, 21. weeping his —s forth, Wint. IV, 4, 560. H8 I, 4, 37. Rom. I, 2, 37. Mcb. Ill, 4, 8. With to: Sonn. 110, 13. L L L II, 93. Wint. IV, 4, 65. H4A IV, 3, 59. H6A IV, 3, 40

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hither: Gent. II, 4, 102. Ext. Ill, 1, 68. John II, 11. 1(103, 10. what care I who calk me u\ or illf 112, 3. home. R2 V, 2, 29. Cor. V, 6, 51. to bid to.: to thee wwiltt please your worship to come in f No, I thank you, and hy company I bid a hearty to. Tp. V, 111. bid 11 am very to. Wiv. 1, 1, 278 (I feel quite comfortable these jentlemen to. Wiv. 1,1, 201. Err. Ill, 1, 68. Ado heerc). if you think to. to carry this as you may, Meas. I, 1, 135. Merch. I, 2, 140. Wint. IV, 4, 65. H6A IV, Illll, 1,267 ( = good), one woman is fair, yet I am «•.; 3, 40. Ant. IV, 14, 136 etc. to give a p. to. or to give annother is wise, yet I am to. Ado II, 3, 28 (it does me to. toa p.: Lncr. 90. Sonn. 110, 13. Err. I, 1, 115. nao harm) this is not so to. as I looked for, L L L I, 1, Merci. V, 133. Shr. Ind. 1, 103. John II, 11. 15. R2 2881. hence, away, now all is w. Mids. II, 2,25. I have V, 2,29. H4A IV, 3, 59. H8 I, 4, 57. Troll. IV, 5, a i device to make all to. Ill, 1, 18. his leg is but so so, 59 eti. to have to..- Gent. II, 5, 11. L L L II, 92. Shr. aandyet 'tis to. As 111,5,119. the meat was w. Slir. IV, II, 97. Cor. V, 6, 51. murò, make their to. Tim. I, 2, I,1,172. in what he did profess, to. found, All's II, 1,105 135. to make society the tweeter w. Mcb. Ill, 1, 43. (c cf. Cor. II, 2,48). say 'tis to. (the statue of Hermione) not piying me a w. Mid». V, 99. our duties did hit to. WW int. V,3,20. hasty marriage seldom proveth re. H6C pay, Mcb. IV, 1, 132 (onr duties, i. e. reverence and IVV, 1, 18 ^cf. Prove), his health is to. Tim. Ill, 1, 12. homqge, were offered him at his visit). 133. I am not to. in health, Caes. II, 1, 257. each oppoWeleame, vb. to salate or receive with kindness ; sitite that blanks the face of joy meet what I would have and netaphorically, to be pleased with: thy palfrey WJD. and it destroy, Hml. Ill, 2, 231. oft we mar what's —s tie warm approach of sweet desire, Ven. 386. well WJJ. Lr. I, 4, 369. I am sorry for your displeasure, but was he —d by the Roman dame, Lncr. 51. a brow un- ahU will sure be to. Oth. Ill, 1,45. all may be to. enough, bent Hat seemed to to. too«, 1509. she doth w. daylightAAnt. 111,3,50. alls not to. V,2,326. cf. above all, the with ier ditty, Pilgr. 199. to. him then according to his beeginning of the dialogue in All's II, 4. Substantively: worth Gent. II, 4, 83. Err. IV, 4, 18. 37 (home). Shr. II wish him to. Meas. Ill, 2, 97. Ado V, 1, 333.. Merch. 1,1, 47 (to town). 201. Ill, 1,3. Wint. IV, 4, 57. John IVV, 1,420. All's I, 1, 193. God send him to. All's I, I, V, 3,15. V, 4,12 (home). R2 II, 2, 7. H4B V, 2, 11 1990. what would my lord and father t Nothing but w. (to w the condition of the time; i. e. to meet it). H5 too thee, H4BIV,4.19. to. be with you, gentlemen, Hml. V PrU. 34. H6B I, 1, 36. R3 III, 1, 6. 139. IV, 1, 51. II,1,2,398. cf. such phrases as hearing to. of your lordIV, 4,439. V, 3, 260 (home). Tit. I, 147 (to Rome). shJtip, Tim. Ill, 6,29. I hope w. of to-morrow, Ant. IV, V. 2, 33 (to this world's light). 43. Caes. II, 1, 131. 2,i, 42. Per. IV Prol. 2. = in good health: your friends are to. Gent. II, 4, Weleamer, one who receives a new comer : thou 1223. I am glad to see your worships to. Wiv. I, 1, 80. wofulw. of glory, R3 IV, 1, 90. yoiou look not to. Merch. I, 1, 73. Err. IV, 2, 31. Ado I, Welfare, 1) wellbeing, good health; until her 1,1, 304. IV, 1, 63. Mids. Ill, 2, 77. Merch. Ill, 2, 238. husbanfs w. she did hear, Luer. 263. and sick of to., IVV, 1, 396. Wint. I, 2, 387. John IV, 3,104.139. H4B found a kind of meetness to be diseased, Sonn. 118, 7.I, , 1, 138. 139. Ill, 2, 92 (Ff lookw., Qq like to.). IV, we hwe been praying for our husbands' to. Merch. V, 4,1, 116. R3 II, 4, 40. H8 II, 4, 204. Rom. V, 1, 16. Trim. I, 1, 1. Caes. II, 2, 53. II, 4,13. Mcb. Ill, 4, 52. 114 healths). 2)prosperity, happiness: H6B III, 1, 80. H6C IV, 566. Ant. I, 3, 72. II, 5, 31. 39. II, 7, 35 etc. Used of the dead, = at rest, free from the cares 3, 39 Tit. V, 3, 110. of>f the world, happy: what were more holy than to « « I k e d , see Whelked. Welkin, the sky. Ven. 921. Lncr. 116. Tp. 1,2, rejejoice the former queen is to. Wint. V, 1,30. how doth 4. Wtv. I, 3, 101. L L L 1, 1, 221 (the —'s vicegerent, thAe king t Exceeding to., his cares are now all ended, in Aimado's letter). 111,68. IV,2,5. Mids. Ill, 2, 356 H i 4 B V, 2, 3. she is w. Rom. V, 1, 17. you love your Shr. hd. 2, 47. T w . II, 3, 59. 111,1,65 (out of my to., chJiild so ill that you run mad, seeing that she is to. IV, Imigit say 'element', but the word is overworn). Wint. 5,'), 76. they were to. at peace when I did leave them, I, 2, 336 (look on me with your to. eye, = heavenly ; Mtfcb. IV, 3, 179 (cf. 177). we use to say the dead are Germin : mil deinem Himmelsauge, i. e. pure and in- WJJ. Ant. II, 5, 33. 2) in a good or satisfactory manner: to. painted nocea like heaven. According to other9, = blue). JohnV, 2, 172. V, 5, 2. H4B II, 4, 182. R3V, 3,341. ididol, Ven. 212. a to. proportioned steed, 290. can so WJJ. defend her, 472. thrive to. 640. foreknowing w. .. Tit. II, 1,212.224.227. Well, subst. 1) ^ spring, a fountain: this brand thihere he could not die, 245. whose taste her lips well she qtenched in a cool to. by, Sonn. 154, 9. clear —s kmtew, 543. look to. to her heart, 580. to. demanded, sprint, not, Pilgr. 281. have emptied all their fountains TjTp. 1, 2, 139. thou hast slept to. 305. thou hast done in myv., and mine 1 pour your ocean all among, Compi. WJJ. 494; cf. R2 111, 3, 170 and Cymb. Ill, 3, 54. to 255. it Saint Gregory's w. Gent. IV, 2,84 (or sub 2 ?). spipeak to. of his friend, Tp. II, 2, 95. you shall w. be make — s and Niobes of the maids and wives, Troil. V,spipared, Meas. II, 2,14 (easily; cf. Tp. II, 1,172). fare 10, lf)(i. e. dissolved in tears, cf. like Niobe, all tears, yeie to. Merch. I, 1, 58; R3 III, 1, 97; Ant. II, 6, 73. thdiou speakest it to. Merch.II,2,161 ( = thou art right; Hml. , 2, 149). 2) a deep narrow pit of water: Wiv. IV, 2, 62. cf:f. Cor. 1 , 6 , 14 and H5 111, 7, 123. see Say), to. paiaid, IV, 1, 415. shall acquit him w. As I, 1, 134. he JohnV, 2, 139. R2 IV, 184. Rom. Ill, 1, 99. Well, adv. and adj. (the line of demarcation is s noi like to marry me to. II 1,3,93. she's not to. married, hardh definable) in a good state, o r i n a good manner ; Rctom. IV, 5,77. my point ... will be throughly wrought, in all the variations of sense that the word good is or-r to. or ill, as this day's battle's fought, Lr. IV, 7, 98. w.o. said, Ant. II, 5, 46 etc. etc. = conveniently: yet able ti express. 1 ) = in such a state or of such a quality as one mrnayst thou to. be tasted, Ven. 128. his grief may be would wish: not blame your pleasure, be it ill or w. coiompared to. to one sore sick, 701. as to. as w. might Sonn.58, 14. to mar the subject that before was to. be^e, Pilgr. 212. nor none so bad, but it may to. be told,

w

1351

W e l l - d e a l i n g , fair in dealing with others, honest: B3IV, 4,459 etc. = happily, fortunately: ice prosper to. in our return, Tp. II, 1, 73. you are to. o'ertaen, to merchants, our w. countrymen, Err. I, 1, 7. W e l l - d e f e n d e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) well Mereh. IV, 2, 5 (cf. Meet), his father ... is w. to live, II,2,55 (old Gobbo's speech), you re to. to live, Wint. guarded: your w. honour, Meas. V, 407. W e l l - d e r i v e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) good III, 3,125 (the clown's speech), and w. am like to do, by birth and nature: corrupts a w. nature with his inAnt. II, 6, 74 etc. 3 ) much, greatly: I can be to. contented, Veil. 513. ducement, All's III, 2, 90. cf. Derive. the kiss shall be thine own as to. as mine, 117. ne'er W e l l . d e s e r v i n g , full of merit, worthy: Merch. pleased her babe so to. 974. resembling w. his pale IV, 1,239. B2 II, 1,194. H4A III, 1,138. H8 111,2,98. cheeks, 1169. that liked of her master as w. as to. W e l l - d e s i r e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) much might be, Pilgr. 212. a silly answer and fitting w. a sought and invited: Oth. II, 1, 206. sheep, Gent. I, 1, 81. I pray she may, as w. for the Well-dlapesed, well affected, loyal: you lose a encouragement of the like ...as for the enjoying of thythousand w. hearts, B2 II, 1, 206. life, Meas. 1,2,192. never touch u>. welcome to thy hand, Well-dalng, acquitting one's self well: whether Err. II, 2, 118. the lady is very te. worthy, Ado I, 1, the horse by him became his deed, or he his manage by 224. this deed will be w. welcome to Lorenzo, Merch. the to. steed, Compl. 112. IT, 2, 4. I am as tc. in my wits as thou art, T w . IV, 2, Well-educated (not hyphened in O. Edd.) having 95. all the nearest things to my heart, asw.my chamber-a good education, well instructed: define, define, to. infant, L L L I, 2, 99 (Armado's speech). councils, Wint. I, 2, 236 etc. etc. 4) Used, in replying, or in beginning a speech, not W e l l • famed, famous: Troil. IV, 5, 173. W e l l - f a v a n r e d , well-looking, handsome, pretty: only to express satisfaction or acqniescence (f. i. Tp. II, 1, 139. IV, 1, 50. Mids. Ill, 1, 48), bat as a mere Gent. II, 1, 54. Wiv. II, 2, 285. Ado 111, 3, 15. T w . expletive, = why: Tp. II, 1, 26. 221. II, 2, 47. Ill, I, 5, 169. Lr. II, 4, 259. Per. IV, 1, 86: W e l l - f a n g h t e n , bravely fought: in this glorious 3, 10. Gent. 1,1, 127. Ill, 1, 283. Meas. I, 2, 88. II, and w. field ( = battle) H5 IV, 6, 18. 2, 58. Merch. IV, 1, 448. B2 III, 3, 170 etc. W e l l - fannd, standing the test, tried, approved: Well-McempUahed, (not hyphened in 0 . Edd.) furnished with good qnalities: Gent. IV, 3, 13. L L L in what he did profess, to. All's II, 1, 105. our to. successes, Cor. II, 2, 48 (found to be as great as they II, 56. W e l l - a e « i » l n t e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) well were reported), cf. Well-warranted, and Well-seen sub See. known: Err. IV, 3, 2. Well-gaverned (not hyphened in 0. Edd.) well W e l l - » - d a y , exclamation expressive of dislike or grief, = ah, woe, alas: Ow., Mistress Ford! having mannered: a virtuous and w. youth, Bom. I, 5, 70. W e l l - s r a c e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) being an honest man to your husband, to give him such cause of suspicion, Wiv. Ill, 3,106. I am as well in my wits in favour with others, popular: after a to. actor leaves as any man in lUyria. W. that you were, sir, T w . IV, the stage, R2 V, 2, 24. 2,116. O io., lady, if he be not drawn now, H5II, 1,38. W e l l - k n i t , strongly compacted, having a firm Ah, to., he's dead, Rom. Ill, 2, 37. 0 w., that ever I frame: O v>. Samson I strong-jointed Samson t L L L was bom, IV, 5, 15. when, to., we could scarcely help I, 2, 77 (Armado's speech). W e l l - k n a w n , fully and generally known: H4B ourselves, Per. II, 1, 23. Substantively: his daughter's woe and heavy w. in her unholy service, Per. IV, 4,49. Ind. 21. Well-advised, see Advise and Advised. Well-labauring, working hard and successfully: W e l l - a - n e a r , well-a-day, alas: the lady shrieks whose w. sword had three times slain the appearance and w. does fall in travail with her fear, Per. Ill of the king, H4B I, 1, 127. Prol. 51. Well-learned, fall of learning, versed in science: W e l l - apparelled (not hyphened in O. Edd.) R3 III, 5, 100. well dressed, adorned: Bom. I, 2, 27. W e l l - l i k i n g , good-conditioned, plnmp: to. wits W e l l - appointed, see Appoint 3. they have; gross, gross; fat, fat, L L L V, 2, 268. W e l l - a r m e d (not hyphened in O. Edd.) well W e l M e a t (not hyphened in O. Edd.) lost in a famished with weapons of offence or defence: in good cause: my w. life, All's I, 3, 254. strong proof of chastity w. Bom. I, 1, 216. where W e l l - m e a n i n g (not hyphened in O. Edd.) having they boast to have w. friends, Lr. Ill, 7, 20. good intentions, harmless: plain to. soul, B2II, 1,128. W e l l - b a l a n c e d , see Weal-balanced. Well-meant, sincere, not feigned: his demand W e l l - b e h a v e d , becoming, decent: gave such springs not from Edwards to. honest love, H6C III, 3,67. orderly and w. reproof to all uncomeliness, Wiv. Well-minded, well disposed: H6C IV, 8, 27. II, 1, 59. W e l l - n i g h , see Nigh. W e l l • belaved, greatly beloved: H4A I, 3, 267. Well-ardered, having a good organization or 118 II, 4, 238. Caes. Ill, 2, 180. form of government: there is a law in each to. notion, Well-beseeming (not hyphened in O. Edd.) well Troil. II, 2, 180. becoming: H 4 A I, 1, 14. Tit. II, 3, 56. Well-paid, receiving good pay for service: his to. W e l l - barn, of good birth: John II, 278. ranis, Ant. Ill, 1, 32. Well-breathed, long-breathed, lasting, of good Well-palnted, 1) skilfully painted: Ven. 212. bottom: on thy w. horse, Ven. 678. Lucr. 1443. Well-cfceaen, selected with good judgment: H6C 2) artfully feigned: to. passion, Oth. IV, 1, 268. IV, 1, 7. cf. H8 II, 2, 2. Well-practised, experienced: I will stoop ...to Well-enntcnted, satisfied, happy: if thou survive your to. wise directions, H4B V, 2, 121. my ¡e. day, Sonn. 32, 1. Well-prapartlaned (not hyphened in O. Edd.) 86 S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T . II.

1352

W

well shaped, well formed: a w. steed, Ven. 290. his w. beard made rough, H6B III, 2, 175. Well-refined (not hyphened in O.Edd.) polished in a high degree, free from any rudeness or impropriety: in polished form of w. pen, Sonn. 85, 8. Well-reputed (not hyphened in 0 . Edd.) having a good reputation, respectable: such weeds as may beseem some w. page, Gent. II, 7, 43. W e l l - r e s p e c t e d , ruled by reasonable considerations : if w. honour bid me on, I hold as little counsel with weak feat as you, H4A IV, 3, 10. Well-sailing, passing swiftly by means of sails: w. ships, Per. IV, 4, 17. Well-seeing, quicksighted: Sonn. 148, 14. Well-seeming, having a good appearance: this w. Angela, Meas. Ill, 1, 232. mis-shapen chaos of w. forms, Rom. I, 1, 185. W e l l - s e e n , see See. W e l l - s k i l l e d , skilful: Lucr. 1520. Well-spoken, speaking with grace, eloquent: a knight w., neat and fine, Gent. 1, 2, 10. these fair w. days, R3 I, 1, 29. Clarence is w. I, 3, 348. cf. better spoken in Lr. IV, 6, 10, and fair-spoken. Well-took, well taken, well undergone: we thank you for your w. labour, Hml. II, 2, 83. Well-tuned, having a good sound, melodious: Philomel had ended the w. warble, Lucr. 1080. the true concord of w. sounds, Sonn. 8, 5. the w. horns, Tit. II, 3, 18. Well-warranted, proved to be good, and trusted on good warrant (cf. Well-found): Meas. V, 254. W e l l - w e i g h i n g , see Weigh. Well-willers, friends: be ruled by your w. Wiv. I, 1, 72 (Evans' speech). Well-wished, attended by good wishes, beloved: a w. king, Meas. II, 4, 27. Well-won, honestly gained: myw. thrift, Merch. I, 3, 51 (Ff. well-worne). Welsh, pertaining to Wales, or native of Wales: Wiv. II, 1, 209. Ill, 1, 100. V, 3, 13. V, 5, 85. 145 (a W.goat). 172 ( W. flannel). H4A II, 4, 372 (a W. hook, i. e. a sort of bill hooked at the end). Ill, 1, 247. H5 IV, 7, 112. V, 1, 82. the W. = the people of Wales: H4B I, 3, 79. 83. Iam W. ( = a Welshman) H5 IV, 7, 110; cf. Wiv. Ill, 1, 100. Substantively, = the language of Wales: H4A III, 1, 50. 120. 193. 201. 209. 233. 239. Welshman, a native of Wales: Wiv. II, 2, 317. R2 II, 4, 5. H4A I, 1, 41. H5 IV, 1, 51. 86. R3 IV, 4, 477. Plur. Welshmen: R2 III, 2, 73. Ill, 3, 2. H5 IV, 7, 102. H6C II, 1, 180. R3 IV, 3, 47. W e l s h w o m e n , women native of Wales: H4A I, I, 45. Wen, a fleshy excrescence: I do allow this w. (i. e. Falstaff) to be as familiar with me as my dog, H4B II, 2, 115. Wench, a female person, a woman; not always in a bad sense, as at present, but used as a general familiar expression, in any variation of tone between tenderness and contempt: know, gentle w., it small avails my mood, Lucr. 1273. as leaky as an unstanched w. Tp. I, 1, 51. well demanded, w. I, 2, 139 (Prospero to Miranda). 412.479. Temperance was a delicate w. II, 1, 43. to weep like a young w. that had buried her grandam, Gent. II, 1, 24. but tell me, w. II, 7, 59. Ill, 1, 312. Meas. II, 2, 124. IV, 3, 180. Err. Ill, 1, 34.

109. IV, 3, 53. 55. 58. L L L I, 1, 265. 285. 290. I, 2, 62. 129. II, 257. Ill, 24. IV, 1, 126. IV, 3, 385. V, 2, 25. 82. 256. 321. 414. 682. Merch. II, 2, 175. Shr. 1, 1, 69. II, 161. 250. Ill, 2, 168. 240. IV, 4, 99. V, 2, 180. All's IV, 3, 123. Tw. I, 3, 45. II, 3, 194. II, 5, 120. 198. Wint. Ill, 3, 62. IV, 4, 318. 335. 618. H4A I, 2, 11. 46. H4B II, 1, 161. II, 2, 152. II, 4, 405. IV, 3, 101. H6A IV, 7, 41. V, 3, 34. R3 I, 1, 155. H8 III, 1, 1. 148. III. 2, 295. IV, 2, 81. 99. 167. Troil. IV, 2, 95. V, 2, 70. Tit. Ill, 1, 283. Rom. II, 4,4. 14. 42. II, 5, 45. Ill, 3, 143. Caes. I, 2, 274. Lr. III, 2, 84. Oth. Ill, 3, 313. V, 2, 272. Ant. 1, 2, 36. II, 2, 231. Per. IV Prol. 16. W e n c h i n g , running after wenches, lecherous: Troil. V, 4, 35. Wenchless, having no store of wenches: we lost too much money this mart by being too w. Per. IV, 2, 5. W e n c h - l i k e , womanish: do not play in w. words with that which is so serious, Cymb. IV, 2, 230. Wend (the impf. went see sub Go), to go: w. you with this letter, Meas. IV, 3,150. Twice employed for the sake of the rhyme: hopeless and helpless doth Aegeonw. Err. I, 1, 158. back to Athens shall the lovers w. Mids. Ill, 2, 372. West, 1) the region where the sunsets; with the article: Sonn 132, 8. H4A 1,3, 195. H4B Ind. 3. Rom. Ill, 2, 3. Mcb. Ill, 3, 5. Otb. IV, 2, 144. throned by the w. Mids. II, 1, 158. from the w. John II, 409. in the w. Ven. 530. Sonn. 73, 6. Err. I, 2, 7. R2 II, 4, 21. R3 IV, 4, 486. Cymb. V, 5, 476. Without the article: by east, w., north and south, L L L V, 2, 566. by east andw. J o h n II, 381. from east, w., north and south, Wint. 1,2,203. from east to w. Troil.II, 3,274. from south to w. Oymb. V, 5, 471. whether for east or w. Cor. I, 2, 10. stealing unseen to w. Sonn. 33, 8. Prepositions omitted: w. of this place, As IV, 3, 79. there lies your way, due w. Tw. Ill, 1, 145. w. of this forest, H4B IV, 1, 19. they take their courses east, w., north, south, IV, 2, 104. Cor. 11, 3, 24. east and w. Hml. I, 4, 17. Adjectively: the w. end of the wood, Gent. V, 3, 9. my East and W. Indies, Wiv. I, 3, 79. the w. corner, L L L I, 1, 249. 2) the countries lying in that region: that utmost corner of the w., John II, 29. all the wealthy kingdoms of the w. H6B I, 1, 154. to this part of the w. Cymb. IV, 2, 349. 3) a westerly wind: a south w. blow on ye, Tp. I, 2, 323. Per. IV, 1, 51. I am but mad north north w. Hml. II, 2, 396. Westerly, coming from the west: is this wind w. Per. IV, 1, 51. Western, being in the west: Gent. V, 1, 1. Meas. IV, 1, 29. Mids. II, 1, 166. IV, 1, 112. As III, 2, 93 (w. Ind). John V, 5, 2. H6C V, 3, 6. R3 IV, 4, 433. 482. Mcb. I, 2, 12. Westminster, the western part of London; seat of the royal palace: H4B II, 4, 384. abbot of W. R2 IV, 152. V,6, 19. The kings crowned in the cathedral: H6B I, 2, 37. IV, 4, 31. R3 IV, 1, 32. Westmoreland (O. Edd. Westmerland); Earl of W., baronial title of several noblemen intimately allied to the royal house of England: H4A I, 1, 31. Ill, 2, 170 etc. H4B I, 1, 18. 135 etc. H5 II, 2, 70. IV, 3, 19. 34. H6C I, 1, 61. 88. Westward, toward the west: Wint. IV, 4,296. H4A HI, 1, 76. With/rom: Rom. 1,1,129. Hml. I, 1,36.

w W e s t w a r d - h o , probably an exclamation often heard from the watermen on the Thames: Tw. HI, I , 146. Wet, adj. consisting of water, or moistened with water (or tears); and generally opposed to dry: Ven. 83. 966. Wint. V. 3, 81. H4B 111, 1, 27. V, 1, 95. Lr. IV, 7, 71. Ant. II, 7, 55. Cymb. V, 5, 35. Substantively: applying V). to w. Compl. 40. messenger of w. All's 1,3, 157. Wet, vb. (partic. wet: R3I,2,163.216) to moisten with water (or tears): Ven. 1179. Lucr. 1228. 1548. Sonn. 9, 1. Tp. II, 1, 127. IV, 211 (my —ing = my becoming wet). As III, 2, 27. H6B III, 2, 341. H6C III, 2, 184. R3 I, 2, 163 (partic. or adj.?). 216. Lr. IV, 6, 102. Wether, a ram castrated: Pilgr. 272. Merch. IV, 1, 114. Wint. IV, 3, 33. cf. Bell-wether. Wexford, see Washford. Weyard or Weyward, see Weird. Wezand, the windpipe: Tp. Ill, 2, 99. W h a l e , the animal Balaena: Wiv. II, 1, 65. All's IV, 3, 249. H4B IV, 4, 40. Troil. V, 5, 23. Hml. Ill, 2, 398. Per. II, 1, 33. 36. Ill, 1, 63. this is the flower that smiles on every one, to show his teeth as white as —'s bone, L L L V, 2, 332 (as white as whale's bone was a proverbial phrase, perhaps from the circumstance that 'the ivory of western Europe in the middle ages was the tooth of the walrus'. Nares. But in our passage there is perhaps some malice intended). W h a r f , the bank of a river: the fat weed that roots itself in ease on Lethe w. Hml. I, 5, 33. from the barge a strange invisible perfume hits the sense of the adjacent — s, Ant. II, 2,218. What, 1) interr. pron. used to inquire after quality or kind of things; a) substantively, as subject, or predicate, or object, in principal or subordinate sentences; f. i. what am I that thou shouldst contemn me this? Ven. 205. what is ten hundred touches unto thee? 519. what is thy body but a swallowing grave? 757. what's the matter? Tp. II, ], 309. what where these? A living drollery, 111, 3, 20. what's the noise? Ant. IV, 14, 104. and what not done, that thou hast cause to rue, wherein I had no stroke of mischief in it? Tit. V, 1, 109. what seest thou in the ground? Ven.118. what shall she say? 253. what should I do? 667. 787. 933. w. seest thou else? Tp. I, 2, 49. 'tis you that have the reason. To do what? Gent. II, 1, 151. what doth our cousin lay to Mowbray's charge? R2 I, 1, 84 etc. canst not feel what 'tis to love? Ven. 201. thou knowest not what it is, 615. art ignorant of what thou art, Tp. I, 2,18. 34. know not what we mean, Ven. 126. let me remember thee what thou hast promisedTp. I, 2, 243. I know them,and what they weigh, Ado V, 1,93 etc. Anglicisms: what is the time o'the day? Tp. I, 2, 239. what do you think the hour? Tim. Ill, 4, 8. what is the night? Mcb. Ill, 4, 126 ( = how far is the night advanced?), what is your name? Tp. Ill, 1, 36. Meas. II, 1, 45. 226. Err. Ill, 2, 110. Ado IV, 2,11. L L L II, 209. As I, 2, 233. Tw. I, 2, 26. H6B II, 3, 81. IV, 2, 105. R3 IV, 2, 40. what your name is else I know not, Err. Ill, 2,29. what do you call your knight's name? Wiv. Ill, 2, 20. what may I call your name? Shr. II, 67. call me what thou darest, Gent. II, 3, 63. trow you what he called me? L L L V, 2, 279. what shall I call thee? As I, 3, 125. 128. Shr. Ind. 2, 110. H4A I, 3, 242. H4B IV, 1,1. H6B I, 4, 52. Tit. V, 2, 61. Hml. Ill, 2, 246 etc.

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b) adjectively: what bare excuses makest thou, Ven. 188. what great danger dwells upon my suit, 206. what hour is this ? 495. what bargains may I make, 512. 565. 1076. what cheer? Tp. I, 1, 2. what foul play hadwe? 1, 2, 60. what impossible matter will he make easy next? II, 1, 88. 112. what stuff is this? 254. Ill, 3, 18. to what end are all these words? Shr. I, 2, 250 etc. mark ... with what care he cranks, Ven. 681. say in brief for what cause thou earnest to Ephesus, Err. I, 1, 31. Jove knows what man thou mightst have made, Cymb. IV, 2, 207 etc. With the indefinite article, contrary to modern use: what a strange drowsiness possesses them? Tp. 11, 1, 199 (M. Edd. possesses them!), what a coil is there? who are those at the gate? Err. Ill, 1, 48. that it may show me what a face I have, since it is bankrupt of his majesty, R2 IV, 266. what an unkind hour is guilty of this lamentable chance? Rom. V, 3, 145 (M. Edd. chance!). Peculiar passage: what is he for a fool that betroths himself to unquietness? Ado 1, 3, 49 ( = what fool is he; cf. For). In such phrases as: what a plague means my niece (Tw. I, 3, 1. H4A II, 2, 39 etc.), a plague is parenthetical. Used in exclamations; substantively: O father Abram, what these Christians are! Merch. I, 3, 161. what mortality is! Cymb. IV, 1,16. Adjectively, with the ind. article: what a sight it was! Ven. 343. what a war of looks! 355. what a mansion have those vices get, Sonn. 95, 9. dost thou forget from what a torment I did free thee? Tp. I, 2, 251. II, 1, 24. 180. 267. Ill, 2, 71. IV, 222. V, 295. Meas. Ill, 1, 240. Err. V, 269. H6B II, 1, 5. H6C V, 4, 12 etc. Without the indef. article (not only before abstracts, as f. i. Gent. 1, 2, 15. Meas. Ill, 1, 241): what banquet wert thou to the taste! Ven. 445. what treasure hast thou lost! 1075. what trouble was I then to you! Tp. I, 2, 151. thou best knowest what torment I did find thee in, 287. out of that 'no hope' what great hope have you! II, 1, 240. what fool is she! Gent. 1,2,53 (O.Edd. 'fool, M. Edd. a fool), what fine change is in the music! IV, 2, 68. I'll tell the world what man thou art, Meas. II, 4, 154. what case stand I in! Wint. I, 2, 352. what dreadful noise of waters in mine ears! R3 I, 4, 22. what night is this! Caes. I, 3, 42. what thing it is that I never did see man die, Cymb. IV, 4, 35 etc. Various elliptical use: a ) what = for what purpose? why? f. i. what may a heavy groan advantage thee? Ven. 950. what tell you me of it? H4B I, 2, 129. what dares the slave come hither f Rom. 1,5,57. Hence, as it were by an anticipation of the expected answer, having the force of a negative: what were thy lips the worse for one poor kiss? Ven. 207. what recketh he his riders angry stir? 283. what cares he now for curb? 285. what canst thou boast of things long since? Ven. 1077. what cares these roarers for the name of king? Tp. I, 1, 17. what should I don this robe and trouble you? Tit. I, 1, 189. what boots it theejo call thyself a sun? V, 3, 18. what doth her beauty serve but as a note where I may read ..., Rom. 1,1,241. what should I stay? Ant. V, 2, 316 etc. Especially before the verb to need: what needs a second striking? Ven. 250. what needeth then apologies be made? Lucr. 31. what shall I need to draw my sword? Cymb. Ill, 4, 34. Gent. II, 1, 158. Err. Ill, 2, 15. H8 II, 4. 128. Caes. II, 1, 123 etc. Hence b) what though = the simple though; originally = what do I care though, no nutter though (with 86 *

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the subjunctive): what though the rose have prickles, yet 'tis plucked, Ven. 574. what though her frowning brows be bent, her cloudy looks will calm ere night, P i l g r . 311. what though care killed a cat, thou hast mettle enough in thee to kill care, Ado V, 1, 132. what though he love your Hernia? Lord, what though? yet Hermia still loves you, Mids. II, 2, 109. what though I be not so in grace as you, ..., this should you pity rather than despise, III, 2, 232. what though you have must you be therefore proud? As III, 5, no beauty,... 37. what though I be enthralled? he seems a knight, H 6 A V, 3, 101. H 6 B I, 1, 158. H6C V, 4, 3. H8 III, 2, 97 etc. what though, alone, = no matter, never mind, 'tis all o n e : but what though? yet 1 live like a poor gentleman born, Wiv. I, 1, 286. but what though? courage! As III, 3, 51. by chance, but not by truth; what though? J o h n I, 169. H 5 II, 1, 9. Similarly: and what an if his sorrows have so overwhelmed his wits, shall we be thus afflicted in his wreaks? Tit. IV, 4, 9. how canst thou believe an oath? What if I do not? ...yet I urge thy oath, Tit. V, 1, 73. c) what if = what should you say, what would be the consequence i f : what if he had said 'widower Aeneas' too? T p . II, 1, 79. what if we do omit this reprobate till he were well inclined? Meas. IV, 3, 77. what if we assayed to steal the clownish fool out of your father's court? As I, 3, 131. what if her eyes were there? R o m . II, 2, 18. what if this mixture do not work at all? what if it be a poison? IV, 3, 21. 24 etc. d) what of = why do you mention, what follows f r o m , what is the matter with: there want not many that do fear in deep of night to walk by this Heme's oak. But what of this? Wiv. IV, 4, 41. have not your worship a wart above your eye ? Yes, marry, have /; what of that? I, 4, 158. well, Mistress Ford; what of her? II, 2, 55. all this is so, but what of this, my lord? A d o IV, 1, 73. and what of him? did he take interest? Merch. I, 3, 76. Shr. IV, 4, 77. 84. IV, 2, 66. All's V, 3, 204. W i n t . IV, 4, 403. H 6 B IV, 2, 143. IV, 7, 53. Troil. I, 2, 14. Cor. V, 4, 3. T i m . 1, 1, 83. 112. Caes. II, 1, 141 (but w. of Cicero? = what do you think of C. cf. L L L IV, 3, 282). Hml. Ill, 2, 311. Oth. IV, 1, 23. Cymb. V, 5, 150. 317 etc. Similarly: what with him? he comes not like to his father s greatness, W i n t . V, 1, 88 ( = what is the matter with h i m ? ) . Hence what of that = no m a t t e r , never mind: the night is spent. Why, what of that? Ven. 717. I am thought as fair as she, but what of that? Demetrius thinks not so, Mids. I, 1, 228. I cannot instantly raise up the gross of full three thousand ducats; what of that? Tubal... will furnish me, Merch. I, 3, 57. IV, 1, 260. T w . II, 3, 196. Ill, 4, 23. H 4 B IV, 3, 43. H 6 A III, 1, 59. H 6 C IV, 1, 49. V, 4, 13. 14. 15. Cor. V, 1, 4. R o m . II, 2, 12. II, 4, 221. Hml. Ill, 2, 251 etc. e) what, a l o n e , superfluously introducing a quest i o n : what, must our mouths be cold? T p . I, 1, 56. what, art thou waking? II, 1, 209. what, are they broken? Gent. II, 5, 19. what, will you walk with me about the town, Err. I, 2, 22. what, you wrestle tomorrow? As I, 1, 126. what, hast thou dined? Shr. IV, 3, 59. what, by a horseman or a footman? Wint. IV, 3, 67. what, shall I find you here? Caes. IV, 1, 10. say, what, is Horatio there? Hml. I, 1, 19. what, has this thing appeared again? 21. what, looked he frowningly? I, 2, 231. cf. but what, but what, come they to

visit ust L L L V, 2, 119. what now? how chance thou art returned so soon? Err. I, 2, 42. what now, Lucilius, is Cassius near? Caes. IV, 2, 3. what now, my son, have I not ever said..., J o h n I, 31. Similarly as a word of exclamation, expressing surprise, or exultation, or impatience: what, canst thou talk? Ven. 427. what, all so soon asleep! T p . II, I , 1 9 1 . what, shall these papers lie like telltales here, Gent. I, 2, 133. what, gone without a word! II, 2, 16. what, didst thou offer her this from me? IV, 4, 58. how now, Grumio! what, Grumio! Shr. IV, 1, 111. now, Cinna; now, Metellus; what, Trebonius! Caes. II, 2, 120. what! I do bring good news, H 4 B V, 3, 133. what! we have many goodly days to see, R 3 IV, 4, 320. what, girl! though grey do something mingle with our younger brown, yet ha' we a brain, A n t . IV, 8, 19. what, I say, my foot my tutor? T p . I, 2, 468. what! an advocate for an impostor! 476. what, man! I know them! AdoV, 1,92. what, courage, man! 132. what,this gentleman will out-talk us all, Shr. 1, 2, 248. J o h n I, 245. H 4 B IV, 5, 110. H5 V, 2, 166. Cor. IV, 1, 14. T i t . IV, 2, 97. T i m . IV, 3, 30. Ant. IV, 15, 83 etc. Employed in calling to persons, particularly when it is done with some impatience: what, Ariel! Tp.IV, 33. what, John Rugby, Wiv. I, 4, 1. 40. 41. what, John! what, Robert! Ill, 3. 1. 154. what, wife, I say, IV, 2, 125. Ado 111, 3, 102. Merch. II, 5, 3. 4. H4A II, 1, 4. 24. H 4 B V, 1, 2. Troil. V, 2, 1. V, 6, 5. Rom. 1, 3, 3. 4. IV, 4, 23. IV, 5, 1. Caes. II, 1, 5. V, 3, 72. A n t . II, 7, 138 (these drums, these trumpets, flutes, what!). IV, 12, 30. what ho, in the same sense: T p . I, 2, 313. Gent. I, 2, 66. Wiv. I, 1, 74. IV, 2, 9. 174. Meas. Ill, 1, 44. IV, 1, 50. IV, 2, 20. IV, 3, 25. Shr.IV, 1,152. T w . 1,5,318. H 4 A I I , 1,52. R 3 III, 2, 1 (Ff my lord). Rom. 1,1,90. IV,4,23. Caes. II, 1, 1 etc. 2) = that which; substantively: what follows more she murders with a kiss, Ven 54. so offers he to give what she did crave, 88. controlling what he was controlled with, 270. 299. lorded not only with what my revenue yielded, Tp. 1, 2, 98. will't please you taste of what is here, 111, 3, 42. 1, 2, 369. I do fearfully believe 'tis done, what we so feared he had a charge to do, J o h n IV, 1, 75. look, what I speak, my life shall prove it true, R 2 I, 1, 87. with what his valour did enrich his wit, his wit set down to make his valour live, R 3 III, 1, 85 ( = that with which), what you have spoke, it may be so perchance, Mcb. IV, 3, 11. our story, what we have two nights seen, Hml. 1,1,33. what our contempt doth often hurl from us, we wish it ours again, Ant. I, 2, 127 etc. Adjectively: paying what ransom the insulter willeth, Ven. 550. set all hearts i the state to what tune pleased his ear, Tp. I, 2, 85. what strength I have is mine own, Epil. 2. for what obscured light the heavens did grant did but convey unto our minds a doubtful warrant of immediate death, Err. I, 1, 67. I made thee miserable what time I threw the people's suffrages on him, Tit. IV, 3, 19 etc. W i t h reference to a preceding substantive: he can afford no praise to thee but what in thee doth live, Sonn. 7 9 , 1 2 . no ill luck stirring but what lights on my shoulders, Merch. Ill, 1, 99. all proofs sleeping else but what your jealousies awake, W i n t . Ill, 2, 114 draw no swords but what are sanctified, H 4 B IV, 4, 4. cf. what (counsels) ever have been thought on in this state, Cor. I, 2, 4 (a much vexed pftssflgc. L a t e r Ff and most M. Edd. what ever hath etc.). cf. R3 V, 2 , 2 0 (Qq who).

w

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often followed by be; cf. Be), 1) no matter what; this or that or any thing that; substantively: he strikes w. is in his way, Ven. 623. do w. tlmu wilt, Sonn. 19, 6. w. thy thoughts be, 93, 11. Gent. V, 4, 151. As II, 7, 109 (w. you are, i. e. savage or civil). Shr. I, 2, 155. II, 382. All's IV, 4, 36. V, 1, 37. John IV, 3, 28. R2 V, 5, 38 (Qq be, Ff am). H 4 A I, 3, 71 (Ff whatever). H6A I, 1, 37. H6C I, 4, 38. II, 1, 39. Ill, 3, 15. Troil. IV, 5, 77 (therefore Achilles: but w., know this; i. e. w. your name may be). Tit. II, 3, 195. V, 2, 71. Rom. V, 3, 26. Mcb. IV, 1, 73. Oth. Ill, 3, 89. Ant. II, 7, 74. IV, 4, 29. Cymb. Ill, 6, 80. Per. III, 2, 52. IV, 2, 10 etc. Adjectively: w. occasion keeps him from us now, II6B III, 1, 3. 2) = whoever: I am to gel a man, — w. he be, it skills not much, Shr. Ill, 2, 133 (perhaps = of what kind soever). Whatever, no matter what; this or that or any thing that; all that; substantively: take no repulse, w. she doth say, Gent. Ill, 1, 100. R 2 IV, 330. H4A I, 3, 71 (Qq whate'er). H5 V Chor. 40. Troil. II, 3, 166. Mcb. IV, 3, 31. Oth. Ill, 3, 8. Adjectively: w. fortune stays him, Shr. Ill, 2, 23. J o h n IV, 1, 84. Whatsoe'er, 1) = whatever: Shr. I, 2, 216. R3 1, 1, 108 (Qq whatsoever). H8V,3,128. Tit. II, 3, 54. 2) = whoever: rude companion, w. thou be, H6B IV, 10, 33. to doom the offenders, w. they be, R3 III, 4, 67 (Ff whosoe'er). Whatsoever, 1) whatever: till w. star that guides my moving points on me graciously, Sonn. 26, 9. w. 1 have merited, Wiv. II, 2, 210. upon any complaint w. Meas. II, 1, 261. IV, 2, 123. Err. V, 305. Ado II, 2, 6. Shr. II, 126. H5 II, 2, 111. R3 I, 1, 108 (Ff whatsoe'er). H8 III, 2, 343. Cor. II, 1, 235 (as if that w. god who leads him were slily crept into his human powers). Caes. V, 3, 39. Hml. I, 2, 249 (Q2.3 whatsomever). cf. Soever. 2) whoever: as any man in Illyria, w. he be, under the degree of my betters, Tw. 1, 3, 124. w. thou art, thou art but a scurvy fellow, III, 4, 163 (Sir Andrew's speeches). Leonatus! a banished rascal; and he's another, w. he be, Cymb. II, 1, 43 (Cloten's speech). Whatsome'er, whatever: All's III, 5, 54. Ant. II, 6, 102. Whatsomever, whatever: Hml. I, 2, 249 (lection of Q2.3; the rest of O. Edd. whatsoever). What-ye-call't, Thingumbob: good even, good Master W. As III, 3, 74. Wheat, the plant Triticum vulgare, and the fruit of it: Tp. IV, 61. Mids. I, 1, 185. Merch. I, 1, 116. H4B V, 1, 16. 17 (redw.). Troil. I, 1, 15. Lr. Ill, 4, 123 (white w.). Ant. II, 6, 37. Wheaten, made of stalks of wheat: peace should still her w. garland wear, Hml. V, 2, 41. Wheel, subst. any thing circular and turning on an axis: it (majesty) is a massy w. fixed on the summit of the highest mount, Hml. Ill, 3, 17. when a great w. runs down a hill, Lr. 11,4,73. bound upon a w. of fire, IV, 7, 47. a potter's w. H6A I, 5, 19. she had transformed me to a curtal dog and made me turn i'the w. Err. 111,2,151 (i. e. to turn the spit). Instrument of torture and execution: Wint. Ill, 2, 177. Cor. Ill, 2, 2. One of the frames which support a carriage: H4A III, 1, 132. H4B II, 4, 278. H6B II, 4, 13. Tit. V, 2, 47. 54. Caes. I, 1, 39. a carbuncle of Phoebus' w. Whate'er (followed by the indicative, though Cymb. V, 5, 190. Pars pro toto, = the carriage: at

3) = who (but only in the predicate): what is this maid? Tp. V, 185. what are you, sir? He, sir, a tapster, Meas. II, 1, G2. what is that Barnardine? IV, 2, 132. what are yon? IV, 3, 27. one in the prison ... I have reserved alive. What's he? V, 472. Err. Ill, 1, 42. Ill, 2, 90. Ado I, 1, 34. II, 1, 137. L L L II, 197. V, 2, 87. 304. Mills. V, 71. As II, 4, 88. 11,7,79. Shr. V, 1,17. 65. Tw. I. 2, .35. I, 3, 53. I, 5, 124. Ill, 4, 346. Wint. V, 3, 63. John II, 134. IV, 3, 34. R2 V, 5, 69. H4B I, 2, 66. H5 III, 7, 115. IV, 3, 18. H6A V, 3, 45. H6B I, 3, 183. HI, 1, 107. H6C II, 1,43. 111,3,44. R3 I, 4, 85. Cor. I, 10, 28. Roin. I, 5, 114. Mcb. V, 7, 2. Hml. IV, 6, 1. Lr. IV, 6, 48. V, 3, 125. Oth. I, 1, 94 etc. 4) = whatever and whoever; a) whatever: to bear up against what should ensue, Tp. I, 2, 158. I beyond all limit of what else i'the world do love, prize, honour you, III, 1, 72. call you 'em stanzos? What you will, As II, 5, 20 (cf. the title of the comedy: Twelfe Night, or What you will-, i.e. call it whatever you will), cf. I, 3, 121. I love thee not ajar o'the clock behind what lady-she her lord, Wint. I, 2, 44. come what will, H4A I, 2, 162; cf. Hml. IV, 7, 189. Cor. Ill, 1, 141. wins the king from her, with promise of his daughter, and what else, H6C III, 1, 51. to have his pomp and all what state compounds but only painted, Tim. IV, 2, 35. what will hap more to-night, safe scape the king, Lr. Ill, 6, 121. Ill, 1, 15. what pain it cost, what danger, Cymb. Ill, 6, 81. be what it is, the action of my life is like it, V, 4, 149. b) whoever: be what thou wilt, thou art my prisoner, H6A V, 3, 45. be what they will, 1 heartily forgive 'em, H8 II, 1, 65. that my accusers, be what they will, may stand forth face to face, V, 3, 47. what in the world he is that names me traitor, villain-like he lies, Lr. V, 3, 97. 5) = something, in the phrase I tell you what, or I'll tell you what = let me tell you (not by way of communicating news, but of laying some stress on what one says): Ado V, 4, 101. Mevch. I, 1, 86. II4A II, 4, 214. H4B II, 4, 166. H5 III, 6, 86. Rom. Ill, 5, 162. Shr. 1, 2, 113. John III, 3, 60. IV, 3, 120. II4A III, 1, 155. H4B I, 1, 51. V, 4, 9. 20. R3 I, 1, 78. Ill, 1, 89. Troil. V, 2, 21. Cor. IV, 2, 22. Similarly: wot you what, R3 III, 2, 92. this trick may chance to scathe you, I know what, Rom. I, 5, 86 ( = depend on it). 6) = somewhat, in some measure, in the phrase what with, = partly by, partly in consequence of: my woeful self, ... what with his art in youth, and youth in art, threw my affectiqms in his charmed power, Compl. 145, thus, what with the war, what with the sweat, what with the gallows and what with proverty, 1 am custom-shrunk, Meas. I, 2, 83. I fear, what with the sickness of Northumberland, ... and what with Owen Glendower's absence thence, ... I fear the power of Percy is too weak, H4A IV, 4, 14. and such a flood of greatness fell on you, what with our help, what with the absent king, what with the injuries of a wanton time, V, 1, 49. is it not like that I , so early waking, ivhat with loathsome smells, and shrieks like mandrakes', ... shall I not be distraught? Rom. IV, 3, 46. Without with: a whoreson tisick so troubles me, and the foolish fortune of this girl, and what one thing, what another, that I shall leave you one of these days, Troil. V, 3, 103.

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the —s of Caesar? art thou led in triumph ? Meas. Ill, 2, 47. the gentle day, before the — s of Phoebus, A d o V, 3, 26. from forth day's path and Titan's fiery —s, Rom. II, 3, 4. Attribute of F o r t u n e , as the emblem of mutability: Lucr. 952. H5 111, 6, 28. 34. H6C IV, 3, 47. H m l . 11, 2, 517. L r . 11, 2, 180. V, 3, 174. Confounded, in this quality, with a spinning-wheel: mock the good housewife Fortune from her w. As 1, 2, 34. Ant. IV, 15, 44 (Fortune being, probably, supposed to do the business of the ancientParcae). Proverbial: then may I set the world on -—s, when she can spin for her living, Gent. Ill, 1, 317 ( = then I have all the world in a string and may drive it before me), would it (the world) were all (drunk), that it might go on — s , Ant. II, 7, 99. Not yet satisfactorily explained: how the w. becomes it! Hml. IV, 5, 17'2 (Malone: allusion to the occupation of the girl who is supposed to sing the song. Steevens, without sufficient authority: = burden, refrain). W h e e l , vb. 1 ) to turn round on an axis: thus hath the course of justice —ed about, R 3 IV, 4, 105 (Ff whirl'd). 2) to fetch a compass; and hence to err a b o u t : I was forced to w. three or four miles about, Cor. I, 6, 19. attend me where I w. Troil. V, 7, 2. an extravagant and —ing stranger of here and everywhere, Oth. 1,1,137. W h e e l e d , having wheels, conveyed on wheels: the w. seat of fortunate Caesar, Ant. IV, 14, 75. W h e e s o n , W h i t s u n : H 4 B 1 I , 1 , 9 6 (Ff Whit son). W h e e z i n g ( Q whissing, Ff o m . ) breathing with difficulty and noise: w. lungs, Troil. V, 1, 24. W h e l k , a protuberance, a pustule, a wheal: his face is all bulukles, and —s, and knobs, H51II,6,108. W h e l k e d ( 0 . Edd. welk'd or wealk'd) set with protuberances, embossed: horns w. and waved like the enridged sea, Lr. IV, 6, 71. W h e l m , to overwhelm: she is my prize, or ocean w. them all, Wiv. II, 2, 143 (Pistol's speech). W h e l p , subst. the young of a d o g , or of a bear, or lion: H4A III, 3, 167. H 5 I, 2, 109. H 6 A 1, 5, 26. H6C III, 2, 161. T i t . IV, 1, 96. Ant. Ill, 13, 94. Cymb. V, 4, 138. V, 5, 435. 443. Used of the children of savage and ferocious parents: the son that she did litter here, a freckled w. hag-born, Tp. I, 2, 283. how the young w. of Talbot's, raging-wood, did flesh his puny sword in Frenchmen's blood, H 6 A IV, 7, 35. two of thy —s,fell curs of bloody kind, have here bereft my brother of his life, Tit. II, 3, 281. W h e l p , vb. to bring forth y o u n g : a lioness hath — ed in the streets, Caes. 11, 2, 17. T r a n s . : thou wast —ed a dog, T i m . II, 2, 90. W h e n , 1) interrogatively, — at what time: w. wilt thou be the humble suppliant's friend? Lucr. 897. w. did you lose your daughter? T p . V, 152. Gent. Ill, 1, 123. IV, 3, 42. Err. II, 2, 13. 155. L L L I, 1, 237 etc. etc. Elliptically used as an exclamation of impatience: come, thou tortoise! when? T p . I, 2, 316. why, when, I say ? ... off withtny boots, you rogues! you villains, when? Shr. IV, 1, 146. 147. when, Harry, when? obedience bids I should not bid again, R2 I, 1, 162. kneel down, kneel down-, nay, when? strike now, or else the iron cools, H6C V, 1, 49. when, Lucius, when? awake, I say, Caes. II, 1, 5. when, can you tell? a proverbial

phrase expressing scorn at the demand or menace of another: Err. Ill, 1, 52. H 4 A II, 1, 43. cf. As IV, I, 133. 2) relatively, = at the time t h a t ; with a preterit tense: w. her lips were ready for his pay, he winks, Ven. 89. it was mine art, w. I arrived and heard thee, that made gape the pine, T p . I, 2, 292. 332. II, 1, 97. Ill, 2, 151. Ill, 3 , 4 3 . Gent. II, 1, 27 etc. W i t h a present, a) expressing an event of ordinary and natural occurrence: he hath it w. he cannot use it, Lucr. 862. to do me business in the veins o'the earth w. it is baked with frost, T p . 1, 2, 256. it is foul weather in us all, w. you are cloudy, II, 1, 142. 195. Ill, 1, 12. 34. L L L I, 1, 238. V, 2, 926. Merch. I, 1, 85 etc. b) futurity: that thine may live w. thou thyself art dead, Ven. 172. be patient. W. the sea is, Tp. I, 1, 17. 1 , 2 , 3 7 8 . 11,1, 234. 295. Ill, 1, 18. Ill, 2, 1. 9. 73. 105. 155. V, 51. Gent. 1 , 1 , 1 0 . II, 1, 136. A d o V, 4, 68 etc. W i t h a f u t u r e : w. I shall see thee frown on my defects, Sonn. 4 9 , 2 . run w. you will, the story shall be changed, Mids. II, 1, 230 ( = w. you will run) etc = at which time (the subordinate clause being, logically, the main p r o p o s i t i o n ) : his testy master goeth about to take him, when, lo, the unbacked breeder ... swiftly doth forsake him, Ven. 320. and comelydistant sits he by her side, w. he again desires her ... her grievance with his hearing to divide, Compl. 66. the time was once w. thou unurged wouldst vow, Err. II, 2, 115. marking the embarked traders on the flood, w. we have laughed to see the sails conceive, Mids. II, I, 128 etc. = at the same time that, while, whereas (noting a contrast): who is but drunken w. she seemed drowned, Ven. 984. thou didst smile, ... w. I have decked the sea with drops full salt, Tp. I, 2, 155. you rub the sore, iv. you should bring the plaster, II, 1, 139. w. they will not give a doit to relieve a lame beggar, they will lay out ten to see a dead Indian, II, 2, 33. Gent. I, 2, 61. II, 1, 158. Wiv. V, 5, 12. Meas. V, 11. Err. Ill, 1, 35. Merch. I, 1, 97 etc. = the time t h a t , or the fact t h a t , after to know and see: I have known w. there was no music with him but the drum and the fife, Ado II, 3, 13. I know when thou hast stolen away from fairy land, Mids. II, 1, 65. I knew w. seven justices could not take up a quarrel, As V, 4, 103. I have seen w. after execution judgement hath repented, Meas. II, 2, 11. Caes. II, 1, 20. = which time; then (relative for demonstrative), after since and till: I was adopted heir by his consent, since w. his oath is broke, H 6 C 11, 2, 89. till w., be cheerful, Tp. V,250. till w., go seek thy fortune, Troil. V, 6, 19. w. that = when: Sonn. 47, 3. L L L IV, 3, 145. A s II, 7, 75 etc. (cf. That). Scarcely distinguishable f r o m i f : w. a painter would surpass the life,... so did this horse excel, Ven. 289. and for my sake, w. I might charm thee so for she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me, Lucr. 1681. 'tis the curse in love... w. women cannot love where they're beloved, Gent. V, 4, 44. when she is able U overtake seventeen years old, Wiv. I, 1, 54 (Evans' speech), what a thing should I have been w. I had been swelled, III, 5, 17 ( o r = after). I may say so w. I please. And w. please you to say so? W. I like your favour, Ado II, 1, 95. what madness rules in brainsick men, w. for so frivolous a cause such factious emula-

w tions hall arise, H6A IV, 1, 112. would 'twere come to that. Marry,w. thou darest, H6B 11,1,39. Cor. 111,3,53. W h e n a s , at the time that, when: w. I met the boar ... I railed on thee, Veil. 999. w. thy love hath cast his utmost sum, Sonn. 49, 3. I in deep delight am chiefly drowned w. himself to singing he betakes, Pilgr. 114. w. thine eye hath chose the dame,... let reason rule, 299. to. your husband all in rage to-day came to my house ... straight after did I meet him, Err. IV, 4, 140. many a battle have I won in France, w. the enemy hath been ten to one, II6C I, 2, 75. a woful looker-on, w. the noble Duke of York was slain, II, 1, 46. cried all hail, w. he meant all harm, V, 7, 34. The signification of os preponderating, = since, as: words more sweet and yet more dangerous than baits to fish or honey-stalks to sheep, w. the one is wounded with the bait, the other rotted with delicious feed, Tit. IV, 4, 92 (but cf. when in such sentences as f.i. Tp. I, 2, 355). W h e n c e , 1 ) interrog. from what place, from where, and metaphorically, from what source or origin : w. didst thou steal thy sweet? Sonn. 99, 2. w. hast thou this becoming of things ill, 150, 5. w. came you, Gent. IV, 1, 18. w. comes this restraint, Meas. I, 2, 128. Wiv. IV, 5, 106. Meas. V, 247. H6A I, 4, 99 etc. Preceded by from: more should 1 question thee ... from w. thou earnest, how tended on, All's II, 1,210. from w.? Cor. V, 2, 4. By of: nought knowing ofw. I am, Tp. I, 2, 19. of w. are you? Meas. Ill, 2, 229. of w., 1 pray you? Shr. II, 103. to know of him of w. he is, Per. II, 3, 74. V, 1, 19. to ask of w. you are, Cymb. V, 5, 16. 2) relat. from which place, from where : the book of his good acts, w. men have read his fame, Cor. V, 2, 15. Mostly preceded by from: departed back to the camp, from w. he shortly after privily withdrew himself, Lucr. Arg. 14. within the gentle closure of my breast, from w. at pleasure thou mayst go and part, Sonn. 48, 12. Err. V, 264. L L L IV, 3, 304. As III, 2, 291. All's II, 4, 13. R2 V, 1, 78. ÎI4A I, 3,151. H6A III, 1, 166. H6B II, 1, 160. II, 2, 25. H6C V, 3, 11. R3 l , l , 6 9 e t c . 3) from w. = there from where: how do all from w. you came, Gent. II, 4, 122. let him walk from w. he came, Err. Ill, 1, 37. w. or from w. = from there where: come thou home, JRousillon, w. honour but of danger wins a scar, as oft it loses all, All's III, 2, 124. is returned from w. he circumscribed with his sword... the enemies of Home, Tit. I, G8 ( F f from where ). our poesy is as a gum which oozes from w. 'tis nourished, Tim. I, 1, 22. as w. the sun 'gins his reflection shipwrecking storms and direful thunders break, Mcb. I, 2, 25. Whencesoever, from what place soever: R2 II, 3, 22. Whene'er or Whenever, at what time soever: H4A III, 2, 138; Cor. IV, 7, 26. R3 II, 1, 3 2 ; ' T i t . IV, 2, 15. Whensoever, the same: Meas. V, 158. Hml. V, 2, 210. Whe'r (0. Edd. where or whe'r) contracted from whether, q. v.: and w. he run or fly they know not whether, Ven. 304. whether we are mended, or w. better they, Sonn. 59, 11. Tp. V, 111. Err. IV, 1, 60. John I, 75. II, 167. H6B III, 2, 265. Ill, 3, 10. Caes. I, 1, 66. V, 3, 97. Where, 1) interrogatively ; a) at or in what place; f.i. w. am I? Ven. 493. w. did I leave? 715. w. 's

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the mastert Tp. I, 1, 10. 13. w. was she born? I, 2, 260. b) to what place; f. i. w. is my judgment fled? Sonn. 148, 3. w. runnest thou so fast? Err. Ill, 2, 71. w. shall w. go? Mids. Ill, 1, 166. 2) relatively; a) at which place, or at the place at which; f. i. here come and sit, w. never serpent hisses, Ven. 17. w. she ends, she doth anew begin, 60. love keeps his revels w. there are but twain, 123. 154. 176. 234. 426 etc. I know w. you are, As V, 2, 32 ( I perceive your drift, I know what you hint at; cf. Whereabout). Correlative to so: in a strait so narrow w. one but goes abreast, Troil. Ill, 3, 155. in no place so unsanctified w. such as thou mayst find him. Mcb. IV, 2, 82 (cf. So), b) to which place; f. i. I must go w. it fits not you to know, Wint. IV, 4, 304. he is in heaven w. thou shalt never come, R3 I, 2, 106. Used after verbs of seeing, when there would be expected: behold w. Madam Mitigation comes, Meas. I, 2, 45. look w. he comes, Wiv. II, 1, 106. 196. IV, 1, 9. Meas. 1, 1, 25. Mids. Ill, 2, 176. John V, 2, 65. H6B V, 3, 14. H6C I, 3, 2. Caes. 11, 2, 108. look w. Beatrice like a lapwing runs, Ado III, 1, 24. look w. three-farthings go, John 1, 143. look w. the sturdy rebel sits, H6C 1, 1, 50. low. he comes, H4BIV, 5, 90. H6C V, 5, 11. H8 I, 1, 113. Hml. 1, 1, 126. lo w. your son is borne, H6A IV, 7, 17. lo w. George of Charence sweeps along, H6C V, 1, 76. lo by thy side w. Rape and Murder stands, Tit. V, 2, 45. see w. she comes, Gent. V, 1, 7. Err. IV, 1, 14. V, 128. L L L V, 2, 337. H6B V, 1, 122. H6C III, 3, 43. IV, 2, 3. V, I, 58. see you w. Benedick hath hid himself, Ado II, 3, 42. see w. he looks out of the window, Shr. V, 1, 57. see w. he lies, H6A IV, 7, 45. see w. stand his guard, H6C IV, 3, 23. R3 HI, 7, 95 etc. As the idea of place is very expansive, where is often used for in which, or in which case, on which occasion, and sometimes almost = when: thy beauty hath ensnared thee lo this night, w. thou with patience must my will abide, Lucr. 486. to be in love, w. scorn is bought with groans, Gent. I, 1, 29. this is like the mending of highways in summer, w. the ways are fair enough, Merch. V, 264. thou art not for the fashion of these times, w. none will sweat but for promotion, As II, 3, 60. w. did I leave? At that sad stop, w. rude hands from windows' tops threw rubbish on Richard's head, R2 V, 2, 5. in the unshrinking station w. he fought, Mcb. V, 8, 42. in these cases, w. the aim reports, Oth. I, 3, 6. it (love) shall suspect w. is no cause of fear, Ven. 1153. 1154. we were awaked; straightway at liberty; w. we in all her trim freshly beheld our royal ship, Tp. V, 236. w.your good word cannot advantage him, your slander never can endamage him, Gent. Ill, 2, 42. w. you may temper her by your persuasion, 64. when women cannot love w. they're beloved, V, 4, 44. it will not lie w. it concerns, I, 2, 77. great clerks have purposed to greet me, ... w. I have seen them shiver and look pale, Mids. V, 95. drew to defend him,... w. being apprehended, Tw. V, 89. have broken from his liking w. you were tied in duty, Wint. V, 1, 213. they have a king and officers of sorts, w. some like magistrates correct at home, H5 I, 2, 191. why sighest thou without breaking? w. he answers again ..., Troil. IV, 4, 19. and suddenly; w. injury of chance puts back leave-taking, 35. out of her favour, w. I am in love, Rom. I, 1, 174. I have heard, w. many ... have wished that noble Brutus had his eyes, Caes. I, 2, 59,

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as little is the wisdom, w. the flight so runs against all reason, Mcb. IV, 2, 13. she hath my letter for the purpose, w., if thou fear to strike,... thou art the pander to her dishonour, Cymb. 111,4, 30. Hence = whereas: fellowship in woe doth woe assuage, ... w. now I have no one to blush with me, Lucr. 792. and w. I thought the remnant of mine age should have been cherished by her child-like duly, I am now full resolved ... to turn her out, Gent. Ill, 1, 74. his ignorance were wise, w. now his knowledge must prove ignorance, L L L II, 103. and w. thou now exactest the penalty. ... thou wilt loose the forfeiture, Merch. IV, 1, 22. fight and die is death destroying death, w. fearing dying pays death servile breath, R2 III, 2, 185. so we should, w. now remains a sweet reversion, H 4 A IV, 1, 53. w. I was wont to feed you with my blood, I'll lop a member off and give it you, H 6 A V, 3,14. his wealth doth warrant ft liberal dower, w. Reignier sooner will receive than give, V, 5, 47. H6B III, 2, 394. R3 IV, 4, 141 ( F f w. 't should be branded, Qq w. should be graven). Cor. I, 1, 104. 1, 10, 13. L r . 1, 2, 89. Per. I, 1, 127. II, 3, 43. - wherever: who conquers w. he comes in every jar, Ven. 100. feed w. thou wilt, on mountain or in dale, 232. u\ 1 have come, great clerks have purposed to greet me, Mids. V, 93. a savour that may strike the dullest nostril w. I arrive, Wint. I, 2, 422. bear me w. you will, H6B IV, 7, 64. attend me w. I wheel, Troil. V, 7, 2. w. he arrives he moves all hearts against us, Lr. IV, 5, 10. Cor. I, 10, 24. = whence: every word doth almost tell my name, showing their birth and w. they did proceed, Sonn. 76, 8. w. have they this mettle ? H5 III, 5, 15. w. have you this? 'tis false, Ant. II, 1, 18 ( — from whom have you heard this?), cf. Wheresoever in Oth. IV, 1,160. w. that -— where: L L L IV, 3, 296. 115 V Chor. 17 (cf. That, conj. 8). Substantively: thou losest here, a better w. to find, Lr. 1, 1, 264. As for Shr. IV, 3, 151, see Place. W h e r e a b o u t , on what purpose: I must not have you henceforth question me whither I go, nor reason w. H 4 A II, 3, 107. Substantively, = purpose: hear not my steps, which ivay they walk, for fear thy very stones prate of my w. Mcb. II, 1, 58. Wliereagainst, against which: Cor. IV, 5, 113. W h e r e a s , 1) at which place, where: he spying her bounced in, w. he stood, Pilgr. 83. to ride unto Saint Albans, w. the king and queen do mean to hawk, H6B 1, 2, 58. make a conquest of unhappy me, w. no glory's got to overcome, Per. I, 4, 70. 2) the thing being so that (referring to something different): and w. I was black and swart before, with those clear rays ... that beauty am I blessed with which you see, H 6 A I, 2, 84. H6B IV, 7, 37. 3) while, when on the contrary: H 6 A II, 5, 76. V, 5, 64. Per. 1, 2, 42. W h e r e a t , at which: Ven. 589. 748. 823. 829. 878. 979. 1026. 1045. Lucr. 178. 264. Mids. V, 147. H6C I, 1, 4. Cor. V, 6, 134. Tit. II, 3, 219. Tim. Ill, 6, 113. Hml. II, 2, 65. Cymb. V, 5, 181. W h e r e b y , 1) by what: w. hangs a tale, sir? Oth. Ill, 1, 9. 2) by which: Merch. IV, 1, 377. Shr. II, 275. H4A V, 1, 67. H4B II, 1, 104. Ill, 2, 86. II6C 1, 1, 250. H8 I, 1, 186. Cor. I, 1, 144. Tim. I, 2, 88. Mcb. Ill, 1, 99. Per. II, 3, 45.

W h e r e ' e r , at whatever place: Ven. 622. Tp. II, 2, 55. John IV, 3, 26. R2 I, 3, 308. V, 3, 141. H6C II, 3, 43. W h e r e f o r e , 1) interr. a) for what reason: Sonn. 67, 1. 138, 9. T p . 1, 2, 138. II, 1, 309. Ill, 1, 76. Gent. I, 1, 51. IV, 4, 83. V, 2, 27. Err. II, 2, 44. 45 (every why hath a w.; proverbial). 46. 49. Ill, 1, 39. 40. IV, 4. 98. As II, 3, 6. John V, 1, 44. H6A II, 1, 54. H6B I, 1, 115 etc. b ) for what, to be what: w. was I bom? if that my cousin king be king of England, it must be granted I am duke of Lancaster, R2 II, 3, 122 (for what l ank or dignity). 2) relat ; a) for which cause: H 6 A I, 4, 53. b) for which: peace to this meeting, w. we are met, Ho V, 2, 1. W h e r e i n , 1) in what: Meas. V, 507. As II, 7, 83. Ill, 2, 234 (w• went he? = how was he drest?). All's V, 2, 31. R2 II, 3, 107. H 4 A 11, 4, 501. II4B IV, 1, 89. H6B III, 1, 103. IV, 7, 103. R3 I, 4, 182. IV, 4, 93. H8 I, 2, 38 etc. 2 ) in which: Ven. 731. 1131. 1188. Lucr. 317. 619. 697. 1246. 1526. 1815. Sonn. 24, 3. 86, 4. 88, 7. 91, 6. 117, 2. Tp. I, 2, 464. Gent. II, 2, 10. II, 7, 3. Ill, 1, 60. W i v . II, 2, 190. Meas. II, 4, 10. Ill, 2, 270. Merch. I, 1, 129. II, 9, 5. IV, 1, 192. V, 243. As I, 2, 196. 199. II, 7, 139. Ill, 2, 412. Shr. Ind. 1, 92. I, 1, 113. All's I, 2, 7. II, 1, 114. U, 5, 80. IV, 3, 39. T\v. II, 2, 29. II, 3, 169. V, 105. Wint. I, 2, 237. IV, 4, 678! John V, 2, 27. R2 I, 3, 266. II, 2, 132. H 4 A I, 2, 191. I, 3, 169. 180. IV, 4, 9. II4B II, 3, 22. IV, 4, 69. H5 II, 2, 170. 116A I, 1, 107. II, 2, 13. H6C I, 1, 125. 11, 6, 102. R3 III, 1, 180. Ill, 5, 27. V, 1, 16. Cor. 11,3, 48. Rom. I, 4,42. Caes. IV, 3 , 4 ; cf. Hml. IV,5,92. 1,1,159. 11,2,150 (Ff. h e r e on) etc. 3) in that in which (implying opposition to the following principal sentence; almost = though): w. it doth impair the seeing sense, it pays the hearing double recompense, Mids. Ill, 2, 179. w. our entertainment shall shame us we will be justified in our loves, Wint. I, 1, 9. Wherelnto, into which: Oth. Ill, 3, 137. W h e r e o f , 1) of what w. are you made ? Sonn. 53, 1. Merch. I, 1, 4. Lr. I, 4, 312. 2) of which (often preceded by the subst. on which it depends): Ven. 880. Lucr. Ded. 1. Lucr. 681. 1261. Sonn. 63, 6. Tp. II, 1, 253. V, 38. Gent. I, 1, 153. III, 1, 36. IV, 2, 13. W i v . IV, 6, 14. Meas. V, 470. Ado V, 4, 25. Merch. I, 2, 34. IV, 1, 159. 239. 410. Shr. 1, 2, 275. 11, 58. All's I, 3, 195. 235. T w . V, 372. Wint. I, 2, 260. Ill, 2, 18. 191. John V, 4, 44. Ii2 I, 1, 150. I, 2, 11. I, 4, 46. II, 1, 162. IV, 70. H 4 A 1, 2, 81. Ill, 2, 72. Ho I, 2, 132. II, 2, 179. Ill, 2, 34. H 6 A I, 1, 117. II, 1. 64. II, 4, 58. Ill, 4, 5. IV, 1, 87. H6B III, 1, 63. 106. 135. H6C II, 6, 54. Ill, 3, 125. R3 111, 1, 196. Ill, 2, 24. Troil. I, 3, 14. 139. Ill, 2, 61. IV, 5, 84. Tim. II, 2, 179. IV, 3, 91. 180. 194 ( = by which; cf. Of). Lr. IV, 6, 273. Cymb. Ill, 1, 29 etc. W h e r e o n , 1) on what: w. do you look? Hml. III, 4, 124. 2) on which: Ven. 125. 151. 544. 646. 927. Sonn. 15,4. 73, 11. 148, 5. Compl. 10. Tp. I, 2, 127. Gent. I, 3, 18. Meas. I, 2, 164. II, 4, 7. Mids. IV, 1, 91. As I , 3 , 59. Wint. I, 1, 2. John IV,

w 2, 156. B2 I, 3, 289. H4B 1, 1, 62 (Ff when). IV, 2, 38. V, 2, 81. H 6 A II, 3, 47. Cor. IV, 6, 86. Bom. V, 3, 179. Tim. IV, 3, 184. Mcb. IV, 1, 138. Hml. II, 2, 72. 150 (Qq wherein). Ill, 1, 182. IV, 4, 63. IV, 7, 161. Lr. I, 4, 312. Oth. Ill, 3, 84. V, 2, 326. Ant. Ill, 6, 59. Cymb. Ill, 3, 100 etc. Whereeut, oat of which: and make distinct the very breach w. Hector's great spirit flew, Troil. IV, 5, 245. Wheresee'er, in what place soever: LUCT. 1014. Mi da. II, 2, 90. As I, 3, 77, 111, 1, 5. All's III, 5, 69. John III, 3, 62. H6B III, 2, 406. H6C 11, 6, 41. V, 1, 95. Lr. Ill, 4, 28. Whereaeever, the same: Meas. Ill, 2, 96. w. you had it, Oth. IV, 1, 160 ( = whencesoever). Whereaemever, the same: H5 II, 3, 7 (Bardolph's speech). Wherethrough, through which: Sonn. 24, 11. W h e r e * « , 1) to what: to. tends all thisf Mids. III, 2, 256. «7. serves mercy, Hml. Ill, 3, 46. 2) to which: Sonn. 117,4. 124, 8. 137, 8. Compl. 212. Meas. V, 542. T w . I, 2, 20. Wint. IV, 4, 548. R2 I, 3, 234. I, 4, 49. V, 5, 53. Cor. V, 3, 108. Bom. I, 2, 21. Caes. II, 1, 23. Ill, 1, 250. Mcb. I, 7, 62. Hml. Ill, 3, 95. IV, 2, 6. V, 1, 234. Lr. II, 4, 108. V, 3, 140. Oth. Ill, 3, 231. Cymb. Ill, 5, 47 etc. WhereoBtll, to what: we know w. it doth amount, L L L V, 2, 493. 501 (Costard's speeches). W h e r e a a U , to which: C.vmb. Ill, 4,109. Ill, 7,13. W h e r e a M » , on which: Lucr. Arg. 12. Sonn. 20, 6. Phoen. 49. Wint. IV, 4, 763. V, 2, 5. John IV, 2, 65. B2 II, 2, 58. H I A IV, 3, 42. H4B II, 2, 29. II,4, 99. IV, 1, 12. H8 II, 4, 201. Troil. Ill, 2, 215. V, 4, 17. Lr. I, 1, 14. Cymb. V, 5, 208. Wherever (cf. Where'er) in or to what place soever: Sonn. 45, 2. A s II, 2, 15. Ill, 5, 87. H8 V, 5, 51. Tim. IV, 2, 24. Mcb. I, 5, 60. Wherewith, 1) with what: L L L I, 1, 264. 2 ) with which: Lncr. Arg. 24. Sonn. 60, 6. Pilgr. 408. Gent. I, 3, 2. John V, 7, 53. R2 IV, 164. H 6 A 1, 1, 102. 104. H6B IV, 7, 79. H6C 111, 1, 17. Mcb. I, 6, 17. Wherewithal, with which, by means of which: thou ladder to. the mounting Bolingbroke ascends my throne, B2 V, 1, 55. = with what: he may, my lord; has w. H8 I, 3, 59 (i. e. to be noble. French: tl a de guoi. cf. whilst thou hast wherewith to spend, Pilgr. 408). Whet, to rub for the purpose of sharpening: Ven. 617. 1113. Merch. IV, 1, 121. H4B IV, 5,108. B3 I, 3, 244. IV, 4, 227. Metaphorically, = to excite, to stimulate, to instigate: I come to w.your gentle thoughts on his behalf, T w . Ill, 1, 116. to. me to be revenged, K3 I, 3, 332. the king does w. his anger to him, H8 III, 2, 92. Cassias first didw. me against Caesar, Caes. II, 1, 61. to w. thy almost blunted purpose, Hml. Ill, 4, 111. With on: I will ic. on the king, John 111, 4, 181. H6B II, 1, 34. H6C I, 2, 37. Whether, (often monosyll., f. i. Mids. Ill, 1,156. III, 2, 81. Merch. V, 302. H6A IV, 7, 25. Cor. Ill, 1, 251. T i t 1,395. Caes. II, 1,194. Hml. II, 2, 17. Oth. 1,1, 39. Contracted to whe'er, q. v.) which of the two (in a principal sentence): w. he run or fly they know not w. Ven. 304. was this a lover or a lecher w. t Pilgr. 101. in scorn or friendship, nill J construe w. 188. to. had you rather lead mine eyes, or eye your master's heels f Wiv. Ill, 2, 3. to. dost thou profess thyself, a

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knave or a fool1 All's IV, 5, 23. to. hadst thov rather be a Faulconbridge ...or the reputed son of Co-delion, John I, 134. Preceding a subordinate clause expressing aie part of a disjunctive question, and followed by or w. he run or fly they know not to. Ven. 304. conroversy hence a question takes, w. the horse by him beame his deed, or he his manage ..., Compl. 111. Mea. I, 2, 167. Merch. V, 302. H 6 A V, 5, 79. H6B I, i, 110. R3 111, 7, 141. Troil IV, 5, 243. Cor. IV, 5, Al etc. the second part foimed by or no: Tp. V, 111. W i v IV, 5, 33. L L L V, 2, 486. Merch. II, 2, 48. HI 1, 45. III, 2, 146. A s 111, 2, 129. H6C 11, 1, 2. B3 111 1, 23. Tit. 1, 395. Caes. II, 1, 194 etc. The correlative clauses preceded by to.. or to. : to. toe are mended, or to. better they, or to. r&olution be the same, Sonn. 59, 11. to. it be the fault and ¡Ump se of newness, or to. that the public body be a hvritten down. Dogberry's speech), 'twas I toon the wager, though you hit the to. Shr. V, 2, 186 (the cents of an archery butt; alluding to the name of Biana). spit to. H4B I, 2, 237 (cf. Spit), the truth of it stmds off as gross as black and to. H5 II, 2, 104. (urns up the to. o'the eye. Cor. IV, 5, 209. she'll find a w.tht shall her blackness fit, Oth. II, 1, 134 (punning onto, and wight). Plural: in whose comparison all —s ire ink, Troil. I, 1, 56. — s of eggs, Lr. Ill, 7, 106. White-beard, an old man: B2 III, 2, I S . White-bearded, having a white beard, oS: Ado II, 3, 124. H4A II, 4, 509. W h i t e - f a c e d , having a white face, whie: that pale, that to. shore (of England) J o h n II, 23. W h l t e - F r l * r s , 'in London, was a part ituated to the south of Fleet-street, and east of the Temple' (Nares): B3 I, 2, 227. W h i t e h a l l , formerly York-place, the royalpalace in London: H8 IV, 1,97. W h i t e - h a n d e d , having white hands: I L L V, 2, 230. Whit« Hart, a building on the east sidcof the Borough of Southwark: hath my sword therefot broke through London gates, that you should leavt m at the W. in Southwarkt H6B IV, 8, 25 (with a qubble: that you should desert me like cowards). W h l t e - l l m e d , whitewashed, or plastend with lime: ye to. walls, Tit. IV, 2, 98 (Ff white-lit'd, Qq white-limbde; Malone white-Umn'd). White-livered, cowardly: H 5 III, 2, 34. B3 IV, 4, 465. cf. Lily livered and White. W h l t e l y , whitish, pale, of faded beauty: a w wanton with a velvetbrow, L L L 111,198 (Qq and earlier Ewhitly, later Yiwhitely; most M.Edd. wightly). W h i t e n e s s , white colour: Ven. 1170. Cent. Ill, I , 227. Err. Ill, 2, 130. — paleness: the w. in thy cheek, H4B I, 1, 68. Emblem of purity: Ad> IV, 1, 163. Wint. I, 2, 327. White-upturned, writing of M. Edd. h Bom. II, 2, 29; O. Edd. without hyphen.

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W

W h i t h e r (often spelt whether in 0 . Edd.) 1) to ivho). whom, I thank heaven, is an honest ivoman, Meas. which place; relatively: Gent. V, 2, 47. Err. V, 155. II, 1, 72 (Elbow's speech), than whom no mortal so All's V, I, 29. R2 V, 1, 85. = to that place to which: magnificent, L L L III, 180. cf. whom they say is killed to-night, John IV, 2, 165. whom in constancy you think H 4 A II, 3, 118. H6C II, 5, 139. 2 ) to what place; interrogatively: Ven. 904. Gent. stands so safe, Cymb. I, 4, 137. Never adjectively joined to nouns, and always reI, 3, 24. IV, 1, 16. W i v . II, 1, 153. Ill, 2, 9. Ill, 3, 162. 164. A d o II, 1, 193. Mids. II, 1, 1. Merch. II, ferring to nouns, never to sentences. Referring to 4, 16. As I, 2, 59. I, 3, 92. II, 3, 29. IV, 1, 168. Shr. persons, f. i. Ven. 33. 100. Tp. I, 2, 17. 68. 100. 222. I, 2, 165. All's III, 5, 35. V, 1, 27. Wint. IV, 4, 305. Gent. II, 7, 3. III, 1, 14. 82. Ill, 2,37. IV, 3, 17. T o H 4 A II, 3, 107. H 6 A I, 1, 97. II, 3, 28. IV, 4, 12. things or animals (cf. as who should say in Shall): H 6 B II, 4, 92. Ill, 2, 367. H6C I, 3, 1. IV, 5, 20. R3 Ven. 87. 306. 630. 857. 891. 956. 984. 1041. 1043. IV, 4, 515. Cor. IV, 1, 34 (monosyll.). Rom. I, 2, 75. Lucr. 296. 328. 388. 655. 1119. 1139. 1231. 1740. Per. V, 1, 178 etc. w. away? = where are you going: 1781. 1805. Sonn. 41, 11. 128, 11. 141, 4. 11. 145, Gent. Ill, 1, 51. L L L IV, 3, 186. Mids. I, 1, 180. Shr. 11. Pilgr. 30. Tp. I, 2, 7. II, 1, 127. II, 2, 13. Ill, 3, IV, 5, 38. H 6 A III, 2, 104. R3 II, 3, 1. IV, 1, 7. H8 62. Gent. IV, 4, 61. Err. I, 2, 37. II, 2, 181. 111,2,140. L L L I, 1, 82. II, 244. IV, 2, 4. Mids. V, 181. Merch. II, 1, 1. = whithersoever: a fool go with thy soul, w. it I , 3 , 1 8 8 . 11,7,4. A s II, 4, 52. 111,5,13. IV, 3,110. All's III, 4, 17. 27. IV, 2, 36. Wint. IV, 4, 581. John goes, H 4 A V, 3, 22. Cor. I, 2, 16. Whtttng-tlme, bleaching-time: W i v . Ill, 3, 140. II, 137. 575. R2 II, 2, 71. "H4A I, 3, 40. H4B V, 2, 128. H5 III, 5, 17. H 6 A IV, 2, 12. H6B III, 2, 164. Whitmore, name in H6B IV, 1, 14. 31. 44. 345. R3 I, 4, 41 (Qq which). 45 ( F f I ) . Troil. Ill, 3, Whltster, bleacher: W i v . Ill, 3, 14. W h l t s u n , pertaining to Pentecost: W.pastorals, 120. Cor. I, 1, 268. Ill, 2, 119. Rom. I, 1, 119. Caes. Wint. IV, 4, 134. upon Wednesday in W. week, H4B IV, 3, 112. Lr. IV, 3, 16 etc. Preceded by the article: your mistress from the II, 1, 96 ( Q Wheeson; Mrs. Quickly's speech), a W. whom there's no disjunction to be made, Wint. IV, morris-dance, H5 II, 4, 25. 4, 539. Whittle, a small clasp-knife: Tim. V, 1, 183. = he who: and whom he strikes his cruel tushes Whizzing, hissing: the exhalations w. in the air, Caes. II, 1, 44. In Lr. Ill, 6, 17 Qq hissing, Ff hizzing, slay, Ven. 624. who by repentance is not satisfied is nor of heaven nor earth, Gent. V, 4, 79. fixing our some M. Edd. whizzing. W h o , 1 ) interr. pron., always referring to per- eyes on whom our care was fixed, Err. I, 1, 85. I may sons, and never adjectively; nom. who, f. i. Ven. 397. neither choose whom I would nor refuse whom I dislike, 401.415. 416. 888; objective case whom, f. i. Tp. I, Merch. I, 2, 25. whom we raise we will make fast, 1, 20. Gent. II, 1, 153. IV, 4, 118. Anglos, gen. whose, H6B I, 4, 24. is proclamation made that who finds f. i. whose tongue is music now? Ven. 1077. Obj. case Edward shall have a high reward? H6C V, 5, 9. we who instead of whom: who hath she to spend the night are going to whom it must be done, Caes. II, 1, 331. withal but idle sounds? Ven. 847. for who love I so who was the thane lives yet, Mcb. I, 3, 109. who steals much? Merch. II, 6, 30. A d o HI, 3, 9. L L L IV, 1, 74. my purse steals trash, Oth. Ill, 3, 157. who tells me T w . II, 5, 108. Wint. IV, 4, 636. John V, 6, 32. H5 true, though in his tale lie death, 1 hear him as he IV, 7, 154. H6B III, 2, 127. Troil. II, 3, 101. 111,1, flattered, Ant. I, 2, 102. who seeks and will not take 23. Cor. II, 1, 8. Tit. V, 1,71. Mcb.lV,3,171. Hml. when once 'tis offered, shall never find it more, II, 7, 1, 2, 190 etc. Qq who, F f whom: Tit. II, 3, 55. F l and 89. who does i'the wars more than his captain can beQq who, later F f whom: Tp. I, 2, 80. Gent. Ill, 1,200. comes his captain's captain, III, 1,21. Caes. I, 3, 120. IV, 2, 23. A d o I, 1, 214. V, 1, 232. L L L II, 2. As III, = whoever: would make proselytes of who she but 2, 327. H 6 A III, 3, 62. H6C III, 2, 112. Troil. IV, bid follow, Wint. V, 1, 109. let it be who it is, Caes. 5, 176. Hml. II, 2, 196. Lr. I, 4, 26. V, 3, 248. Oth. I, 3, 80. make choice of whom your wisest friends you I, 2, 52. IV, 2, 99. Ant. Ill, 6, 23. Cymb. IV, 2, 76. will, Hml. IV, 5, 204. V, 5, 27. W h o a ho ho or W h o a ho hoa, an exclamaW h o , relat. pron.; Anglos, genitive whose, f. i. tion to attract attention at a distance; used by Slender Ven. 99. 189. 268.487. 543. T p . I, 2, 150. 182. II, and the old shepherd in W i v . V, 5, 187 & Wint. Ill, 3, 1, 116. 257. V, 77. Gent. 11,4, 130. 166. HI, 1,227. 79. cf. Merch. V, 39. Whoe'er, any one that; whatever person: Sonn. III,2,69. 79. IV,1,27. IV,3,21. H 4 A I, 1, 38 (heavy news, whose worst was etc.). Objective whom, f. i. Ven. 133, 11. W i v . II, 2, 103. L L L IV, 1, 4. H 4 A V, 4, 630. Pilgr. 30. Sonn. 128,11. Tp. I, 2, 68. 222. Ill, 37. H4B IV, 3, 12. H 6 A I, 2, 107. I, 3, 7. Oth. I, 3, 3, 62. Gent. Ill, 1, 14. 82. Ill, 2, 37. IV, 3, 17. Err. 65. Unchanged in the accus.: w. I woo, myself would I, 1, 45. Mids. V, 181. As II, 4, 52. All's III, 4, 17. be his wife, T w . 1, 4,42. w. you find attach, Rom. V, 27. John II, 137. H5 III, 5, 17. H6B III, 2, 345. Cor. 3, 173. 1, 1, 268. who for whom: T p . I, 2,231. IV, 1,4. Gent. W h o e v e r , the same: Lucr. 879. Sonn. 135,1. IV, 1, 51. Wint. V, 1, 109. H5 V, 2, 260. H 6 A IV, Err. V, 339. Shr. III, 2, 235. All's III, 2, 115. V, 3, 3, 35. Troil. I, 3, 186. Tim. V, 1, 220. Mcb. III, 1, 105. John III, 1, 335. V, 5, 19. H6C II, 2, 133. R 3 123. Ill, 4, 42. Lr. IV, 1, 47. Oth. II, 3, 15 etc. Qq II, 2, 146. Cor. Ill, 1, 113. Mcb. IV, 1, 47. Unchanwho, F f whom: Merch. I, 2, 25. IV, 1, 290. H4B I, 1, ged in the accus.: w. the king favours, H8 II, 1, 47. 28. F f who, Qq whom: R3 I, 3, 327. IV, 3, 4. F l who, W h o l e , 1) uninjured, unhurt, unbroken, sound: later F f whom: Err. V, 137. L L L I, 1, 167. A s III, my heart all w. as thine, Ven. 370. are they broken? 4, 52. Wint.II,2,6. IV,4,510. H6B V, 1, 63. whom No, they are both as w. as a fish, Gent. II, 5, 20; cf. for who: whom, with Sebastian,... would here have the same quibble in H5 111, 2, 37 and Troil. Ill, 1, killed your king, Tp. V, 76 (later F f and M. Edd. 54. let them keep their limbs w. W i v . Ill, 1, 79. 111.

w yet all goes well, yet all our joints are w. H4A IV, 1, 83. men's flesh preserved so to. H6B III, I, 301. w. as the marble, Mcb. Ill, 4, 22 (cf. Wint. II, 3, 90). if you'll patch a quarrel, as matter w. you have not to make it with, Ant. II, 2, 53. you keep by land the legions and the horse w. Ill, 7, 72. 75. Ill, 8, 3. 2) restored to soundness: I would the state of time had first been iv. ere he by sickness had been visited, H4A IV, 1, 25. he was thrust in the mouth, ... and 'tis not w. yet, H6B IV, 7, 11. Caes. II, 1, 327. 328. Ant. IV, 8, 11. In a moral sense: all is w. All's V, 3, 37. this might have been ... made w. John I, 35. H4A II, 1, 8 1 .

3) not only in part, all, complete, entire: Lucr. Arg. 20. Tp. II, 1, 316. II, 2, 137. Meas. Ill, 1, 235. Err. Ill, 2, 102. 140. Ado I, 1, 67. II, 1, 254. Ill, 1, 5. Ill, 3, 173. V, 2, 32. LLL I, 2, 191. Mids. II, 1, 55. Ill, 2, 53. Merch. 1, 1, 43. All's IV, 3,162. Tw. V, 386. John V, 2, 178."H4B II, 4, 376. H6A II, 3, 54. H6B 1, 1, 133. II, 1, 164. H8 IV, 2, 154. Rom. II, 4, 78. 104. Hml. Ill, 2, 291. Oth. IV, 3, 79. Ant. II, 2, 183 etc. Preceded by all: all my w. device, Merch. Ill, 4, 81. all the w. army, H6A I, 1, 126. Ill, 1, 164. H8 I, 1, 12. Rom. IV, 2, 32. Oth. IV, 3, 75 (Ff for all the w. world, Qq for the w. world). Ant. III, 10, 5. Per. I, 1, 33. Substantively: they whose w. is swallowed in confusion, Lucr. 1159. a leg, a head, stood for the «•• 1428. he pays the w. Sonn. 134, 14. Arthur's title in the w. John II, 562. viceroy of the w. H6A V, 4, 143. Wholesome, 1) sound, healthy: it doth posset and curd ...the thin and w. blood, Hml. I, 5, 70. thy natural magic ... on w. life usurp immediately, III, 2, 271. like a mildewed ear, blasting his w. brother, III, 4, 65. Metaphorically, = a) prosperous: in state as w. as in state 'tis fit, Wiv. V, 5, 63. when shalt thou see thy w. days again, Mcb. IV, 3, 105. in the tender of a w. weal, Lr. I, 4, 2"0. b) reasonable: an honest method, as w. as sweet, Hml. II, 2, 465. if it shall please you to make me a w. answer, III, 2, 328. I cannot ... make you a w. answer; my wit's diseased, 333. in w. wisdom he might not but refuse you, Oth. Ill, 1, 49. 2) tending to promote health, salubrious: Meas. IV, 2, 76 C—st). Err. V, 104. L L L I, 1,235. As III, 2, 58. Shr. IV, 3, 16. Wint. I, 2, 346. R2 III, 4, 39. 46. H5 I, 1, 61. Cor. 1,1, 18. Caes. II, 1, 264. Hml. 1, 1, 162. Cymb. I, 2, 4. Per. IV, 6, 28 (w. iniquity, ironically). Metaphorically, = salutary, suitable, profitable: to wail friends lost is not by much so w. profitable as to rejoice at friends but newly found, L L L V, 2, 760. w. counsel, R2 II, 1, 2. H8 I, 1, 113. not w. to those, I, 2, 45. not w. to our cause, 111, 2, 99. repeal daily any w. act, Cor. I, 1, 85. you wear out a goodw. forenoon in hearing a cause between . . . , II, 1,77 (which might be spent more profitably), speak to 'em ...in w. manner, II, 3, 66. to such w. end as clears her from all blame, Lr. 11, 4, 146. it seems not meet, nor w. to my place, Oth. 1,1, 146. Wholesome -profitable: LLL V, 2, 760, not hyphened in O. Edd., see Wholesome. Wholly, entirely: Wiv. Ill, 2, 63. L L L V, 2, 65. Troil. Ill, 1, 22. IV, 4, 122. Ant. I, 2, 182. Cymb. II, 2, 7. Whoobub, outcry, clamour: had not the old man

1365 come in with a w. against his daughter and the king's son, Wint. IV, 4, 629. Whoop, an interjection of a somewhat coarse nature: he makes the maid to answer 'w., do me no harm, good man'; puts him o f f , slights him, with 'w., do me no harm, good man', Wint. IV, 4, 199. 200. w., Jug, I love thee, Lr. I, 4, 245. Whoop, vb. see Hoop. Whore, subst. a prostitute, a strumpet Tp. II, 1, 166. Wiv. IV, 1, 65. Meas. Ill, 2, 62. IV, 2, 39. V, 521. H4B II, 4, 157. 280. Ill, 2, 338. H5 II, 3, 41 (Me w. of Babylon; cf. Revelation XVII). H6A I, 3, 35. Troil. II, 3, 79. IV, 1, 66. V, 1, 20 (his masculine w.). V, 2, 114. 193. V, 4, 7. 26. V, 7, 22. Tit. IV, 2, 72. Rom. 11,4, 32. Tim. IV, 3, 42. 61. 83. 133. 134. 139. 141. Mcb. I, 2. 15. Hml. II, 2,614. Lr. I, 4 , 1 3 7 . 11,4,52. 111,2,90. 111,6,21. IV, 6, 165. Oth. Ill, 3, 359. IV, 1, 187 etc. Ant. I, 2, 82. Ill, 6, 67. IV, 12, 13. V, 2, 221. Cymb. II, 4, 128. Whore, vb. 1) to fornicate: Tim. IV, 3, 14G. Oth. V, 1. 116. 2) to debauch: Hml. V, 2,.64. W h o r e m a s t e r , one who converses with prostitutes or practises lewdness: Meas. Ill, 2, 37. H4A II, 4, 516. Tim. II, 2, 111. 113. Lr. 1, 2, 137. W h o r e m a s t e r l y , running after whores, lecherous: Troil. V, 4, 7. Whoremonger, the same as whoremaster: Meas. III, 2, 37. Whoreson, 1) bastard: Lr. 1,1,24. 2) a term of coarse familiarity, — fellow, when used as a substantive: the sly —s have got a speeding trick, H81,3,39. well said; a merry w., ha! thou shalt be loggerhead, Rom. IV, 4, 19. Adjectively applied not only to persons, but to anything, as a term of reproach or ludicrous dislike, and sometimes (ns in the language of Doll Tearsheet) used even in a tone of coarse tenderness: Tp. I, 1,46. Gent. 11,5,49. IV, 4, 47. Err. IV, 4, 24. LLL IV, 3, 204. Shr. IV, 1, 132. 158. 160. H4A 11, 2, 88. II, 4, 155. 252. Ill, 3, 177. II4B I, 2, 16. 40. 43. 123. 128. II, 2, 91. II, 4, 225. 235. 250. 319. 326. Ill, 2, 193. Troil. II, 1, 44. II, 3, 244. V, 1, 32. V, 3, 101. Hml. V, 1, 189. 193. Lr. I, 4, 89. II, 2, 19. 35. 69. Ant. V, 2, 277. Cymb. II, 1, 4. 16. Whorish, addicted to lewdness: Troil. IV, 1, 63. Whoso, whosoever: R2 II, 2, 130. H6A III, 4, 39. Tim. V, 1,212. Per. Prol. 37. Whosoe'er, whatever person, any body that: H6A V, 3, 52. H6C IV, 7, 74. R3 III, 4, 67 (Qq whatsoe'er). Whosoever, the same: R2 V, 3, 83. Troil. I, 2, 208. Whosomever, = whomsoever: w. you take him to be, Troil. II, 1, 70 (the later Ff and M. Edd. whosoever). Why, adv. wherefore; interrogatively and relatively; f. i. Ven. 96. 120. 138. 169. 373. 951. Lucr. 1224. 1225. Tp. I, 2, 444. II, 1, 200. 308. Ill, 3, 94. IV, 82. Gent. I, 2, 72. II, 3, 38. IV, 2, 27. Wiv. II, 1, 4. Err. I, 1, 30. II, 2, 45 (every tchy hath a wherefore). Mids. Ill, 2, 43. R3 IV, 4, 19. V, 3, 185. Lr. Ill, 6, 30 ( = for which reason; therefore a comma after speak). IV, 6, 33 (why I do trifle thus with his despair, is done to cure it). Oth. Ill, 3, 176 {why, why is this ? thinkest thou I'Id make a life ofjealousy 1

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W

= wherefore do you tell me this?). Ant. IV, 14, 89 (the thing why thou hast drawn it) etc. Why so? = wherefore, for what reason: puppet ? why so? ay, that way goes the game, Mids. Ill, 2, 289. I love you better. And why so, my lord? Wint. II, 1, 7. Cymb. I, 1, 15. For why = because, for: sorts a sad look to her lady's sorrow, for why her face wore sorrow's livery, Lucr. 1222. I weep for thee and yet no cause I have, for why thou left'st me nothing in thy will; and yet thou left'st me more than I did crave, for why I craved nothing of thee still, Pilgr. 138. 140. sorrow changed to solace, solace mixed with sorrow, for why she sighed and hade me come to-morrow, 204. if she do chide, 'tis not to have you gone, for why the fools are mad, if left alone, Gent. Ill, 1, 99. trembled and shook, for why he stamped and swore, Shr. Ill, 2, 169. then must my earth ivith her continual tears become a deluge ...,for why my bowels cannot hide her woes, but like a drunkard must I vomit them, Tit. Ill, 1, 231. Peculiar passages: the rites for why I love him are bereft me, Oth. I, 3, 258 ( = why alone. But Qq for which), send the hearers weeping to their beds, for why the senseless brands will sympathize ... and in compassion weep the fire out, K2 V, 1, 46 (Qq for why, the etc. Ff for why* Perhaps why is here the interjection , intimating that something is to be added by way of amplification; cf. Gent. II, 3, 13). Why that, see sub That. Why either, see Either. W h y , interj., almost an expletive, merely enlivening the speech, especially when something new is perceived or comes into the mind: Ven. 246. 717. 1109. Tp. I, 2, 215. II, 1, 95. II, 1, 261. Ill, 2, 29. 58. 80. 95. Gent. I, 1, 33. 79. I, 3, 4. II, 1, 50. II, 3, 13. Meas. I, 2, 3 etc. etc. Why, so, an expression of content or of unwilling acquiescence: no news of them? why, so; and I know not what's spent in the search; why, thou loss upon loss, Merch. Ill, 1, 95. it shall be what o'clock 1 say it is. Why so, this gallant will command the sun, Shr. IV, 3, 198. your son was gone before I came. He was? why, so! go all which way it will, R2 II, 2, 87. why, so! now have I done a good day'swork, R3II, 1, 1. Cor. V, 1, 15. unreal mockery, hence! why, so: being gone, I am a man again, Mcb. Ill, 4,107. cf. Gent.II, 1,137, and why, this it is, in 1,3,90. Used a as call or exclamation: why, Jessica, I say! Why, Jessica! Mcrch. II, 5, 6. why, Davy! Here, sir! 1I4BV, 1,8. why, how now, ho, awake! Tp. II, 1,308. V, 285. Gent. V, 4, 86. Meas. I, 2, 128. W i c k , that round which the wax or tallow in a candle is applied: Hml. IV, 7, 116. Wicked (super). —est, Meas. V, 53.) bad, immoral: Tp. I, 2, 320. V, 130. Wiv. II, 1, 20. 68. V, 5, 165. Meas. I, 2, 27. II, 1,174.183.187. 193. 199. Ill, 2, 20. Mids. V, 181. As III, 2, 44. V, 1, 5. All's I, 3, 37. Ill, 7, 45. Wint. I, 2, 292. V, 3, 91. John II, 193. 111,1,83. IV, 2, 71. R2V, 1,66. H4A I, 2, 106. 11,4, 517. II4B II, 4, 346. 347. 355. 357. H6A V, 4, 16. 42. H6B II, 1, 174. 186. Ill, 1, 52. R3 I, 2, 103. V, 1, 23. Troil. V, 10, 28 (a w. conscience). Tit. IV, 3, 23. V, 2, 98. V, 3, 145. Rom. Ill, 5, 235. Tim. Ill, 3, 33. V, 4, 71. Mcb. II, 1, 50. IV, 1, 45. Hml. I, 2, 156. I, 4, 42. I, 5, 44. Ill, 3, 59 (the w. prize = the prize of wickedness). Ill, 4, 12 (Ff idle). V, 1, 271. Lr. II, 1, 41. 11, 4, 259. 260. Oth. V, 2, 181. Cymb. V, 5, 463. Per. IV, 4, 33. V, 1, 173. V, 3, 95. Lucr. 1035. 1540.

Sometimes = mischievous: as w. dew as e'er my mother brushed ... from unwholesome fen, Tp. 1,2,321. that samew. bastard of Venus, AsIV, 1,216. cf. Mids. II, 2, 98. Troil. IV, 4, 61. Tim. Ill, 2, 49. Wickedly, sinfully: Lucr. 365. Wickedness, 1) corruption of manners, immorality: As 111,2,44. H5 IV,1,156. II6A 111,1,14. Especially used of lewdness and incontinence: Wiv. II, 2, 134. Ado III, 2,113. All's I, 3,40. 111,2,89. Ho III, 3, 22. Apparently = a state of being mischievous disguise, I see thou art a w., wherein the pregnant enemy does much, Tw. II, 2, 28. 2) a bad action: I'll never care what w. I do, Lr. III, 7, 99. knows he the w.? IV, 2, 92. W i c k e r , made of twigs: a w. bottle, Oth. II, 3, 152 (Ff twiggen-bottle). W i d e , adj. 1) very extensive, stretching far: the w. world, Sonn. 19, 7. 107, 2. 137, 10. Err. II, 1, 21. Ado IV, 1, 292. Merch. I, 1, 167. As I, 3, 134. Troil. 11,2,206. Tit. I, 248. Rom. Ill, 3,16. w. as the ocean is, Sonn. 80, 5. Ado IV, 1, 142. Tim. 1, 1, 47. the w. universe, Sonn. 109, 13. this w. and universal theatre, Asll,7,137. the w. vessel of the universe, H5 IV Chor. 3. in the world's w. mouth, 1I4AI,3,153. the w. fields, LLL 11,93. w. Arabia, Merch. 11,7,42. the w. cheeks o'the air, Cor. V, 3, 151- the forest walks are w. Tit. II, 1, 114. Caes. I, 2, 155. the w. arch of the ranged empire, Ant. 1, 1, 33. 2) having a great space between the sides, forming a great opening or gap: small head and nostril w. Ven. 296. thew. wound, 1052. Rom. Ill, 1,100. gape at —st, Tp. I, 1, 63. that iv. gap, Wint. IV, 1, 7. V, 3, 154. w. havoc (i. e. a breach) made for bloody power to rush upon your peace, John 11,220. the w. difference 'twixt amorous and villanous, Cymb. V, 5, 194. 3) capacious, holding much: weed w. enough to wrap a fairy in, Mids. II, 1, 256. As II, 7, lfiO. H4B III, 1, 51. with conscience w. as hell, H5 111, 3, 13. as this temple waxes, the inward service of the mind and soul grows w. withal, Hml. I, 3,14. till that a capable and iv. revenge swallow them up, Oth. Ill, 3, 459. 4) apparent, open, obvious: without more —r and more overt test, Oth. 1, 3, 107 (Qq certain, cf. the adverb in Rom. II, 4, 91). W i d e , adv. 1) to a great extent, far and near: one body should be filled with all graces w. enlarged, As III, 2,151 (spread abroad, distributed through the whole world), far and w. = for all the world, apparently, plainly: proves thee far and w. a broad goose, Rom. II, 4, 91 (cf. the adj. in Oth. I, 3, 107). 2) so as to have a great space from one side to the other, or to form a great opening: the door he opens w. Lucr. 359. John II, 300. 449. keep my drooping eyelids open w. Sonn. 27, 7. Tp. II, 1, 214. H4B IV, 5, 24. the graves all gaping w. Mids. V, 387. H4B V, 5, 58. I will not open my lips so w. as ..., Tw. I, 5, 2. stretch the nostril w. H5 111, 1, 15. the villains march w. betwixt the legs, H4A IV, 2, 43. his arms spread —r than a dragon's wings, H6A I, 1, 11. earth, gape open w. R3 I, 2, 65. and w. unclasp the tables of their thoughts, Troil. IV, 5, 60. a thing inseparate divides more —r than the sky and earth, V, 2, 149. thus w. I'll ope my arms, Hml. IV, 5, 145. her clothes spread w. IV, 7, 176. 3) far from the mark or from the purpose, so as

w

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to miss the aim, astray: bear thine eyes straight, though like you Windsor wives? V, 5, 110. the rest aloof are thy proud heart go w. Sonn. 140, 14. is my lord well, the Dardanian wives, Merch. Ill, 2, 58. him I love that he doth speak so w.f Ado IV, 1,63. no such matter; more ... than e'er I shall love w. Tw.V,139 (quite = you are w. Troil. Ill, 1. 97. Pyrrhus at Priam drives; woman; placed in the rhyme), let wives with child in rage strikes w.; but with the whiff and wind of his pray, John III, 1, 89. as did the wives of Jewry at fell sword the unnerved father falls, Hml. II, 2, 494. Herod's slaughtermen, H5 III. 3, 40. pales in the flood still, still far w. Lr. IV, 7,50. With of: I never heard with men, with wives and boys, V Chor. 10. his enforcea man ...so w. of his own respect, Wiv. Ill, 1, 58. w. ment of the cily wives, R3 III, 7, 8. make wells and o'the bowhand, L L L IV, 1, 135 (far from the mark). Niobes of the maids and wives, Troil. V, 10, 19. lest Wide-chapped, opening the mouth wide: Tp. I, that thy wives with spits and boys with stones in puny battle slay me, Cor. IV, 4, 5. ci.Alewife, Goodu'ife, 1, 60. Housewife, Midwife-, and the doubtful passage in Oth. Wide-enlarged, see Enlarge and Wide. Widen, to throw open: now the gates are ope; ... 1 , 1 , 2 1 . 'tis for the followers fortune —s them, not for the fliers, 2) a married woman considered in her relation to Cor. I, 4, 44. her husband: Tp. 1, 1, 65. II, 1, 4. Ill, 1, 83. IV, 77. W i d e - s k i r t e d , having wide borders, extensive: 123. V, 210. Gent. Ill, 1, 66. 76 (take a w.). Wiv. w. meads, Lr. I, 1, 66. I, 1, 201. Ill, 3, 242. IV, 2, 125. Meas. I, 2, 151. W i d e - s t r e t c h e d , large, extensive: w. honours, II, 1, 69. 120. Err. I, 1, 59. I, 2, 88. II, 1, 56. Ill, 1, 115 II, 4, 82. 63 etc. etc. with to: R3 I, 2, 10. Lr. I, 1, 69. Cymb. Widow, subst. a woman whose husband is dead: V, 5, 39. asked her for his w. Per. Prol. 37. I lake Lucr. 906. Sonn. 9, 1. 5. 7. Tp. II, 1, 76. 77. 78. 133. thee for iv. As IV, 1, 137. to woo thee for my w. Shr. Meas. II, 1,207. V, 175.178.179. Ado V,2,82. Merch. II, 195. have to w. As IV, 1, 130. will have Katharine 11,2,171. Ill, 2,312. Shr. IV, 2, 37. 50. IV, 5,78. V, to my w. Shr. II, 282. 367. took to w. Caes. II, 1, 293. 2, 7 etc. John II, 32. 305. Ill, 1, 14.108. R2 I, 2, 43. Hml. 1,2,14. take Antony Octavia to his w. Ant. 11,2, H4B 11,1,76. 89. 11,3,57. H6BV, 1,188. II6CIII,2, 130. what dowry shall I have with her to w. Shr. 11,121. 16.26. V,6,39. R3 1,1,81. 11,2,55. 111,7,185. Tim. W i f e l i k e , having the qualities of the female sex, IV, 3, 38. Hml. Ill, 2, 233. Lr. V, 1, 59. Ant. HI, 3, resembling a woman: thy meekness saint-like, w. go30 etc._ With of: H5 1,2,158. Rom. I, 2,69 (the lady vernment, H8 II, 4, 138. more goddess-like than w. w. of y'ilruvio). With to: H8 III, 2,71. w. to a woful Cymb. Ill, 2, 8. bed, R31,2,249. Adjectively: aw.aunt, Mids.1,1,157. W i g h t , person, being (fem. as well as masc.): this w. lady, John II, 548. my w. comfort, III, 4, 105. beshrew the witch (viz night)! with venomous —s she your w. dolour, R3I1,2,65 (Qq your widow's dolours'). stays as tediously as hell, Troil. IV, 2, 12. Used by W i d o w , vb. 1) to bereave of a husband: —ed Pistol: O base Hungarian w. Wiv. I, 3, 23. 1 ken the wombs, Sonn. 97, 8. hath —ed and unchilded many a w. 40. 0 braggart vile and damned furious w. H5 II, one, Cor. V, 6, 153. I, 64. In rhyming: Sonn. 106, 2. L L L I, 1, 178. In 2) to endow with a widow's right, to jointure: for the style of popular poetry: she was a w., if ever such his possessions ... we do instate and w. you withal, w. were, Oth. II, 1, 159. he was a w. of high renown, Meas. V, 429. II, 3, 96. so for her many a w. did die, Per. Prol. 39 3) to become a widow to, to survive as a wife: let (Gower's speech). me be married to three kings in a forenoon andw. them W i g h t l y , writing of some M. Edd. in L L L III, all, Ant. I, 2, 27. 198. see Whitely. Widow-comfort, see Widow. Wild, 1) not tame, not domestic: Ven. 560. Sonn. Widow-dolour, see Widow. 102, 11. Ado III, 1, 35. 112. Mercli. V, 71. Shr. II, W i d o w e r , a man whose wife is dead: Tp. II, 1, 279. H4A IV, 1, 103. H8 V, 3, 22. Cor. Ill, 2, 2. In 79. All'sV,3,70.142. H6CIII,3,227. IV,1,99. Ant. the following passages adj. and subst. hyphened by some Edd.: w. boars, Ant. 11,2,183. sleeps by day more II, 2, 122. Widowhood, state of being a widow (? cf. Of), than the w. cat, Merch. II, 5, 48. Shr. I, 2, 197. Oth. or estate settled on a widow (?): I'll assure her of her II, 1, 111. a w. duck, H4A II, 2, 108. IV, 2, 21. w. w., be it that she survive me, in all my lands and leases fowl, Mids. Ill, 1, 33. Tw. IV, 2, 55. my taxing like a w. goose flies, As II, 7, 86. Rom. II, 4, 76. w. geese, whatsoever, Shr. II, 125. Widow-maker, one who bereaves women of their Mids. Ill, 2, 20. H4A II, 4, 152. H4B V, 1, 79. Lr. II, 4, 46. if thy wits run the ID. goose chase, I have husbands: John V, 2, 17. Wield, to use with the hand, to manage: weapons done, Rom. 11,4,75 (Dyce: a kind of horse-race: two w. Lucr. 1432. Rom.1,1,101. wilt thou the spigot w.? horses were started together, and whichever rider could Wiv. 1,3,24. to w. a sceptre, H6CIV, 6,73. more than get the lead, the other was obliged to follow him over whatever ground the foremost jockey chose to go). words can w. the matter, Lr. I, 1, 56. Wieldy, in Unwieldy, q. v. 2) growing without culture: Mids. II, 1,249. Wint. W i f e , (plur. wives; also the Anglos, gen. of the IV, 4, 93. H5 III, 5, 7. Cymb. IV, 2, 390. singular spelt so in 0 . Edd., f. i. Wiv. II, 1, 242. Ill, 3) uncultivated, uninhabited, desert: to trace the 2,35. 111,5,79. IV, 2,148.171. Meas. IV,2,4. Merch. forests w. Mids. II, 1, 25. As V, 4, 165. high w. hills, IV, 1,451. V, 167. As IV, 1,170. All's I, 3, 43) 1) any R2 II, 3, 4. a little fire in a w. field, Lr. Ill, 4, 117. woman of mature age that is or might be married: 4)savage, atrocious, sanguinary: Lucr.980. Mids. good morrow, goodie. Not so, an't please your worship. II, 1, 228. 229. V, 225. John IV, 3, 48. V, 2, 74. H4A Good maid then, Wiv. II, 2,36. she's a civil modest w. V, 2,11. H4B IV, 5,132. H6BV, 2, 59. Mcb.II,4,16. 101. never a w. in Windsor leads a better life, 122. 5) turbulent, tempestuous: w. waves, Ven.819. the wives may be merry, and yet honest too, IV, 2,107. how w. waters, Tp. I, 2, 2. 379. Gent. II, 7, 32. Err. II, 1, S c h m i d t , Shakespeare Lexicon. 2. Ed. T. II.

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31. Merch. V, 11. H 4 B I . 1 , 1 5 4 . H5 HI, 1,14. H8 II, 4, 200. Ill, 2, 198. Troil. I, 1, 105. Mcb. IV, 2, 21. a tc. night, Lr. II, 4,311. In a moral sense, = violently agitated: the times are to. H4B I, 1, 9. H8 V, 1,15. in to. hurry, Cor. IT, 6,4. while men'» mind* are to. Hml. V, 2, 405. in a town of war, yet to. Oth. II, 3, 214. 6) ungoverned, licentious: the to. prince and Pains, Wiv. Ill, 2, 74. my to. societies, III, 4, 8. Meas. IT, 3, 19. Merch. II. 2, 190. 196. H4A V, 2, 72. H4B V, 2, 123. H5 I, 2, 267. Hml. II, 1,18. 22. C j m b . 1,6,103. Sometimes not a term of reproach, = wanton, frolicsome: youth it to. and age it tame, Pilgr. 164. our to. faction, Gent. IT, 1, 37. pretty and witty, to. and yet, too, gentle, Err. Ill, 1,110. to move to. laughter in the throat of death, L L L T , 2 , 8 6 5 . cf. Ado III, 1,35. Merch. T, 71. H4A IT, 1, 103. Adverbially: if I chance to talk a Utile tc., forgive me, H8 I, 4, 26. 7) violent, carried headlong by passion: to. rage, H5 IV, 7,82. desperate, to. and furious, R3 IT, 4,169. w. grief, 229. Rom. Ill, 3, 110. Tim. V, 1, 167. 206. Ant. V, 2, 154. 8) rash, inconsiderate: 'twere most piteous to be to. Wint. II, 1, 182. a to. dedication of yourselves to unpathed waters, IV, 4, 577. Mm unheedful, desperate, to. adventure, H6A IV, 4, 7. a to. exposture to each chance, Cor. IV, 1, 36. 9) bewildered, distracted, mad: to. amazement, John V, 1, 35. your looks are pale and to. Rom. V, 1, 28. V, 3, 240. it almost turns my dangerous nature to. Tim. IV, 3, 499 (dangerous perhaps = exposed to danger. Most M. Edd. mild), to. and whirling words, Hml. I, 5, 133. 10) wanting order and regularity, or quiet and composure in any manner; extravagant, inordinate, eccentric, fantastic, mad: how like you this to. counsel, mighty states1 smacks it not something of the policy i John II, 395. the irregular and to. Glendower, H4A I, I, 40. like a to. Morisco, H6B III, 1, 365. in this tc. action, Troil. I, 3, 340. so w. in their attire, Mcb. I, 3,40. paragons description and tc. fame, Oth. II,1,62. you to. bedfellow, Ant. I, 2, 51. the to. disguise, II, 7, 131. I am to. in my beholding, Per. V, 1, 224. W I M , adv. see Wild, adj. 6. W I U , subst. 1) wilderness: the vasty —s of wide Arabia, Merch. II, 7, 41. Metaphorically: a w. of nothing, save of joy, Merch. Ill, 2, 184. 2) = weald: a franklin in tht w. of Kent) H4A II, 1, 60. W l l d - b « a r , see Wild, adj. 1. W i l d - c a t (wildcat), see Wild, adj. 1. W l l d - d a e k , see Wild, adj. 1. W i l d e r n e s s , 1) a tract of solitude and savageness, a desert: Lucr. 544. Gent. IV, 1, 63. Merch. ill, 1, 128. R2 IV, 74. H4B IV, 5, 137. H6B III, 2, 360. Tit. Ill, 1, 54. 94 f a to. of sea). 2) wildness: such a warped slip of to. ne'er issued from his blood, Meas. Ill, 1,142 (slip of w. = wild slip). WiMHre, a composition of inflammable materials: Lucr. 1523. H4A III, 3, 45. WlU-rawl, see Wild, adj. 1. Wlld-g**ae, see Wild, adj. 1. W i l d l y , 1) without cultivation: valour that to. grows in them, Cymb. IV, 2, 180. 2) savagely: prisoners to. overgrown with hair, H5 V, 2, 43.

3) in a bewildered manner, with perturbation or distraction, madly: she to. breaketh from their strict embrace, Ven. 874. to. determining which way to fly, Lncr. 1150. looking to. Wiv. HI, 3, 94. R2 V, 3, 25. Hml. 111,4,119. how to. then walks my estate in France, John IV, 2, 128. start not so w.from my affair, Hml. Ill, 2, 321. 4) inconsiderately, foolishly: I prattle something too w. Tp. Ill, 1, 58. he demeaned himself rough, rude and to. Err. V, 88. accident is guilty to what we to. do, Wint. IV, 4, 550. tomething to. by us performed, V, 1, 129. W1 I d - m a r e ; to ride the tc. = to play at see-saw: H4B II, 4, 268. W l l d n e s * , 1) disorderly growth in an uncultivated state: vineyards, fallows ... grew to tc. H5 V, 2, 55. 2) savageness, fierceness: wilder to him than tigers in their to. Lncr. 980. 3) irregularity of manners, licentiousness: prate to me of the to. of his youth, H4B 111,2,328. IV, 5,153. H5 I, 1,26. 64. Caes II, 1, 189. 4) want of sober judgment: our youths and to. shall no whit appear, Caes. II, 1, 148. 5) distraction, madness: 1 do wish that your good beauties be the happy cause of Hamlet's w. Hml. Ill, 1, 40. put thyself into a haviour of less fear, ere tc. vanquish my staider senses, Cymb. Ill, 4, 9. W i l e s , deceitful practices, tricks, stratagems: the w. and guiles that women work, Pilgr. 335. these are but imaginary w. Err. IV,3,10. upon my wit, to defend my to. Troil. I, 2, 285. Wlirnl, 1) willing, pleased, ready: this beauteous combat, to. and unwilling, Ven. 365. a secure and to. Actaeon, Wiv. HI, 2, 44. when walls are so to. to hear without warning, Mids. V, 211. patience perforce with 10. choler meeting, Rom. 1,5,91 (ready anger, opposed to enforced and constrained patience). 2) acting with set purpose; or done by design: from thee going he went to. slow, Sonn. 51,13 (hyphened by M. Edd.). if ever I were to. negligent, Wint. 1,2,255 (hyphened by O. and M. Edd.). to confess the to. abuse, H4B II, 4, 339. we shall see to. adultery and murder committed, H5 II, 1, 40. Strange expression: you are too to. blame, H4A III, 1, 177 (blameable on purpose, on principle; indulging your faults, though conscious that they are faults. M. Edd. wilful-blame). Hence = voluntarily assumed, affected, not natural: if thou thyself decewesi by w. taste of what thyself refuscst, Sonn. 40, 8. and do a to. stillness entertain, with purpose to be drestedin an opinion of wisdom, Merch. I, 1, 90. 3) obstinate, stubborn, refractory: the Dauphin is too to. opposite, John V,2,124 (hyphened by M. Eild.) what means this tc. silencet R3 III, 7, 28. to tc. men the injuries that they themselves procure must be their schoolmasters, Lr. II, 4, 305. 4) regardless, reckless, saucy: and in his will his tc. eye he tired, Lucr. 417. I owe you much, and, like a to. boy, that which I owe is lost, Merch. I, 1, 146 (i. e. like a reckless boy I confess to you), how will their grudging stomachs be provoked to w. disobedience, and rebel, H6A IV, I, 142. peace, to. boy, H6C V, 5, 31. the tc. sons of old Andronicus, Tit. IV, 4, 8. W i l f u l - b l a m e , see Wilful 2. W i l f u l l y , 1) willingly, readily, voluntarily: they

w w. themselves exile from light, Mids. Ill, 2,386. thatw. seeks her own salvation, H m l . V, 1 , 2 . 2) on purpose: still thou mistakest, or else committest thy knaveries w. Mids. Ill, 2, 346 (Ff willingly), who, on my soul, hath w. betrayed the souls of those ..., H 4 A I, 3, 81. 3) obstinately, stubbornly: why thou against the church ... so to. dost spurn, J o h n III, 1, 142. 4) saucily: my saucy bark inferior far to his on your broad main doth w. appear, Sonn. 80, 8. W i l f u l - n e g l i g e n t , see Wilful 2. Wilfulness, 1) intentional and premeditated way of acting and behaving: book both my w. and errors down, Sonn. 117, 9 (my offences committed on purpose as well as my mistakes, cf. forsworn in will and error, L L L V, 2, 471). 2) inclination, propensity (?): never Hydra-headed w. so soon did lose his seat, H 5 1,1, 35 (perverse selfindulgence, which seemed unextirpable like the heads of the Lernaean Hydra?). Wilful-opposite (not hyphened in O. Edd.), see Wilful 3. Wilful-slow (not hyphened in O. Edd.), see Wilful2. W i l l , subst. 1) the faculty of the mind by which we desire and purpose: so true a fool is love that in your w., though you do any thing, he thinks no ill, Sonn. 5 7 , 1 3 . he wants wit that wants resolved w. to learn his wit to exchange the bad for better, Gent. II, 6 , 1 2 . he is the bridle of your w. Err. II, 1, 13. let your w. attend on their accords, 25. a sharp wit matched with too blunt a w. L L L 11, 49. 50. the w. of man is hy his reason swayed, Mids. II, 2, 115. the w. of a living daughter, Merch. I, 2, 26. all too late comes counsel to be heard, where w. doth mutiny with wit's regard, R2 II, 1, 28. so was his w. in his old feeble body, H 6 B V, 3, 13. Troil. I, 3, 122. II, 2, 179. R o m . IV, 1, 72. Caes. II, 2, 71. Hml. I, 3, 95. 11, 1, 101. Ill, 1, 80. Oth. I, 3, 324. 2) a particular operation or effect of that faculty: a) disposition, inclination, bent of m i n d : what wit sets down is blotted straight with w. Lucr. 1299 (wit and w. corresponding to the words conceit and grief in the line before), our shows are more than w., for still we prove much in our vows, but little in our love, T w . II, 4 , 1 2 0 . Scotland hath w. to help, but cannot help, H6C III, 3, 34. a slave to each incensed w. H8 I, 2, 65. not friended by his wish, to your high person his w. is most malignant, 141. value dwells not in particular w. Troil. II, 2, 53. the w. dotes that is attributive to ..., 58. my election is led on in the conduct of my w.; my w. enkindled by mine eyes and ears, two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of w. and judgment: how may I avoid, although my w. distaste what it elected, the wife Icliose? 6 2 — 6 6 . there is between my w. and all offences a guard of patience, V, 2, 53. I have no w. to wander forth of doors, Caes. Ill, 3, 3. one may smell in such a w. most rank, Oth. Ill, 3, 232. with your w. — as you choose, as you think g o o d : then with your w. go on, Caes. IV, 3, 224. Good w. = 1) willingness; good intention: my good w. is to it, and yours it is against, T p . Ill, 1, 30. pray God our cheer may answer my good w. Err. Ill, 1, 20. heart and good w. IV,4,88. here with all good w. .. I yield you up my part, Mids. 111,2,164. if we offend, it is with our good w. V, 108. I will do my good w. H 4 B III, 2,167 ( = my best), he that has but effected his good

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w. hath overta'en mine act, Cor. 1, 9 , 1 8 . your good w. must have that thanks, V, 1,45. Caes. V , 5 , 5 1 . Ant. II, 5 , 8 . Per. 111,4,18. 2) favor, benevolence, love: what dear good w. I bear unto Valentine, Gent. IV, 3,14. to remember my good w. IV, 4, 103. can you carry your good w. to the maid? Wiv. 1, 1, 238 (Evans' speech). / tell you for good w. IV, 5, 81 & 90 (out of friendship. Evans' and Cains' speeches), if a' could get her good w. Ado II, 1,18. 224. Shr. 1,1, 86. H 5 I V , 8 , 7 3 . H 6 A IV, 1, 54. H8 III, 1, 68. Hml. II, 2, 22. Ill w. = enmity, hate; cf. Ill-will. 3) accord, consent, approbation: I hope I have your good w , father Page, Wiv. III, 2, 61. Ill, 4, 86. IV, 4, 84. I'll fetch my sister, to get her good w. E r r . Ill, 2, 70. my w. is your good w. may stand with ours, Ado V, 4 , 2 8 . his good w. obtained, II, 1, 311. with his good w. Shr. 1,1,6. without asking my good w. V, 1, 137. All's 1, 3, 19. 23. II, 4, 15. Lr. V, 3,79. by her good w. = of her own accord, voluntarily: Ven. 479. of thine own good w. = of thy own accord, R2 IV, 177. on my free w. Ant. Ill, 6, 57. by my w. — of my own accord, or with my consent: Ven. 639. Ado 111, 3, 67. T w . Ill, 3, 1. H 4 B IV, 1, 159. Troil. II, 3, 202. b) arbitrary disposal, command, authority: bidding the law make courtesy to their w. Meas. 11,4,175. whose w. stands but mine? H 6 A 1,3,11. we must not rend our subjects from our laws and stick them in our w. H8 I, 2, 94. every thing includes itself in power, power into w., w. into appetite, Troil. I, 3, 120. to curb the w. of the nobility, Cor. Ill, 1, 39. making your —s the scope of justice, T i m . V, 4, 4. bid my w. avouch it, Mcb. Ill, 1, 120. their law's their w. Per. I, 1, 103. c) divine determination: the —s above be done, T p . 1,1,71. Wint. Ill, 3, 7. oppose against their —s, V, 1, 46. the w. of God, H 5 I, 2, 289. V, 1, 34. R2 I, 2, 6. H 6 B III, 1, 86. Cymb. V, 1, 16. by God's w.l H 6 A II, 4 , 8 2 . God's w.l Wiv. Ill, 1, 62. H 5 I V , 3 , 2 3 . 7 4 . IV, 8, 2. H 8 II, 3, 12. Rom. Ill, 3, 76. Oth. II, 3, 161 (Ff fie, fie), od's blessed w. W i v . 1,1,273. od's my iv. A s IV, 3, 17. d) intention, desire: one relying on your lordship's w. Gent. I, 3, 61. my w. is something sorted with his wish, 63. how she opposes her against my w. 111,2,26. my w. is even this, that . . . , IV, 2, 93. always obedient to your grace's w. Meas. 1,1,26. is it your will Claudio shall die to-morrow? 11,2,7. Err. Ill, 2,174. IV,1,112. Mids. I, 1, 87. 118. All's IV, 4, 30. J o h n II, 193. H 8 I, 2, 13. Hml. Ill, 3, 39. Ill, 2, 221. Lr. 1, 1, 44. Oth. I. 3, 399. A n t . IV, 6, 2. IV, 9, 14 etc. to do one's w. Cor. 111,2,137. Caes. IV, 1,27. V , 3 , 4 8 . to have one's w. Err. IV, 2, 18. H 6 C I, 4, 144. IV, 1, 16. 17. H8 II, I, 167. Cymb. I, 6, 8. what is your w.f — what do you want, what is your pleasure? Gent. IV, 2,92. Wiv. II,2,164. 111,4,58. Meas. II, 2, 26. 11,3,2. 111,1,153. 178. Mids. IV, 1, 23. Tit.V, 2 , 1 5 2 . T i m . 1,2,123 etc. your w.l T w . I, 5, 180. Ant. 1, 2, 7. Ill, 13, 46. 92. what's your w. with me? Gent. Ill, 1. 3. Shr. Ind. 2, 105. H 4 A II, 4, 555. T i m . II, 2, 15.' In other cases also = pleasure: on my frailties why are frailer spies, which in their —s count bad what I think good? Sonn. 121, 8. to commend their service to his w. Gent. I, 3, 42. make their —s their law, V, 4, 14. is she wedded or no? To her w., sir, or so, L L L II, 212. wit, an't be thy w., put me into good fooling, T w . I, 5, 35. I danced attendance on his w. H 6 B I, 3, 174. direct me, if it be your w., where great Aufidius 87*

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lives, C o r . I V , 4 , 7 . he stays upon your w. Ant. 1,2,119. at id. = at pleasure: a very trick for them to play at w. W i n t . II, 1, 52. Cor. I, 6, 39. Oth. II, 1, 150. at one'sw. Caes. 11,1, 17. Hml. 1,2,63. Cymb. IV,3,13. e) carnal desire: the sundry dangers of his —'s obtaining, Lucr. 128.129. my w. is strong, past reasons weak removing, 243. hot-burning w. 247. the locks between her chamber and his w. 302. in his w. his wilful eye he tired, 417. where thou with patience must my w. abide, 486. 487. 495. 614. his taste delicious, in digestion souring, devours his w. 700. he hath studied her w. and translated her w. Wiv. I, 3, 54. yielding up thy body to my w. Meas.II, 4 , 1 6 4 . never could maintain his part but in the force of his w. Ado I, 1, 239 (in the heat of lust, when he put up with what was offered). All's IV, 3,19. H á V, 2, 356. R o m . II, 3, 28. Hml. 1,5,46. 111,4,88. L r . IV, 6,278. Oth. 111,3,236. Ant. 111,13,3. Cymb. 1,6,47. cf., above all, the various plays on the word in Sonn. 134. 135. 136.

is —ing pride, L L L II, 36. —ing misery outlives incertain pomp, is crowned before, T i m . IV, 3, 242. c) complying, consenting, voluntary: like a —ing patient, I will drink potions of eisel, Sonn. I l l , 9. not without the prince be —ing, Ado III, 3 , 8 6 . what —ing ransom he will give, H5 III, 5, 63. a —ing bondman, Caes. 1,3,113. we have —ing dames enough, Mcb. IV, 3, 73. 2) to dispose, to determine: what so poor a man as Hamlet is may do, ... God —ing, shall not lack, Hml. I, 5, 186. 3) to order, to b i d : he —ed me in heedfullest reservation to bestoiv them, All's 1,3,230 ( = he ordered by testament? cf. the following passage), at Worcester must his body be interred, for so he —ed it, J o h n V, 7, 100. God's mother —ed me to leave my base vocation, H 6 A 1,2,80. we do no otherwise than we are —ed, I, 3, 10. who —ed you? 11. ivould they speak with me? They —ed me say so, H 8 III, 1 , 1 8 . 4 ) to invite, to summon: he —s you ... that you divest yourself, H 5 II, 4, 77. —ing you overlook this pedigree, 90. he craves a parley, ... —ing you to demand your hostages, Tit. V, 1, 160. 5) to require: it shall be to him then, as our good —s, a sure destruction, Cor. II, 1, 258. what custom —s, in all things should we do't, II, 3, 125. II. irregular verb; 2d pers. pres. wilt, 3d pers. will; impf. would. Often contracted to one syllable with the preceding pronoun: I'll ( 0 . Edd. usually He), thou'lt ( 0 . Edd. sometimes thou't), he'll, she'll, we'll, you'll, they'll-, I'Id, he'Id, she'ld, you'ld. Wilt thou or wouldst thou contracted to wo't or woo't: I I 4 B II, 1, 63. Hml. V, 1, 298. Ant. IV, 2, 7. IV, 15, 59. would for wouldst: W i v . II, 2, 31. H 5 V, 2, 174. Tit. Ill, 1, 210 (Ff wilt), thou't for thou wouldst Cor. I, 9, 2. 1) to have a m i n d , to desire; followed by an infinitive expressed or understood: one for interest, if thou wilt have twain, Ven. 210. feed where thou wilt, 232. I know not love, nor will not know it, 409. 'tis much to borrow, and I will not owe it, 411. he will not manage her, 598. if thou needs wilt hunt, 673. he needs will be absolute Milan, T p . 1,2,108. I am your wife, if you will marry me, III, 1, 83. 86. Gent. I, 1, 11. II, 7, 63. As II, 5, 20. All's II, 1, 73. R 3 I, 4, 95 etc. etc. cf. woo't above. Impf. would as indicative ( = volui): the lion walked along behind some hedge, because he would not fear him, Ven. 1094. not to be tempted, would she be immured, Compl. 251. for one thing she did they would not take her life, T p . 1,2,267. you may thank yourself... that would not bless our Europe with your daughter, II, 1,124. I fear my Julia would not deign my lines, receiving them from such a worthless post, Gent. 1,1,160. what a fool is she, that knows I am a maid and would not force the letter to my view, 1,2,54. he would not, but by gift of my chaste body ..., release my brother, Meas. V, 97. why I . . . would not rather make rash remonstrance of my hidden power, 396. she that would be your wife now ran from you, Err. IV, 4, 152. heaven would that she these gifts should have, As III, 2, 161 etc. I will rather and I would rather see sub Rather 4.

f ) a testament: Lucr. 1198. Pilgr. 138. Wiv. Ill, 4, 60. Merch. I, 2, 27. 101. 118. As 1 , 1 , 2 . 7 1 . T w . I, 5 , 2 6 5 . J o h n I, 109. 11, 192. R2 III, 2, 148. T r o i l . V , 1 0 , 5 3 . Rom. 1,1,208. T i m . V , 1 , 3 0 . Caes. 111,2,134. 140. 143. 148. 158. 160. 161. 163. 243. 244. IV, 1, 8. Ant. Ill, 4, 4. P e r . I, 1, 47. W i l l , diminutive of William: Sonn. 135. 136. 143, 13. H 4 B III, 2, 23. H 6 B II, 3, 75. W i l l , vb. I. regular verb; impf, and partic. pass. willed, partic. pres. willing; 1) to wish, to desire, to be f o r : paying what ransom the insulter —eth, Ven. 550. much —ing to be counted wise, L L L II, 18. whose will still —s it should none spare, 50. as w. the rest, so —eth Winchester, H 6 A III, 1, 162. what —s Lord Talbot pleaseth Burgundy, III, 2, 130. not —ing any longer conference, H 6 C I I , 2 , 1 7 1 . the mother —s it so, Tit. IV, 2, 82. Rom. Ill, 5, 24. the gentleman —ing, H m l . V, 2, 183. wishes fall out as they're —ed, Per. V, 2, 16. Willing, adjectively, = a) desirous, pleased, inclined; and hence = f o r w a r d , ready, prompt (cf. above: L L L II, 18. II6C II, 2, 171. Hml. V, 2, 1 8 3 ) : with a heart as —ing as bondage e'er of freedom, T p . Ill, 1,88 (cf. Of). I was as —ing to grapple, L L L II, 218. but one dead that is —ing to be so, As I, 2, 201. you will not extort from me what I am —ing to keep in, T w . II, 1, 14. she is very —ing to bid you farewell, II, 3 , 1 0 8 . he shall conceal it whiles you are —ing it shall come to note, IV, 3, 29 ( = till you desire), could be —ing to march on to Calais without impeachment, H5 III, 6, 150. if they be still and —ing, I'll undertake may see away their shilling, H 8 Prol. 11. —ing to leave their burthen, IV, 2,3. they that most are —ing, Cor. 1, 6, 67. 1 trouble thee too much, but thou art —ing, Caes. IV, 3, 259. most —ing spirits, Cymb. IV, 2, 338. cf. L u c r . 1237. Sonn. 6, 6 (the —ing loan, i. e. readily and gladly given). Wiv. 1,4,10. Meas. V, 542. As V, 4, 11. Shr. IV, 4, 34. T w . Ill, 3, 11. R2 IV, 108. 190. R 3 V, 3, 264. H8 III, 1, 49 (the —est sin, i. e. committed with the greatest eagerness). T h e adj., where the adv. would have been expected: what you will have, I'll give, and —ing too, R2 III, 3, 206 (with pleasure, gladly). I'll send them all as —ing as I live, Would as subjunctive (vellem); expressing a preH 6 B V, 1, 51. most —ing, madam, H8 IV, 2, 130. the sent wish in a conditional f o r m : backward she pushed swallow follows not summer more — ing, T i m . 111,6,32. him, as she would be thrust, Ven. 41. now she weeps, b) pleased, contented, gratified: he strays with and now she fain would speak, 221. she would, he will —ing sport to the wild ocean, Gent. II, 7, 32. all pride not in her arms be bound, 226. for one sweet look thy

w help I would assure thee, 3 7 1 . he hath won what he would lose again, Lucr. 688. and now she would the caged cloister fly, Compl. 249. now would I give a thousand furlongs of sea for an acre of barren ground, T p . 1 , 1 , 6 9 . I would fain die a dry death, 72. I would have sunk the sea within the earth or ere ..., I, 2 , 1 0 . he would be king on't, II, 1, 156. a foul bombard that would shed his liquor, II, 2, 22. I would not for the world, V, 173. you'ld be king o'the isle, 287. I rather would entreat thy company, Gent. 1,1, 5. love still and thrive therein, even as I would when I to love begin, 10. which they would have the profferer construe 'Ay', I, 2, 56. when willingly 1 would have had her here, 61. to plead for that which I would not obtain, IV, 4, 105. I would have been a breakfast to the beast rather than ..., V, 4 , 3 4 . from which we would not have you warp, Meas. I, 1, 15. which princes, would they, may not disannul, Err. I, 1, 145. I would see his own person, L L L I, 1, 185 etc. Followed by an infinitive of the perfect, to express an intention not carried into execution: it cannot be that so much guile, she would have said, can lurk in such a look, Lucr. 1535 ( = she was g o i n g to say), their antique pen would have expressed even such a beauty as you master now, Sonn. 106, 7 ( = meant or intended to express), who ... would here have killed your king, Tp. V, 78. you would all this time have proved there is no time for all things, Err. II, 2 , 1 0 1 . they would have stolen away, Mids. IV, 1, 161 etc. W i t h the infinitive of the present, on the other hand, often quite — will (in the sense of wish): your father would speak with you, Gent. II, 4, 116. when would you use it? HI, 1, 123. there's some great matter she'Id employ me in, IV, 3 , 3 . would you speak with me? W i v . II, 2 , 1 6 1 . we would, and we would not, Meas. IV, 4 , 3 7 . if'you would know your wronger, lookonme, Ado V,1,271. towed Demetrius, ashewould, M i d s . 1 , 1 , 8 8 . whatwouldst thou have with me? H 4 A II, 3, 98. if thou would have such aone,takeme, H 5 V , 2 , 1 7 4 . would thou kneel with me? Tit. Ill, 1 , 2 1 0 (Ff wilt), he would be crowned, Caes.II,

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IV, 1 , 4 4 . J o h n 1,1. IV, 2, 38. H 4 B I V , 4 , 1 8 . H5 IV, I, 32 ( I would no other company). V, 2, 68 (if you would the peace). H 6 A IV, 2, 5 (and thus he would: open your city gates). H 6 B I, 3, 11. II, 3, 21 (sorrow would solace and mine age would ease). Troil. Ill, 3, 17 (what wouldst thou of us?). 57. H m l . Ill, 4, 104. IV,4,5. Lr. 1 , 4 , 1 2 . Oth. I, 3, 248. IV, 1, 261. Cymb. III, 1, 1. V, 5, 108. Per. I, 3, 6 etc. / would optatively, followed b y a subjunctive: I would the lightning had burnt up those logs, Tp. Ill, 1, 16. I would I knew his mind, Gent. I, 2, 33. 50. 67. IV, 2, 64. A s I, 2, 2 4 3 etc. I would, not so, Tp. Ill, 1, 61 ( = I were not a king). I would to heaven I had your potency, Meas. II, 2, 67. J o h n III, 4, 48. IV, 1, 23. I would to God my heart were flint, R3 I, 3, 140. II, 1,74. IV, 1, 59 (Ff O would) etc. I omitted: would thou wert as I am, Ven. 3 6 9 . O would thou hadst not, 428. Tp. I, 2, 349. II, 1, 107. Gent. I, 2, 104. Meas. III, 2, 189. IV, 4, 35. V, 190. Err. IV, 4, 6 9 (where would you had remained). L L L IV, 3, 123. Mids. II, 1 , 5 9 . Merch. Ill, 1, 93. IV, 1, 296. V, 144. All's 1,2, 52. H 6 B II, 1, 38. H 6 C I, 1, 216. R 3 I, 2, 151 etc. Might in the optative clause: would I might triumph so, Pilgr. 236. would thou mightst lie drowning, Tp. I, 1, 60. I, 2, 168. Gent. IV, 4, 176. W i v . 1, 1, 156. IV, 5, 95. R 2 V, 3, 4. Troil. I, 1, 117 (if'would I might' were 'may'). Rom. Ill, 5, 87. Would in the optative clause: I would my valiant master would destroy thee, Tp. Ill, 2, 53. I would my husband would meet him, Wiv. IV, 2, 86. would that alone he would detain, Err. II, 1, 107. would he would change, Mids. V, 255. I would it would make you invisible, T w . 111,1,34. wouldhalfmy wealth would buy this for a lie, Cor. IV, 6, 160. Similarly: I wish mine eyes would ... shut up my thoughts, Tp. II, 1, 192. I could wish he would modestly examine himself, Ado II, 3 , 2 1 5 . entreats thou wouldst vouchsafe to visit her poor castle, H 6 A II, 2, 40. the king's request that I would visit you, H8 IV, 2, 116. my next petition is that his noble grace would have some pity . . . , 139. wish that warmer days would come, Cymb. II, 4, 6. Hence the wish itself expressed by would: 0 that our fatherswould applaud our loves! Gent. I, 3, 48. O that your frowns would teach my smiles such skill! Mids. I, 1, 195. now my soul's palace is become a prison: ah, wouldshe break from hence! H 6 C II, 1 , 7 5 . 0 that my death would stay these ruthful deeds! 11,5,95. would the nobility lay aside their ruth! Cor. I, 1, 201.

I, 12 etc. Will and would governing an accusative: that I will, Tp. V, 2 9 4 . what I will, I will, Gent. I, 3, 65. I will none of them, II, 1,133. I'll no pullet-sperm in my brewage, W i v . Ill, 5 , 3 2 . we'll none of that, Mids. V, 46. will you any wife? Shr. 1 , 1 , 5 6 . will you any thing with it9 All's I, 1, 177. you will my noble grapes, II, 1, 74. I'll no more drumming, IV, 3, 331. what greeting will you to my Lord Lafeu? 352. she'll none of me, T w . I, 3 , 1 1 3 . 1 1 5 . I'll no more of you, 1 , 5 , 4 5 . I'll no more 2) to claim, to pretend: then reason will our hearts with thee, III, 1, 48. you'll nothing to my lord by me? should be as good, H 4 B IV, 1, 157. this is a riddling 148. I'll no gainsaying, Wint. I, 2, 19. what your merchant for the nonce: he will be here, and yet he is highness will, J o h n IV, 2 , 3 9 . I'll no swaggerers, H 4 B not here, H 6 A I I , 3 , 5 8 (he pretends to be here; German: II, 4, 81. I will none of you, III, 2 , 2 7 1 . she will none, er will hier sein). art thoit king and wilt be forced ? H 6 C Rom. Ill, 5 , 1 4 0 . I will no reconcilement, Hml.V, 2 , 2 5 8 . I, 1, 2 3 0 (pretendest, pleadest as an e x c u s e , to have Hml. IV, we'll no defence, Cymb. 111,4, 81 etc. Likewise would, been forced), her mood will needs be pitied, but only in the sense of vellem (I should wish, I wish): 5, 3 (claims pity), that would be scanned, 111, 3, 75. what would my potent master ? Tp. IV, 34. Gent. I, 2, 3) Denoting not so much a wish or purpose as 66. what would you with her, if that I be she? IV, 4, mere readiness or likelihood : wink again, and I will 115 (what's your business with her?), what would thou wink, Ven. 122. I will enchant thine ear, 145. she, by more of man? W i v . II, 2, 31 (most M. Edd. wouldst). her good will, will never rise, so he will kiss her still what would you with her? IV, 5 , 3 0 . 111,4,63. A d o III, 4 8 0 . if you will say so, you shall have a kiss, 5 3 6 . whose 5, 1. what wouldst? L L L I, 1, 183. nothing becomes vulture thought doth pitch the price so high that she will him ill that he would well, II, 46. what would these draw his lips' rich treasure dry, 552. you will fall again strangers? V, 2 , 1 7 4 . 1 7 8 . 1 8 0 . is he yet possessed how into your idle theme, 769. my heart ... will not let a much ye would? Merch. I, 3, 66. wouldst thou aught false sound enter, 780. if thou wilt deign this favour,... with me? II, 2 , 1 2 8 . 150. II, 9, 85. A s III, 2, 3 1 6 . T w . a thousand secrets shall thou know, 15. if thou wilt

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chide,thy lips shall never open, 48. he hath neither to see a dead Indian, Tp.II, 2,33. sometimes a thousand Latin French, nor Italian, and you will come into the twangling instruments will hum about mine ears, III, 2, court md swear that I have a poor pennyworth in the 147. which ... each putter-out ... will bring us good Englih, Merch. I, 2, 75 etc. etc. Often almost pe- warrant of, 111,3,48. she will often praise her liquor, riphratical: gazing upon a late-embarked jriend, till Gent. Ill, 1, 350. the man doth fear God, howsoever the void waves will have him seen no more, Ven. 819. it seems not in him by some large jests he will make, abhored slave, which any print of goodness wilt not Ado II, 3, 206. if a man will make courtesy and say take, "p. I, 2, 352. I'll warrant him for drowning, I, nothing, he is virtuous, H4B II, 1, 135. grow like saI,49. oillyou grant with me that Ferdinand is drowned? vages, as soldiers will that nothing do but meditate on II, 1, '43. they'll nor pinch nor ..., unless he bid 'em, blood, H5 V, 2, 59. Gent. II, 1, 11. HI, 1, 393. Meas. 11,2,4 if it will please you to show us so much gentry, I, 2, 190. Ado II, 3, 115. As IV, 3, 159. Shr. II, 250. Hml. I, 2, 21. when we were boys, who would believe Tw. 1, 2, 33. H6B III, 1, 14. R3 111, 1, 126 etc. the that Are were ..., Tp. Ill, 3,44 (which in the present tiger would be tame and gently hear him, Yen. 1096. wouldbe: I'll believe), as much love in rhyme as would some would sing, some other ... would bring him mulbe craimed up in a sheet of paper, L L L V, 2,7. cf. the berries, 1102.1087 —1092. when virtue bragged,beauty following passages: who was so firm that this coil would would blush for shame, Lucr. 54. Tp. I, 2, 193. 200. not inect his reason ? Tp. I, 2, 208. he wondered that 333. 356. II, 2, 53. Ill, 2, 150. Meas. Ill, 2, 136. Err. your trdship would suffer him to spend his youth at II, 2, 115. Ado III, 1, 61. Mids. II, 1, 132. As 111, 2, home, Gent. I, 3, 5. and would you take the letter of 435. All's I, 2, 52. Wint. IV, 4, 58. H8 IV, 1, 78. her? ill's III, 4, 1. Tim. II, 2, 143. Hml. I, 2, 143. II, 2, 381. Oth. 1,3, It will not be = all is in vain, it is to no effect: 146. Ant. I, 5, 33 etc. 4) Used, in the first as well as in the second and but al in vain; good queen, it will not be, Vcn. 607. I pray pu, leave me. Ho! now you strike like the blind { j third persons, to form the future tense: there shall not man: twos the boy that stole your meat, and you'll beat be one minute in an hour wherein I will not kiss my the pot. If it will not be, I'll leave you, Ado II, 1,208 sweet love's flower, Ven. 1188. if you can command (if ym will not leave me at my request), it wilt not these elements to silence, we will not hand a rope more, be: rtire into your trenches, H6A I, 5, 33. will it not Tp. 1, 1, 25. his daughter and I will be king and queen, be? ai expression of impatience: wilft not be? will III, 2, 115. I will thrive, Wiv. I, 3, 21. we will thrive, not a alf's-skin slop that mouth of thine? John III, 1, lads, we will thrive, 81. perchance I will be there as 298. tadam, madam! ay, let the county take you in soon as you, Err. IV, 1, 39. an bad thinking do not your ed; he'll fright you up, {faith; will it not be? wrest true speaking, I'll offend no body, Ado 111, 4, what, hressed! Bom. IV, 5, 11. 34. perhaps I will return immediately, Merch. II, 5, Tfc will = let ns: some dark deep desert ... will 52. to-morrow will we be married, As V, 3, 2. I will we fiti out, Lncr. 1146. we'll visit Caliban, Tp. I, 2, sooner have a beard grow in the palm of my hand than 308. ie will inherit here, II, 2, 179. the next advan- he shall get one on his cheek, H4B I, 2, 23. there's not tage till we take throughly, III, 3, 14. now will we a piece of feather in our host; good argument, I hope, breakcith him, Gent. I, 3, 44. why, then, we'll make we will not fly, H5 IV, 3, 113. there is no hope that exchaqe, II, 2, 6. we'll hear him. Ay, by my beard, ever I wiU stay, if the first hour I shrink, II6A IV, 5, will Wt, IV, 1, 9. 10. Wiv. Ill, 3, 209. IV, 2, 96. Meas. 30. I'll do well yet, Cor. IV, 1, 21. I will gain nothing IV, 5,12. Err. V, 128. 422. Ado I, 1, 161. V, 3, 31. but my shame and the odd hits, Hml. V, 2, 184. perLLL 1, 85. V, 2, 127. Mids. 11, 2, 37. Ill, 1, 5. chance I will ne'er go home, Oth. V, 2, 197. we will V, 401 Merch. IV, 1, 456. V, 55. Shr. II, 112. V, 2, yet do well, Ant. Ill, 13, 188. courtesies which I will 69 (»all win the wager which we will propose). H4B be ever to pay, Cymb. I, 4, 39. Instances of the 2nd I, I, B6. H6A I, 2, 18. Ill, 2, 12. H6B II, 1, 200. and Mrd persons: Ven. 23. 424. 761. 945. 1082. Tp. V, 1, 5 . H6C III, 1, 1. IV, 6, 97. R3 IV, 1, 11. Hml. I , 2 , 1 8 4 . 11, 1,289. 11,2,83. 111,2,31. Gent. 1, 1,37. 1, 5, £6. Ant. Ill, 2, 38 etc. Tit. IV, 1, 117 etc. etc. you will, imperatively: you'll A: denoting what may be expected, sometimes leave your noise anon, H8 V, 4, 1. Would forming the conditional tense in all the equivient to may: lam resolved on two points. That if one ireak, the other will hold, Tw. I, 5, 26. in fierce three persons: if I did think I were well awake, I'ld tempet is he coming, that, if requiring fail, he will strive to tell you, Tp. V, 230. I would resort to her by i-ompe, H5 II, 4, 101. hath begg'd that I will stay at night, Gent. Ill, 1, 110. I would be loath to turn them hornet-day, Caes. II, 2, 82. And in the following together, Wiv. II, 1, 192. I would turn her loose to phrase: in my heart he there what hidden woman's him, 189. who 1 would be sorry should be thus foolishly fear tere will, As I, 3, 121. come what will, H4A I, lost, Meas. I, 2, 195. I would be glad to receive some 2, 162 be what thou wilt, H6A V, 3, 45. H8 II, 1, 65. instruction, IV, 2, 18. I would have thought, Ado II, V, 3, i . speed how it will, Cor. V, 1,61. come Pente- 3, 119. I wouldbe sorry, Tw. Ill, 1,44. what wouldst cost a quickly as it will, Rom. I, 5, 38. let shame say thou think of me? I would think thee a most princely what i will, Hml. IV, 7, 189. what will hap more to- hypocrite, H4B II, 2, 56. 58. if I would stand against night, Lr. Ill, 6, 121. thee, would the reposal of any trust ... in thee make T b idea of probability passing into that of nse thy words faithed? Lr. II, 1, 70. cf. Wiv. II, 1, GO. Ado and C B t o m : rain added to a river that is rank will II, 3, 121. Mids. IV, 1, 16. Shr. Ind. 2, 128. Instances force ( overflow his bank, Ven. 72. love is a spirit of the 2nd and 3rd persons in every page. NB. would all cotpact of fire ... and will aspire, 150. 153. men seem to have us make denial, All's I, 2, 8. as one would will kis even by their own direction, 216. being ireful, say, Merch. II, 2,134 ( = as who should say, cf. Shall), on the'ion he will venture, 628. when they will not give as who would say, Tit. IV, 4, 20. a doit o relieve a lame beggar, they will lay out ten 5) Will anil tco«W,inaU their significations, joined

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with adverbs and prepositional expressions, to express Tim. Ill, 6, 33. Hml. I, 2, 52. II, 2, 220. Ant III, 2, motion or change of place, when modem usage would 58. Cymb. I, 6, 193. IV, 2, 167. Per. IV, 2, L>8. Willingness, 1) readiness: I would extend it require will go, would go or the like: her object will away, Ven. 255. now I will away, 807. now she will with all to. H6B III, 1, 150. look to have it rielded no further, 905. I'll to my book, Tp. Ill, 1, 94. that with all w. B3 III, 1, 198 (Ff kindness). 2) good will: to. rids way, H6C V, 3, 21 cf. the ... will never out of my bones, V, 283. I'll to the alehouse, Gent. II, 5, 8. I'll after, 111, 1, 394. V, 2, 51. proverb: where the will is ready, the feet are Ight). W l l l a o g h h r ; Lord W., name in B2 II, 2 54. II, I'll never to sea again, Wiv. II, 1, 96. will on, 11, 2, 176. I will about it, 327. I will to my honest knight, 3, 10. 57. Wlllaw, the tree Salix: Hml. IV, 7, 16'. EmIII,2,88. I'll in, 111,3, 145. we'll abirding, 246. I ll to him, IV, 4, 76. 84. Meas. I, 1, 68. I, 2, 196. I, 4, blem of unhappy love: Ado II, 1, 194. 225 (v. tree). 85. II, 1,246. 11,4, 177. Ill, 1, 276. IV, 3, 66. 124. Merch. V, 10. Tw. I, 5, 287 (w. cabin). H6( III, 3, V, 360. Err. I, 2, 104. Ill, 1, 114. Ill, 2, 189. V, 228 and IV, 1,100 (wear the w. garland). OtL IV, 3 109. L L L IV, 2, 173. V, 2, 668. 737. Mids. Ill, 2, 28.42. 44. 46. 49. 50 f a green to. must be my galand). 375. IV, 1, 114. V, 194. 410. Merch. II, 2, 85. IV, 1, 56. V, 2, 248. 455. IV, 2,2. As HI, 2,109. 111,3,106. IV, 1,163. 168. Wiltshirei Earl of W. B2 II, 1, 215. S6. II, V, 2, 44. V, 4, 190. All's IV, 3, 91. B2 II, 1, 218. 2, 136. Ill, 2, 122. Ill, 4, 53. H6C 1, 1, 14. H6A I, 1, 152. 167. I, 3, 84. II, 1, 33. Ill, 1, 146. Wimpled, muffled, veiled, hoodwinked: his to., IV, 1,109. V, 3,167. H6B I, 1, 142. 171. H6C 1,1, whining, purblind, wayward boy (Cupid) L L L II, 181. W i n , (impf. and partic. won; in H4A 111 2, 59 206. II, 5, 136. IV, 3, 3. V, 1, 110. V, 4, 21. R3 I, 1, 107. 147. I, 4, 97. II, 4, 66. Ill, 1, 138. Cor. II, Qq impf. toan, Ff toon), 1) to gain by success n com3, 157. Bom. Ill, 2, 141. Mcb. Ill, 4, 132. 139. 142. petition or contest, to have the better; abso.: who IV, 3, 136. Hml. II, 2, 449. Oth. V, 2, 219. Ant. II, loses and who —s, Lr. V, 3, 15. they laugh kat to. 6, 134. IV, 14, 51 etc. I would to Valentine, Gent. Oth. IV, 1,126. = to have the better at play: w shall IV, 3, 22. we would unto the Holy Land, H4B III, 1, never to. at that sport, Merch. Ill, 2, 219. Ban. Ill, 108. he is very sick and would to bed, H5 II, 1, 87. 2,12. Mcb. I, 5, 23. Hml. V, 2,183.222. 298. Cymb. there were wit in this head, an 'twould out, Troil. Ill, II, 3, 7. 8. = to be conqueror in war: I cannt pray that thou mayst to. John 111, 1, 331. 335. H4AV, 1,8. 3, 256. I'ld with thee, Cor. IV, 1, 57. Will substantively: I am at war 'twixt will and H4B I, 1, 132. B3 V, 3, 244. Cor. V, 3, 113 Ant. III, 4, 18. With of: I have seen ... the firm sol to. of will not, Meas. II, 2, 33. the watery main, Sonn. 64, 7. he that —s ofal, John Wilier, in Well-willer, q. v. William, Christian name of 1) the poet himself: II, 569. H8 V, 1, 58. Cymb. 1, 1, 121. Ven. Ded. 9. Lncr. Ded. 8. 2) W . of HatBeld, second With an object: to. the wager, Shr. V, 2, S. 116. son of Edward III: H6B II, 2, 12. 33. 3) W . of 186. to to. this easy match, John V, 2,106. Tt. V, 1, Windsor, seventh son of Edward III: H6B II, 2, 17. 100. the field it won, Shr. IV, 5, 23. to. the dat, John 4) W . de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk: H6A II, 4, 80. V, 4, 30. H6A I, 6, 17. H6C II, 1, 136. IV 4, 15. H6B I, 1, 44. I, 2, 30. 5) Sir W . Glansdale: H6A B3 V, 3, 145. alts done, airs won, H4A V,3, 16. I, 4, 63. 6) Sir W . Lucy: H6A IV, 4,10. 12. 7) Sir thus Iw. thee, V, 4, 38 (cf. Ado V, 1, 82). to. c battle, VV. Stanley: H6C IV, 5, 1. B3 IV, 5,10. 8) W. Lord H6B V, 3, 30. H6C I, 2, 74. B3 IV, 4, 538. Mcb. I, Hastings: B3 III, 1, 162. 181. Ill, 4, 28. 9) Sir W . I, 5. a victory. Cor. V, 3, 186. With of: he won it Courtney: B3 IV, 4, 502 (Ff Edward). 10) Sir W . of me with false dice, Ado II, 1, 289. those prod titles Brandon: B3 V, 3, 22. V, 6, 14. 11) Sir W . Blomer: thou hast won of me, H4A V, 4, 79. H5 II, 1, 9i. Ant. H8 1, 2,190. 12) the young son of Page: Wiv. IV, 1, II, 3, 36. Cymb. II, 1, 54. toon three fields ofSultan 17 etc. 13) the son of Justice Silence: H4B III, 2,11. Solyman, Merch. II, 1, 26. 2) to be successful in any manner: he mays. (i. e. 14) Justice Shallow's cook: H4B V, 1, 12.17.25.29. 15) W . Visor: H4B V, 1, 42. 16) a young country choose the right casket) Merch. Ill, 2, 47. » cozen him that would unjustly to. All's IV, 2, 76. meis flesh fellow in As V, 1, 22. 23. 64. preserved so whole do seldom to. H6B III, 1, 30. how Willing, see Will vb. I, 1. Willingly, 1) on purpose: still thou mistakest, can man hope to to. by it (ambition) H8 III, 2, 443. or else commit'st thy knaveries to. Mids. Ill, 2, 346 With upon = to gain on: the rabble ... willin time to. upon power, Cor. I, 1, 224. (Qq wilfully). 3) to gain, to obtain, to get: her husbands fame 2) with one's own consent, of one's own accord, voluntarily: more praise ... than niggard truth would won in the fields, Lucr. 107. what to. I, if I tain the to. impart, Sonn. 72, 8. but most to. humbles himself thing I seek, 211. he hath won what he would los again, to the determination of justice, Meas. Ill, 2, 257. IV, 688. thou in losing me shall to. much glory, Sain. 88, 8. to to. a Paradise, Pilgr. 42 and L L L IV 3, 73. 3, 85. John II, 563. H4A V, 3,61. H8 111, 1,140. 3) readily, gladly, with pleasure: how churlishly make us lose the good we oft might to. Meas. I 4, 78. I chid Lucetta hence, when to. I would have had her L L L I, 1, 86. II, 60. Ill, 153. Merch. Ill, 2, 2-4. Shr. here, Gent. I, 2, 61. thou knowest how to. I would II, 344. All's III, 2, 96. 124. V, 3, 336. Johi I, 174 effect the match, III, 2, 22. you embrace your charge (well won is still well shot). II, 158. H4A 111.1, 113. too to. Ado I, 1, 103. proud of employment, to. I go, III, 2, 59. H5 I, 2, 131. Ill, 2, 11. 28. H6B •', 3, 6. L L L II, 35. Meas. V, 481. As II, 4, 95. Shr. Ill, 2, Cor. I, 1, 164. I, 6, 50. II, 1, 231. Mcb. I, 2,37. IV, 152. T w . V, 135. Wint. IV, 2, 60. John IV, 2, 45. 3, 118 (to to. me into his power). Ant. II, 4, 9 (you'll H4A 1, 3, 111. V, 2, 34. H6B I, 3,216. II, 3,33. 35. to. two days upon me). Cymb. Ill, 4, 112 (to u time). IV, 9, 42. H6CI, 1, 201. I, 2,41. Cor. II, 2, 66. IV, Per. V, 1, 44 (would w. some words of him) ec. 6, 144. Tit. 17, 1, 28. V, 1, 142. Bom. I, 1, 161. = to conquer, to get possession of: to. ne and

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wear me, Ado V, 1, 82 (cf. H 4 A V, 4, 38). 'tis won as towns with fire, so won, so lost, L L L I, 1, 147. this —s him, liver and all, T w . II, 5, 106. w. you this city without stroke, J o h n II, 418. did w. what he did spend, R 2 II, 1, 180. 181. you won it, wore it, kept it, H 4 B IV, 5, 222. if that you will France w. H 5 I, 2, 167. how the English have the suburbs won, H 6 A I, 4, 2. Henry ... should w. all, III, 1, 198. myself did w. them both (An;ou and Maine) H 6 B I, 1, 119. 210. they have won the bridge, IV, 5, 3. some nation that won you without blows, Cor. Ill, 3, 133 etc. W i t h from: to w. it (the island) from me, T p . I, 2, 455. which I will w. from France, H 6 B I, 1, 213. Peculiar expressions: Poictiers and Tours are won away, H 6 A IV, 3, 45 (won by the enemy, consequently lost), till France be won into the Dauphin's hands, H 6 B 1,3,173. 4 ) to gain in a moral sense; to move and prevail •with by persuasion or any kind of influence; absol.: corruption —s not more than honesty, H 8 III, 2, 445. Transitively: pray heaven she w. him, Meas. II, 2, 125. W i n t . I, 2, 21. H 5 II, 2, 124. H 6 B III, 1, 28. H 6 C III, 1, 34. 35. Mcb. I, 3, 125. W i t h from: she is corrupted, changed, and won from thee, J o h n III, 1, 55. —s the Icing from her, II6C III, 1, 50. from his mother w. the Dulce of York, R 3 III, 1, 38. from Antony w. Cleopatra, Ant. Ill, 12, 27. W i t h to: to w. me soon to hell, Sonn. 144, 5. whom I with pain have wooed and won thereto, H 6 A V, 3, 138. he will not be won to aught against him, R3 III, 1, 166. Ill, 7, 50. 80. Caes. I, 3, 141. Mcb. I, 3, 123. Hml. I, 5, 45. P e r . II, 4, 49. 52. W i t h an infinitive, = to prevail o n : cannot your grace w. her to fancy him1 Gent. Ill, 1, 67. w. her to consent to you, Wiv. II, 2, 245. Err. V, 116. All's V, 3, 119. R2 II, 3, 163. Lr. II, 2, 119 etc. Especially used of success in love: gentle thou art and therefore to be won, Sonn. 41, 5. did w. whom he would maim, Compl. 312. T p . I , 2 , 451. Gent. I, 1 , 141. Ill, 1, 89. 105. Wiv. II, 2 , 7 1 . 2 4 8 . Ado II, I , 17. L L L IV, 3, 372. V, 2, 858. Mids. I, 1, 108. Merch. I, 2, 113. II, 1, 19. 31. As IV, 1, 189. Shr. II, 312 (won me to her love). All's IV, 2, 64. H 6 A V, 3, 79. R 3 I, 2, 229. Troil. Ill, 2, 119 etc. cf. Gent. 1, 1, 32. 33. L L L III, 8. Mids. I, 1, 17. W i n c e or W i n c h (the first form preferred by M. Edd., the latter better authorized by 0 . Edd.; cf. lance and lanch, and the old lection wrenching for rinsing in H 8 I, 1, 167) to shrink or start f r o m p a i n : J o h n IV, 1, 81. H m l . Ill, 2, 253. W i n c h e s t e r ; Henry Beaufort Bishop of W . : H 6 A I, 3,' 19. 23. II, 4, 118. Ill, 1, 64. 107 etc. V, 1, 28. 39. V,4, 120. H 6 B 1, 1, 56. 139. Gardiner, Bishop of W . : H 8 III, 2, 231. IV, 1, 101. 103. V, 3, 58. 73. 123. W. goose, cant term for a certain venereal sore, thought to have originated from the public stews in Southwark being under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Winchester: H 6 A I, 3, 53. Troil. V, 10, 55. W i n c o t (Shr.) or W o n c o t (H4B), usual corruptions of Wilmecote, a village near S t r a t f o r d : Shr. I n d . 2, 23. H 4 B V, 1, 42. W i n d , subst. 1) a current of a i r : Ven. 303. 338. 458. 1046 (the w. imprisoned in the ground etc.; cf. H 4 A III, 1, 30). 1082. 1084. 1089. Lucr. 311. T p . I, 2, 150. 254. Ill, 3, 63 (may as well wound the loud —s). V, 42. Gent. I, 2, 118. 11,3,59 (if the w. were down). Meas. Ill, 1 , 1 2 4 (to be imprisoned in the view-

less — s ) . Err. IV, 1, 90 (the merry w. blows fair from land). Ado III, 1, 66 (a vane blown with all —s). Merch. I, 1, 24 (a w. too great). Shr. II, 135 (little w.). T w . I, 5, 255 ('twill endure w. and weather). V, 399 (with hey, ho, thew. and the rain; cf. L r . Ill, 2, 75). W i n t . II, 3, 154 (a feather for each w. that blows; cf. IV, 4, 552). J o h n V, 2, 87 (weak w.). H 4 A III, 1, 30 (cf. Ven. 1046). Ill, 3, 102 (is the w. in that door?). H 4 B IV, 5, 100 (weak w.). V, 3, 89 (what w. blew you hither?). R 3 IV, 1, 53 (O ill-dispersing w. of misery). T i t . IV, 3, 57 (to shoot against the w.) Mcb. I, 3, 82 (melted as breath into the w.). Hml. II, 2 , 4 9 5 (with the whiff and w. of his fell sword). Oth. Ill, 3, 262 (let her down the w.; c f Whistle) etc. etc. the four — s , Merch. I, 1, 168. carried with more speed before the w. Err. I, 1, 110. H 6 C 1, 4, 4. P e r . V P r o l . 14. the high w. sings, Ven. 305. Lucr. 335. H 6 B II, 1, 3. 55. sits the w. in that corner? Ado II, 3, 102. to know where sits the w. Merch. 1, 1, 18. R2 II, 1, 265. II, 2, 123. H5 II, 2, 12. Hml. I, 3, 56. L r . I, 4, 112. cf. my reason sits in the w. against me, Ant. III, 10, 37. w. and tide: Err. IV, 1, 46. H 6 C III, 3, 48. IV, 3, 59. V, 1, 53. Proverbial expressions: 1 hear it sing i'the w. T p . II, 2, 20. W i v . Ill, 2, 3 8 ; cf. T p . Ill, 3, 97. there is something in the w. that we cannot get in, Err. Ill, 1, 69. many can brook the weather that love not the w. L L L IV, 2, 34 (cf. Weather), ill blows the w. that profits nobody, H 6 C II, 5, 5 5 ; cf. H 4 B V, 3, 90. Emblem of swiftness: Ven. 303. 681. Sonn. 51, 7. L L L V, 2 , ' 2 6 1 . Mids. Ill, 2, 94. Of liberty: as free as mountain'—s, T p . I, 2, 499. I must have as large a charter as the w. to blow on whom I please, As II, 7, 48. speak frankly as the w. Troil. I, 3, 253. he should be as free as is the w. Cor. I, 9, 89. Of wantonness: the wanton w. Mids. II, 1,129. the strumpet w. Merch. II, 6, 16. 19. the bawdy w. that kisses all it meets, Oth. IV, 2, 78. Of inconstancy and falseness: Wint. I, 2, 132. Troil. Ill, 2, 199. Rom. 1, 4, 100. Of ubiquity: her worth, being mounted on the w., through all the world bears Rosalind, As III, 2, 95. I have eyes upon him, and his affairs come to me on the w. Ant. Ill, 6, 63 ( = from every side), slander ... whose breath rides on the posting winds and doth belie all corners of the world, Cymb. Ill, 4, 38. cf. Mcb. I, 7, 25 and H 4 B Ind. 4. Considered as bearing scent: this same coxcomb that we have i'the w. All's III, 6, 122 ( = of whom we have taken the scent), allow the w. V, 2, 10 (— do not stand between the wind and m e ) ; cf. H 4 A I, 3, 45. he knows the game: how true he keeps the w. H 6 C III, 2, 14; cf. why do you go about to recover the w. of me, as if you would drive me into a toil, Hml. Ill, 2, 362. my son and I will have the w. of you: keep there, T i t . IV, 2,. 133 ( = we will keep a strict eye upon you, and stand on our guard against you). 2) breath: blow till thou burst thy w. T p . I, 1, 9 ( = till thou be out of breath), if my w. were but long enough to say my prayers, Wiv. IV, 5, 104. words are but w. Err. Ill, 1, 75. my w. cooling my broth, Merch. 1, 1, 22. I shall break my w. H 4 A II, 2, 14. your w. short, H 4 B 1, 2, 206. obeying with my w. when I do blow, H 6 C 111, 1, 86. fetches her w. so short, Troil. Ill, 2, 33. pursy insolence shall break his w. with fear and horrid flight, T i m . V, 4, 12. not to crack the w. of the poor phrase, Hml. I, 3, 108. cf. Ven. 189.

w

1375

Windlasses, indirect advances, shifts: with w. and with assays of bias, Hull. II, 1, 65. W i n d m i l l , a mill set in motion by the wind: H 4 A III, 1, 162. H4B III, 2, 207. Wind-obeying, obeying the wind: the always w. deep, Err. I, 1, 64. W i n d o w , an opening in a building for the admission of light and air, or rather the frame covering it (cf. Bay-window, Chamber-w., Church-w.): Lucr. b) sighs: like a stormy day, now w., now rain, 1089. Sonn. 24, 8. Gent. II, 4, 181. IV, 2, 16. Ado sighs dry her cheeks, tears make them wet again, Ven. II, 2, 18. Ill, 3, 144. Mids. Ill, 1, 58. All's II, 3, 224 965. at last it rains (i. e. he weeps), and busy —s (w. of lattice). IV, 1, 60. R2 III, 1, 24. V, 2, 5 (from give o'er (and ceases to sigh) Lucr. 1790. storming —s' tops). 12. H4B II, 2, 87. H 6 A III, 1, 84. Troil. her world with sorrow's w. and rain, Compl. 7. puffing I, 2, 120 (compassedw.). Cor. II, 1, 226. Eom. I, 1, with w. and rain (sighs and tears) A s III, 5, 50. where 126 (the golden 10. of the east). 145. II, 2, 2. HI, 5, are my tears1 rain, to lay this w., or my heart will be 41. Caes. I, 1, 44. II, 1, 36. Ill, 2, 264. Cymb. II, 2, blown up by the root, Troil. IV, 4, 56. the —s thy sighs, 25. V, 4, 81. Per. IV, 6, 117. enter at her w. Gent. Rom. Ill, 5, 135. tears shall drown the w. Mcb. 1, 7,25 III, 1,113. Mids. 1,1, 30. Hml. IV, 5, 50. in at the w. (thewordused herein eachof its senses), we cannotcall John 1, 171 (a proverbial expression applied to illeher — s and water sighs and tears, Ant. I, 2, 153. gitimate children), in at his —s, Caes. I, 2, 320. talk c) a flatus emitted from behind, a fart: a man may with a man out at a w. A d o IV, 1, 85. 311. look out break a word with you, sir, andwordsare but w., ay, and at w. Merch. II, 5, 41 ( Q l at a w.). looking out at the break it iny our face, so he break itnotbehind, Err. Ill, 1,75. w. Shr. V, 1, 32. 57. it would not out at —s nor at W i n d , vb. (partic. winded) 1) to blow: that I will doors, John V, 7, 29. Metaphorically applied to wounds: these —s that have a recheat —ed in my forehead, Ado I, 1, 243. 2) to nose, to scent: the dam will wake, and if she let forth thy life, R3 1,2,12 (not the usual and natural passage; cf. John I, 171 and V, 7, 29). to eyes: thou w. you once, Tit. IV, 1, 97. W i n d , vb. (impf: and partic. wound) 1) trans, through --s of thine age shalt see ... thy golden time, a) to turn to this or that direction: to turn and w. a Sonn. 3, 11. the w. of my heart, mine eye, L L L V, 2, 848. cf. Sonn. 24, 8. to eyelids: her two blue —s fiery Pegasus, H 4 A IV, 1, 109. b) to turn round a fixed centre, to twist: you have faintly she upheaveth, Ven. 482 (cf. Blue), ere I let wound a goodly clew, All's I, 3, 188. With up, 1) used fall the —s of mine eyes, R3 V, 3, 116. thy eyes' —s of ensigns, = to furl or roll together: John V, 2, 73. fall, Rom. IV, 1, 100. downy —s, close, Ant. V, 2, V, 5, 7. of a watch, = to put in a state of motion by 319. the enclosed lights, now canopied under these —s, turning the spring round its pin: he is —ing up the Cymb. II, 2, 22. watch of his wit, Tp. II, 1, 12. T w . II, 5, 66. metaW i n d o w - b a r s (O. Edd. window barn) a sort of phorically: the charm's woundup, Mcb. I, 3, 37. the embroidery in the form of lattice-work, worn by women untuned and jarring senses, 0, w. up of this child- across the naked bosom: those milkpaps that through changed father, Lr. IV, 7, 16. 2) to bring round, to the w. bore at men's eyes, Tim. IV, 8, 116. consummate, to pass: —ing up days with toil and Windowed, 1) placed in a window: wouldstthou nights with sleep, H5 IV, 1, 296. bew.in great Rome and see thy master thus with pleached c) to en twist, to infold, to encircle: all wound with arms1 Ant. IV, 14, 72. adders, T p . II, 2, 13. I will w. thee in mine arms, 2) full of openings or holes: your looped and w. Mids, IV, 1, 45. this hand, fast wound about thy hair, raggedness, Lr. Ill, 4, 31. H6C V, I, 54. Wind-pipe, the passage for breath, the trachea: 2) intr. a) to change one's direction,to turn: w. away, H5 III, 6, 45. Tim. I, 2, 52. be gone, I say, As III, 3,104. a creature that I teach to W l n d r i n g , unintelligible lection of O. Edd. in light, to w., to stop, to run directly on, Caes. IV, 1, 32. Tp.IV, 128: w. brooks-, some M. Edd. winding, others b) to have flexures or to move in flexures: a —ing wandering. maze, Lucr. 1151. thin —ing breath, 1407. —ing Wind-shaked, driven and agitated by the wind: nooks, Gent. II, 7, 31. it (the river) shall not w. H 4 A the w. surge, Oth. II, 1, 13. HI, 1, 104. Metaphorically, = to fetch a compass, to W i n d - s h a k e n , trembling and tottering in the make an indirect advance: spend but time to w. about wind: the rock, the oak not to be w. Cor. V, 2, 117. my love with circumstance, Merch. I, 1, 154. seek him Windsor, place in England: W i v . I, 4, 136. II, out, w. me into him, Lr. I, 2, 106 (me dat. ethicus). 1,66. 11,2,63.103. 122.126. 111,1,6 (old W. way). With an accus. denoting an effect: to w. yourself into Ill, 3, 114.121.232 (W. Castle). IV, 4,29 (W. forest). a power tyrannical, Cor. Ill, 3, 64. 64. V, 5, 1 (W. bell). 14 (a W. stag). 47.60 (W. Wind-changing, inconstant like the wind: H6C Castle). 110 (W. wives). 174. 223. H 4 A I, 1, 104. H4B II, 1, 98. IV, 4, 14. 50. Henry VI born at W., V, 1, 57. W i n d f a l l s , a disease of horses consisting in en- H 6 A III, 1, 199. William of W., the seventh and last largements in the neighbourhood of the fetlock: Shr. sou of Edward 111: H6B II, 2, 17. Ill, 2, 53. W i n d - s w i f t , swift as the wind: Rom. II, 5, 8. W i n d i n g - s h e e t , a sheet in which a corpse is W i n d y , 1) next the wind: it keeps on the w. side wrapped: H6C I, 1, 129. II, 5, 114. of care, A d o II, 1, 327 (so that care cannot scent and Wind-instrument, an instrument of music played find it), still you keep o'the w. side o'the law, T w . Ill, 4, 181. by the breath: Oth. Ill, 1, 6. 10.

Hence = a) words, speech: sorrow ebbs, being blown with w. of words, Lucr. 1330. stop in your w. Err. I, 2, 53. foul words is but foul w., and foul w. is but foul breath, A d o V, 2, 52. for his death no w. of blame shall breathe, Hml. IV, 7, 67. then we bring forth weeds, when our quick —s lie still; and our ills told us is as our earing, Ant. I, 2, 114 (truth frankly told is as wholesome to the hearer as fresh air. Most M. Edd. quick minds), cf. H5 III, 3, 30.

1376

W

2) Applied, metaphorically, to words and sighs as resembling the wind (cf. Wind.)-, with her w. sighs ... to fan and blow them dry again she seeks, Ven. 51. this w. tempest (inarticulate sounds), till it blow up rain (i. e. tears), held back his sorrow's tide, Lucr. 1788. give not a w. night a rainy morrow, Sonn. 90, 7 (a night spent in sighs), zeal, now melted by the w. breath of soft petitions, J o h n II, 477. what showers arise, blown with the w. tempest of my heart, upon thy wounds, H6C II, 5, 86. w. attorneys to their client woes, R 3 IV, 4, 127 ( = airy words), w. suspiration of forced breath, Hml. I, 2, 70. W i n e , the fermented juice of the g r a p e : Tp. II, 1, 146. 153. II, 2, 78. 96. 138. IV, 252. V, 278. Wiv. I, 1, 195. II, 2, 70. V, 5, 167. Err. V, 215. Ado 111, 5, 57. Merch. I, 1, 81. I, 2, 104 (rhenish w.). Ill, 1, 44 (red w. and rhenish). As III, 2, 211. Ill, 5, 73 (falser than vows made in w.). Epil. 4 (goodw. needs no bush). Shr. Ill, 2, 172. All's II, 3, 106. T w . II, 3, 14.129 ctc. Metaphorically: thew.oflifeis drawn, and the mere lees is left this vault to brag o f , Mcb. II, 3,100. W i n g , subst. 1) the limb by which an animal or imaginary being flies: Ven. 57. 306. Lucr. 507. 949. 1009. Tp. IV, 78. Gent. II, 6, 42. Ado II, 1,155. Mids. 1, 1, 237. II, 2, 4. Ill, 1, 175. Ill, 2, 365. Merch. 1, 1, 14 (woven— s, = sails). Wint.IV, 1,4. H 4 A V , 1 , 64. H 5 111 Chor. 1. IV, 1, 177. H 6 A I, 1, 11. 75. H 6 B II, 4, 54. IV, 1, 5. H 6 C I, 1, 47. II, 2, 29. V, 6, 14. 20. 23. R 3 IV, 4, 13. V, 2, 23. Troil. Ill, 2, 15. Ill, 3, 79. IV, 2, 14. V, 8, 17. Cor. V, 4, 14. Tit. Ill, 2 , 6 1 . IV, 4, 85. Rom. I, 4, 17. 60. 1 1 , 2 , 5 , 8 . Ill, 2, 18. Tim. II, 1, 30. Mcb. IV, 1, 17. A n t . V, 2, 157. Cymb. Ill, 2, 50. Ill, 5, 161. V, 4, 118. V, 5, 471 (on w.). Used to protect the y o u n g : H 6 A V, 3, 57. II6B I, 3, 41. cf. H8 V, 1, 163 and Ilml. Ill, 4, 103. Metaphorical use: on the w. of all occasions, Wiv. II, 2, 209. the tailor that made the —s she flew loithal, Merch. Ill, 1, 30. health with youthful —s is flown, II4B IV, 5, 229. when I had seen this hot love on the w. Hml. II, 2, 132. Emblem of swiftness: Gent. II, 7, 11. L L L V, 2, 260. All's I, 1, 218. II, 1, 96. Ill, 2, 76. H 5 I, 2, 307. H6C 11, 3, 12. H 8 1, 4, 9. Troil. II, 2, 44. Mcb. I, 4, 17. Hml. I, 5, 29. Emblem of any thing that carries the mind upwards or a l o n g : borne by the trustless •—s of false desire, Lucr. 2. added feathers to the learned'sw. Sonn. 78, 7. with what —s shall his affections fly, H 4 B IV, 4, 65. knowledge the w. wherewith we fly to heaven, H 6 B IV, 7, 79. R2 II, 1, 292. R 3 IV, 3, 54. V, 3, 106. Troil. II, 2, 133. Rom. II, 2, 66. Caes. I, 1, 77. Ant. III, 12, 4. Cymb. I, 6, 186. Pars pro toto, w. = b i r d : to whose sound chaste •—s obey, P h o e n . 4. every fowl of tyrant w. = of a cruel species or nature, 10. 2) flight; the act or manner of flying: with what w. the staniel checks at it, T w . II, 5, 124. hold a w. quite from the flight of all thy ancestors, H 4 A III, 2, 30. when they stoop, they stoop with the like w. H 5 IV, I, 112. the crow makes w. to the rooky wood, Mcb. 111. 2, 51. 3) one of the two side-bodies of an a r m y : All's HI, 6, 52. H 6 A IV, 2, 43. Caes. V, 2, 4. Cymb. V, 3, 5. The first and third significations combined: shadowing their right under your s of war, J o h n 11, 14. W i n g , vb. 1) intr. to fly: we, poor unfledged, have

never —edfrom view o'the nest, Cymb. 111,3,28. W i t h an accus. of space : the crows and choughs that w. the midway air, L r . IV, 6, 13 (cf. never swum the Hellespont, sub Swim; to reel the streets at noon, sub Reel; walk the whole world, sub Walk; he trots the air, sub Trot; gallops the Zodiac, sub Gallop). 2 ) t o transport by flying: willw.me to some withered bough, Wint. V, 3, 133. Partic. —ed flying: two Talbots,—ed through the lither sky, H6A1V, 7, 21. I saw Jove's bird ... —ed from the spongy south to this part of the west, Cymb. IV, 2, 348. W i n g e d , 1) furnished with wings: Lucr. 1728. Sonn. 51, 8. E r r . II, 1, 18. Mids. I, 1, 235. As IV, I, 142. H 4 A IV, 4, 2. H 5 II Chor. 7. V Chor. 8. H 6 B 111, 3, 16. H 6 C I, 1, 267. R3 II, 1, 88. Troil. II, 3, 123. Rom. II, 2, 28. L r . Ill, 7, 66. Cymb. Ill, 5, 61. Ter. IV Prol. 47. 2) covered by a side body of troops: whose puissance on either side shall be well w. with our chiefest horse, R3 V, 3, 300. W l n g f l e l d ; Lord Cromwell of W., one of Talbot's baronial titles: H 6 A IV, 7, 66. W i n g h a n i , place in England: the tanner of W. H6B IV, 2, 24. W i n g - l e d , lection of F l in Cymb. II, 4, 2 4 : their discipline, now w. with their courages; later F f and M. Edd. mingled. W i n k , subst. 1) the act of closing the eye: whiles you ...to the perpetual w. (i. e. to death) for aye might put this ancient morsel, T p . II, 1, 285. to give mine enemy a lasting w. W i n t . 1,2,317 (cf. to give a winking, Ilml. II, 2, 137). 2) a significant look: her —s and nods, Hml. IV, 5, 11 (cf. Eye-wink). 3) no more time than is necessary to shut the eyes; a short moment: ambition cannot pierce a w. beyond, but doubt discovery there, T p . II, 1, 242. every -JO. of an eye some new grace will be born, W i n t . V, 2, 119. I have not slept one w. Cymb. Ill, 4, 103. W i n k , vb. 1) to shut the eyes or to have them shut so as not to see: when her lips were ready for his pay, he —s and turns his lips another way, Ven. 90. art thou ashamed to kiss? then w. again, and I will w.; so shall the day seem night, 121. his eyes begun to w., being blinded with a greater light, Lucr. 375. she dares not look, yet, —ing, there appears quickshifting antics, 458. moody Pluto —s while Orpheus plays, 553. against my heart will fix a sharp knife, to affright mine eye, who, if it w., shall thereon fall and cite, 1139. when most Iw. (i. e. in sleep) then do mine eyes best see, Sonn. 43, 1. 56, 6. T p . II, 1, 216. Gent. 1, 2, 139. V, 2, 14. W i v . V, 5, 52. Err. Ill, 2, 58. L L L 1,1, 43. J o h n II, 215 (your —ing gates, = shut). R2 IV, 284. H 4 B I, 3, 33. H 5 II, 1, 8. Ill, 7, 153. V, 2, 327. 332. H 6 B II, 1, 105. Rom. Ill, 2, 6. Hml. 11, 2, 137 (if 1 had given my heart a —ing, i. e. if I had shut my eyes on purpose to see nothing. Qq working. cf. to give a wink, W i n t . I, 2, 317). Oth. IV, 2, 77. Cymb. II, 3, 25. II, 4, 89. V, 4, 194. 198. W i t h at or upon = to seem not to see: w. at me and say thou sawest me not, Tim. Ill, 1, 47. the eye w. at the hand, Mcb. I, 4, 52. upon a homely object love can w. Gent. II, 4, 98. Hence to w. at = to connive a t : if little faults ... shall not be —ed at, H5 II, 2, 55. w. at the Duke of Suffolk's insolence, H 6 B II, 2, 70. —ing at your discords, R o m . V, 3, 294.

w

1377

2) to shut the eyes involuntarily by way of re- Timon's purse, T i m . Ill, 4, 14. as poor as w. Oth. lieving them, and hence to spend no more time than III, 3, 173. quake in the present —'s stale, Cymb. II, is necessary to shut them: now here is three studied 4, 5. cf. T i m . Ill, 6, 33. IV, 3, 264. Ant. V, 2, 87. ere ye'll thrice w. L L L I, 2, 54. grew a twenty years W i n t e r e d , pertaining to winter, worn in winter: removed thing while one would w. T w . V, 93. I have w. garments must be lined, As III, 2, 111 (F3. 4 and not —ed since I saw these sights, W i n t . Ill, 3, 106. M.Edd. winter garments, unnecessarily; see Appendix). W i n t e r - g r o u n d , vb. to protect f r o m the incle3) to give a significant look: and on the —ing of authority to understand a law, J o h n IV, 2, 211. nor mency of the winter-season, like a plant covered with to., nor nod, nor kneel, nor make a sign, Tit. Ill, 2, 43. straw or the like: and furred moss besides, ...to w. W i t h at or on: w. each at other, Mids. Ill, 2, 240. thy corse, Cymb. IV, 2, 229. you saw my master w. and laugh upon you, Shr. IV, 4, W i n t e r l y , cheerless, uncomfortable: if w. (news), 76. I will w. on her to consent, H 5 V, 2, 333. thou needest but keep that countenance still, Cymb. Ill, W i n n e r , one who wins: Shr. V, 2, 187. Wint. 4, 13. V, 3, 131. H 5 111, 6, 120. H 6 B 111, 1, 184. Hml. IV, W i p e , subst. a note of infamy, a b r a n d : worse than 5, 143. Cymb. II, 4, 53. Ill, 5, 15 ( = conqueror). a slavish w. or birth-hour's blot, Lucr. 537. W i n n o w , 1) to separate, as the chaff from the W i p e , vb. 1) to make clean by gentle rubbing: g r a i n : distinction, with a broad and-powerful fanpuffing w. thine eyes, T p . I, 2, 25. H 6 C I, 4, 139. R 3 IV, 4, at all, —s the light away, Troil. I, 3, 28. bitter torture 278 (Qq dry). Lr. V, 3, 23. Cymb. IV, 2, 402. to w. shall to. the truth from falsehood, Cymb. V, 5, 134. my shoes, Gent. II, 1, 86. thy lips are scarce —d 2) to sift, to t r y : we shall be —ed with so rough since thou drunkest last, H 4 A II, 4, 170. Cor. IV, 5, a wind, II4B IV, 1, 194. H 8 V, 1, 111. such a —ed 232. let me w. thy face, H 4 B II, 4, 234. Hml. V, 2, purity in love, Troil. Ill, 2, 174. through the most fond 305. •—ing his bloody brow, Cor. I, 3, 38. I will w. and—ed opinions, Hml. V, 2 , 2 0 1 ( p r o b a b l y = t r u i s m s . thy cheeks, Tit. Ill, 1, 142. let me w. it (my hand) first, Lr. IV, 6, 136. w. his beard, Oth. Ill, 3, 439. Qq the most prof an", and trennowed opinions). W i n t e r , the cold season of the year: Lucr. 1255. With a double accus.: will he w. his tables clean, H4B Sonn. 5, 6. 56, 13. 97, 1. T p . V, 16. Gent. II, 4, 163. IV, 1, 201. W i t h of: —d our eyes of drops, As II, Meas. II, 1, 136. Err. Ill, 2, 100 (a Poland w.). L L L 7, 122. V, 2, 901. Mids. II, 1 , 1 0 1 . 112. Mereh. Ill, 1 , 6 6 . 2) to take away, to strike off gently: w. the dim As II, 3, 52. II, 5, 8. Shr. IV, 1, 24 (proverb: w. tames mist from thy doting eyne, Lucr. 643. 1213. how may man, woman and beast). W i n t . II, 1, 25. Ill, 2, 213. this stain be —d from me, 1701. L L L IV, 3, 125. As IV, 3, 4. IV, 4, 75. 79. 81. R2 V, 1, 40. H 4 B 1, 3, II, 7, 116. H 6 B IV, 10, 74. Metaphorically: from my 62. IV, 4, 34 (as humorous as w.). 92. H 5 111, 3, 55. succession w. me, father, W i n t . IV, 4, 491. —d it I-I6B I, 1, 81. II, 4, 3. H 6 C V, 2, 15. R 3 II, 3, 33. from my mind. H 4 B I, 1, 211. H5 IV, 1, 139. Mcb. T i t . Ill, 1, 20. Rom. I, 2, 28. T i m . Ill, 6, 33. IV, 3, IV, 3, 116. Ant. II, 2, 81. W i t h away: Lucr. 608. 264. L r . II, 4, 46. Ant. V, 2, 87. Cymb. IV, 2, 259. H 6 B II, 4, 65. IV, 1, 40. H 6 C II, 5, 71. Tit. Ill, 1, IV, 4, 30. Per. IV, 3, 50. Sometimes" with the article 106. V, 3, 148. Hml. I, 5, 99. W i t h o f f : J o h n V, 2, in a general sense: you are sure together, as the w. 45. R2 II, 1, 294. H 6 C I, 3, 52. Troil II, 2, 149. to foul weather, As V, 4 , 1 4 2 . the —'s cold, Caes. 1,2, W i t h out: W i n t . IV, 2, 11. H 6 A II, 4, 117. Cor. V, 99. L r . 11,4, 69. J o h n V, 7, 36. H 5 III, 3, 55. Hml. 3, 146. T i m . V, 4, 17. W i r e , a thread of metal: if hairs be—s, black V, 1, 239. Adjectively: w. meads, Lucr. 1218. w. weather, Pilgr. 159. w. time, Wiv. IV, 4, 30. w. wind, —s grotv on her head, Sonn, 130, 4. whipped with w. As II, 7, 174. w. cricket, Shr. IV, 3, 110. w. showers, Ant. II, 5, 65. T i m . II, 2, 180. T h e Anglos, gen. in the same sense: W i r y , pertaining to wire, or consisting of wire: —'s day, Sonn. 13, 11. the —'s wind, As II, 1, 7. the w. concord, Sonn. 128, 4 (the w. concord = the a —'s night, H 6 B III, 2, 335. H 6 C V, 5, 25. V, 7, harmony of the strings), ten thousand w. friends, (i. e. 17. at a —'s fire, Mcb. Ill, 4, 65. the present —'s hairs), J o h n III, 4, 64. state, Cymb. 11, 4, 5. W i s , see I-wis. W i s d o m , 1) science, knowledge: though the w. of P a r s pro toto, = year (as passed in a cheerless m a n n e r ) : when forty — s shall besiege thy brow, Sonn. nature can reason it thus and thus, Lr. I, 2, 113. what 2, 1. T p . I, 2, 296. Meas. Ill, I, 76. L L L IV, 3, 242. can man's w. in the restoring his bereaved sense? IV, W i n t . V, 3, 50. R 2 I, 3, 211. 214. 260. IV, 258. 4, 8. cf. Merch. IV, 1, 409. Emblem of old a g e : lust's w. comes ere summer 2) the quality of being wise (often opposed to half be done, Ven. 802. let not —'s ragged hand de- folly); applied with great latitude to any degree of face in thee thy summer, Sonn. 6, 1. Sonn. 13, 11. the faculty of discerning and judging what is most Err. V, 312. cf. A s II, 3, 52 and W i n t . IV, 4, 79. that just and proper, from the sapience of the sage to the IO. lion, who in rage forgets aged contusions, H 6 B V, sound discretion of policy or common sense: 'tis not 3, 2 ( = old lion). I'll take that w. from your lips, w. thus to second grief against yourself, Ado V, 1, 2. Troil. IV, 5, 24 (viz Nestor's kiss). Of death: till cold w. waiting on superfluous folly, All's I, 1, 116. death, that w., kill it, H8 III, 2, 179. Of any cheer- w. cries out in the streets, and no man regards it, H 4 A less situation, as misfortune, poverty, destitution: a 1, 2, 99 (cf. Proverbs I, 20. 24). Meas. II, 1, 32. II, nun of — ' s sisterhood, As III, 4, 17 (one devoted to 4, 78. L L L V, 2, 70. Merch. 1, 1, 92. Wint. II, 1, 21. cold and barren chastity), that w. should cut off our H 6 B I, 1, 33. H 8 V, 5, 25. Rom. Ill, 5, 171. T i m . spring-time so, H6C II, 3, 47. if we use delay, cold III, 5, 51. L r . IV, 2, 38. herein lives m.t beauty and biting w. mars our hoped-for hay, IV, 8, 61. the w. of increase, Sonn. 11, 5. much upon this riddle runs the our discontent, R 3 I, 1, 1. this goodly summer with w. of the world, Meas. Ill, 2, 242. shoio your w. in your w. mixed, Tit. V, 2, 172. 'tis deepest w. in Lord your close patience, IV, 3, 122. pace your w. in that

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good path, 137. pray heaven his w. be not tainted, IV, 4, 5. your long experience of her to. Err. Ill, 1, 89. w. and blood combating in so tender a body, Ado II, 3, 170. IV, 1, 189. V, 1, 239. LLL IV, 3, 357. V, 2, 742. Merch. II, 9, 81. As I, 2, 74. Shr. V, 2, 127. All's 1, 2, 9. II, 1, 87. Tw. Ill, 1, 47. Wint. IV, 4, 150. H4A IV, 1, 64. H4B I, 1, 162. H6B III, 1, 195. V, 2, 75. H6C IV, 7, 60. R3 I, 4, 99. Ill, 7, 40. H8 I, 3, 29. Cor. I, 1, 219. Hml. I, 2, 15. Lr. I, 4, 102. 184. Ant. V, 2, 150 etc. Wise, subst. manner: in howling w. Pilgr. 277. in no w. = by no means: he is promised to be wived to fair Marina, but in no w. till he had done his sacrifice, Per. V, 2, 11 (Gower's speech), cf. Colossus-wise, Likewise, Otherwise. Wise, adj. 1) experienced, skilful: take counsel of some —r head, Pilgr. 303. the —st beholder ... could not say if the importance were joy or sorrow, Wint. V, 2, 18. in these nice sharp quillets of the law ... I am no —r than a daw, H6A II, 4, 18. (cf. Ado V, 1, 166, where the words 'the gentleman is w.' are explained by 'he hath the tongues'}, a w. woman = a woman skilled in hidden arts, as fortune-telling, palmistry etc.: Wiv. IV, 5, 27. 59. Tw. Ill, 4, 114. cf. the —st aunt, Mids. II, 1, 51. 2) endowed with, or showing, sound judgment; sage, judicious, sensible, discreet: the spirits of the to. sit in the-clouds and mock us, H4B II, 2, 155. what the w. powers deny us for our good. Ant. II, 1,6. Meas. HI, 1, 113. V, 475. Mids. Ill, 1, 151. Merch; I, 1, 96. R2 I, 3, 276. Ill, 2, 178 and H6C V, 4, 1. Ill, 1, 25. strike the w. dumb and teach the fool to speak, Ven. 1146. old and yet not w. Lucr. 1550. lest the w. world should look into your moan, Sonn. 71, 13. be w. as thou art cruel, 140, 1. Tp. II, 2, 77. V, 294. Gent. I, I, 41. II, 4, 15. IV, 2, 41. IV, 3, 13. Wiv. I, 3, 32. II, 3, 10. 39. 56. IV, 5, 82. Meas. 1, 2, 103. II, 1, 57. 180. II, 4, 14. Ill, 2, 145. 146. Err. IV, 3, 76. V, 217. Ado II, 3, 29. 32. 167. 192. 197. L L L I, 2, 143. II, 18. V, 2, 76. Merch. Ill, 2, 101. As I, 1, 26. Shr. II, 267 (cf. Wit). Wint. I, 2, 262. Troil. IV, 5, 257. Hml. I, 2, 6. Oth. II, 3, 193. Cymb. Ill, 4, 121 etc. etc. a w. gentleman, Ado V, 1,166, according to Dyce, = wiseacre. —r, adverbially: thou speakest —r than thou art ware of, As II, 4, 58. Wisely, adv. (comp. wiselier, Tp. II, 1,21) with wisdom, judiciously: Tp. II, 1, 8. 21. Wiv. I, 3, 3. Meas. I, 2, 135. Ado III, 5, 65. Merch. II, 2, 15. As I, 2, 93. II, 7, 22. 53. Ill, 2, 129. Tw. I, 5, 33. Ill, 1, 74. Wint. IV, 4, 726. H4A I, 2, 97. H4B IV, o, 181. Troil. I, 3, 138. Ill, 2, 159. Rom. I, ], 227. II, 3, 94. II, 4, 132. Ill, 5, 234. Tim. Ill, 5, 31. Caes. HI, 3, 12. 17. V, 1, 38. Mcb. Ill, 6, 14. Hml. 11, 1, 3. III, 3, 30. Oth. V, 2, 344. Cymb. I, 6, 43. Wiseman (spelt as one word in 0 . Edd. and accentuated on the first syllable) one not a fool or a madman: As I, 2, 93. V, I, 35. Tw. I, 5, 95. 11, 3, 45. Ill, 1, 73. 75. R2 V, 5, 63. Rom. Ill, 3, 62. Lr. I, 4, 182. Ill, 2, 13 (Qq wise man), cf. Man. Wlseness, wisdom: yet have I something in me dangerous, which let thy w. fear, Hml. V, 1, 286 (Qq wisdom). Wish, subst. a desire (optation): Ven. Ded. 7. Gent. 1, 3, 60. Wiv. Ill, 3, 52. Mids. I, 1, 155. Merch. Ill, 2, 152. 189. As V, 2, 101. H5 III, 2, 16. V, 2,

355. R3 IV, 1, 72. H8 I, 2, 140. Ant. Ill, 13, 18 etc. to give a p. his ' IV, 3, 77. Ado II, 1, 200. L L L V, 2, 342. 835. maid's — s should be as mortal as an old man's life, Merch. Ill, 2, 192. Ill, 4, 42. H4B IV, 2, 79. R3 IV, IV, 5, 159. The safety and soundness of the —s con1, 65. H8 V, 1, 76. Cor. I, 3, 123. Ant. V, 2, 281 etc. stituting the wise or reasonable man, their loss the thy own wish w. I thee, L L L II, 179. Towards for to: fool or madman: being mad before, how doth she now a heart that —es t. you honour and plenteous safety, for —s? Ven. 249. here's a fellow frights English out 118 I, 1, 103. The relation of the dat. and accus. of his —s, Wiv. II, 1, 143. I will stare him out of his peculiarly inverted: I could not w. them to a fairer —s, II, 2, 291. I am as well in my —s as thou, Tw. death, Mcb. V, 8, 49. 2) to desire, to invite, to ask, to bid; with an inf. IV, 2, 95. 9S. holp madmen to their —s, R2 V, 5, 62. with to: nor (was I) —ed to hold my peace, Meas. V, in his right —s, H5 IV, 7, 49. Tp. Ill, 2, 86. Meas. 79. I will w. thee never more to dance, LLL V, 2,400. V, 33. Err. V, 42. 96. Mids. I, 2, 82. Tw. Ill, 4, —ing me to permit my chaplain ... a choice hour, H8 14. H6A V, 3, 195. Cor. IV, 2, 44. Oth. IV, 1, 1,2,161. whenman was —ed to love his enemies, Tim. 280 etc. etc. Used with the same latitude in the singular, so as IV, 3, 473. this she —ed me to make known, Cymb. III,5, 50. without to: to w. him wrestle with affection, to come near, sometimes, to the sense of mind: by Ado III, 1, 42. such thanks I give as one near death love the young and tender w. is turned to folly, Gent. to those that w. him live, All's II, 1, 134. the rest Iw. 1, 1, 47. made w. with musing weak, 69. my w. unthee gather, H6A II, 5, 96. With to before a noun, trained in any kind of art, H6A I, 2, 73; cf. Gent. I, = to invite: I will w. him to her father, Shr. I, 1, 1, 2. with what his valour did enrich his w., his w. set 113 (invite him to offer his service to her father). down to make his valour live, R3 III, 1, 85. the moral shall I . . . w. thee to a shrewd ill-favoured wife? ... of my w. is 'plain and true', Troil. IV, 4, 109. she hath Ihou'rt too much my friend, and I'll not w. thee to her, Dian's w. Rom. I, 1, 215 ( = sentiments). Sometimes 1, 2, 60. 64 (shall I invite thee to try thy fortune with = imaginative and inventive faculty: fair fall the w. that can so well defend her, Ven. 472. danger deviseth etc.; shall I treat thee to a sinew?) Wisher, one who expresses a wish: Mids. 11, 2, shifts, w. waits on fear, 690. conceit and grief an eager combat fight: wliatw. sets down is blotted straight with 65. Ant. IV, 15, 37. W i s h f u l , longing: to greet mine own land with will, Lucr.- 1299. each several stone, with w. well blazoned, smiled or made some moan, Compl. 217. my my w. sight, H6C III, 1, 14. admirable dexterity of w. Wiv. IV, 5, 121. thousand Wishtly, see Wistly. Wisp, a small bundle: a w. of straw, H6C II, escapes of w. make thee the father of their idle dreams, Meas. IV, 1, 63. hast thou or word or w. or impudence 2, 144 (cf. Straw). Wist, impf. of a verb to wis unknown to Sh.; that yet can do thee office? V, 368. devise, w.; write, substituted by M. Edd. for wish of O. Edd. in H6A pen, L L L I, 2, 191. past the w. of man to say what dream it was, Mids. IV, 1, 211. the man hath no w. IV, 1, 180. Read: and i f , — I wish he did, — but let that cannot ... vary deserved praise on my palfrey, that rest; as Johnson proposed. H5 III, 7, 33 etc. At other times = common sense, Wistly, attentively, observingly, with scrutiny: understanding, judgment: a folly bought with w., or what a sight it was, w. to view horn she came stealing else a w. by folly vanquished, Gent. I, 1, 34. he wants to the wayivard boy, Ven. 343. she thought he blushed w. that wants resolved will to learn his w. to exchange as knowing Tarquin's lust, and blushing with him w. the bad for better, II, 6, 12. I have the w. to think my on him gazed, Lucr. 1355. the sun looked on the world master is a kind of a knave, III, 1, 262. if I had not with glorious eye, yet not so w. as this queen on him, had more w. than he, IV, 4, 15. see now how w. may Pilgr. 82. speaking it he w. looked on me, as who should be made a Jack-a-lent, Wiv. V, 5, 134. few of any w. say 'I would thou wert the man', R2 V, 4, 7 (Ql. 2 in such matters, Meas. II, 1, 282. Wiv. I, 3, 102. Err. wishtly).

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II, 2, 39. 152. A d o I, 2, 17. V, 1,128. L L L I, 2, 93. 94. John III, 4, 102. L r . II, 4, 42 etc. etc. Not seldom equivalent to wisdom: so then we do neglect the thing we have, and aU for want of w., mate something nothing by neglecting it, Lncr. 153. Brutus ... began to clothe his tc. in state and pride, 1809. if I might teach thee to., better it were, though not to love, yet, love, to tell me so, Sonn. 140, 5. one that hath taught me more w. than ever I learned before, W i v . IV, 5, 61. 'tis wisdom to conceal our meaning. Away with scrupulous w., now arms must rule, H 6 C IV, 7, 61. cf. L L L V, 2, 70. 72. T w . V, 218. W i n t . II, 2, 52. B2 II, 1, 28. H6B III, 1, 232. Oth. II, 1, 130 etc. Often denoting the faculty o f associating ideas in a new and ingenious, and at the same time natnral and pleasing way, which is at present its principal signification: T p . II, 1, 13. IV, 242. Gent. I, 1, 132. II, 4, 38. W i v . IV, 5, 102. Meas. II, 2, 127. Err. II, 1, 91. II, 2, 86. 88. A d o I, 1, 64. II, 1, 127. 135. 145. 399. V, 1, 124. L L L I, 2, 100 (my father s w. and my mother's tongue assist me). Mids. Ill, 1, 137. A s I, 2, 48. 56. 95. T w . I, 5, 35. B3 1, 2,115. Troil. II, 1, 94 etc. Proverbial expressions: more hair than w. Gent. III, 1, 361. 367. 368. 371. Err. II, 2, 82. 84. w. enough to keep himself warm. A d o I, 1, 68; cf. Shr. II, 268. when the age is in, the w. is out, A d o III, 5, 37. tc., whither wiltf As IV, 1, 168; cf. I, 2, 59. 2) a) as a vox media, = a person o f any degree of mental capacity: parasites ... soothing the humour of fantastic —s, Ven. 850. — s of no higher breeding, H4B II, 2, 38. among foaming bottles and ale-washed —s, H5 III, 6, 83. b) a man of fancy or wit: the —s of former days to subjects worse have given admiring praise, Sonn. 59, 13. good —s wilt be jangling, L L L II, 225. are these the breed of —s so wondered at f V, 2, 266. belter —s have worn plain statute-caps, 281. the dulness of the fool is the whetstone of the —s. How now, w., whither wander youf A s I, 2, 59. those —s that think they have thee (viz wit) do very oft prove fools, T w . 1, 5, 36. shallow jesters and rash bavin —s, H 4 A III, 2, 61. W i t , vb. to know: swift-winged with desire to get a grave, as - ing I no other comfort have, H 6 A II, 5, 16. now please you w. the epitaph is for Marina writ, Per. IV, 4, 31 (Gower's speech), to w. = that is to say, namely: Merch. II, 9, 90. As V, 1, 57. H5 I, 2, 50. H6C V, 6, 51. W i t c h , snbst. 1) a woman who practises sorcery: T p . I, 2, 258. 263. V, 269. W i v . IV, 2, 88. 100. 180. 187. 194. 201. IV, 5, 120. 124. Err. I, 2, 100. Ill, 2, 149. 161. IV, 3, 80. IV, 4, 151. A d o II, 1, 186. H 6 A I, 5, 6 (one who could draw a witch's blood was free from her power). 21. II, 1, 18. Ill, 2, 38. V, 3, 34. H6B I, 2, 75. 91. II, 1, 172. II, 3, 7. R3 III, 4, 72. Troil. II, 1, 46 (thou stool for a w.). Mcb. I, 3, 6. IV, 1, 23 (—es mummy). H m l . l , 1, 163. Lr. Ill, 4, 129. Ant. IV, 2, 37 (the w. take me, if I meant it thus). Term of reproach for an old and ugly woman: a mankind w. W i n ! II, 3, 67. the cripple tardy-gaited night who like a foul and ugly w. doth limp so tediously away, H5 IV Chor. 21; Troil. IV, 2, 12. foul wrinkled ic. R3 I, 3, 164. the w. shall die, Ant. IV, 12, 47. 2) a male sorcerer: I could find in my heart to stay here still and turn w. Err. IV, 4, 160. out, fool, I

forgive thee for a w. Ant. I, 2, 40 (cf. the proverb: yom'll never be burnt for a witch). Cyrnb. 1,6, 166. W i t c h , vb. to bewitch, to enchant: H 4 A IV, 1, 11(0. H6B III, 2, 116. 119. H6C III, 2, 150. Tim. V, 1, 158. Hml. Ill, 2, 406 (the —ing time of night; cf. M c b . II, 1, 51). Witchcraft, 1) the practices of witches, sorcery: R3! III, 4, 63. 74. Mcb. II, 1, 51. Oth. I, 3, 64. 169. II, S, 378. Ill, 3, 211. Ant. II, 1, 22. Cymb. IV, 2, 277. 2) enchantment, irresistible influence, charm: Coimpl. 288. T w . T, 79. Wint. IV, 4, 434. John 111, 1, 169. H5 V, 2, 301. H8 ill, 2, 18. Cor. IV, 7, 2. Html. I, 5, 43. IV, 7, 86. W i t - c r a c k e r , one who breaks jests, a joker: A d o V, 4 , 102. W i t h ; denoting a being together; f. i. the breeder ... swiftly doth forsake him; w. her the horse, Ven. 322. keep w. thy hounds, 678. let's aU sink w. the king, Tp.. I, 1, 67. any thing ... that hath kept w. thy remembrance, I, 2, 44. that which good natures could not abiide to be w. 360. wishing me w. him, Gent. I, 59. I lingered w. you at your shop, Err. Ill, 1, 3. leave him herie w. me, V, 108. to come w. thee, H6C IV, 8, 13. Pecnliar use after verbs of motion or, at least, implying the idea of motion, to express the effect of it: nay, rather damn them w. King Cerberus, H4B II, 4, L81 (i. e. so that they may be in hell), lay me with Juliet, Rom. V, 3, 73. w. dishonour laid me on the grotund, H6B HI, 3, 9 (laid me on the ground, where I lite in the company of dishonour). I have seen the amlbitious ocean swell ...to be exalted w. the threatening clomds, Caes. I, 3, 8. give him a statue w. his ancestors, III, 2, 55 (in that place where the statues of his ancestors stand). Til pluck ye (eyes) out and cast you w. the waters that you lose, to temper clay, Lr. I, 4, 325 (thait you may lie on the ground together with the tears which you have shed. M. Edd. erroneously: and cast you, w. the waters etc.) return w. herl II, 4, 214 ( — return to be and live with her? quite = return to hier). cf. to lie and sit w. in A s I, 213. Meas. V. 246u H6C III, 3, 2 ; and the similar use of at home in A n t . I, 2, 190: the letters of our friends in Rome petitiom us at home ( — to be at hoine,i.e. to come home). The^ same principle applicable to the following passages : who, being suffered w. the bear's fell paw, hath clapjped his tail between his legs and cried, H6B V, 1, 153 (being suffered to be w., i. e. to combat with etc.). that the noble Moor should hazard such a place as his own second w. one of an ingraft infirmity, Oth. II, 3, 145. Inversely, after verbs of separation (especially to part') that with which a person or thing has hitherto beem together, indicated by with: let the stinking elder, grief, untwine his perishing root w. the increasing vine, Cymib. IV, 2, 60 ( = from; so as to be no more twined withi). how did thy master part w. Madam Julia i Gent. II, 5i, 11. when you parted w. him, R2 I, 4, 10. II, 2, 2. I l l , 2, 8. R3 1,4, 251. hath willingly departed w. a part, John II, 563. I'll be w. you = 1) I'll be in your company, I'll comie to you: I'll be w. you anon, H 4 B V, 3, 28. Troitl. I, 2, 304. cf. A s I, 1, 89. 2 ) in a menacing tone, = I ' ll chastise you, I'll teach you good manners, you shalll pay for this (Latin guos ego!): I will be w. thee straight, Mids. Ill, 2, 403. what, do you grumble? I'll

w be w. you straight, Shr. IV, 1, 170. I'll be tc. you amon, Tw.lll,4,353. I shall be re. you presently, good maxster puppy, H8 V, 4, 29. cf. I'll be to. you at your shteepshearing too, Wint. IV, 3, 128 (i. e. I'll pick y o n r pockets there). Cardinal, lam to. you, H6B II, 1,, 48. was I tc you there for the goose? Rom. II, 4, 78 (cf. Wint. I, 2, 217. Cor. Ill, 2, 74). Denoting identity of place: she looks for ntight, and then she tongs for morrow, and both she thinkm too longw. her remaining, Lacr. 1572 ( = w h e r e s h e is), tlhere was an old woman even now w. me, Wiv. IV, 5, 26 (in my chamber), some say he is to. the emperor of Russia, Meas. 111,2,93. her brother's noontide w. the Antipodes, Mids. Ill, 2, 55. thou shall not gormandise, as thou ¡hast done to. me. Merch. II, 5, 4. I entreat you home to.. me to dinner, IV, 1, 401. As III, 3, 43. John IV, 1, 30i. V, 4, 40. Tim. Ill, 2, 12. Cymb. Ill, 5, 83 etc. he im not to. himself, Tit. I, 368 ( = he is beside himself. F f he u not himself). T h e notion of locality applied to abstract idieas: to. Death she humbly doth insinuate, Ven. 1012. hie tc. the Romans teas esteemed so, Lucr. 1811. I lie w. her, and she to. me, Sonn. 138,13 (I tell her untruths;; cf. Oth. IV, 1, 36). toill you grant to. me, Tp. II, 1, 2 4 3 . 'tis fresh morning to. me, III, 1,33. 'tis a custom to. him Cth' ofternoon to sleep, III, 2, 95. whose credit to., the judge, Meas. II, 4, 92. 1 will break to. her, Ado II, 1, 311 (cf. Break), not a word to. him hut a jest, 1LLL II, 216. a place of high respect w. me, Mids. 11,1,209. have all persuaded to. him, Merch. Ill, 2, 283. arm not to. me esteemed above thy life, IV, 1,285. to flatten- to. his lord, Tw. I, 5, 322; R2 II, 1, 88. he can do tall in all to. her that hateth thee, H6B II, 4, 52. your displeasure to. the king, H8 111, 2,392. it is an accustomed action to. her, Mcb. V, 1, 32. is Caesar to. Anlomius prized so lightt Ant. I, 1, 56. his taints and homours waged equal to. him, V, 1,31. a goodly day not to /keep house to. such whose roof's as lorn as ours, Cymbi. Ill, 3,1. the shipman . . . to. whom each minute threatens life or death, Per. I, 3, 25 etc. cf. the following phrases: what news to. your mastership 1 Gent. Ill, 1,280 (what news have yon to tell?); what tidings to. our camsin Buckingham? H6B II, 1,165. what's your will to. met Gent. Ill, 1, 3. tchat wouldst thou have to. met Kom. III, 1, 79. what would you to. hert Gent. IV, 4, 115. W i r . HI, 4, 64. IV, 5, 30. L L L V, 2, 178. Mercfli. II, 2, 128. H4A II, 3, 98. what w. met W i r . II, 2„ 41. Tit. IV, 2,54. Tim. 11,2,15. I'll no more to. thee, Tw. Ill, 1, 49. Thus used to designate the person wihom (or the thing which) an action concerns or with respect to whom a quality is exhibited or a state expressed: to practise his judgment to. the disposition of nattures, Meas. Ill, 1, 165. heaven doth to. us as we to. torches do, 1,1, 33. do w. 'em what thou will, H 6 A IV, 7 , 94. breaking faith tr. Julia, Gent. IV, 2, 11. you dw not keep promise w. me, Tw. V, 106. keeping thy word to. the devil, H4A I, 2, 135. the regent hath to. Talbot broke his word, H6A IV, 6, 2. in hand to. all things, Ven. 912. how the world is changed tc. you, Err. 11,2, 154. I am witness to. her that she did, IV, 4, 92. thus stands it to. me, Meas. I, 2,149. 'tis better w. mat now than when I met thee last, R3 III, 2,100. so is it mot to. me as to. that ¡fuse, Sonn. 21,1. Meas. 1,1, 82. 11,2, 82. All's II, 1,152. Tw. 111,4,97. V,199. W i n t . 1,2, 148. R2 II, 1, 72. Cor. 1,6,33. V, 6 , 1 0 . Rom. nil, 3, 93. Mcb. II, 2, 58. Hml. Ill, 4, 115. 116. IV, a, 13.

1381

Oth. Ill, 4, 33. Cymb. IV, 3, 1. are to. gain so fond, Lucr. 134. stands at a guard to. entry, Meas. I, 3, 51. be not angry to. me, Ado III, 1, 94. do not be so bitter to. me, Mids. Ill, 2, 306. in love to. a disdainful youth, II, 1, 261. bear to. me, L L L V, 2, 417. be opposite to. a kinsman, surly to. servants, Tw. 11,5,162. be plainer to. me, Wint. 1, 2, 265. be fire w.fire, J o h n V, 1, 48. are you so choleric to. Eleanor, H6B I, 2, 52. is so pleasant to. us, H5 I, 2. 259. an a' be proud tc. me, Troil 11,3,215. I would dissemble to. my nature, Cor. III,2,62. I'Ube cruel tc. the maids, Rom. 1,1,27. the troubled Tiber chafing to. her shores, Caes. 1.2,101. the world, too saucy to. the gods, I, 3, 12. that lam meek and gentle to. these butchers, Caes. Ill, 1, 255 etc. Peculiar expression: they're here w. me already, whispering, rounding, 'Sic ilia is a to-forth', Wint. 1,2,217 (they go so far with respect to me as to whisper. The words perhaps accompanied by a correspondinggestnre emblematizing cockoldom). go to them, to. this bonnet in thy hand, and thus far having stretched it — here be to. them — thy knee bussing the stones, Cor. Ill, 2, 74 (do thns in addressing them). 0 ho, are you there to. met no eyes in your headt Lr. IV, 6, 148. Denoting junction and community: the world hath ending to. thy life, Ven. 12. his smell tc. others being mingled, 691. to. him is beauty slain, 1019. I have suffered to. those that I saw suffer, Tp. I, 2, 6. executing the outward face of royalty to. all prerogative, 105. confederates ... to. the king of Naples, 112. confer fair Milan ID. all the honours on my brother, 127. fresh water ... that Gonzalo ... did give us, to. rich garments, 163. I would mine eyes would to. themselves shut up my thoughts, II, 1, 192. a tongue tc. a tang, II, 2, 52. tr. my nobler reason 'gainst my Jury do I take part, V, 26. to marry w. Nan Page, Wiv. IV, 4,85. join not to. grief, R2V, 1,16. to wail it to. their age, R3 IV, 4,394 (in v. 392 Qq in), the kings your ancestors, together to. the natural bravery of your isle, Cymb. 111,1,17 etc. etc. see Confer, Speak etc. and the burden to. heigh ho, the wind and the rain, Tw. V, 399. Wint. IV, 3, 2. Hence expressing correspondence, likeness and comparison: nothing to. his proud sight agrees, Ven. 288. lay this Angiers even to. the ground, J o h n II, 399. wishing his foot were equal to. his eye, H6C III, 2, 137. measure my strangeness to. my unripe years, Ven. 524. weigh oath to. oath, Mids. Ill, 2, 131. compare w. Caesars, H4B II, 4, 180 etc. Sometimes almost = like: indenting to. the way, Ven. 704. seemed w. him to bleed, 1056. to. others thou shouldst not abhor my state, Sonn. 150, 12. of nature's gifts thou mayst to. lilies boast and to. the half-blown rose, J o h n 111, 1, 53. at if to. Circe she would change my shape, H6A V, 3,35. Noting simultaneousness: to. this she seizeth on his sweating palm, Ven. 25. and to. that word she spied the hunted boar, 900. to. every minute you do change a mind, Cor. 1,1, 186. to-morrow to. your earliest let me have speech to. you, Oth. II, 3 , 7 . to. your speediest bring us what she says, A n t . V , l , 6 7 . cf. Ven. 811.1121. Lucr. 1639.1709. Tit. V, 1,37. Caes. Ill, 2 , 4 8 etc. cf. the phrases: come tc. a thought, Tp. IV, 164. he would kiss you twenty w. a breath, H8 1,4,30. After expressions of contest (as, for a combat, there must needs be two): to. herself at strife, Ven. 11.291. encounter to. the boar, 672. leaden slumber to. life's strength doth fight, Lucr. 124. in rebellion to. himself, Wint. I, 2, 355. his face still combating to. tears, R2 V, 2, 32 etc.

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W

T h e i d e a of c o m m u n i t y lost s i g h t of a f t e r prepositional a n d adverbial expressions o r i g i n a t i n g in i t : to the forge io. it, W i y . IV, 2, 2 3 9 . to the rack to. him, Meas. V, 3 1 3 . to prison to. her, 121. then to cart w. Rosalind, A s 111, 2 , 1 1 4 . to Bedlam to. him, H 6 B T , 1, 131. to pieces to. me, C y m b . Ill, 4, 5 5 . away w. the rest, T p . IV, 247. W i v . IV, 2, 4 5 . Meaa. Ill, 2 , 2 1 7 . V, 4 6 . J o h n I V , 2 , 1 5 5 . H 6 A I , 1 , 8 6 . down to. the topmast, T p . 1 , 1 , 3 7 . G e n t IV, 1 , 2 . L L L I V , 3, 3 6 8 . T i m . IV, 3 , 1 5 7 . forward to. your tale, T p . Ill, 2, 9 1 . off to. Barnardine's head, Meas. IV, 2 , 2 2 2 . H 4 B V, 1, 6 0 . H 6 B II, 1 , 1 5 1 . out to. it, G e n t . Ill, 1, 3 3 9 . IV, 4 , 2 2 . T i m . IV, 1, 9. up to. your fights, W i v . II, 2 , 142. D e n o t i n g t h a t w h i c h a c c o m p a n i e s a n d modifies, either as a n e x t e r n a l a p p e a r a n c e , o r a s a q u a l i t y : the «un to. purple-coloured face, V e n . 1. to. long dishevelled hair, 147. to. hair up-staring, T p . 1 , 2 , 2 1 3 . let him die to. every joint a vxmnd, T r o i l . IV, 1, 29. to. this bonnet in thy hand, C o r . Ill, 2 , 7 3 etc. to. a lazy sprig ht, V e n . 181. he trots to. gentle majesty, 2 7 8 . sweUeth to. more rage, 3 3 2 . to. disturbed mind, 340. to. weary gait, 529. to. blindfold fury, 554. he cranks and crosses w. a thousand doubles, 6 8 2 . T p . 1 , 2 , 2 8 . 3 0 4 . 3 4 6 . 111,1,40. Gent. I, 1, 8. Meas. V, 5 0 (io. that opinion) etc. etc. cf. the phrases: that to. his eery heart despiseth me, Gent. IV, 4 , 9 9 . my daughter's mother thinks it to. her soul, R 3 IV, 4, 256. to. my soul I love thy daughter, 262 etc. H e n c e d e n o t i n g a m e a n s : I'll smother thee to. kisses, V e n . 18. not cloy thy lips to. loathed satiety, 19. to try to. main-course, T p . I, 1, 3 8 . the bettering of my mind to. that which ... o'erprized all popular rate, I, 2, 91. w.colours fairer painted their foul ends, 143. 2 2 2 . 2 3 1 . 322. 3 6 9 . 393. 4 7 2 . Il, 1, 119. 2 8 3 . II, 2, 5. 13. 128. Ill, 2, 9 7 . 98. IV, 158. Epil. 10. G e n t . 1,1, 29. 1 , 2 , 9 4 . 103. IV, 2, 6 etc. etc. P e c u l i a r p a s s a g e : since I have crept in favour to. myself, I tcill maintain it w. some little cost, R 3 I, 2, 259 (i. e . , a c c o r d i n g t o A b b o t t , since I have g a i n e d f a v o n r b y m y p e r s o n ) . A person as m e a n s : he did arrest me to. an officer, E r r . V, 230. his hands were ... bloody w. the enemies of his kin, R 2 II, 1, 183. send for his master to. a pursuivant, H6B 1 , 3 , 3 7 . A f t e r expressions of p r o v i d i n g o r f u r n i s h i n g : one to. treasure laden, V e n . 1022. to. hairy bristles armed, 6 2 5 . replete w. too much rage, S o n n . 23, 3. infused w. a fortitude from heaven, T p . I, 2, 154. not honoured io. a human shape, 283. touched to. madness, Meas. V, 51. her womb then rich to. my young squire, Mids. II, 1, 1 3 1 ; H 5 I. 2, 163. I ll fill these dogged spies to. false reports, J o h n IV, 1, 129. to possess me w. these fears, IV, 2, 203. I did present him to. the Paris balls, H 5 11,4,131. blessed to. beauty, H 6 A 1,2, 86. arming myself to. patience, Caes. V, 1, 106. how Thaliard came full bmt to. sin, P e r . II P r o l . 2 3 . cf. I rather will suspect the sun to. cold, W i v . IV, 4 , 7. acquaint her to. the danger of my state, M e a s . 1 , 2 , 1 8 4 etc. T h e phrases w. child, tv. young, seesub CAt'Wand Young. B e f o r e m e a n s of n o u r i s h m e n t = o n : to dine and sup to. water and bran, Meas. IV, 3 , 1 5 9 . you shall fast a week to. bran and water, LLL 1 , 1 , 3 0 3 . feast w. the best, S h r . V, 2, 8. I live w. bread like you, R 2 111, 2, 175. I have supped full to. horrors, Mcb. V, 5, 13. cf. they are as sick that surfeit w. too much as they that starve to. nothing, Merch. I, 2, 6 . Cor. Ill, 3, 9 0 . D e n o t i n g a cause: he burns to. bashful shame, Ven. 4 9 . swoln to. chafing, 3 2 5 . a dying coat revives to.

wind, 338. pale w.fear, L n c r . 183. die to. terror, 231. forced it to tremble to. her loyal fear, 261. his hand smoking to. pride, 4 3 8 . sweating to. guilty fear, 740. 762. 1491. 1543. S o n n . 2 3 , 2 (who to. his fear is put besides his part). 75, 9 . 124, 12. T p . I, 2, 2 1 2 (afire to. me ). 258. IV, 113. 1 7 1 . 1 9 1 . G e n t . 1,1, 6 9 . W i v . II, 2, 301. E r r . I, 2, 20. A d o I, 1, 250. 253. L L L II, 2 3 9 . Mids. II, 2 , 1 4 8 . Merch. I, 1, 8 1 . II, 1, 38. T w . Ill, 4 , 3 6 6 (this comes to. seeking you). R 2 II, 2, 12 (my inward soul to. nothing trembles: at something it grieves, more than to. parting from my lord the king). H 4 B IV, (awakedyou 5 , 1 3 . H 6 A II, 5 , 1 5 . 1 1 , 4 , 6 3 . R 3 I, 4 , 4 2 not to. this sore agonyt F f in). IV, 3 , 2 0 (gone to. conscience and remorse; see Go). T i m . IV, 3, 4 9 3 (weep to. laughing, not to. weeping). Caes. IV, 3, 191 (w. meditating that she must die once I have the patience to endure it now). M c b . V, 3, 10. C y m b . IV, 3,2 (a fever to. the absence of her son) etc. etc. Often enc r o a c h i n g o n the f u n c t i o n of o t h e r prepositions, f. i. overjoyed to. finding a birds nest, A d o II, 1, 2 3 0 . to. that all laughed, L L L V, 2 , 1 0 7 ( M . E d d . unnecessarily 10. that, all etc.). I feel remorse in myself to. his words, H 6 B IV, 7, 111. will forget to. the least cause these his new honours, Cor. II, 1, 2 4 5 . 3, 2 6 7 . Lastly, d e n o t i n g a n e x t e r n a l a g e n c y , by which a n effect is p r o d u c e d , and w h i c h is usually — a n d a t present exclusively — expressed by the prepos. b y : her best work is ruined to. thy rigour, V e n . 954. it (love) shall be waited on to. jealousy, 1137. accompanied io. his sons, L u c r . A r g . 4 . made glorious by his manly chivalry, w. bruised arms and wreaths of victory, L u c r . 110. blinded to. a greater light, 375. huge fires abide andw. the wind in greater fury fret, 648. eagles are gazed upon to. every eye, 1015. what wit sets down is blotted straight to. will, 1299. a woman's face to. nature's own hand painted, S o n n . 2 0 , 1 . stone besmeared to. sluttish time, 5 5 , 4 . crushed w. time's injurious hand, 6 3 , 2 . consumed w. that which it was nourished by, 73, 12. wounded to. a boar, P i l g r . 126. killed to. a thunderstroke, T p . 11,2,112. though w. their high wrongs I am struck to the quick, V, 2 5 . the mean is drowned to. your unruly base, Gent. 1 , 2 , 9 6 . metamorphosed w. a mistress, 11, 1, 32. lust is but a bloody fire kindled to. unchaste desire, W i v . V, 5, 100. to be overmastered to. a piece of valiant dust, A d o II, 1 , 6 4 . a vane blown w. all winds, II 1 , 1 , 6 6 . a better death than die w. mocks, which is as bad as die to. tickling, 79. had our two noses snapped off w. two old men, V, 1, 116. brought to. armed men back to Messina,\, 4 , 1 2 8 . we shall be dogged w. company, Mids. 1 , 2 , 1 0 6 . pierced through the heart to. your stern cruelty, III, 2, 59. hit w. Cupid's archery, 103. fanned to. the eastern wind, 142. wounded to. the claws of a lion, As V, 2, 26. braved in mine own house to. a skein of thread, S h r . IV, 3, 111. bedazzled to. the sun, IV, 5 , 4 6 . your son was misled w. a snipt taffeta fellow, All's IV, 5 , 1 . / saw him put down w. an ordinary fool, T w . I, 5, 91. torn to pieces ~x. a bear, W i n t . V, 2, 6 8 . we are mocked to. art, V, 3, 6 8 . rounded in the ear w. that purpose-changer, J o h n II, 567. wars shall kin w. kin and kind w. kind confound, R21V, 141. affrighted to. their bloody looks, H 4 A I, 3, 104. was Mahomet inspired to. a dove, H 6 A I, 2, 140. if I to-day die not to. Frenchmen's rage, IV, 6, 34. followed to. a rabble, H 6 B I I , 4 , 3 2 . to. whose sting ... your uncle ... is bereft of life, III, 2, 267. boarded to. a pirate, IV, 9, 33. to. robbers so o'ermatched, H 6 C I , 4 , 6 4 . backed w. France,

w

1383

IV, 1,41. marred w. traitors, Caes. 111,2,201. that we brother ... hath withdrawn her father to break with him can let our beardt be shook w. danger, Hml. IV, 7, 32. about it, Ado II, 1, 162. advantageous care withdrew mutt I be unfolded tr. one that I have bred, Ant. V, 2, me from the odds of multitude, Troil. V, 4, 23. b) to 171. Ven. 559. Lucr. 173. 560. 1494. Sonn. 5, 7. 27, take back, to retract: wouldst thou to. it (thy row)? 1, 122,2. 128,3. Tp. I, 2, 256. 415. 111,3,5. 15. IV, Rom. II, 2, 130. 160. Gent. Ill, 2, 7. IV, 1, 12. WW. II, 1, 22. Ill, 4, 5. 2) refl. to quit a place, to absent one's self: her Meas. Ill, 1, 26. Err. I, 2, 15. II, 1, 34. Ado I, 1, 67. eyes, at murdered with the view, like stars ashamed of L L L V, 2, 291. Mids. II, 1, 129. 167. As II, 7, 50. Ill, day, themselves withdrew, Yen. 1032. from whence 2, 196. Ill, 3, 13. John II, 26. B4A I, 3, 107. H5 III, (the camp) he privily withdrew himself, Lncr. Arg. 1, 14. H6A I, 1, 136. 1, 2, 85. II, 5, 4. H6B I, 3,132. 14. to. thyself (from the battle-field), thou bleedett too Ill, 1, 223. R3 IV, 4,239. Cor. V, 6, 12 etc. much, H4A V, 4, 2. I'U to. me and my bloody power, W i t h a l or W l t h a l l , 1) with this, with it: re- H6 A I V , 2,8. = to g o : whither (the town of Leicester), vealed the tutor and whole manner of hi* dealing, and if it please you, tee may now to. us, R3 V, 5, 11. to. suddenly stabbed herself, Lucr. Arg. 21 (with this; Usually = to retire, to step aside: Gent. V, 4,18. as soon as she had done this; see With"), beating her W i n t II, 2, 16. R2 V, 3, 28. H6C II, 3, 14. B3 III, bulk that kit hand shakes to. Lucr. 467. the bog for 4, 43. IV, 4, 8. Tit. I, 43. Oth. IV, 1, 57. trial need* would touch my breast; I, tick v., the help 3) intr. to quit a place, to absent one's self: I of bath required, Sonn. 153,11. so glad of this at they know the cause of his —ing, Meas. Ill, 2, 140 ( = his I cannot bit, who are surprised w. Tp. Ill, 1,93. he wUI travel). = to g o : let us w. together, Meas. 1,1, 82. I, scarce be pleated w. Gent. 11,7,67. we do inttate and 2, 116. Tit. I, 368. Lr. II, 4, 290. Cymb. IV, 3, 32. widow you w. Meas. V, 429. Err. Ill, 1,113. 111,2,178. toe will w. into the gallery, Per. II, 2, 58. I will w. to Ado 1,2, 23. L L L V, 1,122. V, 2,142. Merch. II, 7, furnish me with some swift means of death, Oth. Ill, 3, 12. 111,1,55. 111,2,211. As 1,1, 139. 1,2,29. Shr. 476. = to come (imperatively): madam, to., the prince, V, 1,23. John II, 531. H5 I, 2, 216. H6A I, 1, 154. the count ... are come to fetch you, Ado 111, 4,100. if II, 1, 51. II, 4, 38. H6C I, 4,83.139. Ill, 3,226. Cor. thou say so, w. and prove it too, Mids. Ill, 3, 255. v . , V, 3,194. Bom. 1,1,119. Mcb. II, 2,56. A n t III, 6, my lord, I'U help you to a horse, R3 V, 4, 8. 59 etc. Peculiar expressions: they fell tick and died; = to retire, to step aside: Ado V, 4,11. L L L V, I could not do w. Merch. 111,4,72 ( = I conld not help 2, 308. John V, 2, 29. R2 I, 3, 121. H4A IV, 3,107. it), they take place, when virtue's steel* bones look bleakB4B IV, 6, 17. 59. H8 111, 1, 27. Cor. Ill, 1, 226. in the cold wind: w.full oft we see cold wisdom waitingRom. I, 5, 93. Ill, 1, 54. Bml. Ill, 1,55. Ill, 4, 7. V, on superfluous folly, All's 1,1,115 (with this, i. e. from 2, 15. Oth. IV. 1, 93. to to. with you, Bml. Ill, 2, 360 this, in consequence of this). (a much vexed passage, probably = to speak a word 2) together with this, at the same time: he struck in private with you). so plainly, I too well could feel hit blowt, and to, to W i t h e r , 1) intr. to become sapless, to diy, to doubtfully that I could scarce understand them, Err. II, fade; used of plants: Ven. 418. 1182. Lucr. 1168. I,53. 1 will have you and that fault to. L L L V, 2,876. R2 V, 1, 8. B6B IV, 10, 67. B6C II, 5, 101. R3 II, let his destrvings and my love to. be valued 'gainst your 2, 42. Rom. 1, 2, 10. Bml. IV, 5, 185. Lr. IV, 2, 35. wife's commandment, Merch. IV, 1, 450. I must have Olh.V, 2,15. Per. IV, 4,35. Partic. —ed: Lucr. 1254. liberty w. ...to blow on whom I please, As II, 7, 48. Pilgr. 177. Tp. 1,2,463. All's 1,1,175 (French —ed nothing comes amits, to money comes w. Shr. I, 2, 82. pears-, cf. B4A III, 3, 4. B4B II, 4, 8). W i n t V, 3, 1 mutt wait, and watch to. Ill, 1, 62. though he be 133. B2 II, 1, 134. II, 4, 8. B4B IV, 5,230. B 6 A I I , merry, yet w. he's honett, III, 2, 25. IV, 5, 50. W i n t 6,11. B6C III, 2, 156. B3 II, 2, 41. IV, 4, 394. Tit. II, 1, 153. B2 IV, 18. H4A HI, 1,143. H5 II, 4, 34. Ill, 1, 113. 168. A n t IV, 15, 64. Cymb. IV, 2, 286. H6A V, 3,184. B3 1,1,103. I, 3,133. 332. 347. Ill, Per. II, 2, 43. With tip: mine arm is like a blasted 7, 13. Tit. I, 135. Bom. Ill, 1, 169. Mcb. IV, 3, 41. sapling —ed up, B3 111, 4, 71. Metaphorically; used of the effect of age in man: BmL I, 8, 14 ate. 8) = with, as placed at the end of the sentence: Sonn. 126,4. Wiv. V, 6,161. L L L IV, 3,342. Mids. toho hath she to spend the night te.t Ven. 847. he has II, 1, 60. Shr. II, 239. 406. IV, 5, 43. B4B II, 4, 8. brave utensils ... which, when he has a house, he'll 281. B5 IV, 1, 316. V, 2, 170. B6A II, 4, 110. B3 deck w. Tp. Ill, 2,105. an honest fellow, as ever ser- 1,3,216. TroiL 1,3,297. Mcb. 1,3,40. Of any physivant shall come in house to. Wiv. I, 4,11 (cf. H4A V, cal or moral decay: a —edstrvingman afresh tapster, 3, 29. B4B V. 3, 70). these banished men that J have Wiv. 1,3,19. such short-lived wits dow.as they grow, kept w. Gent. V, 4,152. one that lam not acquainted L L L II, 54. lam —ed like an old apple-john, B4A to. Wiv. II, 1, 90. her cause and yours I'll perfect him III, 3, 4. shall see thee —ed, bloody, pate and dead, to. Meas IV, 3, 146. such a fellow it not to be talked B6A IV, 2, 38. if you contend, a thousand Hoes must w. to. V, 348. Err. V, 209. 268. Ado II, 3,264. IV, 1,37. B6C II, 5, 102. O —ed truth/ Troil. V, 2, 46. —ed L L L II, 68.147. Merch. Ill, 1,30. IV, 1,412. As 111, murder, Mcb. II, I, 52 (gaunt, spectre-like). 2, 165. 328. 329. 330. 336. 344. 348. Shr. Ill, 1, 3. Sometimes = to pine away, to languish, to lead V, 1, 21. T w . 111*4, 255. John III, 1, 327. H4A II, an uncomfortable life: the cedar stoops not to the base 4, 566. 115 III, 5, 12. H6A IV, 2, 34. H6C II, 1, 82. shrub's foot, but low shrubs w. at the cedar's root, Lucr. III,2,91. Oth. V, 2, 56 etc. Once preceding the verb: 665. earthlier happy is the rose distilled than that which myself and all will I w. endow a child of thine, R3 IV, —ing on the virgin thorn grows, lives and dies in single 4, 249 ('on account of the all at the end of the pre- blessedness, Mids. I, 1, 77. With an accus. denoting an effect: a dowager long —ing out a young man's revious verse'. Abbott). Withdraw (impf. withdrew, partic. withdrawn) venue, Mids. 1,1,6 (consuming in a lingering manner). 2) tr. to cause to dccay: age cannot w. her, Ant. 1) trans, a) to take aside; to draw or call away: my Schmidt, Shakelpeare Lexicon. 3. Ed. T. II. 88

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II, 2, 240. let prisons swallow 'em, debts w. 'em to place: to. a mile, AVint. IV, 3, 104. Cor. 1, 4, 8 etc. W i t h of: to. a mile of my court, L L L 1,1,120. Q 5 111, nothing, Tim. IV, 3, 538. W i t h e r s , the juncture of the shoulder-bones of 7, 136. Caes. Ill, 1, 286. L r . IV, 6, 25 etc. Similarly a horse at the bottom of the n e c k : U 4 A I I , 1,8 (wrung denoting distance or difference of measure: your title, which is to. a very little of nothing, All's II, 4, 27. yet in the tv.). Hml. Ill, 2, 253 (our to. are unwrung). W i t h h e l d (impf. not foond, partic. withheld) to will he, to. three pound, lift as much as his brother hold b a c k : Yen. 612. H 6 B V, 1, 152. B 3 III, 1, 30. Hector, T r a i l . I, 2, 126 (only three pounds less). b) of time; 1) with respect to the present: I come IV, 5 , 5 (Ff holds o f f ) . = to hinder, to restrain: H 4 B IV, 5, 135. Trail. V, 3, 51. Caes. Ill, 2 , 1 0 8 . Ant. Ill, w. an hour of my promise, As IV, 1, 42 (an honr too 6, 79. IV, 14, 69 (the gods w. met). = not to send, late). 2) to the past: to. this hour I was his bondman. not to execute: w. revenge, dear God! H6C II, 2, 7. Err. V, 288 (an h o u r ago), a blind man ... w. this J o h n IV, 2, 125. V, 6, 37. P e r . 11, 4, 4. — to keep half-hour hath received his sight, H 6 B II, 1, 64. R 3 back instead of g r a n t i n g : Mids. II, 1, 26. As V, 4, III, 6, 8. H8 III, 2, 253. Cor. I, 8, 7. 3) to the future: 174. Shr. 1,2,121 (from). J o h n 1,18. H 6 A I V , 4 , 3 1 . broken, dead . Wint. I, 2, 314. till 1 have 27. let him take't at w. Tim. T, I, 181 (let him inset a glory to this hand by giving it the to. of revenge, terpret my declaration, that I care not, in the worst John IV, 3, 72 (ennobling it by revenge), give me w. sense), one's w. = the utmost evil that one can do: and quietness; I like it better than a dangerous honour, to taste of thy most w. Wint III, 2, 180. defy us to H6C IV, 3, 16 (otinm cum dignitate, or rather dig- our w. H5 III, 3, 5. give thy w. of thoughts the w. of nitatem com otio). that good man ofto., Anthony Wood- words, Oth. Ill, 3, 132. to do one's w.i Sonn. 19, 13. ville, B3 I, 1, 66. as I belong to w. H8 I, 1, 39. this 92, 1. Cor. T, 2, 112. Mcb. Ill, 2, 24. Lr. IT, 6,140. double »., where one part does disdain with cause, the Oth. T, 2, 159. other insult without all reason, Cor. Ill, 1,142 (i.e. the 2) adv. = least or most, according to the sense dignity and authority divided between the patricians of the verb (cf. Worse ): you may w. of all this table and plebeians), and in the most exact regard support say so, H8 T, 3, 78 (M. Edd. erroneously: you may, the —s of their name, Lr. I, 4, 288. w. of all this table, say so), the gods do Wee this w. 3) a title of honour given to persons of respectable Per. IT, 3, 21. when thou didst hate him w. Caes. IT, character: Wiv. I, 1, 80. 271. John I, 190. H4B III, 3, 106. 2, 91. H5 III, 2, 89. R3 I, 1, 88. Cor. II, 1, 62. 104. W i n t « 4 H t M k l s | , wearing stockings of woollen ICO. Rom. Ill, 1,62. Mostly used by inferior persons in yam: w. Icnave, Lr. II, 2, 17. addressing their betters: Gent. II, 1, 10. WW. I, 4, Wart, 1) colewort, cabbage: pauca verba, Sir John, 157. 171. II, 3, 10. IT, 6, 56. Meas. II, 1, 186. 191. goot wort*. Good worts! good cabbage, Wiv.l, 1,124. Ill, 2,76. Err. I, 2, 85. Ado 111, 5, 25. LLL III, 151. 2) new beer unfennented; the sweet infusion of 161. Mids. Ill, 1, 182. 183. Merch. 1, 3, 61. II, 2, malt: •«theglin, to. and malmsey, LLL V, 2, 233. 58. 127. II, 5, 8. As I, 1, 94. 168. Shr. I, 2, 7. Ill, W a r t h , snbst 1) value, price: not valued to the 2, 132. IV, 3, 63. H4B I, 2, 57. T, 1, 47. V, 3, 46. money's w. L L L II, 137. twenty times his w. H6B III, 116B II, 1, 80 etc. Used with irony: Alls I, 3, 33. 2, 268. a titty time to make prescription for a kingTim. Ill, 4, 61. Caes. I, 2, 273. dom's to. H6CI1I,3,94. not for the w. that hangt upon Warship, vb. 1) to adore: Sonn. 149,11. Tp. T, our quarrel, Troil. II, 3, 217. I should have lost the w. 297. Gent II, 4, 144. II, 6, 10. IT, 2, 131. IV, 4, of it in gold, Cymb. II, 4, 42. had it been all the w. 204. Ado III, 5, 43. LLL V, 2, 202. Merch. II, 2, ofs car, V, 5, 191. a crown's w. (cf. Pennyworth) = 98. AsT, 2, 88. John II, 598. III, 1, 177. H4A II, as much as is worth a crown: a crown's w. of good 1, 70. H6A I, 2, 145. H6B III, 2, 80. IV, 2, 81 (to. interpretation, H4B II, 2, 99. me their lord; Cade's speech). Trail. II, 3, 198. Ill, 2) that which one is worth; substance, wealth: 3, 182. Bom. I, 1, 125. Tim. Ill, 1, 51. T, 1, 51. to trust the opportunity of night ... with the rich w. of Cymb. Ill, 6, 56. your virginity, Mids. II, 1, 219. were my w. at it my 2) to hononr, to dignify: our grave ...not —ed conscience firm, you should find better dealing, Tw. Ill, with a waxen epitaph, H5 I, 2, 233. 3,17. they art 6tK beggars that can count their w. Rom. Warahlptal, l)claimingrespect,honorable: Shr. II, 6,32. A« that helps him take all my outward w. Lr. V, 1, 56. John I, 205. H4B II, 1, 75. II, 2, 65. R3 IT, 4, 10. for the sea's w. Oth. I, 2, 28. 3) valuable quality, worthiness, excellence: not 111, 7, 138. Cor. I, 1, 254. 2) fnll of reverence: his master's son, as w. he terms the ID. of my untutored lines, Lncr. Ded. 2. of small w. it, R3 III, 4, 41 (Ff worshipfully). held, Sonn. 2, 4. 16, I I . 62, 7. 83, 8. 116,8. Compl. W a r t M p t a l l y , with reverence: his matter's son, 210. Gent. II, 4, 71. 102. 166. Ill, 1, 66. Ill, 2, 65. Meas. 1,1,9. T, 244.602. Ado IT, 1,28. 220. LLL T, as w. he terms it, B3 III, 4, 41 (Qq worshipful). Warshlpper, adorer: Lucr. 86. Alls I, 3, 212. 2, 78. Merch. I, 1, 62. Alb III, 4, 15. R2 I, 1, 107. H5 IT, 1, 259. H6A IT, 5, 23. T, 3, 151. R3 IT, 6, 13. Troil. I, 3, W a n t , 1) adj. most bad: Lncr. 324. Gent. T, 4, 46. II, 2, 151. Cor. Ill, 3, 26 (he hath been used ever 72. Wiv. I, 4, 13. Meas. II, 1, 163. LLL I, 1, 283. to have hit w. of contradiction, i. • to gain reputation Ill, 196. 197. Mids. V, 214. As III, 2, 301. Shr. I, 2, — or to gain his point? — by contradiction. Steevens* 130. IT, 2,104. R2 IT, 115 (to. in this royal presence interpretation 'his full quota of contradiction', though may I speak, i. e. I may be the meanest and most unfit plausible enough, b not sufficiently borne ont by the to speak). H6B I, 3, 88. Rom. II, 4, 131 etc. collocation of the phrase). Cymb. Ill, 5, 89. Per. II, = in the most evil or afflictive state: when he is 4, 51 etc. of w. — precious; worthy: ttonet of to. w., he is little better than a beast, Merch. I, 2, 95. to Sonn. 62, 7. ait office of great to. Gent I, 2, 44. a be »,, the lowest and most dejected thing of fortune, gentleman ofw. Ill, 1,107. II, 4, 56. H6B III, 2,410. stands still in esperance, Lr. IT, 1, 2. cf. to be worse Per. II, 1, 142. than w. of those that lawless and incertain thought 4) desert, merit; that which gives worthiness: at imagine howling, Meas. Ill, 1, 126. I all other in all —t surmount, Sonn. 62, 8. the w. of Substantively: the w. is but denial and reproving, that (the body) is that which it contains, 74, 13. if any Lucr. 242. so shall I taste at first the very to. of for- be of to. to undergo such ample grace, Meas. I, 1, 23 tune's might, Sonn. 90, 12. 80, 14. 137, 4. 150, 8. ( = if any deserve), wilt thou undo the to. thou art tinMids. I, 1, 63. Merch. I, 2, 96. Shr. I, 2, 14. 35. IT, paid for, Cymb. T, 5, 307. Caes. Ill, 2, 225. 4, 60. Alb II, 1, 176 (cf. Extend). R2 III, 2, 94. 103. W a r t h , adj. 1) equal in price to: a score of good

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ewes may be to. ten pounds, H4B III, 2, 57. Gent. II, than the dust, Caes. Ill, 1, 116. I'll give my reasons, 7, 55. Err. IV, 3, 84. H4A III, 3, 95. Tim. I, 2, 238. more —er than their voices, Cor. Ill, 1, 120. In a moral sense: prove nothing to. Yen. 418. te. the 2) deserving praise, excellent (implying all the viewing, 1076. Sonn. 72, 14. Compl. 267. Tp. Ill, shades of meaning between simple approval and the 1, 38. Gent. II, 5, 58. Meas. I, 2, 61. V, 208. 502. highest veneration): deserves the travail of a —erpen, Merch. II, 6, 33. As III, 2, 217. T w . I, 2, 57. 59. II, Sonn. 79, 6. of worth and te. estimation, Gent II, 4, 2, 16. II, 4, 28. HI, 4, 328. Wint.lll, 1, 14. H5III, 56. endued with te. qualities, V,4,153. toe shall employ 1, 28. Lr. I, 4, 321 etc. thee in a —er place, Meas. V, 537. the lady is very well 2) equal in possession to, possessing: time owes more to. Ado I, 1, 224. 231. common speech gives him a w. than he's to. to season. Ere. IT, 2, 58. even now to. this,pass, Alls II, 5, 58. in that and all your —est affairs, and now w. nothing, Merch. I, 1, 35. to ennoble thoseIII, 2, 99. to. policy, H6B III, 1, 235. a to. pioner, that scarce, some two days since, were w. a noble, R3 Hinl. I, 5, 163. Shr. IV, 5,65. H 4 A I I , 4,505. Troil. I, 3, 82. II, 3, 134. Cymb. IV, 2, 94. 355 etc. thou «,. Lord, 3) deserving: are to. the want that you have wanted,Lncr. 1303. to. Sebastian, Tp. II, 1, 205. IT, 221. to Lr. I, 1, 282. found this trespass to. the shame, II, 4, have a look of such a to. mistress, Gent. II, 4, 108. 44. wretch more te. your vengeance, Cymb. V, 1, 11. know, to. prince, 111, 1, 10. IV, 3, 7. 25. V, 4, 157. 4) valuable: his health was never better to. than Meas. V, 1. 28. 159. 309. Ado V, 1, 278. Mids. I, 1, now, H4AIV, 1, 27. the very train of her worst wearing 52. Merch. IV, 1, 236. Wint. Ill, 2, 12. H6A IV, 7, gown was better to. than all my father's lands, H6B I, 69 Cto. Saint Michael). Ant. Ill, 7, 61. Cymb. I, 6, 3, 89. to guard a thing not ours nor w. to us, Troil. 160. 162 etc. II, 2, 22. 3) well deserved; in a good as well as in a bad W o r t h i l y , 1) in a worthy manner, excellently or sense: with many things of te. memory, Shr. IV, 1, 84. at least suitably: thou and thy fellows your last service this superficial tale is but a preface of her to. praise, did to. perform, Tp.lV,36. he hath deserved to. of his H6A V, 5, 11. he has much to. blame laid upon him, country, Cor. II, 2, 27. IV, 1, 53. Ant. II, 2, 102. All's IV, 3, 7. hate turns one or both to te. danger and 2) deservedly, according to merit; a) in a good deserved death, B2 V, 1, 68. doing to. vengeance on sense: thine own acquisition to. purchased, Tp. IV, 14. thyself K3 I, 2, 87. whom to. you would have now succeed, Tit. 1,40. Tim. 4) well founded, legitimate: till you compound I, 2, 191. Ant. II, 2, 188. Per. IV, 6, 56. whose right is —est, John II, 281. he hath more to. inb) in a bad sense, = justly, on good cause: I had terest to the state than thou, H4A III, 2, 98. put not not now to. termed them merciless, Err. I, 1, 100. if he your to. rage into your tongue, Cor. Ill, 1, 241. hath appeal the duke on ancient malice, or to. .. on some given me some te. cause to wish things done undone, known ground of treachery, H2 I, 1, 10. that you are Caes. IV, 2, 8. as te. cause I have to fear, Oth. Ill, 128. cf- *et down in Troil. IV, 5, recitation of what the author had written. In O. Edd. my teemmgh the words for the law of writ and Ae liberty are joined 61 mnd Tiim. IV, 3, 118. Compaire with the phrase it is written (Err. IV, 3, to what precedes). . Write, (impf. seldom wrote: T i t V, 1, 106. Hml. 55. H5 I, 2, 98. Rom. I, 2, 39) the following exV, 2, 32. 37. Cymb. IV, 3, 37: usually writ; partic. pressions: we did think it writ down in our duty to let seldom wrote: Ant. Ill, 5, 11. Cymb. Ill, 5, 2. 21; you know osf it, Hml. I, 2, 222. is't writ in your rein Lr. I, 2, 93 Qq wrote, Ff writ; usually writ or venge that you will draw both friend and foet IV, written); 1) to form characters representing words on 5, 141. 4) to rmake a communication by letter: some love paper or other materials: I writ at random, Gent. II, 1, 117. w. till your ink be dry, 111, 2, 75. they can w. of yours hiath writ to you, Gent. I, 2, 79. Meas. I, 1, and read, Ado 111, 3, 12. L L L III, 206. Merch. II, 4, 56. Ado 111, 3, 150. L L L IV, 2, 138. R2 I, 3, 186. 13. Tw. V, 340 (to. from it, i. e. otherwise). H6B Caes. Ill, 11, 278 (Caesar did write for him to come to IV, 2, 92 etc. Gerund —ing = handwriting: L L L Rome). Olth. I, 3, 46 etc. = to communicate, to tell by letter: Gent. I, 3, 56. Meas. IV, 2, 218. All's IV, IV, 3, 203. 2) to corcr with characters representing words: 3, 102. 2216. Cor. V, 6, 63. Rom. V, 3, 246. Cymb. till she have writ a sheet of paper, Ado II, 3, 138. a Ill, 5, 2. 221. IV, 3, 37 etc. 5) to eexpress, to define in black and white: if 1 paper written in his hand, V, 4, 86. a sheet of paper writ o'both sides the leaf, L L L V, 2, 8. a written scroll,could w. tfhe beauty of your eyes, Sonn. 17, 5. the bill Merch. II, 7, 64. a scroll, and written round about, that —s tJhem all alike, Mcb. Ill, 1, 101. 6) to compose, to produce as an author; absol.: Tit. IV, 2, 18. 3) to set down, to form by means of letters (in a Sonn. 1161, 14. Wint. V, 1, 99. Ant. Ill, 2, 17. with proper and figurative sense): to cipher what is torit of: Sonn. (84, 7. R3 I, 4, 46. with on: Ae star-gazers, in learned books, Lucr. 811. a letter writ to your grace,having wrtit on death, Ven. 509 (?). Transitively: H6A IV, 1, 12. Lucr. 105. 1183.1295. Sonn. 23,13. Gent. II, 11, 97- Wiv. Ill, 2, 69. Ado V, 1, 37 (writ 71,6. 115, 1. Gent. I, 2, 109. 113. 123. II, 1,93. Ae style o/gods). V, 2, 4. L L L I, 2, 120. IV, 3, 99. 110. 132. Ill, 1, 249. Wiv. I, 3, 65. II, I, 76. V, 5, Mids. Ill, A, 18. 25. IV, 1, 220. V, 365. All's IV, 3, 73. Meas. IV, 4, 1. Err. IV, 3, 55 (it is written). Ado 355. H5 nil, 7, 42. H6B IV, 7, 65. Hml. Ill, 2, 274 V, 4, 89. L L L I, 1, 117. 156 (to Ae laws I w. my etc. the —ing = the text: it would neither serve for name). IV, 1, 58. Mids. II, 2, 122. As V, 2, 84. Tw. the —ing mor the tune, L L L 1, 2, 119. 7) to subscribe: he learned to w. for me under 111, 4, 43. V, 293. 370. John IV, 1, 37. R2 IV, 275. H4A I, 3, 263. H5 1, 2, 98 (it is writ). H6B IV, 1, that bond, Sonn. 134, 7. L L L 1,1,117.156. /to., good 99. H6C 1, 1, 169 (over the chair of state ... w. up creature, nvheresoe'er she is, her heart weighs sadly, his title). H8 111, 2, 287. Cor. V, 2, 96. Tit. IV, 1, All's III, 5i, 69 (later Ff / right; most M. Edd. ay, 70. 84. V, 1, 106. Rom. I, 2, 36. 39 (it is written). right; somie I warrant), who —s himself armigero, 43. I, 3, 82. 86. II, 2, 57. IV, 2. 1. V, 3, 82. Caes. Wiv. I, 1, 9. the Turk ... —s not so tedious a style, 1, 2, 126. Hml. V, 2, 32 (wrote it fair). Lr. I, 2, 93. H6A IV, 7„ 74 (does not use so long a title), this hand Ant II, 6, 4. Ill, 5, 11 etc. With down: Gent. I, 2, of mine hrnth writ in thy behalf, H6B IV, 1, 63 (has 117. Ill, 1, 357. Ado IV, 2, 13. 17. 33. 73. 78. 90. underwritten orders tending to thy good). Hence = a) to declare: out on thee, seeming ! 1 John V, 2,4. Cymb. II, 2, 24 ctc. Opposed to speaking by word of mouth: Sonn. 26, 3. Mids. I, 2, 68. Shr. will w. agtainst it, Ado IV, 1, 57. I'll w. against them, Ill, 1, 70. All's III, 2, 98. H6A HI, 1, 2. 10. Cor. V, detest themi, curse them, Cymb. II, 5, 32. b) to claim a title, to call one's self: I w. man, All's II, 3, 208. 1, 68. Rom. V, 2, 4. Tlic gerund —ing substantively = any thing writ- as if he Htad writ man ever since his father was a ten, as a letter, a note, a schedule: I'll read the —ing, bachelor, H4B 1, 2, 30. w. happy when thou hast done, Merch. II, 7, 64. this is not my - ing, Tw. V, 353. let Lr. V, 3. 315. cf. my mouth no more were broken than me see the —ing, R2 V, 2, 57. 59. V, 3, 49. — ings all these boys'., and writ as little beard, All's II, 3, 67. Wrlteir, l)aclerk: Adolll, 5,68. H4A1II, 1,143. lending to the great opinion, Caes. 1, 2, 322. how calm 2) an author: Sonn. 82, 3. Gent. I, 1, 42. 45. As and gentle I proceeded in all my —ings, Ant. V, 1, 76. V, 1, 47. H 4 A II, 4, 455. Ho I, 2, 64. Hml. II, 2, 366. peruse this —ing, Per. II, 5, 41. Wrlttaled, wrinkled: this weak and w. shrimp, Metaphorical use: let him but copy what in you is writ, Sonn. 84, 9. in many's looks the false heart'sH6A II, 3* 23. history is writ, 93, 8. the stealth of our most mutual W r i t i n g , subst. see Write. entertainment with character too gross is writ on Juliet, W r e a t h , see Wroth. Meas. I, 2, 159. there is written in your brow honesty H r n f , subst. 1) anything notrigbtaud becoming, and constancy, IV, 2, 162. have written strange de-or done by mistake; error: construe Cassio's smiles features in my face, Err. V, 299. the last taste of sweets... quite ini the w. Oth. IV, 1, 104. a man of complements, whiom right and w. have chose as umpire, L L L ... writ in remembrance, R2 II, 1, 14. whose memory is written on the earth with yet appearing blood, H4B I, 1, 169. pardon love this to., that sings heaven's praise

w with such an earthly tongue, IV, 2, 121. cf. tlhe quibble: you will not pocket up ID. H4A III, 3, 184 ¡and H 5 III, 2, 55. 2) anything unjust: you do him the morre to.; 'twas 1, Gent. IV, •), 29. it cannot he that she hauh done thee w. Err. V, 135. what judgment shall I dreatd, doing no w.1 Merch. IV, 1, 89. to do a great right,, do a tittle w. 216. All's II, 3, 317. John III, 1, 186! R2 II, 1, 164. 238. H4A IV, 3, 101. H6A III, 2, 7 » . Troil. II, 2, 187. Caes. Ill, 1, 47 etc. to be in the up. = to be unjost: we were Cthe w. when we banished! him, Cor. IV, 6, 156. to have w. = to gaffer injnstiice: an you do not make him hanged among you, the gcaUows shall have w. H4B II, 2, 105. w. hath but w. IU3 V, 1, 29. Caesar has had great w. Caeg. Ill, 2, 1 1 3 . to do w. sometimes = not to do justice, not to giwe a person his due: hath done her beauty w. Lncr. 80 (in nnderpraising it), do him not that w. to bear a htard opinion of his truth, Gent. II, 7, 80. Meas. I, 2, 41. Ill, 2, 137. Ado II, 1, 214. Merch. V, 142. A l l ' s V, 3, 189 etc. With a kind of irony: I fear you have-done yourself some ID. Tp. I. 2, 443 (yon have pretemded to be what you are not). Sometimes to. quite — injustice: law itself is perfect w. John III, 1, 189. fiears attend the steps of w. IV, 2, 56. with the very hamd of stern injustice and confused w. V, 2, 23. now breathless w. shall sit and pant, Tim. V, 4, 10. right and w. opposed: hooking both right and w. to thie appetite, Meas. II, 4, 176. to find out right with to.. R2 II, 3, 145. Troil. I, 3, 116. II, 2, 171. Tim. IV, 3, 29. 3) any injury: assailed by night with ciricumstances strong ... to do her husband w. Lncr. 1264 (by adultery). what w. else may be imagined ... migjht be done to me, 1622. for thy right myself will bear alll tp. Sonn. 88, 14. I shall receive this villanous to. W i v . II, 2, 308. shall not do his Julia so much w. GJent. IV, 4, 142. Err. II, 1, 103. II, 2, 174. Ill, 1, 16. III, 2, 17. V, 201. Ado I, 1,245. L L L II, 154. Mids. 11,2, 129. Merch. I, 1, 155. II, 2, 141. All's I, 1, 74.. II, 3, 96. Tw. V, 143. 336. Wint. V, 1, 148. J o h n III, 1, 13. Ill, 3, 41. H6C IV, 1, 102 (she had the to. = - she suffered the injury); cf. R 3 I, 3, 307 and H8 III, 1, 48. Tim. Ill, 5, 36 etc. With an Anglosaxon genitive or a possessive prononn, either subjectively, = an injury done by one: to bear love's to. Sonn. 4 0 , 12. his grandam's —s, John II, 168. to bear every knave's to. H4B 11, 1, 41. Hml. Ill, 1, 71. with their /high —s I am struck to the quick, Tp. V, 25. 119. Mlids. II, 1, 240. H6C 111, 3, 197. Tim. V, 1, 156. Mlcb. IV, 3, 33 etc. or objectively, = an injury done t® one: my husband's — s , R2 I, 2, 47. England's priviate —s, II, 1, 166. H4A I, 3, 149. H6A 111, 1, 161. R3 IV, 4, 377. Oth. V, 1, 32. complained her —s to us, Lucr. 1840. 1691. Mea«. V, 26. Err. V, 217. Adlo V, 3, 5. Shr. IV, 3, 2. John III, 1, 182. R2 II, 3, 116. 128. H6A I, 3, 59. II, 5, 22. R3 I, 3, 310. V, 3, 144. Tim. Ill, 5, 32 etc. = offence, trespass: answering one foud to., lives not to act another, Meas. II, 2, 103. you ar e i'the to. to speak before your time, V, 86. who I bmlieve was packed in all this to. Ado V, I, 308. forgive me this enforced to. Merch. V, 240. Wint. IV, 4, 41(6. V, I, 9. John II, 116. R2 IV, 120. R3V, 1, 19. - disgrace, insult: 'tis he that hath done thee to. ; I did but act, he's author of thy slander, Ven. 100.0. I will not do you that to. (to go first) Wiv. I, 1, 323.

1401

326. you do yourself mighty to., Master Ford, III, 3, 221. received to. by some person, III, 1, 53. stir Demetrius up with bitter to. Mids. Ill, 2, 361. make some reservation of your —«, All's II, 3, 260. L L L V, 2, 733. Shr. II, 59. Ill, 1, 16. Tw. Ill, 4, 241. John III, 1, 200. R2 I, 1, 191. B4B I, 1, 90. II, 3,39. 115 III, 2, 55 (quibbling). Hml. I, 1, 143. Lr. IV, 2, 51. Oth. I, 1, 129 etc. = mischief, harm, hurt, pain, damage: fiery eyes blaze forth her w. Ven. 219. the heart hath treble to. loAen it is barred the aidance of the tongue, 329. thy mermaids voice hath done me double to. 429. despite thy (time's) w. my love shall ever live, Sonn. 19, 13. to justify the to. that thy unkindness lays upon my heart, 139, 1. the winds tchose pity, sighing back again, did us but loving to. T p . I, 2, 151. Meas. II, 1, 280. II, 2, 53. Err. II, 2, 173. V, 19. 146. 398. Ado V, 1, 7. Mids. II, 2, 11. Ill, 2, 28. As I, 2, 202. All's V, 3, 15. John IV, 1, 118. R2 I, 3, 246. Ill, 2, 215. H4A I, 3, 75. IV, 3, 82. H4B Ind. 40 (comforts false, worse than true —s). I, 1, 161. Ill, 2, 273. V, 1, 58 (he shall have no to. j . Cor. V, 6, 38. Tim. Ill, 4, 53. Caes. Ill, 1,170 (the general to. of Rome). 242. Hml. II, 2, 367. Lr. I, 2, 180. Ant. V, 2, 40. Per. V, 1, 131 etc. W r « n | , adj. 1) not right, not that which was intended or ought to be: I have directed you to to. places, Wiv. Ill, 1,110. you took the to. V, 5, 201. to turn the to. side out: Ado III, 1, 68. Tw. Ill, 1, 14. Lr. IV, 2, 9. Oth. II, 3, 54. 2) false, mistaken, erring: that my steeled sense or changes right or to. Sonn. 112,8 (cf. Right, adj. 2). she's in a to. belief, H6A II, 3, 31. the argument you held was to. in you, II, 4, 57. by false intelligence or to. surmise, R3 II, 1, 54. opinion, whose to. thought defiles thee, Lr. Ill, 6, 119. to. imaginations, IV, 6,290. 3) unjust, illegitimate: if his cause be to. H5 IV, 1, 138. be thy title right or to. H6C 1,1, 159. we have your to. rebuke, Oth. I, 1, 131. Adverbially: if you choose to. Merch. II, 1 , 4 0 . III, 2, 2. it must go w. with you and me, John I, 41. toe go w. Troil. V, 1, 74. how you were to. led, Ant. Ill, 6, 80. W r e n s , vb. 1) to do injustice to: / to. him to call him poor, Wiv. II, 2, 282. I should to. it (your desert) to lock U in the wards of covert bosom, Meas. V, 9. you gave me none; you to. me much to say so, Err. IV, 1, 66. 67. if they speak but truth of her, these hands shall tear her; if they to. her honour, the proudest of them shaU well hear of it, Ado IV, 1, 193. 262. Meas. V, 119. Merch. I, 3, 171. Ill, 2, 127. Shr. II, 46. Tw. IV, 2, 32. V, 310. H4B II, 4, 353. H6C III, 2, 75. H8 III, 1, 81. 156. Rom. I, 5, 99. IV, 1, 32. Caes. Ill, 2, 156. IV, 2, 38. 39. IV, 3, 55. Ant. I, 4, 40. Cymb. I, 6, 145 etc. 2) to do harm, to injure in any manner: how Tarquin —ed me, Lucr. 819. to to. the wronger till he render right, 943. the —ed Duke of Milan, Tp. V, 107. to w. my friend, I shall be much forsworn, Gent. II, 6, 3. IV, 2, 112. IV, 4, 146. Wiv. I, 1, 105. 108. 110. II, 1, 133. Meas. II, 3, 24. 25. HI, 1, 206. 260. V, 21. 406. Err. V, 330. Ado V, 1, 52. 53. L L L II, 155. Mids. Ill, 2, 308. Merch. Ill, 1, 69. 71. 73. Shr. II, 27. All's IV, 4, 1 (almost = to deceive). Wint. 111, 3, 62. H6A II, 5, 109. H6C- III, 2, 74. R3 IV, 4, 421. Rom. IV, 1, 32. L r . 1, 3 , 3 . Oth. II, 3, 224. Ant.

89«

1402

X.

Y.

HI, 6, 65. Per. I, 2, 112. II, 4, 25. 26 etc. Peculiar expression: to. not that wrong with a more contempt, Err. II, 2, 174 ( = make it not worse, cf. what ruina are in me ... by him not ruinedt II, 1, 96. the want that you have wanted, Lr. I, 1, 282. love, which, le/t unshown, it often left unloved. Ant. Ill, 6, 52). = to give offence, to affront: you w. me, sir, thu» still to haunt my house, Wiv. Ill, 4, 73. 80. till that time I do receive your offered love like love and icill not w. it, Hml. T, 2, 263. 244. 246. you w. this presence; therefore speak no more, Ant. II, 2, 111. Caes. IV, 3, 1. - - to disgrace: thou —est his honour, woundest his princely name, Lncr. 599. he contented; you w. yourself too much, Wiv. Ill, 3,178. IV, 2, 161. is any woman —ed by this lewd fellowf Meas. V, 515. 531. Shr. II, 1. H6A II, 1, 16. IV, 7, 50. R 3 IV, 4, 211. H8 III, 1, 168. Tit. I, 8. Caes. IV, 3, 6 etc. Wronger, one who wrongs or injures: Lucr. 943. Ado V, 1, 271. Oth. Ill, 3, 168. Cymb. II, 4, 54. Wrongful, unfair, unjust: 1 despise thee for thy

•o. suit, Gent. IV, 2, 102. into, quarrel you have slam your son, Tit. 1, 293. W r o n g f u l l y , unjustly: Sonn. 66, 7. Meas. V, 140. Ado IV, 2, 51. R2 I, 2, 39. II, 1, 201. H6B II, 3, 107. T i t IV, 4, 55. 76 (Lucius' punishment was w.). Wr»ng-lneen»ed (not hyphened in O. Edd.) perversely exasperated: B3 II, 1, 51. Wrongly, unjustly: and yet wouldst w. win, Mcb. I, 5, 23. W r o t h ( 0 . Edd. tcroath) rnth, misery, sorrow: I'll keep my oath, patiently to bear my w. Merch. II, 9, 78. Wry, vb. to go obliquely, to swerve: murder wives much better than themselves for — ing but a little, Cymb. V, 1, 5. Wry-necked, having a crooked and distorted neck: the vile squealing of the w. f i f e , Merch. II, 5, 30. Wye, river in Wales: H4A 111, 1, 65. H5 IV, 7, 29. I l l (all the water in W.).

X. X a n t h i p p e (Fl Zentippe,

later Ff Zantippe)

the wife of Socrates, proverbial for a scold: Shr. I, 2,71. T.

Yard, 1) a measure of three feet: Shr. IV, 3, 109. 113. H4A II, 4, 273 (tailor's y.). Rom. I, 2, 40. Hml. Ill, 4, 208. Lr. IV, 6, 89 (a clothier's y.). two —s, Wiv. I, 3, 44. 46. eight —s, H4A II, 2, 26. H4B I, 2, 50. four y. H5 111, 2, 66 (Fluellen's speech). loves her by the foot. Be may not by the y. L L L V, 2, 676 (with an indecent quibble). 2) a piece of timber by which a sail is extended: Tp. I, 2, 200. Tare, adj. and adv. ready, active, brisk, nimble: cheerly, my hearts, y., y. Tp. 1, 1, 7. down with the top-most! y., lower, lower! 37. our ship ...is tight and y. and bravely rigged, V, 224. if you have occasion to use me for your own turn, you shall find me y. Meas. IV, 2, 61. dismount thy tuck, be y. in thy preparation, Tw. Ill, 4, 244. their ships are y., yours heavy, Ant. Ill, 7, 39. a haltered neck which does the hangman thank for being y. about him, III, 13, 131. y., y., good Iras, quick, V, 2, 286. Yarely, readily, actively, briskly: fall to it y. Tp. I, 1 , 4 . those flower-soft hands, that y. frame the office, Ant. II, 2, 216. Yarn, woollen thread: the web of our life is of a mingled y. All's IV, 3, 84. all the y. she spun, Cor. I, 3, 93. Y a u g h a n , name in Ilml. V, 1, 68. Yaw, to move on nnsteadily (as a ship), to steer out of the line of the course: to divide him inventorially would dizzy the arithme ic of memory, and yet but y. neither, in respect of his quick sail, Hml. V, 2, 120 (lection of Q2; the other Qq raw, Ff om. As for but neither = nevertheless, see Neither. It must be considered that the whole speech of Hamlet is intentionally affected, and calculated to puzzle his interlocutor). Yawn, to open wide: graves, y. and yield your

dead, Ado V, 3, 19. Caes. II, 2, 18. the gashes, that bloodily did y. upon his face, H5 IV, 6, 14. when churchyards y. Hml.Ill,2,407. Applied to the mouth, = to gape; 1) with greediness: now will I dam up this thy —ing mouth, H6B IV, 1, 73. 2) with drowsiness: the lazy —ing drone, H5 I, 2, 204. the shardborne beetle with his drowsy hums hath rung night's —ing peal, Mcb. Ill, 2, 43. 3) with surprise and bewilderment: to y., be still and wonder, when one but of my ordinance stood up. Cor. Ill, 2, 11. they y. at it and botch the words up fit to their own thoughts, Hml. IV, 5, 9 (Ff aim), that the affrighted globe should y. at alteration, Oth. V, 2, 101. Yclad, clad: her words y. with wisdom's majesty, H 6 B I, 1, 33. Ycleped or Y e l i p e d , called (used by Armado and Holofernes): L L L I, 1, 242. V, 2, 602. Ye, pers. pron. of the 2nd person plur.; not differing from you; nominative: Tp. V, 33. 41. Gent. I, 2, 49. II, 4, 54. Wiv. Ill, 4, 29. Meas. IV, 3, 173. Mids. Ill, 2, 243. Merch. I, 1, 58. 103. II, 2, 212 (Ff and later Qq you). Tw. II, 1, 40. J o h n V, 2, 91. 114A II, 2, 33. H6A II, 2, 35. HI, 1, 70. 117. 111,2, 41. IV, 1, 8. V, 3, 2. 3. H6B I, 1, 137. I, 3, 141. II, 1, 132. Ill, 1, 4. H6C V, 4, 71. 75. R3 I, 1, 74 (Ff you). IV, 2, 85. Caes. I, 3, 91. Mcb. I, 3, 54 etc. Objective: Sonn. 42, 5. I l l , 13. Tp. V, 170. Gent. I, 2, 28. II, 1, 104. V, 4, 58. L L L IV, 2, 10. V, I, 101. Merch. Ill, 5, 3 (Ff and later Qq you). As II, 7, 135. V, 1, 16. Shr. I, I, 90. H4A II, 2, 55. H6B I, 1, 141. IV, 6, 11. IV, 7, 126. H6C V, 5, 27. 35. R3 1, 2, 101 (Qqjrea). Caes. Ill, 1, 157. Ant. II, 6, 78. Cymb. II, 2, 10 etc. After prepositions: Tp. I, 2, 323. Gent. II, 1, 35. IV, 1, 3. Wint. IV, 4, 663. H4B IV, 2, 75. H8 I, 4, 50. Ill, 1, 102 etc. ye will contracted to ye'11: L L L I, 2, 54 (Q-2 Ff you'll), ye are con-

1402

X.

Y.

HI, 6, 65. Per. I, 2, 112. II, 4, 25. 26 etc. Peculiar expression: to. not that wrong with a more contempt, Err. II, 2, 174 ( = make it not worse, cf. what ruina are in me ... by him not ruinedt II, 1, 96. the want that you have wanted, Lr. I, 1, 282. love, which, le/t unshown, it often left unloved. Ant. Ill, 6, 52). = to give offence, to affront: you w. me, sir, thu» still to haunt my house, Wiv. Ill, 4, 73. 80. till that time I do receive your offered love like love and icill not w. it, Hml. T, 2, 263. 244. 246. you w. this presence; therefore speak no more, Ant. II, 2, 111. Caes. IV, 3, 1. - - to disgrace: thou —est his honour, woundest his princely name, Lncr. 599. he contented; you w. yourself too much, Wiv. Ill, 3,178. IV, 2, 161. is any woman —ed by this lewd fellowf Meas. V, 515. 531. Shr. II, 1. H6A II, 1, 16. IV, 7, 50. R 3 IV, 4, 211. H8 III, 1, 168. Tit. I, 8. Caes. IV, 3, 6 etc. Wronger, one who wrongs or injures: Lucr. 943. Ado V, 1, 271. Oth. Ill, 3, 168. Cymb. II, 4, 54. Wrongful, unfair, unjust: 1 despise thee for thy

•o. suit, Gent. IV, 2, 102. into, quarrel you have slam your son, Tit. 1, 293. W r o n g f u l l y , unjustly: Sonn. 66, 7. Meas. V, 140. Ado IV, 2, 51. R2 I, 2, 39. II, 1, 201. H6B II, 3, 107. T i t IV, 4, 55. 76 (Lucius' punishment was w.). Wr»ng-lneen»ed (not hyphened in O. Edd.) perversely exasperated: B3 II, 1, 51. Wrongly, unjustly: and yet wouldst w. win, Mcb. I, 5, 23. W r o t h ( 0 . Edd. tcroath) rnth, misery, sorrow: I'll keep my oath, patiently to bear my w. Merch. II, 9, 78. Wry, vb. to go obliquely, to swerve: murder wives much better than themselves for — ing but a little, Cymb. V, 1, 5. Wry-necked, having a crooked and distorted neck: the vile squealing of the w. f i f e , Merch. II, 5, 30. Wye, river in Wales: H4A 111, 1, 65. H5 IV, 7, 29. I l l (all the water in W.).

X. X a n t h i p p e (Fl Zentippe,

later Ff Zantippe)

the wife of Socrates, proverbial for a scold: Shr. I, 2,71. T.

Yard, 1) a measure of three feet: Shr. IV, 3, 109. 113. H4A II, 4, 273 (tailor's y.). Rom. I, 2, 40. Hml. Ill, 4, 208. Lr. IV, 6, 89 (a clothier's y.). two —s, Wiv. I, 3, 44. 46. eight —s, H4A II, 2, 26. H4B I, 2, 50. four y. H5 111, 2, 66 (Fluellen's speech). loves her by the foot. Be may not by the y. L L L V, 2, 676 (with an indecent quibble). 2) a piece of timber by which a sail is extended: Tp. I, 2, 200. Tare, adj. and adv. ready, active, brisk, nimble: cheerly, my hearts, y., y. Tp. 1, 1, 7. down with the top-most! y., lower, lower! 37. our ship ...is tight and y. and bravely rigged, V, 224. if you have occasion to use me for your own turn, you shall find me y. Meas. IV, 2, 61. dismount thy tuck, be y. in thy preparation, Tw. Ill, 4, 244. their ships are y., yours heavy, Ant. Ill, 7, 39. a haltered neck which does the hangman thank for being y. about him, III, 13, 131. y., y., good Iras, quick, V, 2, 286. Yarely, readily, actively, briskly: fall to it y. Tp. I, 1 , 4 . those flower-soft hands, that y. frame the office, Ant. II, 2, 216. Yarn, woollen thread: the web of our life is of a mingled y. All's IV, 3, 84. all the y. she spun, Cor. I, 3, 93. Y a u g h a n , name in Ilml. V, 1, 68. Yaw, to move on nnsteadily (as a ship), to steer out of the line of the course: to divide him inventorially would dizzy the arithme ic of memory, and yet but y. neither, in respect of his quick sail, Hml. V, 2, 120 (lection of Q2; the other Qq raw, Ff om. As for but neither = nevertheless, see Neither. It must be considered that the whole speech of Hamlet is intentionally affected, and calculated to puzzle his interlocutor). Yawn, to open wide: graves, y. and yield your

dead, Ado V, 3, 19. Caes. II, 2, 18. the gashes, that bloodily did y. upon his face, H5 IV, 6, 14. when churchyards y. Hml.Ill,2,407. Applied to the mouth, = to gape; 1) with greediness: now will I dam up this thy —ing mouth, H6B IV, 1, 73. 2) with drowsiness: the lazy —ing drone, H5 I, 2, 204. the shardborne beetle with his drowsy hums hath rung night's —ing peal, Mcb. Ill, 2, 43. 3) with surprise and bewilderment: to y., be still and wonder, when one but of my ordinance stood up. Cor. Ill, 2, 11. they y. at it and botch the words up fit to their own thoughts, Hml. IV, 5, 9 (Ff aim), that the affrighted globe should y. at alteration, Oth. V, 2, 101. Yclad, clad: her words y. with wisdom's majesty, H 6 B I, 1, 33. Ycleped or Y e l i p e d , called (used by Armado and Holofernes): L L L I, 1, 242. V, 2, 602. Ye, pers. pron. of the 2nd person plur.; not differing from you; nominative: Tp. V, 33. 41. Gent. I, 2, 49. II, 4, 54. Wiv. Ill, 4, 29. Meas. IV, 3, 173. Mids. Ill, 2, 243. Merch. I, 1, 58. 103. II, 2, 212 (Ff and later Qq you). Tw. II, 1, 40. J o h n V, 2, 91. 114A II, 2, 33. H6A II, 2, 35. HI, 1, 70. 117. 111,2, 41. IV, 1, 8. V, 3, 2. 3. H6B I, 1, 137. I, 3, 141. II, 1, 132. Ill, 1, 4. H6C V, 4, 71. 75. R3 I, 1, 74 (Ff you). IV, 2, 85. Caes. I, 3, 91. Mcb. I, 3, 54 etc. Objective: Sonn. 42, 5. I l l , 13. Tp. V, 170. Gent. I, 2, 28. II, 1, 104. V, 4, 58. L L L IV, 2, 10. V, I, 101. Merch. Ill, 5, 3 (Ff and later Qq you). As II, 7, 135. V, 1, 16. Shr. I, I, 90. H4A II, 2, 55. H6B I, 1, 141. IV, 6, 11. IV, 7, 126. H6C V, 5, 27. 35. R3 1, 2, 101 (Qqjrea). Caes. Ill, 1, 157. Ant. II, 6, 78. Cymb. II, 2, 10 etc. After prepositions: Tp. I, 2, 323. Gent. II, 1, 35. IV, 1, 3. Wint. IV, 4, 663. H4B IV, 2, 75. H8 I, 4, 50. Ill, 1, 102 etc. ye will contracted to ye'11: L L L I, 2, 54 (Q-2 Ff you'll), ye are con-

1402

X.

Y.

HI, 6, 65. Per. I, 2, 112. II, 4, 25. 26 etc. Peculiar expression: to. not that wrong with a more contempt, Err. II, 2, 174 ( = make it not worse, cf. what ruina are in me ... by him not ruinedt II, 1, 96. the want that you have wanted, Lr. I, 1, 282. love, which, le/t unshown, it often left unloved. Ant. Ill, 6, 52). = to give offence, to affront: you w. me, sir, thu» still to haunt my house, Wiv. Ill, 4, 73. 80. till that time I do receive your offered love like love and icill not w. it, Hml. T, 2, 263. 244. 246. you w. this presence; therefore speak no more, Ant. II, 2, 111. Caes. IV, 3, 1. - - to disgrace: thou —est his honour, woundest his princely name, Lncr. 599. he contented; you w. yourself too much, Wiv. Ill, 3,178. IV, 2, 161. is any woman —ed by this lewd fellowf Meas. V, 515. 531. Shr. II, 1. H6A II, 1, 16. IV, 7, 50. R 3 IV, 4, 211. H8 III, 1, 168. Tit. I, 8. Caes. IV, 3, 6 etc. Wronger, one who wrongs or injures: Lucr. 943. Ado V, 1, 271. Oth. Ill, 3, 168. Cymb. II, 4, 54. Wrongful, unfair, unjust: 1 despise thee for thy

•o. suit, Gent. IV, 2, 102. into, quarrel you have slam your son, Tit. 1, 293. W r o n g f u l l y , unjustly: Sonn. 66, 7. Meas. V, 140. Ado IV, 2, 51. R2 I, 2, 39. II, 1, 201. H6B II, 3, 107. T i t IV, 4, 55. 76 (Lucius' punishment was w.). Wr»ng-lneen»ed (not hyphened in O. Edd.) perversely exasperated: B3 II, 1, 51. Wrongly, unjustly: and yet wouldst w. win, Mcb. I, 5, 23. W r o t h ( 0 . Edd. tcroath) rnth, misery, sorrow: I'll keep my oath, patiently to bear my w. Merch. II, 9, 78. Wry, vb. to go obliquely, to swerve: murder wives much better than themselves for — ing but a little, Cymb. V, 1, 5. Wry-necked, having a crooked and distorted neck: the vile squealing of the w. f i f e , Merch. II, 5, 30. Wye, river in Wales: H4A 111, 1, 65. H5 IV, 7, 29. I l l (all the water in W.).

X. X a n t h i p p e (Fl Zentippe,

later Ff Zantippe)

the wife of Socrates, proverbial for a scold: Shr. I, 2,71. T.

Yard, 1) a measure of three feet: Shr. IV, 3, 109. 113. H4A II, 4, 273 (tailor's y.). Rom. I, 2, 40. Hml. Ill, 4, 208. Lr. IV, 6, 89 (a clothier's y.). two —s, Wiv. I, 3, 44. 46. eight —s, H4A II, 2, 26. H4B I, 2, 50. four y. H5 111, 2, 66 (Fluellen's speech). loves her by the foot. Be may not by the y. L L L V, 2, 676 (with an indecent quibble). 2) a piece of timber by which a sail is extended: Tp. I, 2, 200. Tare, adj. and adv. ready, active, brisk, nimble: cheerly, my hearts, y., y. Tp. 1, 1, 7. down with the top-most! y., lower, lower! 37. our ship ...is tight and y. and bravely rigged, V, 224. if you have occasion to use me for your own turn, you shall find me y. Meas. IV, 2, 61. dismount thy tuck, be y. in thy preparation, Tw. Ill, 4, 244. their ships are y., yours heavy, Ant. Ill, 7, 39. a haltered neck which does the hangman thank for being y. about him, III, 13, 131. y., y., good Iras, quick, V, 2, 286. Yarely, readily, actively, briskly: fall to it y. Tp. I, 1 , 4 . those flower-soft hands, that y. frame the office, Ant. II, 2, 216. Yarn, woollen thread: the web of our life is of a mingled y. All's IV, 3, 84. all the y. she spun, Cor. I, 3, 93. Y a u g h a n , name in Ilml. V, 1, 68. Yaw, to move on nnsteadily (as a ship), to steer out of the line of the course: to divide him inventorially would dizzy the arithme ic of memory, and yet but y. neither, in respect of his quick sail, Hml. V, 2, 120 (lection of Q2; the other Qq raw, Ff om. As for but neither = nevertheless, see Neither. It must be considered that the whole speech of Hamlet is intentionally affected, and calculated to puzzle his interlocutor). Yawn, to open wide: graves, y. and yield your

dead, Ado V, 3, 19. Caes. II, 2, 18. the gashes, that bloodily did y. upon his face, H5 IV, 6, 14. when churchyards y. Hml.Ill,2,407. Applied to the mouth, = to gape; 1) with greediness: now will I dam up this thy —ing mouth, H6B IV, 1, 73. 2) with drowsiness: the lazy —ing drone, H5 I, 2, 204. the shardborne beetle with his drowsy hums hath rung night's —ing peal, Mcb. Ill, 2, 43. 3) with surprise and bewilderment: to y., be still and wonder, when one but of my ordinance stood up. Cor. Ill, 2, 11. they y. at it and botch the words up fit to their own thoughts, Hml. IV, 5, 9 (Ff aim), that the affrighted globe should y. at alteration, Oth. V, 2, 101. Yclad, clad: her words y. with wisdom's majesty, H 6 B I, 1, 33. Ycleped or Y e l i p e d , called (used by Armado and Holofernes): L L L I, 1, 242. V, 2, 602. Ye, pers. pron. of the 2nd person plur.; not differing from you; nominative: Tp. V, 33. 41. Gent. I, 2, 49. II, 4, 54. Wiv. Ill, 4, 29. Meas. IV, 3, 173. Mids. Ill, 2, 243. Merch. I, 1, 58. 103. II, 2, 212 (Ff and later Qq you). Tw. II, 1, 40. J o h n V, 2, 91. 114A II, 2, 33. H6A II, 2, 35. HI, 1, 70. 117. 111,2, 41. IV, 1, 8. V, 3, 2. 3. H6B I, 1, 137. I, 3, 141. II, 1, 132. Ill, 1, 4. H6C V, 4, 71. 75. R3 I, 1, 74 (Ff you). IV, 2, 85. Caes. I, 3, 91. Mcb. I, 3, 54 etc. Objective: Sonn. 42, 5. I l l , 13. Tp. V, 170. Gent. I, 2, 28. II, 1, 104. V, 4, 58. L L L IV, 2, 10. V, I, 101. Merch. Ill, 5, 3 (Ff and later Qq you). As II, 7, 135. V, 1, 16. Shr. I, I, 90. H4A II, 2, 55. H6B I, 1, 141. IV, 6, 11. IV, 7, 126. H6C V, 5, 27. 35. R3 1, 2, 101 (Qqjrea). Caes. Ill, 1, 157. Ant. II, 6, 78. Cymb. II, 2, 10 etc. After prepositions: Tp. I, 2, 323. Gent. II, 1, 35. IV, 1, 3. Wint. IV, 4, 663. H4B IV, 2, 75. H8 I, 4, 50. Ill, 1, 102 etc. ye will contracted to ye'11: L L L I, 2, 54 (Q-2 Ff you'll), ye are con-

1403 traded to y'are in O. Edd.: All's 111, 2, 94. Ill, 7, old, i. e. makes it seem old by its continual wrinkles). 14. IV, 3, 160. Wint. IV, 4, 108. Tim. 1, 1, 203 etc. Sometimes = time: await for wretched —s, HCA I, In Per. II, 1, 60 Ff ¡/'may see, Qq may tee. 1, 48. Hector shall not have his wit this y. Tr. I, 2, Yea, particle of affirmation, = yes: Sonn. 40, 1. 92 (it will take some time). Tp. Ill, 2, 68. Meas. II, 2, 8. II, 4, 38. Err. IV, 2, 3. Yearly, adj. annual: the y. course that brings Mids. IV, 1, 201. R3 I, 1, 52. IV, 4, 526 etc. Sub- this day about, John III, 1, 81. five hundred poor I stantively: receives the scroll without or yea or no, jj have in y. pay, H5 IV, 1, 315. Lucr. 1340. by yea and no, Wir. I, 1, 88. the very 1 Yearly, adv. annually, every year: my beauty as yea and the no is, I, 4, 98. by yea and no, IV, 2, 202. 1, the spring doth y. grow, Yen. 141. Ado V, 3, 23. H5 H4B II, 2, 142. by the yea and no of general igno- IV, 3, 45. Cymb. Ill, 1, 9. rance, Cor. Ill, 1, 145. by yea and nay, L L L I, 1, 54. Y e a r n , 11 tr. to grieve, to vex (O. Edd. yern or H4B 111, 2, 10 (Qq by yea and no), in russet yeas and yearn): she laments for it, that it wouldy. your heart honest kersey noes, L L L V, 2, 413. to see it, Wiv. Ill, 5, 45. R2 V, 5, 76. it —s me not Often used = nay, to reprove, or notice, or am- when men my garments wear, H5 IV, 3, 26. plify what has gone before: yea, though I die, the 2) intr. to grieve (O. Edd. ern or earn): my heart scandalwiU survive, Lncr. 204. yea, the illiterate ... will doth y. H5 II, 3 , 3 . Falstaff he is dead, and we musty, quote my trespass, 810. make his bold waves tremble, therefore, 6. that every like is not the same, the heart yea, his dread trident shake, Tp. I, 2, 206. incensed of Brutus —s to think upon, Caes. II, 2, 129. the seas and shores, yea, all the creatures, III, 3, 74. Yeast, see Yest. the great globe itself, yea, aU which it inherit, IT, 154. Y e d w a r d , familiar corruption of Edward: H4 A the state ... yea, my gravity, Meas. II, 4, 9. yea, dost I, 2, 149. thou jeer and flout met Err. II, 2, 22. one that comYell, subst a loud and alarming cry: to stop the posed your beauties, yea, on« to whom you are but as a loud pursuers (hounds) tn their y. Ven. 688. with form in wax, Mids. I, 1, 48. yea, art thou there? Ill, like timorous accent and dire y. as when ...the fire 2, 411. 1 tender it, ... yea, twice the sum, Merch. IV, is spied, Oth. I, 1, 75. = scream of distress and I, 210. yea, say you sot W i n t IV, 4, 588. yea, brother agony: nor —s of mothers, maids, nor babes, T i m . Richard, are you offended toot H6C IV, 1, 19. yea, !j I V , 3, 124. are you so brief! R31,4,88 (Ff what), yea, so familiar 1 |I Y e l l , vb. to cry out; to howl: the dogs did y. Troil. V, 2, 8. yea, Troilus! 0, well fought! V, 6, 12. 1I L L L IV, 2, 60. as if it felt with Scotland and —ed out yea, is it come to thist Lr. I, 4, 326. yea. mistress, |i like suitable of dolour, Mcb. IV, 3, 7. are you so peremptory t Per. II, 5, 73 etc. Y e l l e w , having the colour of gold or of withered Y e a 4 , diminutive of Edward or rather Yedward: leaves: y. autumn, Sonn. 104, 5. sands, Tp. I, 2, 376. Wiv. I, 1, 160. Mids. II, 1, 126. hair, Gent. IV, 4, 194. beard, Wiv. Y e a - f a r s a a t h i a rascally y. knave, H4B I, 2, 41 1, 4, 23. cuckoo-buds, L L L V, 2, 906. gold, Mids. Ill, (one saying to anything yea and forsooth, which latter 2, 393. Tim. IV, 3, 26. 33. these y. cowslip cheeks, was not a phrase of genteel company). Mids. V, 339 (Thisbe's speech), stockings, Tw. II, 5, Y e a n , see Ean. 166. 180. 185. 218. Ill, 4, 28. 52. V, 346. cheek, Y e a r , the time in which the earth completes a H4B I, 2, 204 (sign of old age), y. chadless skulls, revolution: Ven. 508. Tp. I, 2, 250. Meas. IV, 2, 25 Rom. IV, 1, 83. this y. lachimo, Cymb. II, 5, 14. The (compound with him by they.); cf. Shr. II, 371. 374. colour of grief: with a green and y. melancholy, Tw. Err. IV, 1,21. Merch. II, 5, 26. H6C II, 5,28 etc. etc. II, 4, 116. Of age and decay: fallen into the sear, the Plnr. — t : Tp. I, 2, 41. 279. Meas. II, 1, 277. IV, 2, y. leaf, Mcb. V, 3, 23; cf. Sonn. 73, 2. 135. Err. V, 309. H6A II, 3, 40. IV, 3, 37 (this seven Substantively: your perfect y. Mids. 1, 2, 98. —s). H6B II, 1, 2 (these seven —»' day). H6C II, 'mongst all colours no y. in it, W i n t II, 3, 107 (as the 5, 29. 38 etc. etc. Often unchanged in the plural, colour of jealousy), a long motley coat guarded with particularly in the language of low persons: Sonn. y. H8 Prol. 16. the —s, blues, the purple violets, Per. I I , 8. Tp. I, 2, 53. Meas. II, 1, 252. 254. 274. Ado IV, 1, 15 (yellow flowers). III, 3, 134 (this seven y.; Ff —s). L L L V, 2, 11 Y e l l e w e d , grown yellow: my papers y. with their and 894 (lection of Qi). Merch. II, 5, 27. As III, 2, age, Sonn. 17, 9. 335. V, 2, 66. Shr. Ind. 2, 115. All's 1,1, 159. H4A Y e l U w I n c , lection of Qq in Tit. II, 3, 2 0 : let II, 4, 343 (this seven y.; Ff —a). H4B III, 2, 224 us sit down and mark their y. noise; Ff yelping, some (Ff —«). H6A I, 3, 91. Cor. V, 4, 17. Rom. I, 3, 2. M. Edd. yelling. Hml. V, 1, 183. Lr. Ill, 4, 145 etc. Y e l l e w n e s s , jealousy, in the language of Nym: — i equivalent to age: my unripe —s, Ven. 524. I will possess him with y. Wiv. I, 3, 111. his tender —s, 1091. thy beauty and thy —s, Sonn. Y e l l e w s , jaundice in horses: Shr. Ill, 2, 54. 4 1 , 3 . Gent. II, 4, 69. Meas. IV, 3, 76. Err. 1,1, 126 Y e l p i n g , partic. and gerund; barking without (at eighteen —s = at the age of etc.). Ill, 1, 90. As courage: the timorous y. of the hounds appals her senses, IV, 3, 86. Shr. II, 362 (struck in —s); cf. R 3 1, 1, Ven. 881. a y. kennel of French curs. H6A IV, 2, 47. 92. H6A II, 5, 107. Ill, 1, 71. IV, 1, 149. V, 1, 21 ' In Tit. 11, 3, 20 Ff let us sit down and mark their y. etc. etc. thou heapest a —s' age on me, Cymb. I, 1, noise; Qq yellowing. 133 (an age advanced in yean, old age. M. Edd. a Y e e m a n , 1) one not advanced to the rank of a — 's age, which would not matter much), of —s = gentleman: toe grace the y. by conversing with him, of age: a king of—s, HGB II, 3, 28. till my infant i H6A II, 4, 81. spring crestless yeomen from so deep fortune comes to —s, R2 II, 3, 66 (— becomes of age). a roott 85. till thou be restored, thou art a y. 95. a in —s — old: H4A II, 4, 500. Rom. Ill, 5, 46. smiles j gentleman or a y. Lr. Ill, 6, 11. 13. 14. hit cheek in —s, L L L V, 2, 465 ( = smiles bis cheek J 2) a freeholder, a farmer: not so wealthy as an

1404

Y

English g. H6C 1,4,123. good householders, —'s sotu, or would know me, Tp. V, 83. no more yet of this, for 114A IV, 2, 16. 'tis not ... befitting this first meeting, 162. she's come 3) appellation given in courtesy to common soldiers: to know, if yet her brother's pardon be come hither, you, good yeomen, «hose limbs were made in England, Meas. IV, 3, 112. hath yet the deputy sent my brother's H5 111, 1, 25. fight, gentlemen of England! fight, bold pardon1 118. hast thou yet latched the Athenian's eyes ...as I did bid thee dot Mids. Ill, 2, 36. is he come yeomen! R3 V, 3, 338. 4) a gentleman servant: the lady of the Strachy home yetf IV, 2, 2. is he yet possessed how much ye married the y. of the wardrobe, Tw. II, 5, 45. now it wouldt Merch. I, 3, 65. is my master yet returnedt V, 34. did you yet ever see Baptista's daughter f Shr. did me —'s service, Hml. V, 2, 36. — a kind of under-bailiff: where's your y.t is't a I, 2, 252. is he won yetf Wint. I, 2, 86. have you inlusty y.t will a' stand to't t H4BII, 1,4 (Mrs. Quickly» quired yet who picked my pocketf H4A III, 3, 61. no word to your master that I am yet come to town, H4B speech). Yerk, to jerk, to thrust with a sudden and quick II, 2, 177. heard he the good news yetf IV, 5, 11. is motion: their wounded steeds... y. out their armed heels that letter ...yet sent awayt H8 IV, 2, 128. is Caesar at their dead masters, H5 IV, 7, 83. to have —ed him yet gone to the Capitolf Caes. II, 4, 24. yet to be known here under the ribs, Oth. I, 2, 5. shortens my made intent, Lr. IV, 7, 9. Yes, the word of affirmation opposed to no: Yen. As yet, in the same sense: hast thou as yet con9:19. Tp. I, 2, 284. 437. V, 174. Gent. II, 1, 128. II, ferred with Margery Jourdaint H6B I, 2, 74. I will 3, 18. Wiv. II, 2, 108. Meas. I, 4, 3. II, 2, 49. II, 3, not trouble you asyet, Asll,7,172 (Latin: non jam), as 25. Ill, 1, 64. 87. 100. 108. Err. II, 2, 76. IV, 2, 56. hardly willhe endure your sight as yet, Wint. IV, 4,481. Mcrch.I, 3, 34. Alls II, 5, 90 (rhyming to kiss) etc. etc. 3) still, to this time, now as formerly: which yet Peculiarly used in replying to a negative proposition: are green, Sonn. 104, 8. grew a seething bath, which it never yet did hurt to lay down likelihoods andforms yet men prove ...a sovereign cure, 153, 7. all's hushed of hope. Yes, if this present quality of war, indeed the like midnight yet, Tp. IV, 207. you do yet taste some instant action, a cause on foot, lives so in hope, H4B subtilties o'the isle, V, 123. will they yet look after theet I, 3, 36, i. e. yes, it did hurt in such a case as ours, Wiv. II, 2, 146. yet there want not many that do fear when that which is to be done immediately, depends ...to walk by this Heme's oak, IV, 4, 39. bestowed on uncertain hopes. Similarly Cor. IV, 6, 61. Y, her on her own lamentation, which she yet wears for 4 , 27 a n d : my quarrel was not altogether slight. his sake, Meas. Ill, 1, 238. this maid hath yet in her Faith, yes, to be put to the arbitrement of swords, Cyinb. the continuance of her first affection, 248. yet I have I, 4, 52. Used as a word of enforcement: I say, take a trick of the old rage, L L L V, 2, 416. are you yet 1 heed; yes, heartily beseech you, H8 I, 2, 176. lining f Ado I, 1, 120. yet it lives there unchecked that Vest, spume or foam of water: Wint. Ill, 3, 94. Antonio hath a ship wrecked, Mcrch. Ill, 1, 2. she was Yesterday, 1) on the day before to-day: Wiv. the fairest creature in the world, and yet she is inferior IV, 2, 152. V, 1, 14. Merch. II, 8, 27. As II, 5, 49. to none, Shr. Ind. 2, 69. I am yet so near the manners Ill, 4, 38. Tw. I, 3, 15. J o h n III, 4, 80. H5 II, 2, 40. of my mother, Tw. II, I, 41. they will talk of mad Ill, 7, 51. IV, 8, 91. V, 1, 9. 36. Troil. I, 1, 46. I, 2, Shallow yet, H4B III, 2, 16. with yet appearing blood, 34. 185. Ill, 3, 19. Cor. IV, 5, 211. Caes. 1, 3, 26. IV, 1, 82. her mother liveth yet, HGA V, 4, 12. for yet Ill, 2, 123. Mcb. Ill, 1, 74. Hml. II, 1, 56. Oth. Ill, is hope of life and victory, II6C II, 3, 55. some dregs 3, 333. IV, 1, 52. Ant. V, 2, 251. of conscience are yet within me, R3 (, 4, 125. live you 2) substantively, = the day before to-day: call yetf Cor. II, 1, 197. thou art mighty yet, Cues. V, 3, back y., bid time return, R2 111, 2, 69. all our —s, 94. yet here, Laertesf Hml. I, 3, 55. or that I do not Mcb. V, 5, 22. yet, and ever did, and ever will... love him dearly, Y e s t e r n i g h t , last night: Meas. V, 134. Ado IV, Oth. IV, 2, 156. 1 see her yet, Cymb. II, 4, 101. we I , 84. 184. H4A I, 1, 32. 36. 11, 1, 59. R3 111, 6, 6. wept after her hearse, andyetwe mourn, Per.IV,3,42. Troil. 1, 1, 32. Tit. IV, 2, 153. Rom. V, 3, 251. Caes. As yet, in the same sense: I might as yet have been II, 1, 238. Hml. I, 2, 189. a spreading flower, Compl. 75. Yesty, foamy, frothy: they, waves, Mcb. IV, 1, 4) hitherto: like a red morn that ever yet betokened 53. a kind o f y . collection, Hml. V, 2, 199 (light, fri- wreck to the seaman, Veil. 453. her yet unstained bed, volous, unsolid). Lucr. 366. bend the dukedom yet unbowed, Tp. I, 2, Yet, 1) now, by this time what if my house be 115. thou dost me yet but little hurt, 11, 2, 82. there troubled with a rat and I be pleased to give ten thou- are yet missing some few oidlads, V, 254. 'tis but her sand ducats to have it banedl what, are you answerid picture I have yet beheld, Gent. II, 4, 209. a rashness yetf Merch. IV, 1, 46 (i. e. alter my alleging this in- that I ever yet have shunned, III, 1,30. I keep but three stance). whose party do the townsmen yet admitt John men and a boy yet, till my mother be dead, Wiv. I, 1, 11,361 (after we have measured our strengths in figlit). 285. any madness that I ever yet beheld, IV, 2, 27. you how yet resolves the governor of the townt H5 III, 3, are yet unsworn, Meas. 1, 4, 9. your yet ungalled esti1. know you me yetf Cor. IV, 3, 5 (after what I have mation, Err. Ill, 1, 102. in time I may believe, yet I said to put you in mind), prepare thy brow to frown: mistrust, Shr. Ill, 1, 51 etc. knowest thou me yetl IV, 5, 69. have you done yetf As yet, in the same sense: that's not five weeks old Ant. Ill, 13, 153. whence are yout A poor Egyptian as yet, LLL IV, 2, 36. as yet I cannot truly say how yet, the queen my mistress ... desires instruction. Ant. 1 came here, Mids. IV, 1, 152. things as yet not come V, 1, 52 (i. e. my queen, who is now no more tlinn to life, H4B III, 1, 84. asyet I do not (know) R3 I, a poor Egyptian. M. Edd. a poor Egyptian yet. The 1, 53. have not spoke asyet, Cor. I, 4, 4. although as queen etc.). yet the face of it be covered, Lr. Ill, 1, 20. unrecon2) already: not one of them that yet looks on me, iled as yet to heaven, Oth. V, 2, 27.

Y

1405

Not yet: Tp. I, 2, 36. 244. Meas. 1, 1, 81. LLL IV, 2, 61. IV, 4, 111. Wiv. II, 2, 138. Ill, 4, 19. V, V, 2, 212 etc. Sometimes yet placed before not: news 5, 258. Meas. II, 1, 4. Ill, 1, 92. Err. IV, 2, 10 etc. etc. that you yet dreamt not of, Ado I, 2, 4. yet I have not 10) = the adversative particle but: Ven. 94. 544. seen so likely an ambassador of love, Mercb. II, 9, 91. 548 . 911. 981. 998. Tp. I, 1, 20. II, 1, 38. II, 2, 55. the time teas that I hated thee, and yet it is not that I III, 3, 31 etc. After a negation: I sold not Maine, I bear thee love, As III, 5, 93. his powers are yet not lost not Normandy, yet, to recover them, would lose my ready, H5 III, 3, 46. full sick, and yet not well, H8 II, life, H6B IV, 7, 71. 4, 204. my work hath yet not warmed me, Cor. I, 5, 18. Seemingly = though (cf. the German trotzdem = stained as meadows, yet not dry, Tit. ill, 1, 125. my obgleicK): for my soul, yet I know not why, hates nothing ears have yet not drunk a hundred words, Rom. II, 2, more than he, As I, 1, 171. I cannot speak to her, yet 58 (the suireptitious Ql and M. Edd. not yet), we yet the urged conference, I, 2, 270. not know, Ant. II, 1, 49. yet they are not joined, IV, Tew, the tree Taxns baccata (planted in church12, 1. I yet not understand the case myself, Cymb. 11, yards, and therefore emblem of death): my shroud of 3, 80. Lr. II, 4, 284. cf. never yet and yet never: white, stuck all with y. Tw. II, 4, 56. bows of doublenever woman yet could rule them, Ven. 1007. duty fatal y. R2 III, 2, 117. would bind me here unto the never yet did want his meed, Gent II, 4, 112. for yet body of a dismal y. Tit. II, 3, 107. slips of y. slivered his honour never heard a play, Shr. Ind. 1, 96. the in the moon's eclipse, Mcb. IV, 1, 27. In Rom. V, 3, nature of our quarrel yet never brooked parte, 1,1,116. 3 and 137 the spurious Ql and M. Edd. yew-trees, the 5) before or till some future time: he'll be hanged authentic O. Edd. young trees. yet, Tp. I, 1, 61. J'U to my book, for yet ere supperYield, 1) trans, a) to produce, to give in return tone must I perform much business, 111, 1, 95. the time for labour or as profit: for fear it y. me still so bad is yet to come, Meas. II, 1, 175. we may effect this a harvest, Ven. Ded. 6. what my revenue —ed, Tp. I, business yet ere day, Mids. Ill, 2, 395. you, Diana, 2, 98. the bees that y. it (honey) Gent. I, 2, 107. Wiv. under my poor instructions yet must suffer some thing IV, 4, 33. Mids. V, 435. As II, 3, 64. II, 6, 6. Ill, 2, in my behalf, Alls IV, 4, 27. yet, I pray you, 30. \f 123. Wint. IV, 3, 34. IV, 4, 702. V, 1, 55. John 111, I like thee no worse after dinner, I will not part from 4, 111. R2 III, 2, 18. H4B IV, 5, 80. H5 IV, 3, 125. thee yet, Lr. I, 4, 45 (not so soon), you shall be yet Tim. Ill, 6, 58. Hml. IV, 4, 21. Cymb. IV, 2, 180. far fairer than you are, Ant. I, 2, 16. Per. IV, 1, 4. 6) still; before comparatives: yet more quarrelling = to bear, to bring forth: a birth which throes with occasion, Merch. Ill, 5, 61. Similarly yet again thee much to y. Tp. II, 1, 231. that such a crafty devil — once more: yet again, what do you heref Tp. I, 1, as is his mother should y. the world this ass, Cymb. II, 41. peace yet again, Caes. I, 2, 14. let our wives yet 1, 58. the was —ed there, Per. V, 3, 48. once again... appoint a meeting, Wiv. IV, 4, 14. yet b) to afford, to offer, to give: the portal... which once again proclaim it publicly, Err. V, 130. whom, to his speech did honey passage y. Ven. 452. each unyet once more, I hold my most malicious foe, H8 II, 4, willing portal —s him way, Lucr. 309. to their hope 82. nor yet - nor even: Helen, the mother of great they such odd action y. 1433. the earth can y. me but a Constantine, nor yet Saint Philip's daughters are like common grave, Sonn. 81, 7. the pleasures that hill and thee, H6A 1, 2, 143. valleys ...y. Pilgr. 356. who never —s us kind answer, 7) after all; as matters stand; though the case be Tp. I, 2,309. y. me a direct answer, Meas. IV, 2,7. our such: that (my mind) ... still pure doth in her poisoned soul cannot but y. you forth to public thanks, V, 7 ( = closet yet endure, Lucr. 1659. 1 killed a man whose j . public thanks to you), as much (love) as may be death I much repent, but yet I slew him manfully in —edto a man, Ado III, 1, 48. ere further leisure y. fight, Gent. IV, 1, 28. what's yet in this that bears the them farther mean«, R2 I, 4, 40. the means that heaven name of tifet Meas. Ill, 1, 38. hast thou or word or —s must be embraced, III, 2, 29. thy own hand —s thy wit or impudence, that yet can do thee office? V, 369. death's instrument, V, 5, 107. O earth, y. us that king yet have I left a daughter, Lr. I, 4, 276. 327. there's again, H4B I, 3, 106. he'lly. the crow a pudding, H5 nothing in her yet, Ant. Ill, 3, 27. n, 1, 91. didst y. consent to disinherit him, H6C II, 2, Sometimes = at least; though nothing else: if not 24. IV, 6, 36. 46. if France can y. relief, III, 3, 20. divine, yet let her be a principality, Gent. II, 4, 152. all kindness that your estate requires and mine can y. if your heart be so obdurate, vouchsafe me yet your 150. Burgundy willy, him help, IV, 6, 90. more pain picture for my love, IV, 2, 121. the duke yet would ... than death can y. me here, R3 I, 3, 169. look to have dark deeds darkly answered, Meas. Ill, 2, 187. have it —ed with all willingness, 111, 1, 198. as thou sweet Isabel, do yet but kneel by me; hold up your hands, canst y. a melancholy seat, IV, 4, 32. day, y. me not say nothing, V, 442. since you could not be my son-in- thy light, 401. if they would y. us but the superfluity, law, be yet my nephew, Ado V, 1, 297. but tell me yet, Cor. I, 1, 17. to y. your voices, II, 3, 184. Ill, 1, 34. dost thou not know my voice f Err. V, 300. lie further earth, y. me roots, Tim. IV, 3, 23. 185. they botch the off yet, Mids. II, 2, 44. hear me yet, Merch. Ill, 3, 3. tcords up fit to their own thoughts; which, as her winks 8) nevertheless, still: I'll smother thee with kisses, and nods and gestures y. them, indeed would make one and yet not cloy thy lips with loathed satiety, Ven. 19. think ..., Hml. IV, 5, 11. that self exhibition which who conquers where he comes ..., yet hath he been my four own coffers y. Cymb. I, 6, 123. who did promise captive, 101. this is my spite, that, thou being dead, to y. me often tidings, IV, 3, 39. wherein my death might the day should yet be light, 1134. I shall niss thee, but y. her any profit, Per. IV, 1, 81. this city will y. many yet thou shall have freedom, Tp. V, 96. Ven. 112. icholars, IV, 6, 198. 11C. 128. 148. 406. 438. 442. 574. 576. 610. 778. c) to grant, to allow, to admit: the noblemen —ed 867. 986. 1070. Tp. II, 1, 26. 156. 206. 215. II, 2, Collatinus the victory, Lucr. Arg. 11. were not his re4. HI, 2, 23. Gent. 1, 1, 26. 133. II, 1, 123—126 quests so far from reason's — tng, your fair self should

1406

Y

make a — ing ... in my breast, L L L 11, 151. 152. Iy. another (wind) when it blows. III, 1, 87. thus —s the all this, Whit. IV, 4, 421. shall y. the other in the cedar to the axe's edge, V, 2, 11. why do I y. to that right opinion, H6A II, 4, 42. nor will he know his suggestion, Mcb. I, 3, 134. I bear a charmed life, purse or y. me this, to show him what a beggar his which must not y. to one of woman born, V, 8, 12. a heart is, Tim. I, 2, 200. your loving motion to the substance that must y. to you, Per. II, 1, 3. common body, to y. what passes here, Cor. II, 2, 58. c) to give way, not to oppose or to discontinue d) to deliver, to exhibit: the reasons of our state opposition: Ven. 547. Lncr. 339. 526. 1036. Compl. I cannot y. All's III, 1, 10. I can y. you none (reason) 149. Pilgr. 319. Ado V, 4, 95. Merch. IV, 1, 425. without words, Tw. Ill, 1, 27. Ill, 2, 4. but well and All's III, 7, 36. B2 111, 3, 58. H4A V, 1, 110. H4B tree, i/ thou so y. him, there is gold, Ant. II, 5, 28. II, 1, 125. H5 V, 2, 301. H6A III, 1, 112. 118. V, e) to emit; to give up: graves, yawn and y. your 3, 99. V, 5, 77. Cor. V, 3, 17 (I have —ed too; some dead, Ado V, 3, 19. y. the ghost ( = die) H6A I, 1, M. Edd. unnecessarily — ed to). Tit. I, 449. With 67. B 3 I, 4, 37. ere thou y. thy breath, H6A IV, 7, to: Ven. 566. Err. IV, 4, 84. L L L II, 168. Merch. 24. R3 V, 3, 172. With op: graves —ed up their III, 3, 15. H6A III, 1, 134. H6B V, 1, 40. B3 III, 7, dead, Caes. II, 2, 18. 207. Troil. V, 3, 76. Tit. V, 2, 140. Caes. II, 2, 106. f) to deliver, to render, to give up, to surrender: d) to submit: heart, . . . y . to my hand, Lucr. 1210. 1 11 y. him thee asleep, Tp. Ill, 2, 68. if I would y. to your power I'Uy. Err. Ill, 2, 40. must y. to such him my virginity, Meas. HI, 1, 98. y. thee to my hand, inevitable shame as to offend, being himself offended, John II, 156. H4A V, 3, 10. H4B IV, 3, 19. here he Merch. IV, 1, 57. so she —s to me, Shr. II, 137. all is, and here I y. him, 49. we y. our town and lives to Kent hath —ed, J o h n V, 1, 30. I must not y. to any thy soft mercy, H5 111, 3, 48. I'll y. myself to prison, rites of love, H6A I, 2, 113. made me almost y. upon H6B IV, 9, 42. I must y. my body to the earth, H6C my knees, III, 3, 80. y. or die, H6B IV, 2, 135. all V, 2, 9. the sheep doth y. his fleece and next his throat his powers do y. IV, 9, 10. what he will, I humbly y. unto the butcher's knife, V, 6, 8. they had so vilely unto, H6C HI, 1, 101. toy. to his conditions, Cor. V, — edthe town, Cor. Ill, 1, 11. y. thee, coward, Mcb. 1,69. making a treaty where there was a —ing, V, 6, V, 8,23. mine honour was not ed,but conqueredmerely, 69. all places y to him, IV, 7, 28. life would not y. Ant. Ill, 13, 61. it shall safe be kept and truly —ed to age, Lr. IV, 1, 12. to wisdom he's a fool that will you, Cymb. I, 6, 210. y. thee, thief, IV, 2, 75. V, 3, not y. Per. II, 4, 54. 77. therefore briefly y. her, Per. Ill, 1, 53. With a = to surrender: R2 111, 3, 20. H4A V, 3, 11 (Ff double accus.: to y. myself his wife who wins me by to y.; Qq a yielder). H4B IV, 3, 13. 44. H5 111, 3, 42. that means, Merch. II, 1, 18. the man entire upon the IV, 2, 37. IV, 4, 1. V, 2, 327. Cor. Ill, 1, 215. Caes. next encounter —s him ours, Caes. I, 3, 156. With up: V, 4, 12. Mcb. V, 8, 27. Lr. II, 1, 33. Ant. Ill, 10, y. them up where I myself must render, Compl. 221. 35. V, ] , 1. Cymb I, 4, 115 (go back even to the the law of Athens —s you up ... to death, Mids. I, 1, —ing). IV, 2, 100. With to: y. to my love, Lucr. 668. 119. he'ldy. them up (twenty heads) Meas. II, 4, 181. the coward ... doth y. to those two armies, 75. I'll hath —ed up his body to the grave, R2 V, 6, 21. your force thee y. to my desire, Gent. V, 4, 59. Meas. V, northern castles are —ed up, III, 2, 201. is Rouen 101. H6B IV, 8, 12. H6C I, 4, 30. Ant. IV, 12, 11. — ed up 1 H6A I, 1, 65. —s up his life unto a world Cvmb. IV, 2, 80. of odds, IV, 4, 25. y. me up the keys, HGC IV, 7, 37. e) to comply,to assent: inclinedtoaccessary —ings, that reason which denies the —ing of her up, Troil. II, Lucr. 1658. how well this —ing rescues thee from 2, 25. so she will y. us up, Ant. Ill, 13, 16. Iy. thee shame, L L L 1,1,118. I would not y. to be your house's up my life, V, 1, 12. y. up their deer to the stand o'the guest, v, 2, 354. if you y. not to your father's choice, stealer, Cymb. II, 3, 74. Mids. I, 1, 69. I see a —ing in the looks of France, = to resign (cf. above: Meas. Ill, 1, 98. H6C John II, 474. befort I would have —ed to this league, V, 2, 9. V, 6, 8. R2 V, 6, 21. H6A IV, 4, 25): till H6B I, 1, 127. that is more than I will y. unto, II6C each to razed oblivion y. his part of thee, Sonn. 122, III, 2, 96. will not y. to our complots, B3 HI, 1, 192. 7. shall I now give o'er the —ed sett J o h n V, 2, 107 — ed to bear the golden yoke of sovereignty, HI, 7, 145. (almost = lost, or at least given up for lost). —ed not impute this —ing to light love, Horn. II, 2, 105. upon compromise that which his ancestors achieved, therefore must his choice be circumscribed unto the voice lt2 II, 1, 253. who ... his sceptre —s to the possession and —ing of that body whereof he is the head, Hml. of thy royal hand, IV, 109. I ll make him y. the crown, I, 3, 23. willy, to see his daughter, Lr. IV, 3, 43. when H6B I, 1, 258. H6C II, 2, 101. Milo his addition y. life itself —s to the theft, IV, 6, 44. he'll never y. to to sinewy Ajax, Troil. II, 3, 258. Err. IV, 4, 58. Mids. that, nor must not thtn be —ed to in this. Ant. III, 6, I, I, 91. H6C II, 5, 59. Ill, 3. 16. With up: ere I'ld 37. 38. you shall not say 1 y. being silent, Cymb. II, y. my body up to shame, Meas. II, 4, 103. 164. LLL 3, 99. II, 160. Mids. I, 1, 80. Ill, 2, 165. J o h n IV, 2, 157. Yielder, 1) one who allows or suffers: briers V, 1, 1. Tit. 1,191. Oth. Ill, 3,448. and thorns at their apparel snatch; some sleeves, some g) to give a reward, to bless: the gods y. you for hats, from —s allthngs catch, Mids. HI, 2, 30. 2) one it, Ant. IV, 2, 33 (cf. Godild). who surrenders: I vas not born a y. H4A V, 3, 11 2) intr. a) to give place: y. day to night, II6A I, (Ff to yield). 3) ay. up, = one who gives up: some 1, 1. let York be regent, I will y. to him, H6B I, 3, guard these traitors i> the block of death, treason's true 109. I yield to thee, or to the meanest groom, II, 1,184 bed and y. up of bteath, H4B IV, 2, 123 (y. up of b) to give way; to succumb: soldiers, when their ireaih, as it were, aJjcctively added to bed, the sense captain once doth y., they basely fly, Ven. 893. Her- being: treason's true tied, as it is a dying bed, a cules himself must y. to odds, H6C II, 1, 53. so true death-bed). men y., with robbers so o'ermatched, I. 4, 64. —ing to Yielding, subst see Yield.

Y Y a k e , subst. 1) the curvatied piece of timber placed on the necks of draught oxen : Ado I, 1, 263. Mids. II, I, 93. Emblem of servitude and slavery: Lucr. 409 Ado I, 1, 203. Mids. I, 1, 81. R2 II, 1, 291. H4B IV, 4, 10. H6A I, 1, 164. R3 V, 2, 2. Tit. 1, 69. 111. IV, 1, 109. Caes. I, ? , 61. I, 3, 84. Mcb. IV, 3, 39. Cymb. Ill, 1, 52. Ill, 5, 5. ofsuffcrance in general: can I bear this shameful y. H6B II, 4, 37. yield not thy neck to fortune's y. H6C III, 3, 17. to bear the golden y. of sovereignty, R3 III, 7, 146. now thy proud neck bears half my burthened y. IV, 4, 111. and shake the y. of inauspicious stars from this worldwearied flesh, Bom. V, 3, 111. I shall with aged patience bear your y. Per. II, 4 , 4 8 . of connection and unity: whose souls do bear an equal y. of love, Merch. III, 4, 13. 2) a pair, a couple: ay. of his discarded men, Wiv. II, 1, 181. how a good y. of bullocks? H4B III, 2, 42. Doubtful passage: do not these fair —s become the forest better than the town1 Wiv. V, 5, 111 (the horns worn by FalstafT called so on account of their shape ? Later Ft oaks). T a k e , vb. (cf. Unyoke) 1) trans, to put under a yoke: Ven. 1190. Metaphorically, = a) to bring into bondage, to subdue: Gent. I, 1, 40. H6A II, 3, 64. Troil. II, 1, 116. Tit. 1, 30. b) to couple, to join: unless thou y. thy liking to my will, Lucr. 1633. may my name be —d with his that did betray the Best, Wint. I, 2, 419. ever may your highness y. together ... my doing well with my well saying, H8 III, 2, 150. you are —d with a lamb, Caes. IV, 3, 110. every bearded fellow that's but —d may draw with you, Oth. IV, 1, 67 ( = married), if it be sin to say so, I y. me in my good brother's fault, Cymb. IV, 2, 19. nobly he —s a smiling with a sigh, 51. 2) intr. to join, to be coupled: on his netk her —ing arms she throws, Ven. 592. to sunder them that y. so well together, H6C IV, 1, 23. we'll y. together, IV, 6, 49. nor y. with him for tribune, Cor. Ill, 1, 57. I i k e - i n l l i , two devils coupled together: H5 II, 2, 10«. Y a k e - r e l l a w , companion: —«inarms, H51I.3, 56. by his bloody side, y. to his honour-owing wounds, the noble Earl of Suffolk also lies, IV, 6, 9. thou, his y. of equity, Lr. Ill, 6, 39. Y a n , 1) demonstr. pron.,used in pointing at something: Mids. HI, 2, 188. Merch. Ill, 2, 240. 246. J o h n II, 472. Ill, 3, 60. H4A V, I, 2. H 5 IV, 2, 16. 39. IV, 7, 60. R3 I, 2, 261. Rom. Ill, 5, 19. Caes. II, 1, 103. Hral. I, 1, 167. Ant. Ill, 10, 10. Per. Prol. 40. I, 1, 21. 37. II, 3, 37. 54. Qq yon, Ff yond: R2 II, 3, 53. Ill, 3, 26. 135. 111,4, 29. Troil. IV. 5, 220 Lr. IV, 6, 18. 120. 155. 2) adv. there: y. methinks he itands, R2 III, 3, 91 (Ff yond, methinks, he is). Y a n d , 1) demonstr. pron., used in pointing to a person or thing at a distance (not always within view): Tp. II, 2, 20. 21. 24. Gent. IV, 4,71. Wiv. Ill, 4, 87. As II, 4, 64. Tw. I, 5, 147. II, 4, 33. Ill, 2, 73. Wint II, 1, 31. H6A II, 1, 33. Troil. T, 3, 99. Cor. Ill, 1, 50. IV, 5, 110. V, 4, 1. Rom. I. 5, 130. Ill, 5, 4. 12. V, 3, 3. Tim. I, 2, 29. IV, 3, 466. Caes. I, 2, 194. V, 3, 18. Hml. 1, 1, 36. Oth. Ill, 3,460. Ant. Ill, 9, 1. IV, 12, 1. Cymb. Ill, 3, 10. IV, !, 392. F{ yond, Qq yon: R2 II, 3, 53. Ill, 3, 26. 13}. Ill, 4, 29. Troil

1407

IV, 5, 220. Lr. IV, 6, 18. 120. 155. In Meas. IV, 3, 93 O Edd. y. generation, M. Edd. the under generation2) adv. there: say what thou seest y. Tp. I, 2, 409. y. 's that same knave. All's III, 5, 85. y., methinks, he is, R2 III, 3, 91 (Qq yon methinks he stands), is not y. Diomed, Troil. IV, 5, 13 (Ff young), by all Diana's waiting-women y. V, 2, 91. what torch is y. Rom. V, 3, 12Ó. Oth. 1, 2, 28 (Qq yonder). Y a n d e r , = yon or yond; 1) pron.: Meas. I, 2, 87. L L L IV, 1, 9. Mids. Ill, 2, 61. Merch V, 142. R2 I, 3, 7. 26. H5 IV, 7, 123. H6A I, 4, 11. Ill, 2, 23. R3 I, 3, 289. Troil. IV, 5, 211. 219. V, 6, 23. Rom. 1, 5, 44. 51. II, 2, 2. 107. Ill, 5, 8. IV, I, 78. Caes. I, 2, 104. V, 3, 16. Hml. Ill, 2, 393 (Ff that). IV, 5, 64. 2) adv.: Gent. V, 4, 125. Wiv. II, 1, 163. Ill, 1, 27. 52. IV, 2, 22. V, 5, 194. Meas. I, 2, 60. Err. II, 2, 111. IV, 4, 42. V, 9. Ado I, 3, 44. V, 2, 98. Mids. Ill, 2, 176. 380. V, 188. Merch. II, 2, 183. As I, 1, 28. I, 2, 137. 156. 160. Shr. V, 1, 113. All's 111, 2, 35. IV, 5, 99. Tw. II, 5, 20. Ill, 4, 310. H4B II, 1, 41. H5 IV, 1, 88. 91. H6C II, 2, 2. V, 4, 67. 80. Troil. I, 2, 229. 231. 246. 247. IV, 5, 64. 191. V, 1, 74. V, 5, 23. Cor. I, 4, 1. I, 6, 21. Tit. IV, 4, 41. Tim. Ill, 2, 27. IV, 3, 356. Caes. V, 3, 92. Oth. I, 2, 28 (Ff yond). V, 2, 106. Ant. II, 2, 14. IV, 12, 11. Per. II, 3, 23. Y a r e ; of y. = times ago: what beauty was of y. Soon. 68, 14. Y e r l c k , name of a jester, lamented by Hamlet: Hml. V, 1, 198. 203. Y e r k , English town: R2 V, 5, 73. H4A V, 5, 36. H4B IV, 3, 80. H6C I, 4, 179 (on Y.gales). 180. II, 1, 65. 11, 2, 1. IV, 7, 8. H8 IV, 2, 13 etc. archbishop of Y. H4A I, 3, 269. Ill, 2, 119. H4B I, 1, 189. H6C IV, 3, 53. IV, 4, 11 (bishop of Y.) etc. Cardinal of Y. (Wolsey): H8 I, 1, 51. II, 2, 106. III, 1,62. Edmund Langley Duke of Y., son of Edward III: R2 I, 2, 62. 67 etc. H4A I, 3, 245. H6A II, 5, 85. H6B II, 2 . 1 5 etc. His title inherited by his descendants: H6A 11,4, 119. 11,5,41. Ill, 1, 165. 171 etc. His son Edward Duke of Yoik slain in the battle of Agincourt: H5 IV, 3, 131. IV, 6, 3. IV, 8, 108. His grandson Richard Duke of T . claiming the crown and kindling the war of the Roses: H6A III, 4, 30. H6B 1,1, 65. H6C 1,4, 180 etc etc. The second son of Edward IV bearing the title: R 3 III, 1, 101 etc. Y e r k - p l a c e , a palace in London, afterwards called Whitehall: H8 IV, 1, 94. 95. Y e r k i h l r e , English county: H4B IV, 4, 99. R3 IV, 4, 521. Yan, pera. pron. of the 2nd pers. plur., the usual address to one as well as to several persons (its difference from thou sub Thou)-, nom. as well as objective case (as for the ancient orthography yare for the modern you're, see Ye): Ven. 382. 421. 771. 774. 1082. 1084. Tp. 1, 1, 14. 41 etc. etc. With an adjective: for the prize of all too precious you, Sonn. 86, 2. Reflexively: rest you, T p . Ill, 1, 18. hie you home, Gent. IV, 2, 94. bethink you of some conveyance, Wiv. Ill, 3, 135. hold you ever to our special drift, Meas. IV, 5, 4. Ado V, 1, 92. get you to heaven, II, 1, 47. that you should here repent you, Mida. V, 115. prepare you, Merch. II, 4, 23. H6C V, 4, 60. Caes. V, 1, 12. put you in your beat array, As V, 2, 79. undress

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you, Shr. Ind. 2, 119. content ye, I, 1, 90. keep yot A8 I, 2, 100. H6C II, 2, 14. 26. 32. II, 5, 35 (have Icarm, II, 268. betake you to your guard, T w . Ill, 4, been with y. = pregnant). V, 6, 17. Lr. I, 4, 236. y. 253. to your own bents dispose you, Wint. I, 2, 179. one in the same sense: she feels her y. one kick. All's dismantle you, IV, 4, 666. arm you, John IV, 2, 249. V, 3, 303. her harmless y. one, H6B III, 1, 215. Tit. bear you welt, R2 V, 2, 50. you towards York shot I I , 3 , 142. Mcb. IV, 2, 11. bend you, H 4 A V, 5, 36. furnish you fairly, TroiL Y c u n g - e y e d , having the fresh look o f youth: y. III, 3,33. Jit you to the custom, Cor. II, 2, 146 etc. etc chentbins, Merch. V, 62. cf. W i v . Ill, 2, 68. Superfluous; 1) as dativus ethicos: I'll do yot T i u n i l l n f , a stripling, a novice, a greenhorn: your master what good I can, W i v . 1, 4, 97. I wit she told the y. how pod Mars did try her, P i l g r . 145. find you twenty lascivious turtles, II, 1, 82. will net y., thou canst not love so dear as I, Shr. II, 339. y., miss you morning nor evening prayer, II, 2, 102. whet learn thou to make some meaner choice; Lavinia is offence hath this man made you t Meas. HI, 2, 15. shi thine elder brother's hope, Tit. II, 1, 73. I tell you, —s, will sit you, A d o II, 3, 116. I will roar you as gently, IV, 2, 93. Mids. I, 2, 84 (Ff om.). John lays you plots, Johl Y a n n g l y , early in l i f e : that fresh blood which y. III, 4, 146. a' shall charge you and discharge you will thou bestowest, Sonn. 11,3. how y. he began to serve the motion of a pewterer's hammer, II4B III, 2, 280. his country. Cor. II, 3, 244. jhey will learn you by rote where services are done, H i Y a u n g - m a n , see Man. III, 6, 74. he will weep you, Troil. 1, 2, 188. he wil Y o u n g s t e r , a youth, a lad: for Adon's sake, a last you some eight year, Hml. V, 1, 183 etc. 2) after y. proud and wild, P i l g r . 120. the imperative (not only when stress is laid on it, ai I t a n k e r , a stripling: will you make a y. of me? in Tp. I, 1, 45. Meas. I, 4, 8. II, 2, 13 etc.): taki H 4 A 111, 3,92 (i. e. a novice), trimmed like ay.prancing you this, Gent. II, 2, 6. fear not you, IV, 2, 82. V, 2, to his love, H6C II, 1, 24. In Merch. II, 6, 14 M. Edd. 45. W i v , III, 3, 39. Meas. II, 1, 222. Err. I, 2, 92. nnnecessarily y., O. Edd. younger; see Young. A d o II, 2, 22. 25. Ill, 1, 31. V, 1, 295. Merch. I, a Y a a r , poss. pron., = belonging or pertaining to 69. T w . I, 5, 92. Wint. IV, 3, 126. IV, 4, 52. H6B yon: Ven. Ded. 1. 3. 6. 7. 9. Ven. 381. 423. 425. I, 4, 6. 13. T i m . Ill, 2, 11. Ant. II, 2, 24 etc. cf. soft 770. 774. 776. 789. 809 etc. good y. graces, H8 III, you: A d o V, I, 207. Hml. Ill, 1, 88. Oth. V, 2, 338. I, 78. Oth. I, 3, 52. goody, highness. Ant. II, 5, 106 3) before and after a vocative: you madcap, Gent , (see Good), your increasing in love Leonatus, Cymb. II, 5, 8. you hag you, W i v . IV, 2, 188. you miniot III, 2, 47 (subscription nnder a letter). you, Err. IV, 4,63. you puppet you, Mids. Ill, 2, 288. Used indefinitely, not with reference to the person you juggler you, H4B II, 4, 141. you candle-mim addressed, but to what is known and common: in you, 326. mistress minion you, Rom. Ill, 5, 152 (c£ these times you stand on distance, your passes, stoccaThou) etc. does, W i v . II, 1, 233. ever your fresh whore and your Used indefinitely, = one, they: in these timet powdered bawd, Meas. Ill, 2, 62. your beggar of fifty, you stand on distance, W i v . II, 1, 233. 133. IV, 2, 39. every true man's apparel fits your thief, Y * a n g , being in the first part of life, not old: 46. 47. 49. 50. your hangman is a more penitent trade Ven. 187. 260. 419. 837. 1152. Lucr. 1769. Sonn. than your bawd, 53. I will discharge it in either your 19, 4. 138, 5. Tp. II, 2, 176. Ill, 3, 92. IV, 1, 40 straw-colour beard, your orange-tawny beard etc. Mids. Gent. I, 1, 22. 47. II, 1, 24. Ill, 2, 65. IV, 2, 26. Wiv. I, 2, 95. there is not a more fearful wild-fowl than your I, 1, 40. 77. Meas. II, 3, 13. IV, 3, 4. Err. I, 1, 125 lion. III, 1, 33. 1 could munch your good dry oats, IV, Ado V, 1, 119. Merch. 1, 2, 90. A s I, 1, 57 (you art 1, 36. your chestnut was ever the only colour, A s HI, loo y. in this). 59. Shr. Ind. 2, 147 (we shall ne'er i 4, 12. all your writers do consent that ipse is he, V, 1, be —er). II, 237. All's III, 1, 17. T w . Ill, 2, 70. I 47. as your pearl in your foul oyster, V, 4, 63. 107. John I, 71 (—erborn). H 4 A I, 3, 7 (soft as y. down). your marriage comes by destiny, your cuckoo sings by H6B II, 2, 52. H6C I, 2, 1. IV, 1, 118. R3 I, 1, 153 kind, All's I, 3, 66. II, 2, 23. 32. II, 3, 31. IV, 5, Lr. I, 1, 41 etc. etc. his years but y. Gent. II, 4, 69. 107. T w . V, 23. Wint. IV, 3, 135. John I, 189. H 4 A H6A 11, 5, 107. V, 1, 21. thy y. days, L L L I, 2, 15 | II, 1, 22. 23. II, 4, 82. H4B I, 2, 187. H5 III, 2, 27. Tit. IV, 3, 91. such a y. one, Shr. II, 236. John 11, ' Cor. II, 1, 222. V, 2, 81 ( / have been blown out of 521. H8 V, 3, 180. Per. IV, 2, 144. Metaphorically: | your gates with sighs; unnecessarily corrected by some is the day so y.f Rom. I, 1, 166. in your —er enter- M. Edd.). V, 4, 12. Rom. I, 2, 52. Hml. Ill, 2, 131. prise, H 4 A V, 1, 71 (when it was in the beginning) IV, 3, 22. 24. 25. V, 1, 188. Oth. II, 3, 79. 82. 84. thus Eleanor's pride dies in her —est days, H6B IL 86. Ant. II, 7, 29 etc. 3, 46 (in the very beginning), lowliness is y. ambition i Yours, absol. poss. pron. = that or those beladder, Caes. II, 1, 22. this is yet but y. 118 111, 2, 4T longing or pertaining to y o u ; 1) with reference to (just happened), we are yet but y. in deed, Mcb. Ill ii preceding noun: my good will is to it, and yours it 4, 144 (inexperienced, raw). I is against, T p . Ill, 1, 31. his brother and yours, V, Substantively: the — er rises when the old doth fall 1 12. Gent. II, 1, 2. 89. II, 4, 124. IV, 2, 92. V, 4, 172. Lr.lll,3,26. how like a —er and a prodigal the scarfed Wiv. II, 2, 170. Meas. IV, 3, 109. 145. V, 502. Mercli. bark puts from her native bay, Merch. II, 6, 14 ( i IV, 1, 96. All's I, 3, 13. R 3 IV, 1, 89 etc. younger son; cf. S. Luke X V , 12. M. Edd. younker) 2) without reference, = your property: you are —er than she are happy mothers made, Rom. I, 2, 12. no longer yours than you yourself here live, Sonn. 13, I, 3, 69. he did in the bosom reign of y., of old, Compl 2. what's mine is yours and what is yours is mine, 128. he wooes ... both y. and old, W i v . II, 1, 118. Mens. V, 543. All s IV, 4, 29. H8 III, 2, 199. Ant. Mids. I, 1, 138. R2 111, 2, 119. V, 2, 13. Cor. Ill, 1, Ill, 4, 28. yours,yours, a courteous phrase in parting, •¿28. Per. IV, 1, 42. = offspring; applied to men: hi Hml. V, 2, 190. Peculiar expression: we are yours leaves it to be mastered by his y. Lucr. 863. to animals: in the garden, Wint. I, 2, 178 ( = we are at your

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Y a a t h , 1) early age, the part of life between service); cf. I have wounds to show you, which shall childhood and manhood: Ven. 393. 1120. Lucr. 222. be yours in private, Cor. II, 3, 83. = the persons belonging to you, your friends or Sonn. 37, 2. Pilgr. 157—165. Gent. 1, 1, 8. I, 2, 43. relations: doth turn his hate on you or yours, B3 II, 1, 3, 5. 16. 33. Ill, 1, 34. IV, 1, 45. Wiv. II, 3, 50. 1, 33. 132. as welt I tender you and all of yours, 11, III, 2, 68. Meas. I, 2, 187. I, 3, 6. 10. 11,3, 11. Ill, 4, 72. beggared yours for ever, Mcb. Ill, 1, 91. mine 1, 32. 91. IV, 4, 32. Mids. I, 1, 35. Hml. Ill, 4, 84 will now be yours, and should we shift estates, yours etc. etc. plur. — s: Caes. II, 1, 148. Per. IV, 2, 35. would be mine, Ant. V, 2, 151. — freshness, novelty: the y. of my new interest 3) with reference to a following nonn, from which here, Merch. HI, 2, 224. it is separated: in yours and my discharge, Tp. II, 1, 2) a young man: Sonn. 138, 3. Gent. II, 5, 3. II, 254. cf. in theirs and in the commons' ears, Cor. V, 6,4. 7,47. IV, 2, 58. IV, 69. 178. Wiv. IV, 2, 122 (y. 4) of yours — of you: were tome child of yours in a basket, probably a proverbial phrase). Err. V, alive, Sonn. 17, 13. gentle breath of yours my sails 418. Ado II, 1, 39. L L L II, 56. Mids. II, 1, 261. Ill, must fill, Tp. Epil. 11. some love of yours, Gent. I, 2, 2, 112. Merch. Ill, 4, 69. IV, 1, 141. IV, 2, 11; cf. 79. IV, 4, 62. Err. I, 2, 82. Cor. V, 3, 68. Hml. Ill, Cymb. V, 5, 118. All's I, 2, 19. plur. —s: H8 V, 4, 1, 93 etc. And even: advance of yours that phrase- 63. Troil. IV, 4, 78. Mcb. V, 2, 10. less hand, Compl. 225. the nameless friend of yours, 3) young people: Lucr. 1389. Gent. I, 1, 2. IV, Gent. II, 1, 111. that merry sconce of yours, Err. I, 2, 4, 165. Meas. II, 1, 243. L L L V, 1, 87. Mids. I, 1, 79. she hath that ring of yours, All's V, 3, 209. that 12. H4A II, 2, 89. H4B II, 3, 22. H5 II Chor. 1. H6B flattering tongue of yours, As IV, 1, 189. H4A III, 3, IV, 7, 36. B3 IV, 4, 392 etc. etc. 53. H6A IV, 6, 43. Caes. IV, 2, 40 etc. Y a n t h f a l , 1) young: Lucr. 1432. Sonn. 15, 7. Y i u n t l r (written in two words in O.Edd.; hence Gent. I, 3, 26. HI, 1, 41. 107. Err. V, 52. Merch. V, in B3 II, 1, 18: your self is not exempt in this; Qq 72. All's II, 3, 58. John 111, 4, 125. B2 I, 3, 83. H4A are; see Self), plur. yourselves-, 1) your own person IV, 1, 103. H4B I, 2, 163. IV, 2, 103. IV, 5, 229. or persons: 0 that you were yourself I Sonn. 13, 1. H6A V, 3, 99. V, 5, 104. H6C V, 5, 11. Troil. I, 3, then you were yourself again after yourself s decease, 230. 11,2, 113. Rom. 11, 5, 12. 111,5, 182. IV, 2,25. 7. till the judgment that yourself arise, 55, 13. how Applied to time: his y. morn, Sonn. 63, 4. y. April, answer you for yourselves? Ado IV, 2, 25. Tp. Ill, 1, Tit. Ill, 1, 18. the y. season of the year, Caes. II, 1, 57. Gent. II, 1, 148. 154. II, 4, 37. IV, 3, 7. Wiv. I, 108. 1, 320. Meas. IV, 1, 24. Err. Ill, 2, 175 L L L V, 1, 2) having the manners of youth: andy. still! Wiv. 133 etc. Ado V, 4, 11. L L L V, 2, 430. Mids. I, 1. Ill, 1, 46. 126. Ill, 1, 31. 112 I, 3, 181. H6A IV, 1, 131. V, 4, 3) pertaining to youth: quickened with y. spleen, 118. H6B IV, 7, 122. T i t II, 1, 124 etc. H6A IV, 6, 13. 2) in your own person: no longer than you your4) = of or in youth (cf. Appendix): I attended self here live, Sonn. 13, 2. 83, 6. Wiv. II, 2, 195. a y. suit, Compl. 79 (the suit of a youth), my y. H6B I, 1, 85 etc. carry your letters yourself, Gent. I, travel, Gent. IV, 1,34 (my travels made in my youth). 1,154. Meas. V,30. Err.Ill, 1,96. L L L V, 2,224 etc. thy y. wages, As II, 3, 67 (received and saved in thy 3) refl. pron.: make yourself ready, Tp. 1, 1, 27. youth), his y. hose, II, 7, 160 (worn in hi« youth). spread yourselves, Mids. I, 2, 17. Tp. I, 2, 443. Ill, whose y. spirit, in me regenerate, doth .. • lift me up, 1, 20. Meas. II, 4, 91. Ill, 1, 169. As V, 4, 144. H6A R2 I, 3, 70 (as it was in his youth). IV, 1, 115. V, 4, 91. H6B IV, 2, 193. IV, 9, 19 etc. Yravish, to ravish, to delight: Per. III Prol. 35 Emphatically: you may thank yourself, Tp. U, 1, 123. (Gower's speech). love not yourselves: away, rob one another, Tim. IV, Yalake, to Blake, to abate, to silence: now sleep 3, 447. —d hath the rout, Per. Ill Prol. 1 (Gower's speech).

Zantlppe, see Xanthippe. religion: Wint. V, 1, 107. H4B II, 4, 357. R3 111. Zany, a subordinate buffoon whose office was 7, 103. H8 11,2,25. Troil. IV, 4, 28. Tim. Ill, 3, 33. to make awkward attempts at mimicking the tricks of Synonymous to earnestness: to have defended it with the professional clown: some ylease-man, some slight any terms of z. Merch. V, 205. let not my cold words z. L L L V, 2, 463. I take these wise men, that crow sohere accuse my z. B2 1, 1, 47. ours (prayers, full) of at these set kind of fools, no better than the fools' — es, true z. and deep integrity, V, 3, 108. with tears of inT w . I, 5, 96. nocency and terms of z. H4A IV, 3, 63. Zeal, intense and eager interest or endeavour, Followed by of: under the counterfeited z. of God, ardor: faith so infringed, which such z. did swear, II4B IV, 2, 27. Usually by to: my z. to Valentine is LLL IV, 3, 146. what z., uhat fury hath inspired thee cold, Gent. II, 4, 203. intend a kind of z. both to the nowl 229. where z. strives to conUnt, and the contentsprince and Claudio, Ado II, 2, 36. 'twill make them dies in the z. of that which it presents, V, 2, 518. 519 cool in z. unto your grace, H6B 111, 1, 177. John V, (that which — him who). John II, 244. 477 (cf. Gent. 2,10. H6C V, I, 78. R3 II, 1,40 (Ff love). Tit. I, Ill, 2, 6—9). 565. Ill, 4, 150. H4A V, 4, 95. H4B V, 419. Tim. IV, 3, 523. 5, 14. H5 II, 2, 31. B3 III, 7, 20«. H8 III, 1, 63. Ill, Zealaua, fervent, eager, earnest: with such a z. 2. 456. Tim. 1, 2, 89 ( — s ) . Applied to matters of laughter, so profound, L L L V, 2, 116. upon thy cheek

Y

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Y a a t h , 1) early age, the part of life between service); cf. I have wounds to show you, which shall childhood and manhood: Ven. 393. 1120. Lucr. 222. be yours in private, Cor. II, 3, 83. = the persons belonging to you, your friends or Sonn. 37, 2. Pilgr. 157—165. Gent. 1, 1, 8. I, 2, 43. relations: doth turn his hate on you or yours, B3 II, 1, 3, 5. 16. 33. Ill, 1, 34. IV, 1, 45. Wiv. II, 3, 50. 1, 33. 132. as welt I tender you and all of yours, 11, III, 2, 68. Meas. I, 2, 187. I, 3, 6. 10. 11,3, 11. Ill, 4, 72. beggared yours for ever, Mcb. Ill, 1, 91. mine 1, 32. 91. IV, 4, 32. Mids. I, 1, 35. Hml. Ill, 4, 84 will now be yours, and should we shift estates, yours etc. etc. plur. — s: Caes. II, 1, 148. Per. IV, 2, 35. would be mine, Ant. V, 2, 151. — freshness, novelty: the y. of my new interest 3) with reference to a following nonn, from which here, Merch. HI, 2, 224. it is separated: in yours and my discharge, Tp. II, 1, 2) a young man: Sonn. 138, 3. Gent. II, 5, 3. II, 254. cf. in theirs and in the commons' ears, Cor. V, 6,4. 7,47. IV, 2, 58. IV, 69. 178. Wiv. IV, 2, 122 (y. 4) of yours — of you: were tome child of yours in a basket, probably a proverbial phrase). Err. V, alive, Sonn. 17, 13. gentle breath of yours my sails 418. Ado II, 1, 39. L L L II, 56. Mids. II, 1, 261. Ill, must fill, Tp. Epil. 11. some love of yours, Gent. I, 2, 2, 112. Merch. Ill, 4, 69. IV, 1, 141. IV, 2, 11; cf. 79. IV, 4, 62. Err. I, 2, 82. Cor. V, 3, 68. Hml. Ill, Cymb. V, 5, 118. All's I, 2, 19. plur. —s: H8 V, 4, 1, 93 etc. And even: advance of yours that phrase- 63. Troil. IV, 4, 78. Mcb. V, 2, 10. less hand, Compl. 225. the nameless friend of yours, 3) young people: Lucr. 1389. Gent. I, 1, 2. IV, Gent. II, 1, 111. that merry sconce of yours, Err. I, 2, 4, 165. Meas. II, 1, 243. L L L V, 1, 87. Mids. I, 1, 79. she hath that ring of yours, All's V, 3, 209. that 12. H4A II, 2, 89. H4B II, 3, 22. H5 II Chor. 1. H6B flattering tongue of yours, As IV, 1, 189. H4A III, 3, IV, 7, 36. B3 IV, 4, 392 etc. etc. 53. H6A IV, 6, 43. Caes. IV, 2, 40 etc. Y a n t h f a l , 1) young: Lucr. 1432. Sonn. 15, 7. Y i u n t l r (written in two words in O.Edd.; hence Gent. I, 3, 26. HI, 1, 41. 107. Err. V, 52. Merch. V, in B3 II, 1, 18: your self is not exempt in this; Qq 72. All's II, 3, 58. John 111, 4, 125. B2 I, 3, 83. H4A are; see Self), plur. yourselves-, 1) your own person IV, 1, 103. H4B I, 2, 163. IV, 2, 103. IV, 5, 229. or persons: 0 that you were yourself I Sonn. 13, 1. H6A V, 3, 99. V, 5, 104. H6C V, 5, 11. Troil. I, 3, then you were yourself again after yourself s decease, 230. 11,2, 113. Rom. 11, 5, 12. 111,5, 182. IV, 2,25. 7. till the judgment that yourself arise, 55, 13. how Applied to time: his y. morn, Sonn. 63, 4. y. April, answer you for yourselves? Ado IV, 2, 25. Tp. Ill, 1, Tit. Ill, 1, 18. the y. season of the year, Caes. II, 1, 57. Gent. II, 1, 148. 154. II, 4, 37. IV, 3, 7. Wiv. I, 108. 1, 320. Meas. IV, 1, 24. Err. Ill, 2, 175 L L L V, 1, 2) having the manners of youth: andy. still! Wiv. 133 etc. Ado V, 4, 11. L L L V, 2, 430. Mids. I, 1. Ill, 1, 46. 126. Ill, 1, 31. 112 I, 3, 181. H6A IV, 1, 131. V, 4, 3) pertaining to youth: quickened with y. spleen, 118. H6B IV, 7, 122. T i t II, 1, 124 etc. H6A IV, 6, 13. 2) in your own person: no longer than you your4) = of or in youth (cf. Appendix): I attended self here live, Sonn. 13, 2. 83, 6. Wiv. II, 2, 195. a y. suit, Compl. 79 (the suit of a youth), my y. H6B I, 1, 85 etc. carry your letters yourself, Gent. I, travel, Gent. IV, 1,34 (my travels made in my youth). 1,154. Meas. V,30. Err.Ill, 1,96. L L L V, 2,224 etc. thy y. wages, As II, 3, 67 (received and saved in thy 3) refl. pron.: make yourself ready, Tp. 1, 1, 27. youth), his y. hose, II, 7, 160 (worn in hi« youth). spread yourselves, Mids. I, 2, 17. Tp. I, 2, 443. Ill, whose y. spirit, in me regenerate, doth .. • lift me up, 1, 20. Meas. II, 4, 91. Ill, 1, 169. As V, 4, 144. H6A R2 I, 3, 70 (as it was in his youth). IV, 1, 115. V, 4, 91. H6B IV, 2, 193. IV, 9, 19 etc. Yravish, to ravish, to delight: Per. III Prol. 35 Emphatically: you may thank yourself, Tp. U, 1, 123. (Gower's speech). love not yourselves: away, rob one another, Tim. IV, Yalake, to Blake, to abate, to silence: now sleep 3, 447. —d hath the rout, Per. Ill Prol. 1 (Gower's speech).

Zantlppe, see Xanthippe. religion: Wint. V, 1, 107. H4B II, 4, 357. R3 111. Zany, a subordinate buffoon whose office was 7, 103. H8 11,2,25. Troil. IV, 4, 28. Tim. Ill, 3, 33. to make awkward attempts at mimicking the tricks of Synonymous to earnestness: to have defended it with the professional clown: some ylease-man, some slight any terms of z. Merch. V, 205. let not my cold words z. L L L V, 2, 463. I take these wise men, that crow sohere accuse my z. B2 1, 1, 47. ours (prayers, full) of at these set kind of fools, no better than the fools' — es, true z. and deep integrity, V, 3, 108. with tears of inT w . I, 5, 96. nocency and terms of z. H4A IV, 3, 63. Zeal, intense and eager interest or endeavour, Followed by of: under the counterfeited z. of God, ardor: faith so infringed, which such z. did swear, II4B IV, 2, 27. Usually by to: my z. to Valentine is LLL IV, 3, 146. what z., uhat fury hath inspired thee cold, Gent. II, 4, 203. intend a kind of z. both to the nowl 229. where z. strives to conUnt, and the contentsprince and Claudio, Ado II, 2, 36. 'twill make them dies in the z. of that which it presents, V, 2, 518. 519 cool in z. unto your grace, H6B 111, 1, 177. John V, (that which — him who). John II, 244. 477 (cf. Gent. 2,10. H6C V, I, 78. R3 II, 1,40 (Ff love). Tit. I, Ill, 2, 6—9). 565. Ill, 4, 150. H4A V, 4, 95. H4B V, 419. Tim. IV, 3, 523. 5, 14. H5 II, 2, 31. B3 III, 7, 20«. H8 III, 1, 63. Ill, Zealaua, fervent, eager, earnest: with such a z. 2. 456. Tim. 1, 2, 89 ( — s ) . Applied to matters of laughter, so profound, L L L V, 2, 116. upon thy cheek

1410

Z

Z*dlac, the twelve signs through which the sun lay I this z. kit», John II, 19. Implying the idei of religious piety: intend a z. pilgrimage to thee, Sinn. passes: nineteen —s have gone round, Meis. I, 2, 172 27,6. whilst I from far his name with z. fervour sino- ( = yean), tke sua . . . gallops the z. in his glistering tify, All's III, 4, 11. if z. love should go in seardt of coach, Tit. II, 1, 7. Z » t , the sphere, the orbit in which the sun virtue, John II, 428. so sweet is z. contemplation, B3 moves: let them throw millions of acres on us, till our III, 7, 94. ground, singeing hit pate against the burning z., make S e c h l n , see Chequin. l e d , name of the letter Z: thou whoreson &d! Ossa like a wart, Hml. V, 1, 305. Z*M»d«, an oath contracted from God's wounds thou unnecessary letter! Lr. II, 2, 69. Zenelvphan, Armado's blunder for Penelopton: (cf. Swounds): John II, 466. Evidently thought indecent, and therefore either omitted or changed in LLL IV, 1, 67. Z e n i t h , the highest point in the visible celotial Ff: H4A I, 2, 112. 1, 3, 131 (Ff yes). II, 1, 87. II, hemisphere; metaphorically, = the highest poixt of 2, 68. II, 3, 23 (Ff by this hand). II, 4, 159. 261 (Ff one's fortune: my z. doth depend upon a most auspicious no). IV, 1,17. V, 4, 123. 156. B3 I, 4, 128 (Ff come). 149. Ill, 7, 219. V, 3, 208. Tit. IV, 2, 72 (Ff out). star, Tp. I, 2, 181. Rom. Ill, 1, 52 (Ff come). 104 (Ff what). Oth. I, Ventlpp«, see Xanthippe. Zephyr, a soft and gentle wind: as gentle as —s 1, 86. 108. II, 3, 150. 163. IV, 1, 36. V, 2, 219 (Ff cone). blowing below the violet, Cymb. IV, 2, 172.

APPENDIX.

I. Grammatical Observations. 1. C h * * | « * k l ( accent i f d l u y l l a b l e adjective« a n d participle*. In the article Complete a difference of sense is made between cdmplete and complète. There may some exist indeed, bat it would not be sufficiently proved by tbe Shakespearian instances, as it constantly coincides there with a difference of place. Tbe form cdmplete always precedes a nonn accented on the first syllable, complète is always in the predicate. Believe not that the dribbling dart of love Can pierce a cdnplete bosom. Meas. I, 3, 3. A maid of grace and cdmplete majesty, LLL I, I, 137. Than all the cdmplete armour that thou wearest. E3 IV, 4, 189. of. H6A I, 2, 83. Troil. Ill, 3, 181. IV, 1, 27. Hml. I, 4, 52. On the other hand: He is complète in feature and in mind. Gent. II, 4, 73. Is the young Dauphin every tcay complète. John II, 433. Hole many make the hour (dissyll.) full complète. H6C II, 5, 26. cf. H8 III, 2, 49. Tim. IV, 3, 244. One vene only seems to make an exception : Than ever they were fair. This man so complete. H8 I, 2, 118. But in consideration of the many metrical irregularities caused by a full stop in the middle of a verse, there can no serions difficulty be found in this seeming anomaly. A similar mistake has been committed in the article Humane. It is trae that the spelling of O. Edd. is invariably humane, never human; but it is not evident that Shakespeare invariably accented the first syllable. The passage in Wint. Ill, 2, 166 may possibly be scanned thu9: Not dd | ing it \ and being (monosyll.) | done ; hè,\ most humane; but the much more natural scansion would be: Not dding (monosyll.) | it dnd | being (monosyll.) ddne; | he, mdst \ humdne. The fact is that this is the only passage in which the word is placed after the noun; everywhere else it precedes a substantive. By holy humane law and common troth. Lucr. 571. Upon the lute doth ravish humane sense. Pilgr. 108. I have used thee, Filth as thou art, with humane care, and lodged thee. Tp. I, 2, 346.

Lie further off,in hOmane modesty. Mids.1,2,57. But touched with humane gentleness atd love. Merch. IV, 1, 25. cf the rest of the passages cited sub Humane. And thus it may be stated as a general rue, that dusyllabic oxytonical adjectives and participles tecome psroxytonical before nouns accented on the fist syllable. A few instances will snfiBce. A d v e r s e and Adverse: Though time seem so adverse and meant unfit, All's V, 1, 26. Of thy adverse pernicious enemy, B2 I, 3. 82. Thy ddverse party is thy advocate. Sonn.35, 10. He speak against me on the ddverse tide. Meas. IV, 6, 6. To admit no traffic to our ddverse towm. Err. 1. 1, 15. cf. Tw. V. 87. John II, 57. IV, 2, 172. H6A 1.1, 54. R3 IV, 4, 190. V, 3, 13. B e n i g n , only once found in Shakespeare A better prince and benign lord. Per. II ?rol. 3. C o n f i n e d and c d n f i n e d : Therefore my verse to constancy confined, Sonn. 105, 7. A god in love, to whom I am confined. 1B0, 12. whose honour ccnnot Be measured or confined. Tp. V, 122. Supposed as forfeit to a cdnfined doom. Sonn. 107, 4. The same word, trisyllabic, retains its natural accent before a subst.: Looks fearfully in the confined deep. Lr. IV, 1,77. C o n t r i v e d and c d n t r i v e d : Have you conspired, have you with these cortrived. Mids. Ill, 2, 196. By whom this great assembly is contrivei. H5 V, 2, 6. To do no cdntrived murder. Oth. I, 2, 3. C o r r u p t and c o r r u p t : If eyes corrupt by over-partial looks. Sonn. [37,5. Corrupt, corrupt, and tainted in desire. Miv. V, 5, 94. at what ease Might cdrrupt minds procure knaves as mrrilpt To swear against youf H8 V, 1, 133. D e s p i s e d and d e s p i s e d : So then lam not lame, poor, nor despised.Sonn. 37, 9. Of our despised nobility, our issues. E8 III, 2, 291.

1414

I . Grammatical Observations.

Is yond despised and ruinous man my lord? T i m . But qualijy the fire's (dissyll.) ixtreme rage. IV, 3, 465. Gent. II, 7, 22. The extreme parts of time extremely forms etc. The pangs of déspised love, the law's delay. Hml. L L L V, 2, 750. III, 1, 72. F o r l d r n and f 6 r l o r n : Trisyllabic : And ostentation of despised arms. R2 II, 3, 95. And whom she finds forldrn she doth lament. Despised substance of divinest show. R o m . Ill, Lucr. 1500. 2, 77. To some forldrn and naked hermitage, L L L V, D i s p é r s e d and d i s p e r s e d : 2, 805. And from the fdrlorn world his visage hide. Sonn. And not the puddle in thy sea dispérsed. Lucr. 33, 7. 658. To gather our soldiers scattered and dispérsed. Poor fdrlorn Proteus, passionate Proteus. Gent. H 6 A II, 1, 76. 1, 2, 124. 'My daughter' aud 'my wife' with clamours filled I n s a n e , undoubtedly an oxytonon, accented on The dispersed air, Lucr. 1805. first syllable in the only passage in which it occurs: D i s t i n c t and d i s t i n c t : Or have we eaten on the insane root. Mcb. 1,3,84. Likewise i n v i s e d : Two distincts, division none. P h o e n . 27. And make distinct the very breach. Troil. IV, Whereto his invised properties did tend. Compl. 5, 245. 212. To offend and judge are distinct offices. Merch M i s p l a c e d and m i s p l a c e d : II, 9, 61. And gilded honour shamefully misplaced. Sonn. 66, 5. With distinct breath and cônsigned kisses to them. Troil. IV, 4, 47. Ere I will see the crown so foul misplaced. R 3 D i s t r i c t and d i s t r a c t : 111, 2, 44. The misplaced John should entertain an hour. The fellow is distract, and so am I. Err. IV, 3 , 4 2 . J o h n III, 4, 133. Tosee thynoble uncle thus distract. T i t . IV,3,26. Misprised: Their distract parcels in combined sums. Compl. 231. You spend your passion on a misprised mood. E x i c t and é x a c t : Mids. Ill, 2, 74. O b s c u r e and d b s c u r e : 0 royal knavery! an exact commând, Hml. V, 2, 19. Round rising hillocks, brakes obscure and rough. Ven. 237. And in the most exact regdrd support. L r . 1,4,287. To set the éxact wealth of all our states. H 4 A Obscure and lowly swain, H6B IV, 1, 50. IV, 1, 46. To rib her cerecloth in the dbscure grave, Merch. II, 7, 51. 1 have with éxact view perused thee, Hector. His means of death, his dbscure funeral. Ilml. Troil. IV, 5, 232. IV, 5, 213. E x h i l e d and é x h a l e d : P r o f i n e and p r o f a n e : Let their exhaled unwhdleson.e breath make sick Lest I, too much profane, should do it wrong, the life of purity, the sûpreme fair. Lucr. 779. And be no more an éxhaled meteor. H 4 A V, 1,19. Sonn. 89, 11. E x i l e d and é x i l e d : In their so sacred paths he dares to tread In shape profane. VViv. IV, 4, 60. Both you and I ; for Romeo is exiled. Rom. Ill Which our profane hours here have stricken 2, 133. down, R2 V, 1, 25 (no exception, as hours To be exiled, and thrown etc. Cymb. V, 4, 59. is in the thesis; lection of Q q : which our 1 sue for éxiled majesty's repeal. Lucr. 640. (dissyll.) prdjane hours here have thrown 4 s calling home our éxiled friends abroad. Mcb. down). V, 8, 66. E x p i r e d and é x p i r e d : What prdfane wretch art thou ? Oth. 1, 1, 115. A pantler, not so eminent. Prdfane fellow! Cymb. To work my mind, when body's work's expired. II, 3, 129. Sonn. 27, 4. Your time's expired. Per. I, 1, 89. P r o f o u n d and p r o f o u n d : An éxpireddate, cancelled ere wellbegun. Lucr.26. In so profound abysm I throw all care. Sonn. E x p r é s s and é x p r e s s : 112, 9. Vilely compiled, profound simplicity. LLL V, To the contrary I have expréss commandment. 2, 52. Meas. II, 2, 8. From him I have expréss commandment. H 6 A I, And prdfound Solomon to tune a jig, LLL IV, 3, 168. 3, 20. Let me have your expréss opinions. H 6 A 1,4,64. There's matter in these sighs, these prdfound As bid me tell my tale in éxpress words. J o h n heaves, Hml. IV, 1, 1. IV, 2, 234. In Wint. IV, 4, 501 profound sea, because sea is in E x t r ê m e and é x t r e m e : the thesis. Savage, extrême, rude, cruel, not to trust. R e m i s s and r e m i s s : Had, having, and in guest to have, extrême. Sonn. He means, my lord, that we are too remiss. R 2 129, 4. 10. III, 2, 33. And éxtreme fear can neither fight nor fly. Lucr. The prince must thinkme lardy and remiss. Troil. 230. IV, 4, 143.

I. Grammatical Observation!. That thus ire die, while rémiss traitors sleep H6A IV, », 29. Secrire and s é c u r e : WhiUl thou liest toarm ai home, secure and safe Shr. V, 2, 151. Open the door, secure, fool-hardy king B2 V 3, 43. Upon my sicure hour thy uncle stole. Hml I 5, 61. To lip a wanton in a sicure couch, Oth. IV, 1,72. S e v e r e and Bévere: Which knows no pity, but is still sevère. Ven. 1000. 1155. With eyes sevère and beard of formal cut. As II, 7, 155. 0 just but sèvere law I Meas. II, 2, 41. It shall be with such strict and sèvere covenants H6AV, 4, 114. S i n c è r e and s i n c e r e : Bis love sincère, his thoughts immaculate. Gent II, 7, 76. Supposed sincère and holy in his thoughts. H4B

1415

0 infelt sore! crest-wounding private scart Lucr. 828. The rule may seem sufficiently established by these instances. The reader will find it throughout observed. But it must always be remembered, that the following syllable must be in the arsis, and that participles, when used as trisyllabic (as I. i. unfeigned in H6CIII, 3, 51 and 202), are out of the question. S. Adjective* substantively. Mr. Abbott in his Grammar p. 20 treats of the case when adjectives supply the place of substantives denoting a quality, as pale for paleness, bad for badness etc., bat does not touch upon the use no less contrary to modern grammar of adjectives placed by themselves with reference to single persons. At present the good signifies either that which is good, or all good people, but in Shakespeare's time it could also mean a single good man or woman. He that did betray the Best (i. e. the Redeemer) W i n t I, 2, 419. Then the bold and coward, the wise and fool, the artist and unread, the hard and soft, seem all affined and kin, Troil. I, 3, 23. What the declined is he shall as soon read in the eyes of others as feel in his own fall, III, 3, 76. 'Tit not enough to I, 1, 202. From sincere motions, by intelligence, H81,1,153. help the feeble up, but to support him after, Tim. 1, 1, Sir, in good sooth, in sincere verity. Lr. II, 2, 107. Edmund the base shall top the legitimate. Lr. I, 2, 19. The younger rises when the old doth fall, III, 3, 26. The good in conversation is still at Tarsus, Per. II S u p r è m e and s t i p r e m e : Neither suprème; how soon confusion etc. Cor. Prol. 9. There was, consequently, no occasion to question the correctness of the passage: And added III, 1, 110. The life of purity, the supreme fair, Lucr. 780. feathers to the learned s wing, Sonn. 78, 7. But as we, under heaven (monosyll.), are sipreme It is the same with the indefinite article, at least head. John III, 1, 155. before comparatives: Whiles they behold a greater than Terrene: themselves, Caes. I, 2, 209. I fear there will a worse alack, our tirrene moon come in his place, III, 2, 116. They strike a meaner Is now eclipsed. Ant. Ill, 13, 153. than myself, Ant. II, 5, 83. But no other class of adjectives and participles Oftenest the vocative is used thus (cf. the articles offer» so many and so striking proofs for this law of Fair, Gentle, Good, Sweet): Graceless, wih thou deny prosody as those with the prefix un. thy parentaget H6A V,4,14. Most mighty for thy place When, lo, tie inbacked breeder, Ml of fear. and sway, and thou most reverendfor thy stretched-out Ven. 320. life, Troil. I, 3, 60. Let it please both, thou great, and At which, like Attacked colts, they pricked their wise, to hear Ulysses epeak, 69. What hast thou done, ears. Tp. IV, 176. unnatural and unkindt Tit. V, 3, 48. How now, my 0 inbid spite I is sportful Edward cornei H6C headstrong! where have you been gaddingf Bom. IV, V, 1, 18. 2, 16. Noble and young, when thy first griefs were but My inblown flowers, new-appearing sweets. B3 a mere conceit, we sent to thee, Tim. V, 4, 13. Shaking IV, 4, 10. the bloody fingers of thy foes, most noble, in the preSome inborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's womb. R2 sence of thy corse, Caes. Ill, 1, 199. Infirm of purpose! II, 2, 10. give me the daggers, Mcb. 11,2,52. Come, high or low; Of broached mischief to the inborn times. H4A thyself and office deftly show, IV, 1, 67. High and V, 1,21. mighty, you shall know lam set naked on your kingThis precious book of love, this inbound lover. dom, Hml. IV, 7, 43. Well, my legitimate, Lr. I, 2, 19. Bom. I, 3, 87. Thou perjured, III, 2, 54. Reverend and gracious, Oth. And now have toiled their inbreathed memories. I, 3, 33. Cold in blood, to say as I said then, Ant. I, Mids. V, 74. 5, 74. No incitaste action or dishonoured step. Lr. I, The plural without the article: He did in the ge1, 231. neralbosom reign of young, of old, Compl. 128. Meaner Have inchecked theft, Tim. IV, 3, 447. than myself have had like fortune, H6C1V, 1,71. MidAnd fairy-like to pinch the unclean knight. Wiv. age and wrinkled old, Troil. II, 2, 104 (Q elders, some IV, 4, 57. M. Edd. eld). Worthier than himself here tend the saWhat incouth ill event. Lucr. 1598. vage strangeness he puts on, II, 3, 134. Help him, young To inpathed waters, undreamed shores. Wint. and old, Cor. Ill, 1, 228. Bom. 1, 3, 69. IV, 4, 578. S. Adjectives dclng the «nice *r the first For where is she so fair whose ineared womb part* *f e*mp«and naons. As the English adjective Disdains etc. Sonn. 3, 5. has no inflexion, it was formerly apt to form a looser IIow shall your houseless heads and infed sides connexion with its substantive than in other lanetc. Lr. Ill, 4, 30. guages, and, instead of expressing a quality or degree 90 Schmidt, ShakMpMr* Lexicon. I.Ed. T. II.

1416

I. Grammatical Observations.

pertaining to the latter, to be employed to limit the extent and sphere of it. Thus a bloody fire in Wiv. V, 5, 99 is not a fire that has the quality, or increases to the degree, of being bloody, but, as it were, a bloodfire, a fire in the blood. A thirsty evil in Meas. I, 2, 134, a hungry prey in H6A I, 2, 28, is an evil thirsted for, a prey hungered for. Lovers' absent hours in Oth. Ill, 4,174 = absence hours, hours of absence or separation. A fruitful prognostication in Ant. I, 2, 53 = a prognostication of fruitfulness. Their sterile curse in Caes. I, 2, 9 = curse of sterility. These instances will sufficiently explain the following passages, some of which have caused much unnecessary doubt and perplexity. Old woes, not infant sorrows, bear them mild, Lucr. 1096 ( = woes of old people). This fair child of mine shall sum my count and make my old excuse, Sonn. 2, 11 (the excuse of my being old. Hazlitt my whole excuse!). With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come, Merch. I, 1, 80 (the wrinkles of age). Who in rage forgets aged contusions and all brush of time, H6B V, 3, 3 (the contusions of age). When old time shall lead him to his end, H8 II, 1, 93. The aged wrinkles in my cheeks, Tit. Ill, 1, 7. Too early I attended a youthful suit, Compl. 79 (the suit of a youth), my youthful travel therein made me happy, Gent. IV, 1, 34 (travels made in youth). Ere we have thy youthful wages spent, As II, 3, 67 (wages earned and saved in thy youth). His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide for his shrunk shank, II, 7, 160 (worn in his youth). Blushing red no guilty instance gave, Lucr. 1511 (no sign of guilt). Thus can my love excuse the slow offence of my dull bearer, Sonn. 51, 1 (the offence of slowness). 'Gainst death and all - oblivious enmity shall you pace forth, 55, 9 (the enmity of entire oblivion). I see brass eternal slave to mortal rage, 64, 4 (the rage of mortality, i. e. of death, cf. Hml. Ill, 1, 67). You to your beauteous blessings add a curse, 84, 13 (the blessings of your beauty). What a happy title do I find, happy to have thy love, happy to die, 92, 11 ( a title to be called happy). This time removed tvas summer's time, 97, 5 (this time of being removed). Bearing the wanton burden of the prime, 7 (the burden brought forth by the wantonness of the spring). Worse essays proved thee my best of love, 110, 8 (trials made of worse lovers). The humble salve which wounded bosoms fits, 120, 12 (the salve of humility, i. e. of kindness). The just pleasure lost which is so deemed by others' seeing, 121, 3 (the pleasure of being just). Beauty slandered with a bastard shame, 127, 4 (shame, disgrace of bastardy). The wiry concord that mine ear confounds, 128, 4 (the concord of wire-strings). To this false plague are they now transferred, 137, 14 (plague of being false), doth point out thee as his triumphant prize, 151, 10 (as the prize of his victory). He did in the general bosom reign, Compl. 127 (in the hearts of all people). Which may her suffering ecstasy assuage, 69 (the ecstasy of her suffering). This deceit loses the name of craft, of disobedience, or unduteous title, Wiv. V, 5, 240 (the title or name of undutifulness). They can be meek that have no other cause, Err. II, 1, 33 (no cause to be otherwise). Which with experimental seal doth warrant the tenour of my book, Ado IV, 1,168 (the seal of experience). Preceptial medicine to rage, V, 1,24 (the medicine oi precepts; precepts as amedicine). All hid, an old infant play, LLL IV, 3, 78 (a play of

children). My virgin patent, Mids. I, 1, 80 (the patent of my virginity). Thy fair virtue, III, 1,143 (the virtue or force of thy beauty). Fish not with this melancholy bait for this fool gudgeon, Merch. I, 1, 101 (this bait of melancholy). The virgin tribute paid by howling Troy, III, 2, 56 (virgins offered as a tribute). Oppressed with two weak evils, age and hunger, As II, 7, 132 (evils of weakness). When we should submit ourselves to an unknown fear, Alls II, 3, 6 (fear of something unknown). Some great and trusty business, III, 6, 16 (a business of trust, requiring trust). Put myself into my mortal preparation, 81 (preparation for death). You need but plead your honourable privilege, IV, 5, 95 (the privilege of your rank as a lord, being addressed with the title 'your honour'). Natural rebellion done in the blaze of youth, V, 3, 6 (rebellion of nature). Leap all civil bounds, Tw. I, 4, 21 (bounds of civility or good manners). The quality of the time and quarrel might well have given us bloody argument, III, 3, 32 (a subject or cause of shedding blood). Nothing of that wonderful promise, to read him by his form, III, 4, 290 (promise of something wonderful and extraordinary). He that hears makes fearful action, John IV, 2, 191 (the gesture of fear). Ere my tongue shall wound my honour with such feeble wrong, R2 I, 1, 191 (a wrong caused by feebleness). A partial slander sought I to avoid, I, 3, 241 (reproach of partiality). To take advantage of the absent time, II, 3, 79 (the time of the king's absence). Mock not my senseless conjuration, 111,2,23 (conjuration of a senseless thing, viz the earth). Judged by subject and inferior breath, IV, 128 (the voice of subjects and inferiors). Thou takest thy last living leave, V, 1, 39 (the last in life). Hast lost thy princely privilege with vile participation, H4A III, 2, 87 (community and intercourse with vile and base companions). We come within our aweful banks again, II4B IV, 1, 176 (the banks, i.e. limits or restraints, of awe and submission). This law and female bar, H5 I, 2, 42 (exclusion of women from succession). Crammed with distressful bread, IV, 1, 287 (the bread of poverty). Solicit Henry with her wondrous praise, H6A V, 3, 190 (the praise of her wonderful qualities). The envious load that lies upon his heart, H6B III, 1, 157 (the load of envy). These hands are free from guiltless blood-shedding, IV, 7, 108 (from shedding the blood of guiltless persons). A drunken slaughter, R3 II, 1, 122 (committed in drunkenness). Our fatherless distress was left unmoaned, 11,2, 64 (our misfortune of losing our father). I wish no other speaker of my living actions, H8 IV, 2, 70 (the actions of my life). An envious fever, Troil. I, 3, 133. Such a precious loss, IV, 4, 10 (loss of a precious thing). May give you thankful sacrifice, Cor. I, 6, 9; cf. Ant. I, 2, 167. Against the hospitable canon, Cor. I, 10, 26 (the law of hospitality). Plead my successive title with your swords, Tit. I, 4 (my title to succession). Heart-sick groans, Rom. HI, 3, 72. Artificial strife lives in these touches, Tim. I, 1, 37 (emulation of art). The monstrousness of man when he looks out in an ungrateful shape, III, 2, 80 (in the shape of ingratitude). A prodigal course is like the sun's, 111, 4, 12. Filled the time with all licentious measure, V, 4 , 4 . With such familiar instances, Caes. IV, 2, 16 (signs of familiarity). This eternal blazon must not be to ears of flesh and blood, Hml. I, 5, 21 (publication of eternal things). When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,

1417

I. Grammatical Observations.

III, 1, 67 (coil or turmoil of mortal life). The wicked agazedon him, H6A I, I, 126 (furnished with gazes, prize itself buys out the laic, III, 3, 59 (the prize of i. e. gazing). Be simple- answered, for we know the wickedness). Gave you such a masterly report, IV, 7, truth, Lr. Ill, 7, 43 (furnished with a simple answer. 97 (sach a report of mastership). Mark the high noises, Qq simple answerer). Your favour is well appeared Lr. Ill, 6, 11S (the rnmonrs among the great ones). by your tongue, Cor. IV, 3, 9 (your countenance has In thy just proof, 120 (in the proof of thy justness the dne appearance, is well discernible, may well be and honesty). The main descry stands on the hourly recognized, by the help of your voice. Hanmer offtered, thought, IV, 6, 218 (the discovery of the main army Warburton appealed, Jackson apparelled etc.). Beis expected every hoar). To pluck the common bosom guiled with outward honesty, but yet defiled with inward on his side, V, 3, 49 (cf. above: Compl. 127). Confine vice, Lucr. 1544 (guilefully furnished, dressed in outyourself but in a patient list, Oth. IV, 1, 76. He comes ward honesty). And gave him what becomed love I too short of that great property which still should go might, Rom. IV, 2, 26 (furnished with that which bewith Antony, Ant. 1,1, 58 (that qnality of greatness). comes; becoming). How have I been behaved, Oth. IV, A Roman thought has struck him, I, 2, 87 (a thought 2,108 (having a behaviour). She concludes the picture of Rome). With brazen din blast you the city's ears, was belied, Lucr. 1533 (full of lies, disfigured by lies). IV, 8, 36 (din of brass instruments). Give me the pe- With fair blessed beams, Mids. Ill, 2, 392 (beneficial). nitent instrument to pick that bolt, Cymb. V, 4, 10. Such force and blessed power, IV, 1, 79. It is twice Testy wrath could never be her mild companion, Per. blessed; it blesses him that gives and him that takes, Merch. IV, 1, 186. the blest infusions that dwell in I, 1, 18 (the companion of her mildness). Hence it comes that sometimes the relation of the vegetives, Per. Ill, 2, 35. The answer is as ready as adjective and its noun seems inverted and confounded: a borrowed cap, H4B II, 2, 125 (perhaps a salutation murderous shame = shameful murder, Sonn. 9, 14; or obeisance made for the purpose of borrowing moa separable spite = a spiteful separation, 36, 6; swift ney. But we would not insist on the correctness of extremity = extreme swiftness, 51, 6; shady stealth the passage. M. Edd. borrower's). Divide me like a stealing shadow, 77, 7; living torment — painful bribed buck, Wiv. V, 5, 27 (given as a bribe. M. Edd. life, Oent. Ill, 1, 170; a credent bulk — a weighty bribe-buck. The poet maybe chose to write bribed for credit, Meas. IV, 4, 29; a good outward happiness = the sake of euphony). In despite of brooded watchful a hippy, pleasing exterior, Ado II, 3, 190; virtuous day, John III, 3, 52 (having a brood to guard, sitting property = peculiar virtue, Midi. Ill, 2, 367; brief on brood. Pope broad-eyed, Mitford broad and. Collier and plain conveniency = convenient briefness and the broad, Anon, broody). Now thy proud neck bears plainness, Merch. IV, 1, 82; aged honour = honour- half my burthened yoke, R3 IV, 4, 111 ( = burdenous, able age, Alls I, 3, 216; valiant approof= approved heavy). The caged cloister, Compl. 249 (like a cage valour, II, 5, 3; estimable wonder — admiring esti- or prison). To be commanded under Cominius, Cor. I, mation, T w . II, 1, 28; the bloodiest shame — most 1,266 (having a command). Careful hours with time's shameful bloodshed, John IV, 3, 47; fiery indignation deformed hand have written strange defeatures in my = indignant fire, IV, 1, 63; silken dalliance = dal- face, Err. V, 298 (not an ugly hand, as it is explained lying silks, H5 II Chor. 2. Ingrateful injury = in- by some, but a hand that causes deformity, spoils jurious, wicked ingratitude, Cor. II, 2,35; paly ashes beauty). And the delighted spirit to bathe in fiery floods, = ashy paleness, Rom. IV, 1,100; excellent differences Meas. Ill, 1, 121 (the spirit whose nature it is to be = different excellent qualities, Hml. V, 2,112; expert full of delight, to enjoy its existence. Variously corallowance = allowed, acknowledged expertness, Oth. rected or rather corrupted by M. Edd. The best comII, 1, 49; in negligent danger = dangerous negligence, mentary on Shakespeare's expression has been written by the Emperor Hadriauus in the verses: Animula Ant. Ill, 6, 81. One class of adjectives, derived from nonns by vagula, blandula, Hospes comesque corpora, Quae nunc means of the suffix erf, deserve particular attention, abibis in loca Paltidula, rigida, nudula, Nec ut soles as they have often been mistaken for participles and dabis jocos). Revenge the jeering and disdained conmisinterpreted accordingly. Even so sagacious a gram- tempt of this proud king, H4A I, 3, 183 (full of dismarian as Mr. Abbott speaks 'of an indefinite and dain). When I did speak of some distressed stroke, apparently not passive use of passive participles.' Oth. I, 3, 157 (full of distress. Ff distressful). Some That there are a great many words is ed, which are enchanted trifle to abuse me, Tp. V, 112 (cf. above: no participles, f. i. aged, wicked, wretched etc., there charmed). Enforced hate, instead of love's coy touch, can be no doubt. Therefore we must take heed of shall rudely tear thee, LUCT. 668 (hate armed with supposing all words in ed, which, from the existence force). The fated sky gives us free scope, Alls I, 1, of homonymous verbs, might possiblj be participles, 232 (heaven which makes or ordains the fate of man). always to be so indeed. Thus when we read in Compl. In these feared hopes, Cymb. II, 4, 6 (hopes mingled 146: my woeful self threw my affections in his charmedwith fear, if not hopes for which I am in fear). Furred power, it would be quite preposterous to say that the moss, IV, 2, 228 (fur-like). Ornament is but the guiled passive participle charmed is used here in an active shore to a most dangerous sea, Merch. Ill, 2, 97 (full sense, for charming, but charmed is in adjective de- of guile). The imprisoned absence of your liberty, Sonn. rived from the substantive chart», or from the com- 58, 6 ( = prison-like). 0 knowledge ill inhabited, As mon root of the substantive and verb, and meaning III, 3, 10 (having a bad habitation). No, misconceived! 'furnished, supplied, endowed with t charm/ Near H6A V, 4, 49 (having a wrong conception). Ofpenas this may come to the sense of chaiming, no con- sived and subdued desires the tender, Compl. 219 ( = fusion of different verbal functions las taken place. pensive, melancholy). Till each to razed oblivion yield In the same or a similar manner tht following ex- his part of thee, Sonn. 122, 7 (oblivion whose office pressions most be explained: All the uhole army stood it is to raze and obliterate all). The ravinedsalt-sea 90*

1418

I . Grammatical Observations.

shark, Mcb. IV, 1, 24 ( = ravenous). Wash atcay thy thou their slave, thou nobly base, they basely dignified, country* stained »pott, B6A III, 3, 57 (spots which Lucr. 660 (thon, though being of noble birth, shalt are stains, and to the dishonour of thy coon try). A be base etc.). Those hours... will play the tyrants ... prince should not be so loosely studied as to remember and that unfair which fairly doth excel, Sonn. 5, 4 so weak a composition, H4B II, 2, 10 (stndions, in- (fairly = by being fair or beautiful). That fresh blood clined). Two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores, which youngly thou bestowest thou mayst call thine, 11, Troil. II, 2 , 6 4 (professional). I'll strive with troubled 3 ( = when young). The best news is that we have noise, to take a nap, R 3 T, 3, 104 (I'll try in spite of safely foutd our king and company, Tp. V, 221 (in a the noise caused around me by the troubles of war. safe state; safe). Where we in all her trim freshly beQq with troubled thoughts). Playing patient sports in held our royal, good and gallant ship, 236 (in a fresh unconstrained gyves, Com pi. 242 (imposing no con- state; fresh, unimpaired, as if she were new). Puts straint). Hardy and undoubted champions, H6C V, 7, the drowsy and neglected act freshly on me, Meas. I, 2, 6 (fearless). An unpitied whipping, Meas. IV, 2, 13 175. In Belmont is a lady richly left, Merch. I, 1, 161 (pitiless). Make unprofited return, Tw. 1,4,22 (profit- (— rich). Those that she makes honest she makes very less). With the whiff and wind of his fell sword the ill-favouredly, As I, 2, 41 (ugly). In what he did prounnerved father falls, Hml. II, 2, 496 (strengthless). fess, well found, All's II, 1, 105 (found good). When Wintered garments should be lined, As HI, 2, 111 (M. you have our roses, you barely leave our thorns to prick Edd. winter-garments, cf. above: bribed buck). So rare ourselves, IV, 2, 19 (in a bare state; bare). Commend a wondered father, Tp. IV, 123 (endowed with the it strangely to some place where chance may nurse or end it, Wint. II, 3, 182 (in the situation of a stranger; faculty of performing miracles). Now these adjectives in td, too, are employed for so as not to be known there). O, thus she stood, even the kind of hypallage treated of above: As for the with such life of majesty, warm life, as now it coldly rest appealed, R21,1,142 (the rest of tbc accusation). stands, V, 3, 36. if like an ill venture it come unluckily His banished years, I, 3, 210 (the years of his banish- home, H4B V, 5, 128. You may stroke him as gently ment). Forfeit to a confined doom, Sonn. 107, 4 (to the as a puppy greyhound, II, 4, 106 ( i . e. it will be as fate of a limited existence, to death). At our more harmless to stroke him, he will be as gentle as a considered time we'll read, Hml. II, 2, 81 (a time fitter puppy). If a son that is by his father sent about merfor consideration). The dedicated words which writers chandise do sinfully miscarry upon the sea, H 5 IV, 1, use of their fair subject, Sonn. 82, 3 (words of dedi- 155 ( i n the state of sinfulness). It lies as coldly u> cation). Bring them with imagined speed unto the him as fire in a flint, Troil. Ill, 3, 257. 0 noble fellow, tranect, Merch. Ill, 4, 52 (with the speed of imagi- who sensibly outdares his senseless sword. Cor. I, 4, nation , of thought). Thus with imagined wing our 53 (though having sense and feeling). How youngly swift scene flies, H5 III Chor. 1 (with the wing of ima- he began to serve his country, II, 3, 243. You shall gination). To make you understand this in a manifested hear from me still, and never of me aught but what is effect, Meas. IV, 2, 169 (so as to effect it to be mani- like me formerly, IV, 1, 53 (in my former condition; fest, in effected manifestation). It was married chas- as I was formerly). He is your brother, lords, sensibly tity, Phoen. 61 (chastity in marriage). Vnpleasing to fed of that self blood that first gave life to you, Tit. IV, a married ear, L L L V, 2, 912 (to the ear of a married 2, 122 (as a sensible being). Lucius' banishment was man). I can interpret all her martyred signs, Tit. Ill, wrongfully, IV, 4, 76. Things unlmkily charge my 2, 36 (the signs of her martyrdom). Would from my fantasy, Coes. Ill, 3, 2 (M. Edd. unlucky). Why stands forehead wipe a perjured note, L L L IV, 3, 125 (note Macbeth thus amazedlyt Mcb. IV, 1, 126. The air of perjury). Ere she with blood had stained her stained nimbly and sweetly recommends itself unto our gentle excuse, Lucr. 1316 (the excuse of her stain, of her senses, I, 6, 2 ( = by being nimble and sweet). The defilement). Nor falls under the blow of thralled dis- funeral baked meats did coldlyfurnish forth the marriage content, Sonn. 124, 7 (discontent of thralls). To give tables, Hml. I, 2, 181 (in the state of having become our hearts united ceremony, Wiv. IV, 6, 51 (the cere- cold). He took my father grossly,fullof bread, 111,3,80. mony of union, i . e . of marriage). The valued file It will stuff his suspicion more fully, Lr. Ill, 5, 22. I. The gerund In a fiMlve teait. Such distinguishes the swift, the slow, the subtle, Mcb. Ill, 1, 95 (the catalogue of the different prices). The very expressions as that in Hamlet: the whilst this play is stream of his life ... must upon a warranted need give playing, are in use to this day. The table is serving, him a better proclamation, Meas. Ill, 2, 151 (upon the house is building, for being served, being built, or need of a warrant; when a warrant is needed). Wi- rather for in serving, in building (a-building), are very dowed wombs, Sonn. 97, 8 (wombs of widows). My common phrases. But with Shakespeare the gerund may grave is like to be my wedded bed, Rom. I, 5, 137 (my have a passive sense even when it is not in the predicate. The unbacked breeder, full of fear, jealous of bed of marriage. Qq wedding). Much rarer is the use of the participial form in catching, swiftly doth forsake him, Ven. 321 (fearing en in a similar adjectival and seemingly active sense: to be caught), to watch like one that fears robbing, Fair-spoken and well-spoken = eloquent, R 3 I, 3, Gent. II, 1, 26 (being robbed). Excuse hit. throwing 348. H8IV, 2,52. The nomination of the party written into the water, Wiv. Ill, 3, 206 and IV, 1, 5 (his having to the person written unto, L L L IV, 2, 138 (M. Edd. been thrown). That's more to me than my wetting, Tp. the nomination of the person writing). I am all forgotten, IV, 211. Not a sore, till now made sore with shooting, = forgetful, Ant. I, 3, 91. Surly borne = having a LLL IV, 2,59. This very instant disaster of his setting in the stocks, All's IV, 3, 127. more straining on for surly bearing, Troil. II, 3, 249. cf. Thoughten. 4. Aiverbi for adjectives, or, in other words, plucking back, Wint. IV, 4,476. our love durst not the adverb not expressing a manner or degree, but a come near your sight for fear of swallowing, H4A V, state and condition: «So shall these slaves be king, and 1, 64. If you mean to save yourself from whipping,

I. Grammatical Observations.

1419

HGB II, 1, 144; cf. Hml. II, 2, 556 and Per. II, 1, 93. sor Castle, elves, within and out, Wiv. V, 5, 61. The / will take order for her keeping close, R3 IV, 2, 53. Athenians both within and out that wall, Tim. IV, 1,38. Women are angels, wooing, Troil. I, 2, 312. How My East and West Indies, Wiv. I, 3, 79. Cone cut 'scaped I killing tchen I crossed you thus? Caes. IV, 3, and long tail, III, 4,47. Furred with fox and lamiskins, 150. And 'scape detecting, Hml. Ill, 2, 94. Or else Meas. Ill, 2, 9. Cannot my body or blood-sacrifice mtreat shall he suffer not thinking on, with the hobby-horse, you, H6AV, 3, 20. In Buckingham, Northampbn and 142. An instrument of this your calling back, Oth. IV, in Leicestershire, H6C IV, 8, 14. The wall-nevt and 2, 45. the water, Lr. Ill, 4, 135. Bobtail tike or trunlletail, These instances will explain the following which III,6,73. Acloset lock and key, Oth.1V, 2,22. Shrillhave much puzzled the commentators: Let his unre- tongued or low, Ant. Ill, 3,15. Treble-sinewed, htarted, ealiing crime have time to wail the abusing of his time, breathed, 111,13,178. As poisonous-tongued as funded, Lncr. 993 ( a crime for which there is no recalling, Cymb. Ill, 2, 5. The following expression ii very which cannot be made undone). By deed-achieving cnrious: Wee bride and groom = like bride and bridehonour newly named, Cor. II, 1, 190 (an honour the groom, Oth. II, 3, 180. achieving or obtaining of which lies in deeds). From 1. Zeugma a n d Syllepsis, i. e. a word ¡oined his alt-obeying breath I hear the doom of Egypt, Ant. to two other or more words, bnt having a natural Ill, 13, 77 (a voice attended by a general obeying or reference only to one. obedience). In LLL V, 2, 366: my lady in courtesy a) Zeugma of the verb: Or in the ocean drmched gives undeserving praise, which has been interpreted or in the fire, Ven. 494. Blushing red no guity inin » similar manner, undeserving may be a dative go- stance gave, nor ashy pale the fear that false heartJiave, verned by gives, cf. Bom. Ill, 5, 75. Hml. II, 2,182. Lncr. 1511. Nor Mars his sword nor war's quiJcfire taflbei and prefixes • m l t t e d . Very often, shall burn the living record of your memory, Som. 55, when two or more adverbs are placed together, the ad- 7. I had rather hear them scold than fight, Wiv. II, 1, verbial termination ly is only appended to die last: 239 ( = than see them fight). She hath directed how Feat andaffectedly enswathed, Compl. 4 8. Most strange, I shall take her from her father's house, what gdd and but yet most truly, will I speak, Meas. V, 37. Looked jewels she is furnished with, what page's suit sh hath he tad or merrilyt Err. IV, 2, 4 and H4A V, 2, 12. in readiness, Merch. II, 4, 30 ( = and has canmuHe demeaned himself rough, rude and wildly, Err. V, nicated what gold and jewels etc.). You may a well 88. Sixt and lastly, Ado V, 1, 221. I'll serve thee true forbid the mountain pines to wag their high tojs and and faithfully, LLL V» 2, 841. Most jocund, apt and to make no noise, IV, 1, 75 ( = and command ttem to willingly, Tw. V, 135. Fair and evenly, H4A III, 1, make no noise). To see him shine so brisk anb smell 103. Plain and bluntly, B6A IV, 1, 51. Secure and so sweet, H4A I, 3, 54. sweetly, H6C II, 5, 50. Look fresh and merrily, Caes. b) Zeugma of the noun: She was not, sure. Most II, 1,224. What safe and nicely 1 might well delay, sure she was. Why, my negation hath no taste oj madLr. V, 3, 144. Cold and sickly he vented them, Ant. ness. Nor mine, my lord-. Cressid was here bu now, III, 4, 7. Sow honourable and how kindly we determine Troil. V, 2, 128 ( = nor my affirmation). Yourhearts for her, V, 1, 58. will throb and weep to hear him speak, T i t V,3, 95. Sometimes the suffix is appended to the first and A sister Ibequeath you, whom no brother did ever love omitted in the last adverb: She will speak most bitterly so dearly, A n t II, 2, 152 ( = whom I love as never and strange, Meas. V, 36. SprightfuUy and bold, R2 brother loved his). She would, he will not in hen arms 1, 3, 3. Patiently and yielding, H5V, 2, 300. His grace be bound, Ven. 226 ( = she would be bound in hisarms, locks cheerfully and smooth, R3 III, 4,50. Most danger- bnt not he in hers). ously you have with him prevailed, if not most mortal to c) Syllepsis of the auxiliary verb: Ambition tannot him, Cor. V, 3, 188. Why do you speak so startingly pierce a wink beyond, but doubt discovery there, Tp.ll, and rash t Oth. Ill, 4, 79. 1, 242 ( = bnt must doubt). You must be so Do, if It is the same with inflections: I fast and prayed heed me, 220 ( = if you will heed me). My natter for their intelligence, Cymb. IV, 2, 347. Earth and and his man art both broke loose, beaten the maids i-row, sea's rich gems, Sonn. 21, 6. Nor child nor woman's and bound the doctor, Err. V, 169 ( = have batten). face, Cor. V, 3, 130. Nor near nor farther o f f , R2 III, My loyalty, which ever has and ever shall be gnwing, 2, 64. A weak and colder palate, Troil. IV, 4, 7. The H8 III, 2, 178 ( = has been\ Which I am not vorthy humble as the proudest sail, Sonn. 80, 6. The generous yet to wear: I shall assuredly, IV. 2, 92 ( = I shdl be). and gravest citizens, Meas. IV, 6, 13. To make me blest That means not, hath not, or is not to love, T»il. I, or coursedst among men, Merch. II, I, 49. Without or 3, 288. Home art gone and ta'en thy wages, Cymb. grudge or grumblings, Tp. I, 2, 249. Half sleep, half IV, 2, 261. Inversely: Many have and others oust sit waking, Mids. IV, 1, 152. It would not, therefore, be there, R2 V, 5, 27. ( = many have sat). safe to infer the existence of a substantive vail from d) Syllepsis of the preposition: From whetce at the passage in Troil. V, 8, 7: with the vail and darking pleasure thou mayst come and part, Sonn. 48,12 (where of the sun. thou mayst come and from whence thou maystpart). Prefixes thus omitted are of rarer occurrence: I will follow, more to cross that love than hete for That need to be revived and breathed in me, H4B IV, Silvia, Gent. V, 2, 55 ( = than out of hate). 1 think 1, 114. 'Tween asleep and wake, Lr. I, 2, 15. Perhaps and pray to several subjects, Meas. II, 4, 1 ( = I think also in belee'd and calmed, Oth. I, 1, 30. of and pray to). That more for praise than purpose But in two or more compound words, which have meant to kill, LLL IV, 1, 29 ( = than on pujpose). one part in common, this is more frequently appended Love and languish for his sake, Mids. II, 2,29 (=love to one only: How much in having, or without or in, him and etc.). »Secure and confident fromforeigt purTroil. Ill, 3, 97 ( = without or within). Search Wind- poses, John II, 27. Send fair play orders anamake

1420

I. Grammatical Observation«.

compromise t> arnu invasive, V, 1, 67. He cannot temperately transport his honours from where he should begin and end, Cor. II, 1, 240 ( = from where be should begin to where he should end). Be hath given up himself to the contemplation, mark and denotement of her parts and graces, Oth. II, 3, 323 (M. Edd. unnecessarily denotement for denotement). But first of all, how we may steal from hence, and for the gap that we shall make in time, from our hence-going and our return, to excuse, Cymb. Ill, 2, 65 ( = from our hencegoing to our return), cf. Caes. I, 2, 314. 8. P n l c p i t o *r a n t i c i p a t i o n , that is, an effect to be produced represented as already produced, by the insertion of an epithet: My tongue-tied Muse in manners holds her stiU, Sonn. 85,1 ( = my Muse holds her still and is tongue - tied ). To chase the ignorant fumes that mantle their clearer reason, Tp. V, 68 (their reason which by the chasing of the fumes becomes clearer). The approaching tide will shortly fill the reasonable shore that now lies foul and muddy, 81 (fill the shore and make it reasonable again. But reasonable shore may be = shore of reason). Such short-lived wits do wither as they grow, LLL II, 54 (wither, and are short-lived in consequence). Weed your better judgments of all opinion that is rank in them, As II, 7, 44 (weed your judgments and make them better". What is infirm from your sound parts shall fly, Alls II, I, 170 (what is infirm shall fly from your parts, which will become sound thereby). To break within the bloody house of life, John IV, 2, 210 (to break within the house of life, viz the body, and make it bloody, shed its blood ). The crown, which waste of idle hours hath quite thrown down, R2 111, 4, 66 (the waste of hours, which are made idle by this waste. Qq waste and idle hours). The strand whereon the imperious flood hath left a witnessed usurpation, H4B I, 1, 62 (a usurpation which may be witnessed in consequence). Here shall they make their ransom on the sand, or with their blood stain this discoloured shore, H6B IV, 1, 11 (which thus will become discoloured). Flaky darkness breaks within the east, R3 V, 3, 86 (breaks and becomes flaky). I'ld make a quarry with thousands of these quartered slaves, Cor. I, 1, 203. take our friendly senators by the hands, IV, 5, 138 ( take them by the hand and show thus that you consider them as friends). Hang his poison in the sick air, Tim. IV, 3, 109. It almost turns my dangerous nature wild, 499 (makes it wild and thns dangerous. M. Edd. mild for wild). Now breathless wrong shall sit and pant in your great chairs of ease, V, 4,^10. The air nimbly and sweetly recommends itself unto our gentle senses, Mcb. I, 6, 3 (senses made gentle by its touch and influence. Becket gentle unto our sense; Warburton general sense). Ère human statute purged the gentle weal, III, 4, 76 (the body politic, which became gentle by law. Theobald general, Seymour ungentle for gentle). The glow-worm shows the matin to be near and 'gins to pale his uneffectualfire, Hml. I, 5, 90 (the lire which becomes uneffectual, loses its brightness). The expectancy and rose of the fair state, III, 1, 160 (the state which was to be adorned by him). His silence will sit drooping, V, 1, 311 (he will sit drooping and be silent). / will piece her opulent throne with kingdoms, Ant. I, 5, 45. 'tis well for thee that... thyfreer thoughts may not fly forth of Egypt, 12. Grow, patience! and let the slinking elder, grief, untwine his

perishing root with the increasing vine, Cymb. IV, 2, 60 (let grief untwine its root from patience, in consequence of which grief will perish and patience increase). cf. I d . IV, 2, 87. » » a b l e negative. To join two negatives properly called so (as nor not, nor never etc.) and even three (nor never none, Tw. Ill, 1, 171), where one would not only have been sufficient, hot more logical, was so general a custom with all the writers of Shakespeare's time, that it could not escape the notice of grammarians (cf. negative prefixes before words of a negative sense: disannul = annul, dissever — sever; thus perhaps inextcrable = execrable in Merch. IV, I, 128). Less frequent, but no less remarkable was the duplication of negative words of another kind. Mr. Abbott adduces two instances of the verb to deny: first he denied you had in him no right, Err. IV, 2, 7; you may deny that you were not the cause, R3 I, 3, 90. Add to these the following passages, some of which have sorely tried the sagacity of critics: To mend the hurt which his unkindness marred, Ven. 478 (marred for made). Let his lack of years be no impediment to let him lack a reverend estimation, Merch. IV, 1, 162 ( = either: no motive to let him lack; or: no impediment to let him have). It is most expedient for the wise, if Don Worm, his conscience, find no impediment to the contrary, to be the trumpet of his own virtues, Ado V, 2, 87. I ne'er heard yet that any of these bolder vices wanted less impudence to gainsay what they did than to perform it first, Wint. Ill, 2, 56 (wanted less = had less). Who cannot want the thought how monstrous it was for Malcolm and for Donalbain to kill their gracious father? Mcb. Ill, 6, 8 (Hanmer you cannot want; Jenncns who cannot have; Jackson who care not, want; Keightley we cannot want). Patience herself, what goddess e'er she be, doth lesser blench at sufferance than I do, Troil. I, 1, 28 ( = does less bear up against sufferance, or does more recoil at it). Tullus Aiffidius, is he within your wallsf No, nor a man that fears you less than he, that's lesser than a little, Cor. I, 4,14 (Keightley but a man; Johnson but fears you less; Capell that fears you more). You leu know how to value her, than she to scant her duty, Lr. II, 4, 142 ( = you are apter to nndervalue her than she to scant her duty. Qq slack her duty. Hanmer scan her duty). Taking a beggar without less quality, Cymb. I, 4, 23 (Rowe without more quality; Jackson with doughtiless quality; Grant White with less quality; Lloyd without other quality). Lesser had been the thwartings of your dispositions, if you had not showed them how ye were disposed ere they lacked power to cross you, Cor. HI, 2, 23 (but this passage admits of another interpretation). The cease of majesty dies not alone, Hml. Ill, 3, 15 ( = majesty when ceasing dies not alone); cf. this crack of your love shall grow stronger than it was before, Oth. II, 3, 330 (— this love now cracked); and: the broken rancour of your high-swoln hearts, but lately splintered, knit and joined together, must gently be preserved, R3 II, 2, 117. Such irregularities may be easily accounted for. The idea of negation was so strong in the poet's mind, that he expressed it in more than one place, unmindful of his canon that 'your four negatives make your two affirmatives' Had he taken the pains of revising and preparing his plays for the press, he would perhaps have corrected all the quoted passages. But he

I. Grammatical Observations. did not write them to be read and dwelt on by the eye, bat to be beard by a sympathetic andience. And much that would blemish the language of a logician, may well become a dramatic poet or an orator. Similar perplexity has been caused by some other passages, in which a negative seems to be wanting, as being borne in inind, though not expressed: He that hath learned no wit by nature nor art may complain of good breeding or comes of a very dull kuidred, As 111, 2, 31 (i. e. he may complain of good breeding as a thing not bestowed on him. Hanmer bad breeding; Warburton grost breeding). All out of work and cold for action, H5 I, 2, 114 (cold in as much as action did not warm them; not heated by fighting. Some M. Edd. All out of work for want of action). Who almost dead for breath, had scarcely more than would make up hit metiage, Mcb. I, 5, 37. I was at point to tint for food, Cymb. Ill, 6 , 1 7 . cf. leisure in B3 V, 3, 97, and see Leisure. I t . A m b i g u i t y c a u s e d by m i n i m w t i l In t w e d i f f e r e n t senses. We do not mean to speak of intentional plays on words, in which the comical parts of the dramas abound, but of involuntary obscurities caused by the confnsion of different significations of the same word. Fast used in the senses swiftly and firmly at the same time: Give my love fame faster than time wastes l\fe, Sonn. 100, 13 (a fame whose stability is greater, deserves a more emphatic predicate, than the swiftness of time). Ten times faster Venus' pigeon* fly to seed love's bonds new-made, than they are wont to keep obliged faith unforfeited, Merch. II, 6, & (their swiftness in sealing bonds is greater than their firm constancy in keeping them). O'er and o'er divides him 'twixt his unkindness and his kindness; the one he chides to heU and bids the other grow faster than thought or time, Wint. IV, 4, 565 (take a firmer root than thought or time, which are proverbially fast, that is swift). Sound = healthy, and shrill, clearsounding: so sound as things that are hollow, Meas. 1, 2, 56. he hath a heart as sound as a bell, Ado III, 2, 13. Heavy = melancholy and sleepy: though woe be heavy, yet it seldom sleeps, Lucr. 1574. State — condition in general, and high rank, pomp, power: When I have seen such interchange of state, and state itself confounded to decay, Sonn. 64, 9. Error — offence and wrong opinion: So are those errors that in thee are seen to truths translated and for true things deemed, Sonn. 96, 7. Arms = the upper limbs of the human body, and weapons: And dare avouch her beauty and her worth in other arms than hers, Troil. I, 3, 271. Reason = right and reasoning: Love hath reason, reason none, if what parts can so remain, Phoen. 47. Figure = shape, and a character denoting a number: Yet doth beauty, like a dial-hand, stealfrom his figure, Sonn. 104, 10. Spring — vernal season and source: Here stands the spring whom you have stained with mud, this goodly summer with your winter mixed, Tit. V, 2, 171. Kind = sort and benevolent: He says they can do nothing in this kind. The kinder we to give them thanks for nothing, Mids. V, 88. Open — not shut (liberal) and not confined: A hand open as day, H4B IT, 4,32. FruHful — fertile and bountiful : A hand as fruitful as the land that feeds us, H8 I, 3, 56; cf. Oth. II, 3, 347. More = in a higher degree, and greater: Excusing thy sins more tAan thy

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sins are, Sonn. 35, 8. To fear — to dread, and to be concerned about: If any fear lesser hispenon than an ill report, Cor. I, 6, 69. To keep = to retan, and to cause to be: To keep her still and men in ate, Per. Prol. 36 (to retain her and to keep men in are, i. e. to deter snitors). To undo - to ruin and to intie: to bind me or undo me, Ado V, 4, 20. For — on account of and to the advantage of: Thus by day my bubs, by night my mind, for thee and for myself no qiset find, Sonn. 27, 14. Late = after the expected tine, and lately: I did give that life which she too early and too late hath spilled, Lucr.1801 ( = too lately; anl nevertheless opposed to too early). O boy, thy fatter gave thee life too soon, and hath bereft thee of th$ Kfe too late, H6C II, 5, 92 ( a mnch controverted passage. In fact, there is no real antithesis between soon and late, for both words are employed in another sense than that in which they form contraries: thf father gave thee life too readily, too rashly, and bereft thee of it too lately. A similar antithesis, not in rose, but in words, see B3 I, 2, 120: thou art the catse and most accurst effect. Cause and effect being landing contraries, the poet opposed them to each o i e r also in a sense in which they are rather synonyms: author or contriver, and executor). Particular notice mnst be taken of the cistom of Shakespeare of abstracting nouns from pieceding verbs, and inversely: They that have power tohurt and will do none, Sonn. 94, 1 ( = will do no hurt). If thou dost love fair Hero, cherish it, Ado 1, 1, 310 (cherish the love). You are loved, sir; they fiat least lend it you shall lack you first, All's I, 2, 68 ( = they that least lend you love, i . e . love yon). The king loves you; beware you lose it not, H8 III, 1,172. As much as child e'er loved, or father found, Lr. I, 1, 60 (found love). Yet longest, but in a fainter hnd: O, not like me, for mine's beyond beyond, Cymb. Ill, 2, 56 (my longing is beyond extremity). The codpiece that will house before the head has any, Lr. HI, 2,27 (any bouse). And bid me, when my fate would have me wive, to give it her, Oth. Ill,4,64 (to give it ny wife). For doing lam past, as I will by thee, All's II, 3,246 (as I will pass by thee). Love loving not inelf none other can, B2 V, 3, 88 (can love none else). That bill which was like, and had indeed against us passed, H5 1,1,3 (was like, or likely, to pass). You were as flowers, now withered: even so these herblets shall, Cymb. IV, 2, 286. Sometimes one noun is implied by another: Who are the late commissioners? lone, my lord: ytur highness bade me ask for it to-day, H5 II, 2, 61 (ask for the commission). Of ashy semblance, meagre, pale and bloodless, being all descended to the labourng heart, H6B HI, 2, 162 (the blood being all descended). No lesser of her honour confident than I did truly find her, Cymb. V, 5, 187 (than I found her truly honest or honourable}. 11. T h e A b s t r a c t f a r t h e C e n e r e t e . The kind of metonymy called Abstractam pro Concrete is common to all languages and scarcely to be mmbered among the peculiarities of poetical license, but no poet has been nearly so bold in it as Shakeq>eare. Adversity = loathsome fellow: well sail, adversity, Troil. V, 1, 14. Admiration — admirable, wonderful perwn: bring in the admiration, Alls II, 1, 91.

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I. Grammatical Observation«.

Affliction — afflicted, grieved woman: O fair Feasts - feasters: feasts are too proud to give affliction, peace! John III, 4, 36. thanks to the gods, Tim. I, 2, 62. Age — old man: age, thou hast hit thy labour, Filth = that which, or one who, is filthy and deWint. IV, 4, 787. pity not honoured age for hit grey based : filths savour but themselves, Lr. IV, 2, 39. filth, beard, Tim. IT, 3, 111. cf. let me embrace thine age, thou liest, Oth. V, 2, 231. Tp. V, 121. Gall — a rancorous person: out, gall! Troil. V, Ambition — that which is coveted by the am- 1, 40. bitions: lam still possessed of those effects for which Gaze = an object gazed on: the lovely gaxe where I did the murder, my crown, mine own ambition, and every eye doth dwelt, Sonn. 5, 2. to be the show and my queen, Hml. Ill, 3, 55. gaxe of the time, Mcb. V, 8, 24. Ancientry = old people: wronging the ancientry, Grace = a graceful person: lascivious grace,in whom stealing, fighting, Wint. Ill, 3, 63. aUiU well shows, kill me withspites, Sonn. 40,13. Humour = one humorous: all the unsettled huBaseness — base fellow, or base thing: thou unconfinable baseness, Wiv. II, 2, 21. fly, damned base- mours of the land, rash, inconsiderate, fiery voluntaries, John II, 66. Romeo I humours! madman ! Rom. II, 1,7. ness, to him that worships thee, Tim. Ill, 1, 50. Blasphemy — blasphemer: now, blasphemy, that Ignorance - an ignorant or stupid person: / had swearest grace o'erboard, not an oath on shore t Tp. rather be a tick in a sheep than such a valiant ignorance, V, 218. Troil. Ill, 3, 316. fools as gross as ignorance made Charm ~~ charmer: when I am revenged upon my drunk, Oth. Ill, 3, 405. Information — informer: to whip your information, charm, Ant. IV, 12, 16. Chastity = cbastc woman: ere he wakened the Cor. IV, 6, 53. Iniquity = one iniquitous: wholesome iniquity, chastity he wounded, Cymb. II, 2, 14. Clearness = something clear: in the fountain shall have you that a man may deal withalt Per. IV, 6, 28. Illusion = phantom: stay, illusion! Hml.1,1,127. we gaze so long till the fresh taste be taken from that Joy = that which, or he who, causes delight: clearness and made a brine-pit with our bitter tears, yea, joy, our chains and our jewels, H4B II, 4, 52. Tit. Ill, 1, 128. Judgment = judge, one able to judge: he's one Conduct — that which conducts: extinguishing his conduct (a light) Lucr. 313. there is in this business of the soundest judgments in Troy, Troil. I, 2, 208. Liberty = libertine: disguised cheaters, prating more than nature was ever conduct of, T p . V, 244. Counsel - - counsellors: this land was famously I mountebanks, and many such-like liberties of sin, Err. enriched with politic grave counsel, R3 II, 3, 20. I I, 2, 102. Cruelty = cruel person -.farewell,fair cruelty, Tw. I, Life = living man: whilst I see lives, the gashes 5, 307. get thee to yond same sovereign cruelty, II, do better upon them, Mcb. V, 8, 2. 4, 83. Loveliness — lovely person: unthrifty loveliness, Damnation — sinner: ancient damnationI 0 most why dost thou spend upon thyself thy beauty's legacy t wicked fiend! Bom. Ill, 5, 235. Sonn. 4, 1. Decay = one decayed and fallen: what comfort Malice = one malignant: shruggest thou, malice f to this great decay may come shall be applied, Lr. V,3,297. Tp. I, 2, 367. Diligence -- diligent and officious servant: bravely, Mettle = a man of mettle: he was quick mettle, my diligence! Tp. V, 241. when we went to school, Caes. I, 2, 300. Divorce — that which divorces: hateful divorce of Motive = author: nor are they living who were love, — thus chides she Death, Ven. 932. 0 thou sweet the motives that you first went out, Tim. V, 4, 27. ting-killer and dear divorce 'twixt natural son and sire, Perfection = something perfect: divine perfection Tim. IV, 3 , 3 8 2 . of a woman, R3 I, 2, 75. Empire = emperor: a maid too virtuous for the Passion = one passionate, filled with the passion contempt of empire, All's III, 2, 34. of love: madman!passion, lover! Rom. II, 1, 7. Enchantment — enchanter: and you, enchantment, Perfume = a perfumed woman: hug their diseased worthy enough a herdsman, Wint. IV, 4, 445. perfumes, Tim. IV, 3, 207. Encounter = encounterer, adversary: encounters Pestilence = one infected with pestilence: a most mounted are against your peace, L L L V, 2, 82. arch heretic, a pestilence that does infect the land, H8 End - thnt which makes an end: this apoplexy V, 1, 45. will certain be his end, H4B IV, 4, 130. either of you Poverty = poor people: you houseless poverty. to be the other's end, R 3 II, 1, 15. Lr. Ill, 4, 26. Estimation = something esteemed or valued: Prudence s wiseacre: hold your tongue, good p . beggar the estimation which you prized richer than sea smatter with your gossips, Rom. Ill, 5, 172. and land, Troil. II, 2, 91. your ring may be stolen too: Quarrel perhaps = quarreller: if that quarrel, forso your brace of unprizable estimations, Cymb. I, 4, 99. tune, divorceit (greatness from the bearer, H81I,3,14. Excellence = something excellent: and she a fair Report = reporter: I have my learning from some divided excellence, J o h n II, 439. true reports that drew their swords with you, Ant. II Exchange = something given in exchange: there's 2, 47. my exchange, Lr. V, 3, 97 (a glove). Rudeness = rude fellow: Mars his idiot, do, rudeFancy = a woman in love: a reverend man to- ness, do, camel, Troil. II, 1, 58. wards this afflicted fancy Jastly drew, Pilgr. 61. Sickness — one sick: like a sickness did I loqthe Fear — a dreaded object: imagining some fear, this food, Mids IV, 1, 178 (M. Edd. like in sickness). Mids. V, 21. we will fetters put upon this fear, Hml. Silence = one silent: my gracious silence, haill Ill, 3, 25. Cor. II, 1, 192.

I. Grammatical Observations. Sin -- sinner: cardinal tint and hollow heart* I fear ye, H8 111, 1, 104. thou scarlet sin, III, 2, 255. Solidity = solid mass: yea, this solidity and compound mass, uilh tristful visage, as against the doom, is thought-sick at the act, Hml. Ill, 4, 49. Sore — a person afflicted with a sore: she whom the spital-house and ulcerous sores would cast the gorge at, Tim. IV, 3, 39. Speculation = a speculator, i. e. spy: servants, which are to France the spies and speculations intelligent of our state, Lr. Ill, 1, 24. Speed = speeder, assistant: Saint Nicholas be thy speed, G e n t 111, 1, 301. Hercules be thy speed, As I, 2, 222. Tenderness = one yet of tender age: go, tenderness of years, L L L 111, 4. Untruth = one faithless: O false Cressid! let all untruths stand by thy stained name, and ihey'U seem glorious, Troil. V, 2, 179. Valour = one valiant, a brave: and at this sport Sir Valour dies, Troil. I, 3, 176. Virtue — a virtuous person: grant that, my poor virtue, H4B II, 4, 51. holy men I thought ye, two reverend cardinal virtues, H8 III, ], 103. Wrong =• wronger: to rouse his wrongs and chase them to the bay, B2 II, 3, 128. now breathless wrong shall sit and pant in your great chairs of ease, Tim. V, 4, 10. 19. The Concrete far t h e Abstract, or rather a thing or person designated instead of the prominent quality inherent in them: Our people begin to throw Pompey the Great and all his dignities upon his son, Ant. I, 2, 195 (all the glorious and endearing ideas associated with the name of Pompey). Bis complexion is perfect gallows, Tp. I, 1, 32 (he has a hanging look). To take the indisposed and sickly fit for the sound man, Lr. II, 4, 113 (for that which is natural to him in a good state of health). He echoes me, as if there were some monster in his thought, Oth. ill, 3, 107 ( = monstrosity). He preached pure maid, Compl. 315 (virginity and innocence). He speaks nothing but madman, Tw. I, 5, 115. 1 speak to thee plain soldier, H5 V, 2, 156. To speak parrot, Oth. II, 3, 281. Much fool may you find in you, Alls II, 4, 36. Leave those remnants of fool and feather that they got in France, H8 I, 3, 25. This is not altogether fool, Lr. I, 4, 165. They will not let me have all fool to myself, 169. IS. The w h a l e far s part. W e do not mean to speak of the figure called totnm pro parte in rhetoric (f. i. head for ear), but of a peculiarity which would perhaps have received a denomination of its own, if ithad been known to ancient rhetoricians. Shakespeare very frequently uses the name of a person or thing itself for a single particular quality or point of view to be considered, in a manner which has seduced great part of his editors into needless conjectures and emendations. How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea, whose action is no stronger than a flowerl Sonn. 65, 4 ( = no stronger than the action of a flower). Her lays were tuned like the lark, Pilgr. 198 (— the lays of the lark). He makes a July's day short as December, Wint. 1,2,169 (as a December's day). Iniquity's throat cut like a calf, H6B IV, 2, 29. And be her sense but as a monument thus in a chapel lying, Cynib. II, 2, 32

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(as the sense of a monumental statue, i. e. insereible). Holy seems the quarrel upon your grace's part, black and fearful on the opposer, Alls III, 1, 6 (Hinmer opposer's). Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanch? J o h n II, 431. Her dowry shall weigh equal with a queen, 486 ( = that of a queen ). Thou canst not, cardinal, devise a name so slight, unwortk/ and ridiculous, to charge me to an answer, as the poje, III, 1, 151 (Keightley the pope's''. Mine hair beficed on end as one distract, H6B III, 2, 318 ( = as fiat of one distract). Sleep give as soft attachment to thysenses as infants empty of all thought, Troil. IV, 2, 6 = as to those of infants). They call him Troilus, and in him erect a second hope as fairly built as Hector, IV, 5, 109 ( = as that on Hector). Prosperity be thy page, thy friend no less than those she placeth highest. Cor. I, 5, 25 (— than the friend of those). J know thesound of Marcius' tongue from every meaner man, 1,6, 27. His ascent is not by such easy degrees at thosi who, having been supple and courteous to the people, bometed into their estimation, II, 2, 29. My throat ofuar be turned into a pipe small as an eunuch, III, 2> 114. Your master's confidence was above mine, Tim.IlI, 4, 31 ( = that of mine). An eye like Mars, a statun like the herald Mercury, Hml. Ill, 4, 57. With a sit/t like Tom o' Bedlam, Lr, I, 2, 148. His life, with Mini, and all that offer to defend him, stand in assured lots, III, 6, 101 (— the lives of all). That the noble Moor ihould hazard such a place as his own second with one of an ingraft infirmity, Oth. II, 3, 144. His goodly eyei, that o'er th^files and musters of the war have glowd like plated Mars, Ant. 1, 1, 4 ( = like those of plated Mars). Where's Fulvia's processt Caesar's I would sayt bothl I, 1, 28 ( = the process of both); ci high in name and power, higher than both in blood aid life, I, 2, 197. His soldiership is twice the other twain, II, 1, 35. These instances will suffice to place amuch controverted passage in its proper light: And mercy then will breathe within your lips, like man new made, Meas. II, 2, 78, i. e. as within the lips of mai new made, redeemed and regenerated by the gnce of Heaven. 14. T n a a p e s l t l e a e r w a r d s . T o invert tie relation of notions by transferring an epithet from the agent to the object or means of acting, and, izi general, to apply to one part of a sentence what srictly belongs to another, is a liberty taken by all poets, and to trace it through every line in Shakeipeare would be a task of infinite and perhaps unprofitable labour. Bat it would be interesting to comptre to what lengths different poets have gone, and for Shakespeare especially, whose text has been subject to so much controversy, such a comparison might be a matter of some practical consequence. Here it must suffice to call the attention of others to the qmstion and to show its nature by some single ins tanas (cf. what has been said of the adjectival use of atverbs sub 4). Transposition of epithets from the subject a predicate to the object: Which happies those that piy the willing loan, Sonn. 6, 6 ( = that willing, or willngly, pay the loan). What willing ransom he will giw, H5 III, 5, 63. The thrifty hire I saved under your jather, As II, 3, 39 ( = the hire which I, being thrify, or thriftily, saved). Held a late court at Dunstabh, Ha IV, 1, 27 ( = lately held a court).

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II. Provincialisms.

Epithets of governing and governed substantives confounded: In me thou seest the twilight of such day as after sunset fadeth in the west, Sonn.73, 5 (—such a twilight of the day as etc.). Give notice to such men of sort and suit as are to meet him, Meas. IT, 4, 19 ( = to men of such sort). The manner of my pitywanting pain, Sonn. 140, 4 ( = the pity-wanting manner of my pain). My only son knows not my feeble key of untuned cares, Err. V, 310 (my untuned key of enfeebling cares). The worlds large tongue, LLL V, 2, 852 ( = the large world's tongue). With the divine forfeit of his soul upon oath, All's HI, 6, 33 ( = with the forfeit of his divine soul). ToJiU the mouth of deep defiance up, H4A III, 2, 116 ( = the deep mouth of defiance). Dear men of estimation and command in arms, IV, 4, 31 ( = men of dear estimation). Ere the glass finish the process of his sandy hour, H6A IV, 2, 36 ( = ere the sand-glass finish its hour). That I may give the local wound a name, Troil. IV, 5, 244 ( = give the wound a local name). The whole ear of Denmark is rankly abused, Hml. I, 5, 36 (the ear of all Denmark is abused). Course of direct session, Otb. I, 2, 86 ( = direct course of session). Similarly: the hope to have the present benefit which I possess, R2 II, 3, 14 ( = the benefit which I possess at present^. The manner of logical dependence changed (snbst. for adj., and adj. for sabst.): Time feeds on the rarities of nature's truth, Sonn. 60, 11 ( = the rarities of true nature). Drove the grossness of the foppery into a received belief, Wiv. V, 5, 131 ( = the gross foppery). The folded meaning of your words' deceit, Err. Ill, 2, 36 ( = of your deceitful words). Inversely: Unless this general evil they maintain, Sonn. 121, 13 ( = this generality of evil). When he most burned in heartwished luxury, Compl.314(= in the desire of luxury). Our absence to supply, Meas. I, 1, 19 ( = us in our absence*. Provided that my banishment repealed and lands restored again be freely granted, B2 III, 3, 40 ( = the repeal of my banishment and the restoration of my lands). What with our help, what with the absent king, H4A V, 1, 49 ( = the absence of the king). The strand whereon the imperious flood hath left a witnessed usurpation, H4B 1, 1,

63 (a witness, traces, of usurpation, cf. above: Prolepsis). The whole relation of ideas inverted: You've passed a hell of time, Sonn. 120, 6 (c* a time of hell). Mine eye my heart the picture's sight would bar, my heart mine eye the freedom of that right, 46, 4 (the right of that freedom). The basest weed outbraves his dignity, 94, 12 ( = outvalues its bravery). More to know did never meddle with my thoughts, Tp. I, 2, 22 ( = my thoughts never meddled with, cared for, knowing more). Our soul cannot but yield you forth to public thanks, Meas. V, 7 ( = but yield public thanks to you). Impose me to what penance your invention can lay upon my sin, Ado V, 1, 282 ( = impose to me what penance etc.). You to your former honour I bequeath, As V, 4, 192 ( = I bequeath your former hononr to you). That malignant cause wherein the honour of my dear father's gift stands chief in power, All's II, 1,114 ( = wherein the power ... stands chief in honour). Till we assign you to your days of trial, R2 V, 106 ( = assign your days of trial to you). This is the latest glory of thy praise that I, thy enemy, due thee withal, H6AIV, 2,33 (the last praise of thy glory). To wring the widow from her customed right, H6B V, 1, 188 ( = to wring her customed right from the widow. Compare stripped her from his benediction, Lr. IV, 3, 45, with: all the temporal lands would they strip from us, H5 I, 1, 11). To entailhim and his heirs unto the crown, HOC I, 1, 235. Limit each leader to his several charge, R3 V, 3, 25. To see you ta'en from liberty, H8 I, 1, 205. We must not rend our subjects from our laws, and stick them in our will, I, 2, 93. I would not wish them to a fairer death, Mcb. V, 8, 49. Every thing is sealed and done that else leans on the affair, Hml. IV, 3, 59. We wiU resign ... you to your rights, Lr. V, 3, 300. Be ever known to patience, Ant. Ill, 6, 98. A liberty so extended will easily explain how it came that put fear to valour meant the same as put valour to fear, put to him all the learnings the same as put him to all the learnings (cf. Put), and that in some cases (f. i. in the verb become) what was originally a poetical licence, in time grew so familiar as to modify and change the signification of words.

II. Provincialisms. In general it can be said that Shakespeare abstains from the use of provincial dialects as characteristic of his dramatical persons. He has, indeed, introduced people of all sorts speaking English very imperfectly, among whom his Welshmen are conspicuous in their substituting the literae tenues for the mediae, and the mediae for the tenues, omitting or confounding the aspiratae, and exchanging the sibilants one for another, but these must be called corruptions of the English language, not provincialisms. It is only on one occasion that he seems to imitate the peculiar speech of » certain district, Lr. IV, 6, 239—251. Concerning

the particular connty there referred to English scholars have been of different opinion. Stcevens pleads for Somersetshire, in the dialect of which rustics were commonly introduced by ancient writers; Collier inclines to decide in favour of the north. But in trying to settle the question, it must not be forgotten, that it is not a real peasant from a particular locality, with whom we have to do, but the disguised Edgar, who strives to conceal his true character by affected rusticity. His words are, in the spelling of Fl, as follows: Chill ( = I will) not let go Zir (Qq sir), without

III. Words and sentences taken from foreign languages. vurther (Qqom.) 'cation (Qqcagion). Good Gentleman, got your gate, and let poore volke patte : and chud (= if I should) ha' (Qq have) bin zwaggcrd zwaggar'd) out of my life, 'twould (Qq it wold or it would) not ha' bin zo (Qs to) long at 'tit (Qq om. at'tit, by a vortnight (Qìfortnight).Nay,comenotneereth' old man; keepe out,

1425

eke vor'ye (s= I warn you. Qq ckevore ye), or ice (= I shall. Qq ile) try whither (Qq whether) your Costard (Q2 cotter) or my Ballots (Qq bat) be the harder; chill ( = I will. Qa ile) be plaine with you. Chill pkke your teeth Zir (Qs sir): come, no matter vor ( Q q / o r ; your foynes.

HI. Words and sentences taken from foreign languages. 1. Creek. Misanthropos : T i m . IV, 3,53. Threnot ( a fonerai song) as superscription in Pilgr. 53, whereas threne in v. 49. Action, lection of F l in A n t III, 7, 52; later Ff and M. Edd. Actiut». cf. Epitheton. 9. Latin, a) Single words : Accommodo: Accommodated/ it comet of Accommodo, H4B III, 2, 78 (Shallow's speech). Accusativo (in the accusative case): accusativo, hung, hang, hog, Wiv. IV, 1, 49. Adtum t , = I am here' : H6B I, 4, 26. Aer ( = air), see Mollis. Aliai ( = otherwise, having also the name o f ) : Alls IV, 5, 44. Cor. II, 1, 48. Armigero for artniger (Slender's speech ; esquire) Wiv. I, 1, 10. 11. Ave, a reverential salutation: Meas. 1,1, 71. cf. Ave-Mary. Benedicite, used as an ecclesiastical salutation; in parting: Meas. II, 3, 39. in meeting: Bom. II, 3, 31. Caelo (O. Edd. celo), abl. of caelum (sky): like a jewel ix the ear of caelo, the sky, L L L IV, 2, 6 (Holofemes' speech). Candidatus ( = candidate for an office): be candidata* then, Tit. I, 185. Canit ( = dog) : Cerberus, that three-headed canti, L L L V, 2, 593 (Holofernes' poetry'. Caret ( = is wanting) : but for the elegancy, facility, and golden cadence of poesy, caret, L L L IV, 2, 127. Caveto ( = take heed, be cautions) : therefore Caveto be thy counsellor, H5 II, 3, 55 (Pistol's speech). Circum circa(round about),conjectured byM. Edd. in L L L V, 1, 72; O. Edd.: I will whip about your infamy unum cita. Coram (in presence of), taken foratitle bySlender: Wiv. I, 1, 6. Cubiculo, ablative of cubiculum (apartment): at the cubiculo, Tw. Ill, 2, 56 (Sir Toby's speech). Custalorum, corrupted from Custos Rotulorum (keeper of records): Wiv. I, 1, 7. Dives, the rich man of the parable : H6A III, 3,36. Ergo (consequently, therefore), used by the pedant Holofernes and inferior persons: Err. IV, 3, 57. L L L V, 2, 597. Merch. II, 2, 63. Shr. IV, 3, 129. All's I, 3, 53. Misapplied by Launcelot: Merch. II, 2, 59. Corrupted to argo: H6B IV, 2, 31. to argal: Hml. V, 1, 13 sq. Facere (to make): facere, at it were, replication, L L L IV, 2, 15 (Holofernes' speech). Fatuus, see Ignis.

Gallia, ancient name of Gaul and Wales; see the art. GaUia. Genitivo (in the genitive case): Wiv. IV, 1, 45. Hie hate hoc, demonstr. p r o n , Wiv. IV, 1, 43. Gen. hujut, 45. Aceus. hune hanc hoc, 49. Gen. plnr. horum harum horum, 63. Biemt (winter): L L L V, 2, 901. Homo (man): H4A II, 1, 104 Hysterica pattio (hysterics): Lr. II, 4, 57. Ignis fatuus (will o'the wisp): H4A 111,3,45. Imitari (to imitate): L L L IV, 2, 129. Imprimis (as signifying 'in the first place, firstly'): imprimis, the can fetch and carry, Gent. Ill, 1, 274. 302. imprimit, we came down a foul hill, Shr. IV, I , 68. imprimit, a loose-bodied gown, IV, 3, 135. imprimis, it it agreed, . . . . item, . . . . H6B I, 1, 43. Ipse (one's self): all your writers do content that ipse it he: now, you are not ipte, for I am hs, As V, 1, 48 (Touchstone's speech). Item (likewise; again, in enumerations): Gent. HI, 1, 277. 304 sq. L L L I, 1, 119. 130. Tw. I, 5, 265. H4A II, 4, 585. H6B 1 , 1 , 5 0 . 5 7 . H8 III, 2 , 3 2 0 . Substantively: though the catalogue of hit endowments had been tabled by hie tide and I to peruse him by items, Cymb. I, 4, 7. Lapit (stone): Wiv. IV, 1, 32. Leo-natus, etymologized in Cymb. V, 5, 445. Major, see Una. Manut (hand): L L L V, 2, 595. Mehercle (in faith): L L L IV, 2, 80. Minime (by no means): L L L III, 61. Mollis aer (soft air): Cymb. V, 5, 447. Mont (mountain): L L L V, 1, 89. Mulier (woman): Cymb. V, 5, 448. Nominativo, in the nominative case: Wiv. IV, 1, 42. 44. Ostentare (to show): L L L IV, 2, 16. Pattio, see Hysterica pattio. Pauca (few, i. e. words): Wiv. I, 1, 134. H5 II, 1, 83. pauca verba: Wiv. I, 1, 123. L L L IV, 2 , 1 7 1 . Perge (continue, go on): L L L IV, 2, 54. Pia mater ( = the brain): L L L IV, 2, 71. Tw. I, 5, 123. Troil. II, 1, 77. Praemunire, see the resp. article. Primo (firstly): Tw. V, 39. Pueritia (boyhood): L L L V, 1, 52. Pulcher (beautiful): Wiv. IV, 1, 28. Quart (wherefore): L L L V, I, 36. Quasi (as it were): L L L IV, 2, 85. Qui quae quod, relat. pron.: Wiv. IV, 1, 79.

1426

III. Words and sentences taken from foreign languages.

Qui, (who): L L L V, 1, 55. Quondam: this quondam day = the other day: LLL V, 1, 7. Quoniam (because): L L L V, 2, 596. Ratolonan, corrupted from rotuiorum, Wiv. I, 1, 8 ; see Custalorum. Sanguis (blood): L L L IV, 2, 3. Secundo (secondly): Tw. V, 39. Sin« (without), Ilertzberg's conjecture in L L L V, 1, 2 2 : to »peak dout, tine b, when he should say doubt ( 0 . and M. Edd. to speak dout, fine, when etc.). Singuiartier (in the singular number): Wiv. IV, 1,42. Solus (alone): H5 II, 1, 48. 49. 50. 51. 54. Stuprum (rape, violation): Tit. IV, 1, 78. Terra (earth): L L L IV, 2, 7. Tertio (thirdly): Tw. V, 39. Triplex (triple time): the triplex is a good tripping measure, Tw. V, 41. Unguem (the nail), in the phrase ad unguem (accurately, nicely; used as signifying at the fingers' ends): L L L V, 1, 84. Ursa major (the Greater Bear): Lr. I, 2, 141. F«r (the spring): L L L V, 2, 901. Verba, see Pauca. Verbatim (verbally, orally, by word of mouth): think not, although in writing I preferred the manner of thy vile outrageous crimes, that therefore I have forged, or am not able verbatim to rehearse the method of my pen, H6A III, 1, 13. Videlicet (viz, that is to say): Wiv. I, 1,140. L L L IV, 1, 70. As IV, 1, 97. Hml. II, 1, 61. Once used in the classical sense, = one may behold; as you see: and thus she means, videlicet, Mids. V, 330. Vocativo, in the vocative case: Wiv. IV, 1, 54. Vocatur (iscalled): neighbour vovatur nebour, LLL V, 1, 25 (Holofernes' speech). Vox (voicc): Tw. V, 304 (cf. the resp. art.). b) Phrases and sentences or verses quoted from divers authors: Ftlia mirelur vulgus, mihi flavus Apollo Pocula Caslalia plena ministret aqua; the motto of Ven. (Ovid, Amores I, 15,35, translated by Jonson in his Poetaster: Kneel hinds to trash: me let bright Phoebus swell With cups full flowing from the Muses' well). Fauste, precor gelida quando pecus omne sub umbra Ruminat, L L L IV, 2, 95 ( I pray thee, Faustus, while all our cattle are rominating in the cool shade. From the Eclogues of Baptista Spagnolus Mantuanus). Redime te captum quam queas minimo, Shr. I, 1, 167 (redeem thyself from captivity as cheaply as possible. Terence, Eunuch. I, I, 30: Quit/ agasf nisi ut te redimas captum qunm queas Minimo. The Shakespearian form of the verse is from Lilly's grammar). Hie ibat Simois, hie est Sigeia tellus; hie sleterat Priami regia celsa senis, Shr. Ill, 1, 28 (here the river Simois was running; here is the Sigeian country; here stood the high palace of old Priam. Ovid's Heroid. 1, 33). In terram Salicam mulieres ne succedant, 115 1, 2, 38 ('No woman shall succeed in Saliqne land'. Taken from Holinshed). Praeclaris»imu> filiutnoster Henricus, Rex Angliae, et Hares Franciae, V, 2, 369. Ajo te, Aeacida, Romanos vincere posse, H 6 B i, 4, 65 (the ambiguous oracle which Pyrrhus received

atDelphi before his war against theBomans; meaning as well: I say that thou mayst conquer the Romans, as: I say that the Romans may conquer thee. Ennius in Cicero, de divinatione II, 56). Tantaene animis coelestibus iraet H6B II, 1, 24 (is such resentment found in celestial minds? Virg. Aen. I, 15). Medice, te ipsum, H6B II, 1, 53 ('physician, heal thyself'; from the Vulgata; S. Luke IV, 23). Gelidus timor occupat artus, H6B IV, 1, 117 (cold fear runs through the limbs; in Virg. Aen. VII, 4 4 6 : subitus tremor occupat artus). Di faciant laudis summa sit ista tuae, H6C I, 3, 48 (the Gods grant that this be the pinnacle of thy glory. Ovid's Heroid. II, 66). Per Styga, per Manes vehor, Tit. II, 1, 135 (I am borne through the Styx, through the kingdom of the dead. From what author?). Magni dominator poli, tam lentus audis scelerat lam lentus videst Tit. IV, 1, 82 (great ruler of the skies, doest thou so tardily hear and see crimes committed? Seneca, Hippol. II, 671). Integer vitae scelerisque purus Non eget Mauri jaculis nec arcu, Tit. IV, 2, 20 (a man of spotless life and untainted with crime does not want the darts and bow of the Moor. Horace, Carm. I, 22). Terras Astraea reliquit, Tit. IV, 3, 4 (Astraea left the earth. Ovid's Metam. 1, 150). Ira furor brevis est, Tim. 1, 2, 28 (anger is a short madness. Horace, Epist. I, 2, 62). Bonum quo antiquius eo melius, Per. Prol. 9 (the good is the better for age). Lux tua vita mihi, Per. II, 2, 21 (thy light is my life). Me pompae provexit apex, 30 (Wilkins: the desire of renown drew me to this enterprise). Quod me alit,me extinguit, 33 (Wilkins: thatwhich gives me life, gives me death). Sic »pectanda fides, 38 (Wilkins: so faith is to be looked into). In hac spe vivo, 44 (Wilkins: in that hope I live). All these sentences and devices are not found in Gower. c) Popular and proverbial phrases: Respice finem, Err. IV, 4, 43 (think of the end; the last words of the well-known verse: yuidquid agis, prudenter agas, et respice finem; sometimes changed to respice funem, 'beware the rope's end'; think of the halter). Cucullus non facit monachum, Meas. V, 263. Tw. I, 5, 62 (translated in H8 111, 1, 23: 'all hoods make not monks"). Veni vidi vici, L L L IV, 1, 68 (the celebrated inscription on Caesar's trophies; translated by Don Armado: I came, saw and overcame). Cum privilegio ad imprimendum solum, Shr. IV, 4, 93; cf. cum privilegio, H8 1, 3, 34 (with exclusive copy-right). Hie jacet, All's III, 6, 66 (here lies; the nsual commencement of epitaphs). Dduculo surgere, viz taluberrimum est, Tw. II, 3, 2 ('early to rise, makes a man healthy'). Tremor cordis, Wint. I, 2, 110 (throbbing of the heart). Ecce signum, H4A II, 4, 187 (behold the token). Memento mori, H 4 A III, 3 , 3 5 (a remembrance of death). Semper idem, for obsque hoc nihii est, H4B V, 5, 30 (sentences corrupted and nonsensically quoted by Pistol).

III. Words and sentences taken from foreign languages.

1427

Non nobis, and Te Ileum, H5 IV, 8, 128; cf. H8 Don Adriano de Armado : L L L 1,1,280. IV, 1,89. IV, 1, 92 (the first words of Latin hymns). Fortuna delaguar, L L L V, 2, 533 (M. Bld. de la Quid for Quo (all English prepositions govern- guerra, which does not sufficiently suit with the coning the ablative of Latin words) in the sense of tit text. Perhaps fortuna del agua, fortune or diance of for tat: HCA V, 3, 109. the water, with allusion to the old saying, ttat swimInvitit nubibut, H6B IV, 1, 99 (in despite of the ming mast be tried ia the water; or fortuta de la clouds). guarda, Fortune of guard, i.e. guarding Fortune). In capite, I16B IV, 7, 131 (holding of the king). Paucas pallabrit, Sly's blnnder forpocat jalabras, Sancla majetlat, H6B V, 1, 5 (sacred majesty). few words, Shr. Ind. 1, 5. Fiva voce, H8 V, 4,67 (in the sense of speaking, Cattiliano vulgo, Spanish of SirToby's ownmaking, appearing in person). good enough to impose on Maria and Sir And-ew, and In limbo Patrum, H8 V, 4, 67, i. e. in confinement. very unnecessarily changed to Cattiliano volto by some Originally the place where the patriarchs of the Old M.Edd : Tw. I, 3, 45. Testament are waiting for resurrection). Figo, the fig, and the female pudenda; hence a Per te, Troil. I, 2, 15 (by one's self. cf. Nares' term of opprobrious contempt, accompaniel by an Glossary, p. 1). obscene gesture (see Fig): H5 III, 6, 60. Fki in Wiv. Suum cuique, Tit. I, 280 (to every man his dne). I, 3, 33 is Italian. Sit fat aut nefat, Tit. II, 1, 133 (with right or Malhecho (O. Edd. mallico or malicho) = nischief: with wrong). Hml. Ill, 2, 146. Et tu,Brute, Caes. Ill, 1,77 (Caesar's last words). Diablo = devil: Oth. II, 3, 160. Se offendendo, the gravedigger's blonder for te Pue per doleera hee per for ta, Per. II, 2,27 ; cordefendendo, in self-defence, Hml. V, 1, 9. rected by M. Edd. to Più por duhura que potfuerza; d) Latin apparentlv composed by the poet him- but ;>iu is no Spanish word. Perhaps the author of self: Pericles confounded Spanish and Italian, and the senHand credo, L L L IV, 2, 11 ( I do not believe). tence ought to be written Più per dolcezza chi per In via, 'in way, of explication', 14. forza (more by lenity than by force. Hertzbecg's conjecture). Bit coctus, 'twice tod", 23. 4, Italian. Via ('an adverb of encouragement". Omne bene, 33 (all well). Vir tapit qui pauca loquitur, 82 (the man is wise Florio): Wiv. II, 2, 159. L L L V, 1, 156. V, 2, 112. Merch. II, 2, 11. H5 IV, 2, 4. H6C II, 1, 18!. that speaks little). Lege, domine, 108 (read, sir). Coragio: Tp. V, 258. All's II, 5, 97. Capriccio (O. Edd. caprichio): All's II, 3, 310. Satis quod sufficit, V, 1,1 (sufficiency is enough). Ben venuta (O. Edd. bien venuto or been tenuto or Novihominem tanquam te, 10 ( I know the man as well as I know yon). bien vonuto) : LLL IV, 2, 164. Shr. I, 2, 281 Batta (enough): Shr. I, T, 203. Anne inteUigis, domine f 28 (do yon anderstand, sir?). Fico (a fig; Spanish figo): Wiv. I, 3, 38. Laut deo, bone, intelligo. Bone for bene; Pritcian Bonaroba, cf. the resp. article. a little scratched, V, 1,30.31 (Theobald's emendation Capocchia (O. Edd. chipochia), 'the feminne form for: Laut deo, bene intelligo. Bom» boon for boonpre- of capocchio, which signifie* a fool ; coaxing); applied scian; a little ecratckt. Nathaniel employs bone as the by Pandarus to Cressida' (Nares): Troil. IV,2, 33. vocative of bonus, bot Holofernes thinks it to be a Mercatante; O. Edd. marcantoni, q. v. mistake for bene). Mi perdonate ( F f me pardonato, Q mipatdinato) : Videsne qui* venitt Video et gaudeo, 33. 34 (do Shr. I, 1, 25. yon see who comes? I see and am glad). Con tutto il cuore ben trovato (O. Edd. omtutti le Bonos diet, the clown's blander for bonut diet, core bene trobaUo): Shr. I, 2, 24. good day: T w . IV, 2, 14. AUa nostra casa ben venuto, molto honorât» tignar Bona terra, mala gent, H6B IV, 7, 61 (a good mio Petruchio (O. Edd. alla nottra cata bem venuto land, a bad people). multo honorata signior Petruchio) : Shr. I, 2,15. Tanta est erga te mentis integritas, regina terenitVenetia, Venetia, chi non ti vede non ti pretta, or: tima, H8 III, 1, 40 (such is the integrity of mind Venegia, Venegia, chinontevede, non te pregia (O.Edd. towards yon, most illostrioos qneen). Vemchie, Vencha, que non te vnde, que non te perreche; Ego et rex meut, III, 2, 314 ( I and my king). or perroche; later Ff piaech. Restituted by M. Edd. Ad manet fratrvm, Tit. 1,98 (to the departed sonlB from Florio's Second Frutes) L L L IV, 2, 99 of the brothers). Pistol's motto : Si fortune me tormente, sperato m» Ad Jovem ad Apollinem, ....ad Martern, contente, H4B II, 4, 195; or: ti fortuna me tmnento, Tit. IV, 3, 53 (to Jove, to Apollo, to Mars). spera me contento, V, 5, 102, is a medley of French Hie et ubique, Hml. I, 5, 156 (here and every- and Italian, changed to pure Italian by some M. Edd., to pare French by others. where). S. Spanish. Bilbo = blade (so called from the 5. French, in the writing of the fir£ Folio. town of Bilboa): Wiv. I, 1, 165. Ill, 5, 112. Wiv. 1, 4, 47: unboyteene vert (M. Edd. ui boîtier Labrat, Pistol's blander for labiot (lips): Wiv. vert). 53: mai foy, il fait fort chando, Je mm vota le Court la grand affaires (M. Edd. ma foi, il fait fort I, 1, 166. Cavaleiro and Cavaleire, instead of Caballero: Wiv. chaud. Je m'en vait à la cour — la grande affaire). 57 : Ouy mette le au mon pocket, de-peech quitkly (M. II, 1, 201. 221. Pa labrat = senseless prattle, nonsense: Ado III, Edd. oui; mette le au mon pocket: dépêché, prickly). 65: 911s ay ie oublie (M. Edd. qu'ai-je oublié. 70: O 6, 18.

1428

I D . Words and sentences taken from foreign languages.

diable, diable. 71: La-roone (M. Edd. larron). III, 1, cornent appelle vous les pied et d« roba. Le foot Ma93: Diable! 120: sot. Y, 5, 73: Hong Soit Qui Mal- dame, et le Count. Le Foot, et le Count : O Seignieur y-Penee. 218: oongartoon (M. Edd. un garçon), oon Dieu, U sont le mots de son mauvais corruptible grosse oesant (un paysan). et impudique, et non pour le Dames de Boneur d'user, L L L I I I , 71 etc. : Lenuoy (M. Edd. Fenvoy). IV, 3, le ne voudray pronouncer ce mots devant le Seigneurs 383: alone, alone (M. Edd. allons ! allons i) cf.V, 1,159. de France, pour toute le monde, fo le foot et le Count, As I, 2, 104: Boon-iour Monsieur le Beu (M.Edd. néant moys, le reeitera un autrefoys ma leçon ensembe, bon jour, Monsieur le Beau). dBand, de Fingre, de Nayles,