4964 Pages With 'Shak'
[in All Volumes]


  151
(10) Century Dictionary, Vol. VIII, p. 6401, touch to touch (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  13 Matches

.. Touch thy instrument a strain or two.  Shak., J. C., iv. 3. 257.  I'll touch my..
..y touches ne'er touch'd earthly faces.  Shak., Sonnets, xvii.  The lines, though..
..t  Till ! and my affairs are answered.  Shak., As you Like it, ii. 7. 98.  17. T..
.. all his blood  Is touch'd corruptibly. Shak., K. John, v. 7. 2.  Thou canst not..
..all perceive them make a mutual stand.  Shak., M. of V., v. 1. 76.  What of swee..
..en.  He is touch'd  To the noble heart. Shak., W. T., ill 2. 222.  He weeps agai..
..he quarrel toucheth none but us alone.  Shak., I Hen. VI., iv. 1. 118.  These st..
..nd smell, pleased from thy table rise.  Shak., T. of A., i. 2. 132.  By touch, h..
..thy hand . . .  Unless I . . . touch'd. Shak., C. of E., ii. 2. 118.  But O, for..
..at strained touches rhetoric can lend.  Shak., Sonnets, lxxxii.  It tutors natur..
.. in these touches, livelier than life.  Shak., T. of A., i. 1.38.  The old latti..
..o fierce but knows some touch of pity.  Shak., Rich. III., i. 2. 71.  An insight..
..ch cannot brook the accent of reproof.  Shak., Rich. III., iv. 4. 157.  Bell was..

  152
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 846, cassiopeia to cast (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

.. lest they shake  themselves to pieces. Shak., Ali's Well, iv. 3.  This small pi..
..slaughter.  I made a shift to cast him. Shak., 3Iacbeth, ii. 3.  cast  Eying him..
..ate . . .  Cannot with safety cast him. Shak., Othello, i. 1.  His regiment is c..
..rags of sin," Dryden; "casted  slough," Shak., Hen. V., iv. 1.  He cast al his c..
..sea-swallow'd, though some cast again.  Shak., Tempest, ii. 1.  His filth within..
..e would appear  A pond as deep as hell. Shak., M. for M., iii. 1.  8. To form by..
..mole casts  Copp'd hills toward heaven. Shak., Pericles, i. 1.  95. To emit or g..
..The government I cast upon my brother.  Shak., Tempest, i. 2.  11. To turn; dire..
..r eyes to heaven, and pray'd devoutly.  Shak., Hen. VIII., iv. 1.  In casting hi..

  153
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 791, canine to canker-worm (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

..To kill cankers in the musk-rose buds.  Shak., M. N. D., if. 3.  3. Figuratively..
..nish the canker of ambitious thoughts.  Shak., 2 Hen. VI., i. 2.  Grief, that's ..
.., i. 2.  Grief, that's beauty's canker. Shak., Tempest, i. 2.  What is this but ..
.. this thorn, this canker, Bolingbroke.  Shak., I Hen. IV., i. 3.  He held out a ..
..I. vii. 1.  A canker'd grandame's will! Shak., K. John, if. 1.  The Governor... ..
..ody uglier grows,  So his mind cankers. Shak., Tempest, iv. 1.  2. To fret; beco..
..en with a  cankered or envenomed tooth. Shak.  canker-bloomf (kang'k6r-blSm), n...
..As the perfumed tincture of the roses.  Shak., Sonnets, liv.  canker-blossom (ka..
..ou canker-blossom !  You thief of love! Shak., M. N. D., iii. 2.  canker-dortf, ..

  154
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 734, bustle to but (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

..That she is busy, and she cannot come.  Shak., T. of the S., v. 2.  I write of m..
...  On meddling monkey, or on busy ape.  Shak., M. N. D., it. 2.  3. In constant ..
..  With busy hammers closing rivets up.  Shak., Hen. V., iv. (cho.).  The music-s..
..r employment.  To-morrow is a busy day. Shak., Rich. III., v. 3.  7t. Careful; a..
..usy giddy minds  With foreign quarrels. Shak., 2 Hen. IV., iv. 4.  All other Nat..
..as my betters are,  That led me hither. Shak., 2 Hen. IV., iv. 3.  Do but go kis..
..s were,  That were most precious to me. Shak., Macbeth, iv. 3.  I cannot but  Ap..
..ut I shall find them tractable enough.  Shak., Pericles, iv. 6.  My lord, I neit..
..an nor will deny  But that I know them. Shak., All's Well, v. 3.  ! doubt not bu..

  155
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 657, brain to braird (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

..s  will not mend his pace with beating. Shak., Hamlet, v. 1.  To have (something..
.. the skull.  There thou must brain him. Shak., Tempest, iii. 2.  When Uncas had ..
..s death . . .  That brai'd my purpose. Shak., M. for M., v. 1.  3t. To get into..
..stuff as madmen  Tongue, and brai not. Shak., Cymbeline, v. 4.  brain-bladder (..
..be brained like us, the state totters.  Shak., Tempest, iii. 2.  2. [Pp. of brai..
..ension, kills  The unseen good old man. Shak., Hamlet, iv. 1.  brainless (bran'l..
..stupid: as, "the dull brainless Ajax,"  Shak., T. and C., i. 3.  brainlesshess (..
..-pan had been cleft with a brown bill.  Shak., 2 Hen. VI., iv. 10.  I learnt mor..
..th, to think  So brainsicldy of things. Shak., Macbeth, ii. 2.  brain-sickness (..

  156
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 509, behavior to beholding (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

..nt opposition  To you and your behests. Shak., R. and J., iv. 2.  He did not pau..
..lst I thy babe chase thee afar behid.  Shak., Sonnets, cxliii.  beholding  ly a..
..rpreters  Of my behid.hand slackness.  Shak., W. T., v. 1.  Up, and all the mor..
..uitors following, and not look behind.  Shak., Othello, it. 1.  Worse things, un..
.. shalt live in this fair world behind.  Shak., Hamlet, iii. 2.  Where the bee ca..
.. lion walk'd along  Behid some hedge.  Shak., Venus and Adonis, I. 1094.  2. Fi..
..thee, see there ! behold ! look ! lo !  Shak., Macbeth, iii. 4.  3t. To feel obl..
..ke the sun, did make belolders wink ?  Shak., Rich. II., iv. 1.  beholding (bO..
..father are not fit for your beholding.  Shak., Lear, iii. 7.  beholding2 (be-h..

  157
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. I, p. 371, attaste to attendance (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  9 Matches

..  This nmn of thine attempts her love.  Shak., T. of A., i. 1.  6. To try to win..
.. He will never . . . attempt us again.  Shak., M. W. of W., iv. 2.  It made the ..
.. . undertake one of Hercules' labours.  Shak., Much Ado, ii. 1.  In what I did e..
..uggling to be free,  Art more engag'd ! Shak., Hamlet, iii. 3.  attempt (.a.-tem..
..tempt, and not the deed,  Confounds us. Shak., Macbeth, ii. 2.  By his blindness..
..ny the rarest of our ladies in  France. Shak., Cymbeline, i. 5.  attemptatet (.a..
.. as the lark  When neither is attended. Shak., M. of V., v. 1.  Their hunger thu..
..et one attend him with a silver bason.  Shak., T. of the S., Ind., i.  You shall..
..nter, attends thee  at the orchard end. Shak., T. N., iii. 4.  The trumpets, nex..

  158
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. II, p. 1654, discouragement to discover (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  8 Matches

..shall be of what colour it please  God. Shak., Much Ado, ii. 3.  His wisdom was ..
..d godlike reason  To fust in us unus'd. Shak., Hamlet, iv. 4.  Reason is her [th..
.., when I discourse of love and peace ?  Shak., T. G. of V., v. 2.  Nay, good my ..
..urse, I prithee, on this turret's top.  Shak., I Hen. YI., i. 4.  4. To reason; ..
.. at large discoursed all our fortunes.  Shak., C. of E., v. 1.  Medicines and cu..
..t will  discourse most excellent music. Shak., Hamlet, iii. 2.  3t. To talk or c..
.. several caskets to this noble prince.  Shak., M. of ., ii. 7.  The voice of th..
..warranteth by law to be thy privilege.  Shak., 1 Hen. VI., v. 4.  I find him in ..

  159
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. II, p. 1245, convey to conviction (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  8 Matches

.. of my house yesterday in  this basket. Shak., M. W. of W., iv. 2.  I saw great ..
..ll: Steal! foh; a rico for the  phrase. Shak., M. W. of W., i. 3.  7f. To manage..
..ey the business as I shall find means.  Shak., Lear, i. 2.  8f. To trace; derive..
..his lands will hardly lie in this  box. Shak., Hamlet, v. 1.  3. That by which a..
..s, and these conveyances of our blood.  Shak., Cor., v. 1.  4. The act of remov..
..ck conveyance with her good aunt Anne.  Shak., Rich. III., iv. 4.  5. A device;..
..y's death, I fear there is conveyance.  Shak., 1 Hen. VI., i. 3.  In one [pictur..
..isc thus nimbly by a true king's fall.  Shak., Rich. II., iv. 1.  conveyor (kon-..

  160
(9) Century Dictionary, Vol. II, p. 1184, confidentiality to confirmable (DjVu), (JPEG), (JPEG Popup)
  8 Matches

..ds upon the very verge  Of her confine. Shak., Lear, ii. 4.  Events that came to..
..Havock," and let slip the dogs of war.  Shak., J. C., iii. 1.  4L An inhabitant ..
..rison.  Cotfines, wards, and dungeons. Shak., Hamlet, ii. 2.  6. In geom. of -..
..Who hadst deserv'd more than a prison.  Shak., Tempest, i. 2.  Those who do conf..
..ng compared  With my confineless harms. Shak., Macbeth, iv. 3.  confirmable  con..
..p the confiners,  Andgentlemeuof Italy. Shak., Cymbeline, iv. 2.  Though gladnes..
..halt reign in quiet while thou liv'st.  Shak., 3 Hen. VI., i. 1.  3. To make cer..
.. These likelihoods confirm her flight.  Shak., T. G. of ¾., v. 2.  The news we h..
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