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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... teevens</sc> (ed. 1773): “I would receive THEOBALD's emendation, because Shakespeare uses the word <i>lunes</i> in the same sense in <i>Wiv</i>. [1918]. ...
... <i>frowsish</i>—' <i>Tully's Love</i>, by Greene, 1616. Perhaps, however, Shakespeare designed a metaphor from horned cattle, whose powers of being danger ...
... teevens</sc> (ed. 1793): “I would receive Theobald's emendation, because Shakespeare uses the word <i>lunes</i> in the same sense in <i>Wiv.</i> [4.2.21 ...
... <i>frowsish</i>—' <i>Tully's Love</i>, by Greene, 1616. Perhaps, however, Shakespeare designed a metaphor from horned cattle, whose powers of being danger ...
... He put the <i>froes</i> in, seiz'd their god—.' </small>Perhaps, however, Shakespeare designed a metaphor from horned cattle, whose powers of being danger ...
... > stands for what Claudius sees as the ‘threatening aspect' of Hamlet (<i>Shakespeare and the New Bibliography</i>, ed. Gardner, 1970, p. 103). Cf. <i>KJ ...
... defiant rebel) ‘Leave off these idle braves' (Works, 1874, i.54); and in Shakespeare (<i>Tro</i>. [4.4.137 (2532)]; <i>Shr</i>. [3.1.15 (1310)]; <i>1H6< ...
... of laying rates.” </para> <para>3. “it seems to have been used by Shakespeare for boundaries or limits.”</para></cn> <sigla>1819<tab> </ta ...
... c> (<i>in</i> Irving & Marshall, ed. 1890): “<small>Massy is used by Shakespeare in four places, ‘massive' not at all</small>.<small> </small>S ...
414) Commentary Note for line 2291:2291 Fixt on the somnet of the highest mount,... b> </tab><b>somnet</b>] <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): “Q2, F suggest that Shakespeare spelt sommet. The word was similarly misread at [1.4.70 (659)<sc>]</ ...
... C;<i>Lesser</i> would now be regarded as a barbarous corruption of <i>less</i>. Shakespeare also uses <i>littlest</i> the regular superlative of <i>little</i>. ...
... rs</sc> (ed. 1929): “an impressive, almost legal-looking, vocable, which Shakespeare may have formed, without any consciousness of particular audacity.&# ...
... eason for <i>viage</i> here, versus "voyage" elsewhere, is that Sh. wanted it. Shakespeare could have learned <i>viage</i> from the writings of Chaucer, since ...
... ee-footed</b>] <sc>Clarke & Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868, rpt. 1878): “Here Shakespeare poetically uses the word ‘fear' as personifying Hamlet, who go ...
419) Commentary Note for line 2303:2303 Behind the Arras I'le conuay my selfe... s, where the principal manufacture of such stuffs was. Dr. Johnson thought that Shakespeare had outstepped probability in supposing Falstaff to sleep behind the ...
... d. 1987): “fruits, things acquired. This sense appears to be peculiar to Shakespeare (<i>OED sb.</i> 4).”</para> </cn> <cn> <sigla>1997<tab></tab> ...
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