371 to 380 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields
... /tab></para> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Di ...
... ab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2863<tab> ...
... 863<tab> </tab><b> vnsmirched </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): “Unpolluted; ...
... h): “To darken, or make obscure. Johnson says murky. I doubt. It may be o ...
... r to provent him from striking. [See Dr Johnson's stage-direction, Textual Note, ...
... #8216;Give me my father!', according to Johnson (preferably, it seems, at some m ...
... modern editions except Mr. Knight's. If Johnson had not said so, it would be dif ...
... palpable. In the copies in general use, Johnson is followed and ‘'pear' is ...
... the reading of the quarto, preferred by Johnson and Steevens, is less proper.&#x ...
... modern editions except Mr. Knight's. If Johnson had not said so, it wold be diff ...
... palpable. In the copies in general use, Johnson is followed and ‘ 'pear,' ...
... i>pierce</i>,' less intelligibly, as <i>Johnson</i> says, though several comment ...
... erce, the quartos ‘peare,' whence Johnson ‘'pear' i.e. appear. ̵ ...
... in Boswell's <i>Variorum</i>, and as Dr Johnson understood it.” </2:27 ...
... So F. Q2 reads ‘peare', which Dr. Johnson and many later editors have supp ...
... h are the opposite of the true meaning. Johnson, in his innocent dogmatic vein, ...
... <para>2914<tab> </tab><b>fine</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “These l ...
... >[Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8, 265): &# ...
... was the natural consequence.—Dr. Johnson's explanation of the passage abo ...
... denomination.</para> <para>“Dr. Johnson may perhaps say, without affecta ...
... ted in the folio without great loss. <i>Johnson</i> calls them obscure and affec ...
... ral affection is fal'n in love</i>. <sc>Johnson</sc>: These lines might have bee ...
... >Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): “Dr. Johnson's paraphrase is (as usual) highl ...
377) Commentary Note for lines 2923-25: 2923 Oph. You must sing
{a downe} <downe> a downe,
2923-4 And you call | him a downe a. O how the wheele becomes it,
2924-5 It is | the false Steward that stole his Maisters daughter.
... e wheele </b>. . .<b> daughter</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): <small>“ ...
... ted, and as such was formerly used. Dr. Johnson says, ‘The story alluded t ...
... iven about the story alluded to; but <i>Johnson</i> adds, that perhaps the lady ...
... [1792].]</para> <hanging><sc>tsch: </sc>Johnson (<i>Dict</i>.)</hanging> <para>2 ...
... Folterinstrument kennt, erwähnt S. Johnson, ED. Da O. gleich darauf von dem ...
... nstrument of torture is mentioned by S. Johnson, E. D. Since Ophelia right after ...
... in Latin for the burden of a song. <sc>Johnson</sc> suggests: ‘perhaps th ...
... F print the whole speech in Roman type. Johnson used italics for <i>You . . .a-d ...
... st two lines of Ophelia's speech, which Johnson, <i>The Globe Shakespeare</i> an ...
... Rosemary </b>. . .<b> thoughts</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “There i ...
... sc>Davies</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed, 1765, opp 8. 266): &#x ...
... on <b>Pancies</b> is interpolated after Johnson's on <b>Rosemary</b>, though no ...
... sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): “<sc>Johnson</sc>: ‘For thoughts, becau ...
... evergreen, and carried at funerals: <i>Johnson</i>. ‘For you there's rose ...
... >grand merci</i>, ‘great thanks.' Johnson derives it from the English R ...
... 952<tab> </tab><b>commune with</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755, commune): “<i ...