251 to 260 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields
... ud </i><sc>Steevens</sc> <i>in</i> ed. 1785): “By these hands, says Dr. Johnson; <small>and rightly. But the phrase is taken from our Church catechism, ...
... ab> </tab><b>pickers and stealers</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): “<sc>Johnson</sc>: Hands. <sc>Whalley</sc>: The phrase is taken from our church cate ...
252) Commentary Note for lines 2213-18: 2213-4 Ham. I
{sir}, but while the grasse growes, the prouerbe is
| something
2214-16 musty, | <Enter one with a Recorder.> | ô the {Recorders,} <Recorder.> let mee see {one}, to withdraw with you, why
2217-8 doe you goe about to recouer the wind of mee, as if you | would driue
2218 me into a toyle?
... e sentences, under the letter G.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2216<tab> </tab><b> ...
... G.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2216<tab> </tab><b> recorders </b>] <sc>Johnson</ ...
... <hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2216<tab> </tab><b> recorders </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): 1. “one whose business is to register any events.&#x ...
... ab><b>if </b>. . .<b> vnmanerly</b>] [<sc>Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8.229): “This answer to Hamlet's questions s ...
254) Commentary Note for lines 2228-31: 2228-9 Ham.
{It is} <'Tis> as easie as lying; gouerne these ventages
|with your
{fin-} 2229-30 {gers, & the vmber} <finger and thumbe>, giue it breath with your | mouth, & it wil discourse
2230-1 most {eloquent} <excellent> musique, | looke you, these are the stops. 2230
... hanging><para>2228<tab> </tab><b>ventages</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): <sc>Johnson</sc>: The holes of a flute.”</para><hanging>v1877 ≈ v1778, ...
... ould you make of me</i>? This reading of Q1 gives an unexpected support to Dr. Johnson's conjecture <i>how unworthy a thing you would make of me.”</i></ ...
256) Commentary Note for lines 2240-43: 2240-1 <Why > do you think
<that> I am easier to be
| plaid on then a pipe, call mee what in-
2241-2 strument you wil, | though you <can> fret me {not}, you cannot play vpon me.
2242-3 God | blesse you sir.
... > </tab>God <F1BR/> blesse you sir.</para> </ehline> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2242<tab> </tab><b> ...
... sir.</para> </ehline> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2242<tab> </tab><b> fret </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ( ...
... igla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2242<tab> </tab><b> fret </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): 1. “a strait of the sea, where the water by confinem ...
... n> <cn> <sigla>2006<tab></tab><sc>ard3q2</sc></sigla> <hanging><sc>ard3q2</sc>: Johnson, Dekker and Middleton <i>analogues</i></hanging> <para>2241-2<tab> </tab ...
... etaphor 'to play upon a person' was current is demonstrated by parallels in Ben Johnson's <i>Everyman Out </i> (1599; Induction, 319) and in Thomas Dekker and T ...
... </b>] <sc>Fiebig</sc> (ed. 1857): “I.e. to the utmost stretch; or as <i>Johnson</i> explains this phrase, ‘they compel me to play the fool, till I ...
... ng> <para>2255<tab> </tab><b>bent</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): “<sc>Johnson</sc>: ‘Bent' is used by Sh. for the utmost degree of any passion o ...
... 01C;'They compel me to play the fool, till I can endure to do it no longer' (Dr Johnson). Ham.'s nerves are giving out.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1937<tab ...
... <sc>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1, john2=warb </sc></hanging><para><fnc> Johnson provides <sc>warb's</sc> annotation verbatim, even though emendation is ...
... b> </tab><sc>elze</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>elze</sc>: Murray (Boswell's Life of Johnson)</hanging><para>2267<tab> </tab><b>I will speake dagger</b>] <sc>Elze</s ...
... speake dagger</b>] <sc>Elze</sc> (ed. 1882): “Compare Boswell's Life of Johnson (Murray, 1835) IV, 132 seq.: ‘Colonel Pennington said, Garrick som ...
... m the Greek <b>[GREEK HERE]</b>.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2269<tab> </tab><b> ...
... >.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2269<tab> </tab><b> shent</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ( ...
... igla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2269<tab> </tab><b> shent</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755) To <i>shend</i>: 1. “To ruin; to spoil; to mischief.& ...
... ; xref.</hanging></cn> <cn> <sigla>1822<tab> </tab>Nares</sigla><hanging>Nares: Johnson (<i>Dict</i>.); <i>TN</i> //; Spenser , Ariosto, Tasso, Brown analogues< ...
... #x201C;To reproach, or scold; with several kindred significations. Of this word Johnson very properly says that, though by Dryden, it is now wholly obsolete. Sc ...
... b> </tab><sc>fieb</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>fieb ≈ </sc>Nares <i>minus </i>Johnson (<sc>Dict</sc>.); <i>TN</i> //; Spenser , Ariosto, Tasso, Brown analogue ...