530 to 539 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields
... <hanging>John</hanging><para>3798<tab> </tab><b>vnbated and enuenom'd</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, <i>to envenom</i>, 1): “<i>v.a.</i> [from <i>venom</i ...
... /sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3819<tab> </tab><b>mutes</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : “That are either mere auditors<i> of this </i> ...
... ab>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3826<tab> </tab><b>anticke</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, Antick): “<i>adj.</i> [probably from <i>antiquus</i>, ...
... the only one since 1700. But the identity of pronunciation remained longer; Dr. Johnson says antique `was formerly pronounced according to English analogy, with ...
... c> (ed. 1872): “triumphs over, as a cock over his beaten antagonist. <sc>Johnson</sc> quotes from Spenser's View of the Present State of Ireland (Globe e ...
... al grief, which, indeed, he ought rather to have applauded than condemned. Dr. Johnson has observed, that to bring about a reconciliation with Laertes, he has ...
... ains to point out the immoral tendency of his character.”</para><hanging>JOHNSON-STEEVENS (v1773, pp. 343-4; v1778, pp. 411-12 [page break at “of ...
... ly before the fencing scene, was at the queens earnest intreaty, and though dr. Johnson be pleased to give it the harsh name of ‘a dishonest fallacy,' the ...
... al grief, which, indeed, he ought rather to have applauded than condemned. Dr. Johnson has observed, that to bring about a reconciliation with Laertes, he has ...
... tab>John</sigla><hanging>John</hanging><para>3857<tab> </tab><b>hauock</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755, <i>havock</i>): “<i>interj.</i> [from the noun <b>Hav ...
... ></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>3857<b>cries on hauock</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) : : “To <i> cry on</i>, was to <i>exclaim against ...
... he reward given the hounds af[te]r tak[in]g the game ; tak[in]g it how even in Johnson's sense we have the passage'—'This map of bleed[in]g. & dead b ...
... lanus III. I: Do not cry havock, where you should but hunt With modest warrant. Johnson sage zwar 'to cry on' sei so viel als 'to exclaim against', allein es fe ...
... quarter would be given. 'To cry havock' appears often in Shakespeare . . . <sc>Johnson</sc> says indeed 'to cry on' is so much as 'to exclaim aginast," alone m ...
... Statutes of Warre, &c., by King Henry VIII (1513), quoted in Todd's ed. of Johnson's Dictionary, it is enacted, ‘That noo man be so hardy to crye hav ...
... tutes of Warre</i>, &c., by King Henry VIII (1513), quoted in Todd's ed. of Johnson's <i>Dict</i>, it is enacted, ‘That noo man be so hardy to crye ha ...
... e sense of general and merciless slaughter. <i>To cry on</i> is said by Dr. <sc>Johnson</sc> to be equivalent to exclaiming against somebody or something. The m ...
536) Commentary Note for line 3903_390: 3903 Becomes the field, but heere showes much amisse.
3904 Goe bid the souldiers shoote. {Exeunt.}
3905 <Exeunt Marching: after the which, a Peale of> 3905
3906 <Ordenance are shot off.>
... anguage, so different from his usual style of speech, which, in general, as <sc>Johnson </sc>has truly observed, is not strained by poetical violence above the ...
... n</sc> <i>conj</i>. (<i>apud </i><sc>cam1</sc>) </para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Johnson says only that we <i>might</i> read it this way for smoothness but shoul ...
... . 9) (<i>conj.</i>) </para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> More aptly we should term it Johnson's mistaken recollection.</para> </tnm><tlnrange>672</tlnrange></book> <b ...
... 1773, v1778, v1785, <sc>mal</sc>, v1793, v1803, v1813, <sc>fieb</sc>; frows <sc>johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) <i>conj.</i>; braves <sc>Anonymous</sc> (<i>apud</i> <sc ...