471 to 480 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields
... >John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3510<tab> </tab><b>Rough hew</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, <i> </i>To Roughhew): “ <i>v.a.</i> [<i>rough </i>and ...
... b>John2</sigla><hanging>John2</hanging><para>3513<tab> </tab><b>scarft</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(2nd ed. 1760, scarf): “<i>s</i>. [<i>escharfe</i>, French] ...
... <i>Scarf </i>up the tender eye of pitiful day. [<i>Mac.</i> 3.1.?(0000)] See <i>Johnson</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1826<tab> </tab>sing1</sc></sig ...
... <cn> <sigla>1869<tab> </tab><sc>tsch</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>tsch ≈ </sc>Johnson's <i>Dictionary</i> ?[a loose translation?]</hanging><para>3513<tab> </t ...
... b>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3522<tab> </tab><b>goblines</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, goblin, 1): “<i>n.s.</i> [French; <i>gobelina</i>, wh ...
... /cn> <cn><hanging>John</hanging><para>3522<tab> </tab><b>bugges</b>]<b> </b><sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, bug): “ {bugbear}. <i>n.s.</i> [It is derived by some ...
... ></hanging><para>3522 <b>With hoe such bugges and goblines in my life </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “With such causes of terrour, arising from my c ...
... others from <i>pug</i>; <i>bug</i>, in Welch, has the same meaning. <small>Dr. Johnson says. <i>Pug</i> was an old term for the devil. See <i>Puck</i>. But <i> ...
... 201D;</para> <para>[Ed: SING1 quotes JOHN1 without attributing the quotation to JOHNSON]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1832<tab> </tab>cald2</sc></sigla><hanging> ...
... tab><b>bugges and goblines</b>] <sc>Rylands</sc> (ed. 1947, Notes): “<sc>Johnson</sc> suggests that these are crimes imputed to Hamlet rather than punish ...
... gla><hanging>John : standard +</hanging><para>3523<tab> </tab><b>bated</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, bate, ): <small><b>“</b></small> <i>v.a.</i> [contrac ...
... warb +</sc></hanging><para>3531-2<tab> </tab><b>Ere </b>. . . <b>play</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765) : “In my opinion no alteration is necessary. <i> ...
... >Delius</sc> and <sc>Elze</sc>, but, with these exceptions, all the rest follow Johnson. <sc>Clarke </sc>sees herein a vivid picture of shakespeare's own mode o ...
... b>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3534<tab> </tab><b>statists</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, Statist): “<i>n.s.</i> [from <i>state</i>] A statesma ...
... ab><b>statists </b>. . . <b>faire</b>] <sc>Davies</sc> (ms. notes <i>in </i><sc>Johnson, </sc>ed. 1765): “As is the custom of our Countiers and Gentlemen ...
... tab>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3537<tab> </tab><b>yemans</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, <i>yeoman</i>, 2): “<i>n.s.</i> [Of this word theorig ...
... a she-friend. <i>A tous ses gens</i>, <i>chacun une </i> Commere. And <i>Ben Johnson</i>, in his <i>Devil's an Ass</i>, englishes the word by a <i>middling G ...
... rs a marginal mss. note on p. 549-50 on this passage from HEATH, borrowing from JOHNSON above: “The comma is the note of connection & continuity of s ...
... site sense he might put, that Peace should stand a comma between their amities. JOHNSON”</hanging></cn> <cn> <sigla>1765<sc><tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla ...
... </hanging><para><sc>3543-4<tab> </tab><b>A</b></sc><b>s . . . amities</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765):“Hanmer reads,'<i>And stand a </i> cement— ...
... mities</b>] <sc>Singer</sc> (ed. 1826): “This is oddly expressed, as <sc>Johnson </sc>observes: but the meaning appears to be, ‘Stand as a <i>comma ...
... sc> (1855, p. 229): <p. 229> “Notwithstanding the ingenuity of <sc>Johnson</sc>'s note, I take the sense of this line to be thus:—Hamlet is a ...
... old copies read, ‘stand a <i>comma </i> ‘tween their amities.' <sc>Johnson</sc> supposes that the meaning may be, ‘Stand as a <i>comma </i> , ...
... ><b>comma</b>]<sc>Collier</sc> (ed. 1858): “The <i> comma </i> (says <sc>Johnson</sc>) is the note of <i> connection </i> and continuity of sentences; th ...
... ify a she-friend. <i>A tous ses gens</i>, <i>chacun une </i>Commere. And <i>Ben Johnson</i>, in his <i>Devil's an Ass</i>, englishes the word by a <i>middling G ...
... sigla><hanging>John : standard</hanging><para>3544<tab> </tab><b>Comma</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, comma, 1): “<i>n.s.</i> [Greek: komma.]1. The point w ...
... 1's marginal mss. note on p. 549-50 for this passage from HEATH, borrowing from JOHNSON's 1765 ed. [ : “The comma is the note of connection & continu ...
... site sense he might put, that Peace should stand a comma between their amities. JOHNSON”] </para> <para>[Ed: BWK identifies these notes as mTOL2 in the b ...
... 3543)</sigla><hanging><sc>john1=warb+</sc></hanging><para>3544 <b>Comma</b>]<sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “Hanmer reads, <i>And stand a </i> cement– ...
... ab></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1787<tab> </tab><sc>ann</sc>[<i>Annotations by Sam. Johnson & Geo. Steevens, . . </i>]</sigla><hanging><sc>ann</sc>:v1785 (abbre ...
... obis, Pax alma! veni, spicamove teneto</i>.' WARBURTON”</para> <para><sc>Johnson (</sc><i>apud Annotations </i>, 1787, p. )But the placing her as a <i>C ...
... ify a she-friend. <i>A tous ses gens</i>, <i>chacun une </i>Commere. And <i>Ben Johnson</i>, in his <i>Devil's an Ass</i>, englishes the word by a <i>middling G ...
... s is not an easy style; but is it not the style of <i>Shakespeare</i> ?” JOHNSON</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1790<tab> </tab>mal </sc></sigla ...
... , p. 361) : <p. 361> “Though this passage, by the ingenuity of Dr. Johnson, is considered correct, yet a <i>note of admiration </i>, if a point was ...
... ra>3544 <b>Comma</b>] <sc>Hunter</sc> (1845, 2:264) : <P. 264>“Dr. Johnson's note is ingenious, but the Poet's intention appears to have been to ri ...
... </sc> (-1855, p. 229) : <p. 229> “Notwithstanding the ingenuity of Johnson's note, I take the sense of this line to be thus:—Hamlet is alludi ...
... 44 <b>Comma</b>]<sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1856): “This is oddly expressed, as Johnson observes; but the meaning appears to be, ‘Stand as a note of conne ...
... C;The old copies read, ‘stand a <i>comma </i>‘tween their amities.' Johnson supposes that the meaning may be, ‘Stand as a <i>comma </i>, i.e. ...
... ommon mother'; order durch 'a procuress' erklärt. 'The comma, sagt dagegen Johnson als echter Sprachgelehrter, is the note of connection and continuity of ...
... uarantee, a common mother,' or as 'a procuress.'" The comma, says the differing Johnson as a true grammarian, is the note of connection and continuity of senten ...
... 4<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><b>comma</b>]<sc>Staunton</sc> (ed. 1859): “<sc>Johnson</sc> thinks this not incapable of explanation,—'The <i> comma </i> ...
... rint for <i> co-mate </i>.” </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>[seems to summarize Johnson, Warburton, Hanmer, and Singer]</sigla> </cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1861<tab> ...
... mmentators on the disputed expression, he cannot fail to be greatly amused. Dr. Johnson justifies and explains the received text with so much ingenuity that we ...
... e1 ; ≈ whi ; clarke </sc>; Bailey (<i>minus</i> <i>final </i>Singer & JOHNSON ¶s) ; Cartwright (<i>both</i> <i><b><i>New Readings</i></b></i><b> ...
... eare the point of the sword will make a comma in your cunning'—p. 23. <sc>Johnson, </sc>Hunter, Heath, and <sc>Dyce</sc> accept the text. <i>Commercing</i ...
... <i>cement </i>of our love, to keep it builded.' <small>Some editors, following Johnson, retain <i>comma </i>, on the ground that the comma is in itself ‘ ...
... set forth.</para> <para>“Remarking on this latter explanation, which <sc>Johnson</sc> was the first to suggest, <sc>Staunton</sc> completely disposes of ...
... adds, [cites “at the same time . . . <i>co-mate</i>.']</para> <para><sc>Johnson</sc> writes thus: [cites JOHN1 above, “The expression of our auth ...
... eriod, and peace stands between like a dependent clause. Clar. Press, following Johnson, explains otherwise: ‘comma is used here as opposed to ‘peri ...
... ile marking off one clause from another, links them in sense. This goes back to Johnson, who says that the comma, in contrast to the period, signals ‘<i>c ...
... n1</sc></hanging><para>3545<b> And many such like as's of great charge</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “heavily <i> loaded</i>.”</para></cn> <c ...
... 1</sc>+</hanging><para>3545<b> And many such like as's of great charge</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (<i>apud </i><sc>Steevens, </sc>ed. 1773) : “ A quibble is i ...
... : <p. 363> <small>“</small>To follow Steeven's note 4.— Dr. Johnson's idea is supported by two other passages of Shakspeare, from which it a ...
... s, or monitory injunctions, <i> of great weight and importance </i> ,' yet Dr. Johnson's notion</small> is supported by two other passages of Shakspeare, from ...
... olio have: ‘And many such like <i> assis</i> of great charge. <small>Dr Johnson himself always pronounced the particle <i> as </i> hard, and so I have ...
... 4, p. 108) : <p. 108> “<i>Asses</i> heavily loaded.' (Says Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc>) ‘A quibble is intended between <i>as</i> the conditional par ...
... <i>ass</i> the beast of burden.' Mr. <sc>Malone</sc> seems inclined to Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc>'s opinion, and adds in support of it, that the letter <i>s</i> in t ...
... unced hard in the midland counties as in the pronoun <i>us</i>. ‘Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc> himself' (says Mr. <sc>Malone</sc>) ‘always pronounced the pa ...
... unds of the animal and the conditional particle. On this occasion even Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc> has confirmed his opinion by a quotation from <i>Chapman's Widow's ...
... 5, 2:201) : <p. 201> “I have no doubt of the quibble, which Doctor Johnson remarks, being intended here. We had it before in [<i>Cor.</i> 2.1.62 (9 ...
... l </sc>= v1821 (<i>erroneously attributing STEEVENS's </i>v1773 <i>note to </i>JOHNSON)<i> </i></hanging><para>3545<b> And many such like as's of great charge< ...
... </tab><sc>cln1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cln1 : ≈ v1821 (</sc><i>only </i>JOHNSON) + </hanging><para>3545<tab> </tab><b>as sir, charge</b>] <sc>Clark & ...
... ht</sc> (ed. 1872): “<small>load, burden, weight.</small> [<i>cites </i>JOHNSON <i>from </i>v1821] <small>Compare [<i>TN </i>2.3.184-5 (861)]: ‘<i ...
... /para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> </tab>v1877</sigla><hanging>v1877: (v1773<sc> Johnson</sc>) ; <sc>mal</sc> (<i>only</i> <b>it should be remembered</b> . . . < ...
... /tab>ard1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard1</sc> ≈ v1877 w/o attribution (<sc>Johnson</sc> <i>def.</i> ; <i>TN</i> //) +<small>magenta underlined</small></han ...