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Line 2014-15 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
2014-5 Oph. You are naught, you are naught, Ile mark the | play. 
1733 theo1
Theobald (letter, p. 68 W.b.74) says that naught here means “little better than downright bawdy,” and he compares it to MND where he thinks “a thing of nought” should be “a thing of naught.”
1869 romdahl
romdahl
2014 naught] Romdahl (1869, p. 32): “Naught, as an adjective, for naughty, bad, is now-a-days uncommon. It is the same word as the indefinite pronoun naught (also written nought) and accordingly it properly meant, not any thing, worthless.”
1870 rushtonN
rushtonN
2014 naught] Rushton (1870, pp. 33): “The word naught, in the 19th Henry VII., cap. 6, evidently means ‘bad,’ or worthless, if we consider the context in the preamble, which recites ‘that persons used to make new vessels, and mix good metal and bad together, and made it naught, and sell them for good stuff, where indeed thestuff and metal therof is not woth the fourth part,’—and in this sense it is sometimes used by Shakespeare, as it seems to be by Claudio, Canterbury, the Nurse, Ophelia, and Cymbeline.”
1881 hud2
hud2
2014-5 Hudson (ed. 1881): “That is, naughty, bad; not nothing or nought.”
1885 macd
macd
2014-5 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “naughty: persons who do not behave well are treated as if they were not –are made nought of—are set at nought; hence our word naughty. ‘Be naught awhile” (As You Like it, [1.1.??. (38-39)]—‘take yourself away;’ ‘be nobody;’ ‘put yourself in the corner.’”
1899 ard1
ard1
naught] Dowden (ed. 1899): “improper, licentious, Bunyan in Grace Abounding declares that he never ‘so much as attempted to be naught with women.’ So Dekker, The Honest Whore (Pearson’s Dekker, ii. P. 54).”
2014 2015