Black-brow'd night Ibid. 3 2 1882 13 Ibid. 3 2 188 2 21 O grim-look'd night! O night with hue fo black! O night, which ever art, when day is not The clofe night doth play the runaway Mercb. of Venice. 2 6 206 127 In fuch a night as this Ibid. 5 1 2191 19 I would out-night you, did no-body come 219 147 This night, methinks, is but the day-light fick, it looks a little paler 2201 48 Thrice crowned Queen of Night As You Like It.3 2 234153 All's Well. 4 4 300131 But even this night,-whofe black contagious breath already fmokes about the burning creft of the old, feeble, and day-wearied fun · Stumbling night Why here walk I in the black brow of night to find you out K. Jobn. 5 4 41019 Then thus I turn me from my country's light, to dwell in folemn shades of endless night Richard ii. 1 3 417253 You are more beholden to the night, than to fern feed, for your walking invisible 1 Henry iv. 2 Now comes in the sweetest morfel of the night, and we must hence and leave it unpick'd A night is but fmall breath, and little pause is fled whofe pitchy mantle over-veil'd the earth The tragic melancholy night Deep night, dark night, the filent of the night Dreaming night will hide our joys no longer I 449 112 befhrew the witch! with venomous wights the stays as tediously as hell, but flies the grafps of love Tim. of Atb.5 2 826 110 Troi. and Cr14) The dragon-wing of night o'erfpreads the earth, and stickler-like the armies feperates Ib. 5 9 Things that love night, love not fuch nights as thefe The tyranny of the open night 's too rough for nature to endure This sweaty hafte doth make the night joint-labourer with the day In the dead waste and middle of the night The night grows to wafte Night's black mantle. Cymbeline. 3 4 Lear.32 947,120 Romeo and Juliet.1| 1| 969|1|16| Ibid. 3 2 9832 32 Hamlet. 1100026 Ibid. 1 21003,2 15 Othello. 4 3 1072 2 42 3 Henry vi. 4 2 623225 Orbella. 2 3 1056234 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 987142 Night-brawler. And spend your rich opinion for the name of a night-brawler Night-cap. For I fear Caffio with my night-cap too Night's cloak. I have night's cloak to hide me from their fight Othello. 2 110542 8 Romeo and Jul.2 2 9761 29 3 Henry vi. 56 631258 M. W. of Wind 5 5 73240 Hamlet. I 210021 27 Nighted-life. Edmund, I think, is gone, in pity of his mifery, to dispatch his nighted-| life Night-raven. I had as lief have heard the night-raven Lear.4 956 125 M. Ado Ab. Notb. 2 3 1301 2 Night-mare. This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs, that presses them, and learns them firft to bear Night-rule. What night-rule now about this haunted grove Night-werk. And is Jane Night-work alive Rom. and Jul.1 4 9731 9 Midf. Night's Dream. 3 2 1851 22 Macbetb. 5 5 385 1 31 2 Henry iv.32 490/2/46 Nightingale Nightingale. To the nightingale's diftreffing notes tune my diftreffes, and record my woes Except I be by Silvia in the night, there is no mufic in the nightingale A. S. P. C. L. Midf. Night's Dream. 1 The nightingale, if she should fing by day, when every goofe is cackling, would be Apollo plays, and twenty caged nightingales do fing Two Gent. of Verona. 5 4 43 129 351 I Mer. of Venice. 51 220 124 Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. It was the nightingale, and not the lark, that pierc'd the fearful hollow of their ear Nill. And, will you, nill you, I will marry you Nilus. Even as the o'erflowing Nilus prefageth famine Will he, nill he, he goes By the fire that quickens Nilus' flime The higher Nilus fwells, the more it promifes Ant. and Cleop.1 Nimble-footed. Where is his fon, the nimble-footed mad-cap prince of Wales 1 Ibid. 13 771125 Ibid. 2 7 780 158 H. iv. 41464 238 Ibid. 2 4 454 114 218017 Midf Night's Dream. 2 Midf. Night's Dream. 3 Niobe. Make wells and Niobes of the maids and wives Nip. These tidings nip me Ibid. 5 Ibid. I Treil. and Creff511 890256 Hamlet. 1 21003116 Titus Andronicus. 4 4 849246 Nipple. I would, while it was fmiling in my face, have pluck'd my nipple from his They have been grand jurymen, fince before Noah was a failor Nob. I would not be Sir Nob in any cafe Nobility. But with nobility and tranquillity; burgo masters, and great oneyers Where ftain'd nobility lies trodden on True nobility is exempt from fear Noble's blood. A beggar's book, outworths a noble's blood --- The man was noble, but with his last attempt he wip'd it out Henry viii. 1 2 423 219 I 422 122 1673142 3 7362 4 Troilus and Creff 2 2 868 118 The nobility think scorn to go in leather aprons Thefe hands do lack nobility, that they strike a meaner than myself Lear. 3 2947 29 Nobles [money.] Mowbray hath received eight thousand nobles, in name of lendings for your highness' foldiers A noble fhalt thou have, and prefent pay Richard ii. 1 1 'Tis true, I gave a noble to the priest, the morn that I was wedded to her mother Nobleness. To fee his noblenefs! conceiving the dishonour of his mother 414 2 8 15152-8 1 Henry vi. 55 567 258 W.'s Tale. 2 3 341233 When did he regard the stamp of nobleness in any person out of himself → More charming with their own nobleness which could have turn'd a distaff to a lance Cymbeline. 5 3 921119 Nobly. You have deferv'd nobly of your country, and you have not deferv'd nobly Cor. 2 3 717141 Nobody. Tune play'd by the picture of nobody 2 Henry vi. 4 7 596225 if thou canst not speak too Nay, he nods at us; as who should say, I'll be even with you 2 860237 Ready, with every nod, to tumble down into the fatal bowels of the deep R. ii. 3 4 652|2|36 You fhall fee him nod at me Nodded. Cleopatra hath nodded him to her Noddles. I will fmite his noddles To comb your noddle with a three-legg'd ftool Noddy-for Nod I Noife. He goes but to fee a noise that he heard Troilus and Cref.1 Such a noife arofe as the shrouds make at sea in a stiff tempest, as loud, and to as Cleopatra, catching but the least noise of this, dies inftantly The noife goes this The noife was high Nois'd. It is nois'd, he hath a mass of treasure 6 78517 I 59116 255217 Two Gent. of Verona.1 Naifelefs. France fpreads his banners in our noiseless land Non-com-Here's that shall drive fome of them to a non-com 954217 248 235 164146 Ibid. 4 2 160119 Hamlet. 5 2 1038227 Richard iii. 3 2 64715 M. Ado Ab. Noth. 3 4 1372 4 Nonce. I have cases of buckram for the nonce, to immask our noted outward garments This is a riddling merchant for the nonce I'll have prepar'd him a chalice for the nonce Nonino. With a hey and a ho, and a hey nonino -Non nobis. Do we all holy rites; let there be fung, Non nobis and Te Deum Nonny. Says fuum, mun, ha no nonny Hey no nonny, nonny, hey nonny Non-pareil. 1 Henry iv. 1 2 444246 1 Henry vi. 23 552125 Hamlet. 4 71032252 As You Like It. 5 3 2472 6 Henry v.48536241 M. Ado Abt. Noth.2 3 129249 Ó, fuch love could be but recompens'd, though you were crown'd the non-pareil of beauty 4149 - Nook fhotten ifle of Albion Winding nooks To live in a nook merely monaftical The Duke of Norfolk fprightfully and bold, stays but the fummons of the appellant's trumpet 5231 I 142229 603 671 Richard ii. 1 3 416 139 Jocky of Norfolk, be not too bold, for Dickon thy mafter is bought and fold Ibid. 1 3417223 Ibid. 5 3 6682 40 Richard 5 4 6092 21 Normans. The falfe revolting Normans, through thee, difdain to call us lord Meaf. for Meaf. 1 North. Nor intreat the North to make his bleak winds kifs my parched lips, and comfort me with cold King John. 57 411150 You speedy helpers, that are fubftitutes under the lordly monarch of the North 1 H.vi. 5 4 5652 52 And like the tyrannous breathing of the North, shakes all our buds from growing Cym. 1| 4| 8961 49 Duke, claims to be Earl Marfhal at coronations Normandy. I loft not Normandy Ner:be Norweyan banners flout the sky, and fan our people cold Liberty plucks juftice by the nose Did not I pluck thee by the nofe for the speeches 2111243 , all o'er embellifh'd with rubies, carbuncles, fapphires, declining their rich afpect to the hot breath of Spain; who fent whole armadoes of carracks to be ballasted at her nofe We had like to have had our two noses snapt off by two old men without teeth Your nofe fays, no, you are not, for it stands too right I'll fit the villain's nofe Comedy of Errors. 3 Nay, you need not stop your nofe, fir; I fpake but by a metaphor Nor this is not my note neither.-Nothing that is fo, is fo I have feen a lady's nofe that have been blue, but not her eye-brows 326150 3 517241 It is like a coal of fire, fometimes blue, and fometimes red; but his nofe is exccuted, and his fire's out Ibid. 3 6 52429 You would fwear directly their very nofes had been counfellors to Pepin, or Clotharius, they keep ftate fo Henry viii. 13 6762 32 If you were but an inch of fortune better than I, where would you choose it ?-Not in my husband's nofe Ant. and Cleop.T 2 769 18 4 3 821210 Down with the nofe, down with it flat To keep one's eyes on either fide one's nofe; that what a man cannot smell out, he may spy into 5 9382 18 Ibid. 1 5 938 221 I fee that nofe of yours, but not that dog I fhall throw it to What committed! Heaven ftops the nofe at it, and the moon winks Noftril. Now fet the teeth, and stretch the noftril wide His noftrils ftretched with struggling Not. And fworn to make the not eternal Ibid. 4 Othello. I Ibid. Ibid. 4 Henry v.3 2 Henry vi. 3 2 1071 125 All's Well. 32 I 5201 40 58827 Julius Cæfar. 31 Ant. and Cleop.34 Cymbeline. 2 4 904155 Meaf. for Mcaf. 5 1 100 141 Much Ado About Norb. 1 1 123,248 And on that vice in him will my revenge find notable cause to work ftrumpet Notched. He scotch'd him and notch'd him like a carbonado Note. Can have no note, unless the fun were post "Tis awake; takes note of what is done All's Well. 36 293213 Tw. Night. 2 3 316112 Othello. 5 110751 9 Coriolanus. 4 5 730121 Tempeft. 2 I 9236 Meaf. for Meaf. 2 2 83235 M. Ado About Nothing. I 12314 Ibid. 2 3 129231 Ibid. 3 2 133146 3134137 Ibid. Which is the villain? let me fee his eyes-that when I note another man like him, I may avoid him Ibid.|5| 1| 143|2'11 Note. Thefe make the men of note, (do you note men?) that are most affected to thefel - A. S. P. C.L. Love's Lab. Loft. 31. 154 255 Mer. of Venice. 3 2 211114 220 143 I come by note, to give, and to receive No note upon my parents; his all noble As notes, whofe faculties inclufive were more than they were in note My niece shall take note of it As You Like It. 3 2 236252 Twelfth Night. 3 2 Heavens so shine, that they may fairly note this act of mine 348 151 Winter's Tale. 4 1 2 Henry iv. 51501125 Upon his royal face there is no note, how dread an army hath enrounded him - High notes ta'en of your many virtues They have ta'en note of us Where never Roman shall take note of him 5271 27 To-night, we'll wander through the streets, and note the qualities of people 4.& Cl Three in Egypt cannot make better note The king, my brother, shall have note of this He is one of the nobleft note 768 125 And must not foil the precious note of it with a base slave His picture I will fend far and near, that all the kingdom may have due note of him Do you note me.-An you re us, and fa us, you note us Let the world take note, you are the most immediate to our throne Romeo and Juliet. 4 5 9932 20 Hamlet. 21002 220 Ibid. 3 2 10191 57 Othello. 3 3 1063|2|32 Merry W. of Windfor. II 47 115 Winter's Tale. 1 2 3362 1 Take note, take note, O world, to be direct and honeft, is not fafe Come Camillo, and take her by the hand; whofe worth, and honefty, is richly noted 16.5 3 362255 2 444 246 Two Gent. of Verona. 3 1 I do know of thofe, that therefore only are reputed wife for faying nothing M. of Ven. 1 35127 I 81152 193118 I 1982 2 1 1982 22 Ibid. 3 2 212 115 12841 3 Ibid. 1 . When I told you my state was nothing, I should then have told you I was worfe than nothing Thus he his fpecial nothing ever prologues All's Well. 2 To fay nothing, to do nothing, and to have nothing, is to be a great part of your title: which is within a very little of nothing Ibid. 2 4 288251 I would have men of fuch conftancy put to fea, that their business might be every thing, and their intent every where; for that always makes a good voyage of nothing T.N.2 4 317128 Why then the world and all that's in't is nothing; the covering fky is nothing; Bohemia nothing; my wife is nothing; for nothing have these nothings, if this be nothing fo certain, as your anchors Where nothing, but who knows nothing, is once feen to smile Winter's Tale. 1 2 337 118 Ibid. 4 3 355131 Macbetb. 4 3 382121 As though in thinking, on no thought I think, makes me with heavy nothing faint and shrink Richard ii.22 423|1|14| Nothing. |