King Jobn. 34 400 139 To give us warrant from the hand of Heaven; and on our actions set the name Ibid. 5 2 408 21 2 Henry iv. 1 2 478 1 6 ! - There is not a dangerous action can peep out his head, but I am thrust upon it - Have you enter'd your action? The wearing out of fix fashions which is four terms, or two actions So may a thousand actions, once a foot, end in one purpose Henry v. 1 2512 257 - In such business action is eloquence, and the eyes of the ignorant more learned than their ears - But his whole action grows not in the power on 't - Checks and disasters grow in the veins of actions highest rear'd - Sith every action that hath gone before, whereof we have record, bias, and thwart - As if the passage and whole carriage of this action rode on his tide - If you will make it an action, call witness to 't Ibid. 2 3 869239 Cymbeline. 2 3 904 121 - If such actions shall have passage free, bond-flaves and pagans shall our statefmen be - Yea, though our proper fon stood in your action - They have us'd their dearest action in the tented field Action-taking knave Active. He is fimply the most active gentleman in France Orbello. 1 21046250 Ibid. 1 31047235 Ibid. 1 3 1047 253 Aftor. Bring us but to this fight, and you shall say I'll prove a busy actor in their play - A shewing of a heavenly effect in an earthly actor - As if the tragedy were play'd in jest by counterfeiting actors Like a dull actor now, I have forgot my part, and am out -But bear it as our Roman actors do, with untir'd spirits, and formal -Then came each actor on his afs Acute. The gift is good in those in whom it is acute; and I am thankful for it Acutely. I am fo full of businesses, as I cannot answer thee acutely Adallas. The Thracian king, Adallas Adam. Have you got the picture of old Adam new apparell'd - Not that Adam that kept the Paradise, but that Adam that kept the prifon Ibid. 4 3 - Let him be clapp'd on the shoulder and call'd Adam Much Ado about Nothing. I 1 -'s fons are my brethren Ibid. 2 1 - Though the were endowed with all that Adam had left him before he tranfgrefs'd Adam's profeffion. Gardeners, ditchers, and grave-makers; they hold up Adam's profeffion And haft thou kill'd him fleeping?, Brave touch! Mids. Night's Dream. 3 2 185 236 Is the adder better than the eel, because his painted skin contents the eye? Taming of the Sbrew. 43 272 18 Adder. 8 Adder. And when they from thy bosom pluck a flower, guard it, I pray thee, with al lurking adder - What, art thou, like the adder, waxen deaf? be poisonous too Whose tongue more poisons than the adder's tooth It is the bright day, that brings forth the adder blue A. S. P. C.L. Richard ii. 3 2 426 228 2 Henry vi. 3 2 587 221 3 Henry vi. 1 4 608239 Julius Cafar. 2 1 746 260 Tim. of Athens. 4 3 821243 Tit. And. 2 3 838 149 As an adder, when she doth unroll to do some fatal execution - For pleasure and revenge, have ears more deaf than adders to the voice of any true decifion - Each jealous of the other, as the stung are of the adder Troilus and Creffida. 2 2 868 132 And my two school-fellows, whom I will trust, as I will adder's fang'd Adder's fork. Adders' beads and toads carbonado'd Addiction. Each man to what sport and revels his addiction leads him Winter's Tale. 4 3 352 135 Addition. Where great addition swells, and virtue none, it is a dropsied honour titled Goddess and worth it with addition This man, lady, hath robb'd many beafts of their particular additions Othello. 2 2 1054224 All's Well. 2 3 287 17 Troil. and Creffid. 1 2 859 131 I came to kill thee, cousin, and bear hence a great addition earned in thy death Ibid. 45 882 2 18 One I will beat into clamourous whining, if thou deny'st the least syllable of thy addition - They clepe us drunkards, and with swinish phrase soil our addition -The worfer, that you give me the addition whose want even kills me Addle. He esteems her no more than I esteem an addle egg - Yet thy head hath been beaten as addle as an egg, for quarrelling Address. I will then address me to my appointment Lear. 2 2 940229 Hamlet. 14100616 Orbello. 4 1 1068150 Troil. and Cref. 1 Rom. and Jul. 3 Merry Wives of Windfor. 3 Do you think he will make no deed of all this, that so seriously he doth address himself unto - A dreadful lay!-address thee instantly 2 860130 1982 11 5 64 2 19 All's Well. 3 6 294 151 601220 2 Henry vi. 5 2 - It lifted up its head, and did address itself to motion, like as it would speak Ham. 121003235 - Though that my death were adjunct to my act, by heaven I would do Admiral. Thou art our admiral, thou bearest the lanthorn in the poop it K.John. 3 3 1 Henry iv. 3 3 Admiration. Let us bury him, and not protract with admiration what is now due debt - This admiration is much o' the favour of other your new pranks Admired. Broke the good meeting with most admir'd disorder Cymbeline. 4 2 163 230 399 257. 461 248 917 129. Lear. 14 937 133 376 154 Macbeth. 3 4 Admiringly. The king very lately spoke of him admiringly, and mourningly Admittance. You are a gentleman of excellent breeding, admirable discourse, of great admittance - The Ship-tire, the tire volant, or any other tire of Venetian admittance Admits. The people will accept whom he admits Admonition. Dar'st with thy frozen admonition, make pale our cheek Ado. Let's follow, to fee the end of this ado Adorer. Though I profess myself her adorer, not her friend Adrian, Lord. D. P. Adrian. Adriane. D. P. Don Adriano de Armado. D. P. Adriatic. Were she as rough as are the swelling Adriatic feas Tam. of the Sbrew. 1 Timon of Athens. 1 Tempest. 1 I Advance. Honour me so much as to advance this jewel; accept and wear it Advantage. Make the rope of his destiny our cable for our own doth little advantage - To take an ill advantage of his absence You said, you neither lend nor borrow upon advantage Merry Wives of Windfor. 3 3 Merchant of Venice. 1 3 For where there is advantage to be given, both more and less have given him the 12 8 6118 200 19 Macbeth. 5 4 38514 K. Jobn. 3 2 399 222 1 Henry iv. 2 4 456 247 Ibid. 2 4 456253 Ibid. 3 2 4612 16 And from this swarm of fair advantages, you took occafion to be quickly woo'd Ibid. 5 1 468 124 Henry v. 3 6 524227 1 Henry vi. 4 4 562226 slay bright Ibid. 4 6 563243 Coriolanus. 4 1 726230 Julius Cæfar. 3 1754 160 Troi.and Cref. 3 3 874 2 34 Cymbeline. 4 1 914136 Hamlet. 1 2 1000 227 Othello. 1 3 1050 134 - has an eye can stamp and counterfeit advantages, though true advantage never pre sent itself - Give me advantage of some brief discourse - And, to the advantage, I, being here, took it up Advantageable. As your wisdoms best shall see advantageable for our dignity Advantaging their loan with interest of ten times double gain of happiness As You Like It. 1 2 226 2 17 - The day shall not be up so soon as I, to try the fair adventure of to-morrow Adverfly. If the drink you give me, touch my palate adversty, I make a crooked face A.S. P. C. L. Advice. How shall I doat on her with more advice that thus without advice begin to love her Did repent me after more advice My lord Bassanio, upon more advice, hath sent you this ring 2 Gent. of Verona. 24 312 17 Meas. for Meas. 5 1 102 136 Merchant of Venice. 4 2 218251 All's Well. 34 292 116 Henry v.2 2 516 130 2 Henry vi. 2 2 58112 Titus Andronicus. 2 1 837216 Twelfth Night. 4 2 328 114 Titus Andronicus. 42 847210 1939 135 You did never lack advice fo much Merchant of Venice. 2 1 202 215 Advis'd. Art thou not advis'd, he took fome care to get her cunning schoolmasters Lear. 2 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 989 131 - Who in my wrath kneel'd at my feet, and bid me be advis'd - General, be advis'd; he comes to bad intent 2 Henry iv. 1 1 47528 Henry v. 2 cb 5141 14 2 Henry vi. 24 582 2 17 Richard iii. 2 2 6452 15 Othello. 1 2 1046 150 Advisedly. My foul upon the forfeit, that your lord will never more break faith advisedly Merchant of Venice. 5 I 22129 Adulterate. The adulterate Hastings, Rivers, Vaughan, Grey, untimely smother'd in their dusky graves Richard iii. 44 659254 Adultery. Might have been accused in fornication, adultery and all uncleanness there - To attain in fuit the place of his bed, and win this ring by hers and mine adultery - Die for adultery! No. Cymbeline. 5 5 925226 Adultrefs. But be it known from him that has most cause to grieve it should be, she's an adultress Eacides. Sure Æacides was Ajax,-called so from his grandfather Tam. of the Sbrew. 3 264 149 Ediles. D. P. Coriolanus. 703 Ageon. D. P. Ægle. Midnight Dream. 2 2 1792 39 Ægypt. Melt Ægypt into Nile Ant. and Cleop. 1 5 778 143 Ægyptian Baccbanals. Shall we dance now the Ægyptian Bacchanals Ibid. 2 77812 2 Amilia. D. P. Amilia. D. P. Æmilius. D. P. Æneas Widower As did Æneas old Anchises bear, so bear I thee upon my manly shoulder - I, as Æneas, our great ancestor, did from the flames of Troy upon his the old Anchises bear, fo, from the waves of Tyber did I the tired Cæfar Dido and her Æneas shall want troops - To bid Æneas tell the tale twice o'er, how Troy was burnt Ancas. D. P. 2 Hen. vi. 5 2 J. Caf. 1 2 743 142 I Antony and Cleopatra. 4 12 795 147 That's Æneas, is not that a brave man? he's one of the flowers of Troy Ibid. 1 2 860227 True honeft men being heard, like false Æneas, were in his time, thought false - "Twas Æneas' tale to Dido Aolus. Yet Æolus would not be a murderer Cymbeline 34909247 Hamht. 22101514 2 Henry vi. 3 2 587 238 Merry W.of Windfor. 2 3 57 121 Merchant of Venice. 51 219 135 Æfon. In fuch a night, Medea gather'd the enchanted herbs that did renew old Æfon Afop. Let Æfop fable in a winter's night, his currish riddles fort not with this place Eina. I'll be thrown into Ætna, as I have been into Thames, ere I will leave her thus - Now let hot Ætna cool in Sicily Afcard. But that I am afeard 3 Henry vi. 5 5 630245 Merry W. of Winds. 35642 13 Titus And. 31 843,230 622 8 Afeard. Marry W. of Windfor. 3 4 Afeard. A conqueror, and afeard to speak! - This is a knavery of them, to make me afeard A.S. P. C. L. Love's Labour Loft. 5 2 1712/54 Mid. Night's Dream. 3 - And yet to be afeard of my deferving were but a weak disabling of myself -Then never trust me, if I be afear'd - He is afeard to come - Half afeard to come 1183 142 1 184 1,29 Merchant of Venice. 2 7 206 227 Ibid. 2 9 208 229 Taming of the Shrew. 52 275153 Ibid. 3 3 783 114 Affability. You do not use me with that affability as in difcretion you ought to use me Affair. We have lost the best half of our affair Henry v. 3 2 521224 Affairs. If I know how, or which way, to order these affairs, thus disorderly thrust into my hands - They should be good men; their affairs are righteous Richard ii. 2 2 423243 - that walk as they say spirits do at midnight, have in them a wilder nature, than Ibid. 51 696 2 39 Antony and Cleop. 36 7851 3 Coriolanus. 5 2734230 Hamlet. 1 2 1003 144 Tempest. 3 14223 Macbeth. 4 3 380250 52217 68225 Merry W. of Windfor. 2 2 I Ibid. 4 4 Much Ado About Nothing. I 1 If I affect it more, than as your honour, and as your renown No man can juftly praise, but what he does affect -'Tis policy and stratagem must do that you affect - The young affects, in me defunct Affectations. It is affectations Affected. He furely affected her for her wit - I am in all affected as yourself 124 127 1 148251 Richard ii. 1 44192 6 2 Henry iv. 4 4 500 120 Timon of Athens. 1 2 809/1/20 Titus Andronicus. 21 837259 Othello. 1 3 1049245 Merry Wives of Windfor. I I 47121 Love's Labor Loft. 1 2 151120 Taming of the Shrew, 1 1255131 - I thought the king had more affected the Duke of Albany than Cornwall - No marvel then, though he were ill affected Affetteth. The accent of his tongue affecteth him Affeting one fole throne, without afsistance Affection chains thy tender days - Would it apply well to the vehemence of your affection, that I should win what you would enjoy I heard him swear his affection Mountain of affection - She loves him with enraged affection Merry W. of Windfor. 2 2 Much Ado About Nothing. 2 1 126260 - I would have thought his spirit would have been invincible against all affaults of - If drawing my fword against the humour of affection would deliver me from the re -Witty without affection With affection wondrous fenfible he wrung Eaffanio's hand Ibid. 5 1 164142 Merchant of Venice. 2 1 202.142 Ibid. 28 207/2 12 |