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1081 to 1090 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1081) Commentary Note for line 3588_358:
3588 Ham. I {humble} <humbly> thanke you sir.
3588 Doost know this water fly?
3589 Hora. No my good Lord.
    ... fliegen'? Wir sind &#252;berzeugt, dass Shakespeare  ein ganz bestimmtes Insekt  ...
    ... these waterflies? We are convinced that Shakespeare has a very certain insect in ...
1082) Commentary Note for line 3590_359:
3590-1 Ham. Thy state is the more gracious, for tis a vice to | know him, 3590
3591-2 He hath much land and fertill: let a beast | be Lord of beasts, and his
    ... substantive has to supply, is common in Shakespeare.]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>18 ...
1083) Commentary Note for line 3592_359:
3592-3 crib shall stand at the Kings | messe, tis a chough, but as I {say,} <saw> spaci-
3593-4 ous in the pos|session of durt.
    ... chranzen treffender zu charakterisiren. Shakespeare hat diese Art Dohlen vermuth ...
    ... rize a court [schranzen?] to the point. Shakesspeare observed this artificial ja ...
    ... el</i>, occurs some half-dozen times in Shakesepare and might be relevant to a d ...
    ... h &#8216;puzzling'. It may well be that Shakespeare's conception of the characte ...
    ... Tragedy</i> 2.1.241)). At the time when Shakespeare wrote <i>Hamlet</i>his compa ...
1084) Commentary Note for line 3603_360:
3603-4 Ham. {But yet} me thinkes it is very {sully} <soultry> and hot, {or} <for> my | complec-
3604 tion.
    ... . 110.)) ist es schwer zu glauben, dass Shakespeare mit dem r&#246;mischen Satir ...
    ... , 110)) it is difficult to believe that Shakespeare should have been entirely un ...
1085) Commentary Note for line 3607_360:
3607-8 has layed a great wager on your head, | sir this is the matter.
    ... he power of critic or editor to restore Shakespeare's own spelling of either of  ...
1086) Commentary Note for line 3609_361:
3609 Ham. I beseech you remember.
3610 {Cour.} <Osr.> Nay {good my Lord} <in good faith,> for {my} <mine> ease in good faith, {sir here is newly}
    ...  will now be found in his edition of <i>Shakespeare</i>, vol. I. p. 83. Mr. <sc> ...
    ... taunton</sc>'s. (See <sc>Dyce's</sc> <i>Shakespeare</i>, 1853. Vol. I. p. ccxvi. ...
    ... d.' But why? The removal of the hat, in Shakespeare's time, even more than now,  ...
    ... n Marton's <i>Malcontent</i> several of Shakespeare's fellow-players are introdu ...
    ... y's answer is quoted. See Dr. Ingleby's Shakespeare Hermeutics (1875) p. 74 seq. ...
    ... ;' and this explanation is given in the Shakespeare Lexicon. But it is quite pos ...
    ... tesy</i>, which had the same meaning in Shakespeare's time that they have now. M ...
    ... ten places elsewhere. Not that I supose Shakespeare was himself consistent in hi ...
1087) Commentary Note for line 3610_11_:
3610+11 {of him, his semblable is his mirrour, & who els would trace him, his}
3610+12 {vmbrage, nothing more.}
    ... emblable</i>, Fr.] Like; resembling. <i>Shakespeare</i>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn ...
    ... >s.</i> Likeness. Intended, however, by Shakespeare, as a specimen of ridiculous ...
    ... 0): &#x201C;<small>This word is used by Shakespeare in one other place, [<i>Tim. ...
1088) Commentary Note for line 3610_1_3:
3610+1 {com to Court Laertes, belieue me an absolute gentlemen, ful of most}
3610+2 {excellent differences, of very soft society, and great showing: in-} {N2v}
    ...  this Figure, the Distributor, to which Shakespeare here refers.&#x201D;</para>  ...
    ... >     c. Refined, delicate. rare.  1601 SHAKES. Twel. N. V. i. 331 For your seru ...
1089) Commentary Note for line 3610_16_:
3610+16 {Cour. Sir.}
3610+17 {Hora. Ist not possible to vnderstand in another tongue, you will}
3610+18 {doo't sir really.}
    ... ''&#8212;a word not found else where in Shakespeare; <i>&#8216;readily</i>' occu ...
    ... mple of a corrector interceding between Shakespeare and the Q2.</para> <para>361 ...
    ...  miscorrection of a misunderstanding of Shakespeare's meaning.</para> <para>3610 ...
1090) Commentary Note for line 3610_3_3:
3610+3 {deede to speake fellingly of him, hee is the card or kalender of gen-}
3610+4 {try: for you shall find in him the continent of what part a Gentle-}
3610+5 {man would see.} 3610+5
    ... ads <i> sellingly</i>; which perhaps <i>Shakespeare</i> might have written; if s ...
    ... d in this sense (it is very frequent in Shakespeare) is confined to our author.& ...
    ...  this Figure, the Distributor, to which Shakespeare here refers.&#x201D;</para>  ...
    ... miscorrection for a misunderstanding of Shakespeare's meaning of <b>sellingly</b ...
    ... almost certainly the Q2 compositor, not Shakespeare. [cites3610+3-3610+5] runs t ...
    ... bilities, talents (the usual meaning in Shakespeare) and (ii), playing on the wo ...

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