501 to 510 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields
... >John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3610+10<tab> </tab><b>dixion</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755, <i>diction</i>): “<i>n.s.</i> [<i>diction</i>, French ...
... nging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3610+9 <b> a soul of great article</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “This is obscure. I once thought it might have ...
... ticles</i> .” </para> <para>3610+10 <b> infusion of such dearth</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “dearness, value, price. And his internal quali ...
... rcial quibble: ‘the particulars of an inventory are called articles,' <sc>Johnson</sc>), and his essence (‘infusion') of such costliness (‘dea ...
... 3612+2<tab> </tab><i><b><i>Ham.</i></b></i><b> I </b>. . . <b>himselfe</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : > “<i>I dare not pretend to know him, lest ...
... nother, but by knowing himself</i>, which is the utmost extent of human wisdom. JOHNSON”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1 ...
... c></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3612+4<b> in his meed</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : ”In his excellence.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... ake it six French <F1BR/> Rapiers</para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>3617<tab> </tab><b>impaund</b>] < ...
... > Rapiers</para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>3617<tab> </tab><b>impaund</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, i ...
... nson</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>3617<tab> </tab><b>impaund</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, impawn): “<i>v.a.</i> [<i>in</i> and <i>pawn</i>.] To ...
... igla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3617<tab> </tab><b>impaund</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “Perhaps it should be, <i>deponed</i>. So <i>H ...
... ut down, to stake, from the verb <i>impono</i>. To <i>depone</i>, which dr. <sc>Johnson</sc> <i>perhapses</i> it should be, is the same as to <i>depose</i>, to ...
... Q2> <F1>Hangers or</F1> so. Three</para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1760<tab> </tab>Johnson2</sigla><hanging>John2</hanging><para>3619<b> hangers</b> ] <sc>Johnson ...
... > </tab>Johnson2</sigla><hanging>John2</hanging><para>3619<b> hangers</b> ] <sc>Johnson </sc>(2nd ed. 1760, Hanger): “<i>s.</i> [from<i> hang</i>] That b ...
... any thing hangs: as, the pot hangers<i>.</i>”</para></cn> <cn> <hanging>Johnson2</hanging><para>3619<b> hangers</b> ] <sc>Johnson </sc>(2nd ed. 1760, Ha ...
... 1D;</para></cn> <cn> <hanging>Johnson2</hanging><para>3619<b> hangers</b> ] <sc>Johnson </sc>(2nd ed. 1760, Hanger): “<i>s.</i> [from <i> hang</i>.] A sh ...
... hat are these</i> ? The following extract from the Tragedy of <i> Hamlet</i> , Johnson and Steeven's edit. 1778, vol. X. p. 397, appears to me a full explanati ...
... ohns. E.D. s.v. <i>delicate</i>.”]</para> <para>[Ed: We'll need to check Johnson's Dictionary for <i>delicate</i>.]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1877<tab> ...
... <tab> </tab>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3622+1<b> margent</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, <i>marge, margent, margin, </i>1,2) :<b>”</b> <i>n.s. ...
... orms of the word <i>margin</i>. They have been longest preserved in poetry. Dr. Johnson has given sufficient instances of their use.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... /sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3624 <b>more Ierman</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “more a-kin.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1 ...
... hanging><para>3630-2<tab> </tab><b>in a dozen passes </b>. . . <b>nine</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “ This wager I do not understand. In a dozen ...
... ne</b>]<sc> Ritson</sc> (1783, p. 211-3) : <p. 211>“This wager dr. Johnson candidly professes hisself unable to understand. In a dozen passes, he s ...
... ear and consistent throughout. And it onely remains to be considered whether dr.Johnson or mr. Malone has understood the passage best?”</small> </p. 2 ...
... fencer, was to give Hamlet <i> nine </i> hits out of <i> twelue </i> passes. Johnson's note seem more difficult to be understood than the passage itself. Bu ...
... shall make; on the <i> ratio</i> of twelve to nine.</para> <para>“ Dr. Johnson objects very plausibly to this wager, that in a dozen passes one must ex ...
... lay'd on 12 for 9'. This seems to put the matter right. I do not agree with <sc>Johnson</sc> that ‘the passage is of no importance'.”</para></cn> < ...
... >. . . <b>nine</b>] <sc>Seymour</sc> (1805, 1:203) : <p. 203> “Dr. Johnson says, he does not understand this wager; and Mr. Steevens chooses to con ...
... icht Laertes den Hamlet zwölf, und dieser jenen neun Mal treffen soll, wie Johnson meint, geht aus der Zahl der Gänge hervor, denn eine solche Wette k ...
... r Seite günstigere Bedingungen, nämlich drei voraus."</p. 257> [Johnson confesses that he cannot understand the conditions of this bet, and Stee ...
... rtes shall not strike Hamlet twelve times and Hamlet strike Laertes 9 times, as Johnson means, comes from the number of the passes, if such a bet could be deter ...
... ohn1 ; ≈ mal </sc>(<i>minus</i> <i>Tem.</i> // ; <i>minus</i> “Dr. Johnson objects . . . See the note on it in Vol. X in the APPENDIX.”) ; & ...
... 2 of Laertes'). There fortunately seems to be no great harm in repeating, after Johnson, ‘it is sufficient that there was a wager.'"</para></cn> <cn> <sig ...
... <i>passes</i>, or bouts, Laertes will not make three more hits than Hamlet. <sc>Johnson's</sc> objection to this, ‘In a dozen passes one must exceed the o ...
... There are those who claim to understand this wager, and those who, like Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc> and the present editor, do not. There are to be twelve bouts, and t ...
... ab>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3649<tab> </tab><b>Lapwing</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755, Lapwing) : “ <i>n.s.</i> [<i>lap</i> and <i>wing</i>] ...
... </para></cn> <cn><hanging>John</hanging><para>3651<tab> </tab><b>dugge</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755, dug, 1): “<i>n.s.</i> [<i>deggia</i>, to give suck, I ...
... <sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3649-50<b> This lapwing runs away </b>. . . ] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “I see no particular propriety in the image of ...
... 2;That is, this fellow was full of unimportant bustle from his birth.” JOHNSON”</para></cn> <cn> <hanging><sc>john1 = warb </sc>+ <small>magenta ...
... enta underlined</small></hanging><para>3651-2<tab> </tab><b>did so sir</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “<i>did Complie</i>]]<i> </i><small><i>Hamner</ ...
... prüchwörtlich vor, um einen naseweisen Burschen zu bezeichnen. Bei B. Johnson Staple of News III, 2 heisst es von kahlköpfigen Kutschern, die baa ...
... nd. Gräfe Handbuch der Naturgesch. I, 335 und 491. Nares s. Lapwing. ["<sc>Johnson</sc> conjectures, 'This lapwing ran away etc., that is, This fellow was ...