Frown. To know the meaning of dangerous majefly when perchance it frowns, more from humour than advis'd respect Wherefore frowns he thus? 'tis his aspect of terror A. S. P. C. L. King Jebn. 4 2 405 110 Henry viii. 5 1 697 216 1893 1 5 Romeo and Juliet. 1968 123 I 4212 8 5 911158 I will frown as I pafs by, and let them take it as they lift Richard ii. 2 Frowning. He goes hence frowning: but it honours us, that we have given him caufe Froward. The wench is ftark mad, or wonderful froward - She is intolerably curft, and fhrewd and froward Cymbeline. 3 Ibid. 2 See where she comes; and brings your froward wives as prifoners to her womanly perfuafion Clarence, how evil it befeems thee 30 Ibid. 5 2 2761 53 7627125 3 Henry vi. 4 Fructify. We should thankful be for those parts that do fructify in us more than he Frugal. I was then frugal of my mirth Love's Labor Loft. 4 2 159 1 I Fruit. The weakest kind of fruit drops earliest to the ground, and fo let me M. of Ven. 4 51246 1 2152 32 7233 36 Twelfth Night. 2 5 319232 Richard ii. 2 1421145 Troil. and Creff. 23 869227 Cymbeline. 5 5 926155 Hamlet. 2 21010 219 Orbello. 2 3 1054247 2 Henry iv. 5 4 505230 Left with my fighs or tears I blast or drown king Edward's fruit, true heir to the The fruit fhe goes with, I pray for heartily; that it find good time, and live H. viii. 5 She's fram'd as fruitful as the free elements Frush. I like thy armour well; I'll frush it, and unlock the rivets all Fruftrated. Being fo fruftrated, tell him, he mocks the pauses that he makes Othello. 2 3 1058 117 Lear. 4 959223 1 Henry vi. 5 6 569151 Troi. and Creff 5 6 889253 Tempeft. 3 3 142 58 Ant. and Cleo. 5 1 797144 Mer. of Venice. 2 2203245 Henry viii.53 701125 Trail. and Cre5 2 885257 2 Henry iv. 2 1479242 Henry v.2 3 518 113 3 Henry vi. 5 4 630160 Prol. to Troi. and Creff 8572 2 2150 972 38 1768 133 Othello. I 11044 140 Ibid. 2 11051 2 42 Cymbeline. 2 5 906 114 Full fraught man. And thus thy fall hath left a kind of blot to mark the full fraught man 3 Functions. 'Twas a commandment to command the captain and all the rest from their functions 7 233115 Measure for Meafure. 1 Or what is he of basest function, that says his bravery is not on my cost As You L. It. 2 - I am not tall enough to become the function well That function is smother'd in surmise; and nothing is, but what is not Funerals. Turn melancholy forth to funerals And in the pulpit as a friend fpeak in the order of his funeral Do not confent, that Antony speak in his funeral With mirth in funeral, and with dirge in marriage Love's Labor Loft. 1 I The funeral bak'd meats did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables Funeral Speech. You shall not in your funeral speech blame us, but speak can devife of Cæfar Hamlet. I 11 2 I 175121 754 145 754 50 21001218 Ibid. 1 21003152 all good you 2 Henry iv. 5 3 505120 Furmitory. On her fallow leas the darnel, hemlock and rank furmitory doth root upon H.~.5 Furnish. And have the counfel, which is the best to furnish me to-morrow M. Ads Ab. N. 3 How shall we do? we are not furnish'd like Bohemia's fon He is furnish'd with no certainties You speak of him when he was lefs furnish'd than now he is Furnishings. Whereof, perchance, these are but furnishings Furniture. Neither art thou the worse for this poor furniture, and Furtherance. Omit no happy hour, that may give furtherance to our Fury. An fhe were not poffefs'd with a fury My fury fhall abate, and I the crowns will take I dare your quenchless fury to more rage Ant. and Cleop.311 790218 2 538217 673 2 6 7 899 234 610131 132225 4 2502 2 3 355155 14741 33 5 896 213 1946 147 Mer. of Venice. 2 mean array 2 Henry iv.1 Lear. 3 Taming of the Shrew. 4 If not well, thou should'st come like a fury crown'd with snakes, not like a formal 142 M. Ado About Noth. 1 1123143 2 4091 4 3 Henry vi. 1 4 Gad. I will go get a leaf of brafs, and with a gad of steel will write thefe words Tit. And 4 All this done upon the gad Gadding. Where have you been gadding 4 P Lear. 1 3 101 3 11221 201156 1846 111 2 933 1 I Romeo and Juliet.|4| 2| 991|1|16 Gadjbill. 1314 Gadfill. D.P. = Gage. You shall not gage me by what we do to-night Pale trembling coward, there I throw my gage And interchangeably hurl down my gage upon this over-weening traitor's foot Ibid. 1 Throw down my fon the duke of Norfolk's gage Mer. of Venice. 2 1 Henry i. 204 1 59 414150 4151 415/1/20 431/2/53 thine 16.4 I 431/2/62 Ibid. 4 There is my gaze, the manual feal of death, that marks thee out for hell Ibid. 4 Henry v.4 Some honeft christian truft me with a gage, that Norfolk lies Some other times we drown our gain in tears 432/152 1432/2/13 3446/2/39 1 529144 Ibid. 4 7 53511 I Hamlet.1 Two Gent. of Verona.1 198 2 39 1/1000/2/21 1884/2/20 5 311/144 I 23/2/16 All's Well. 4 3 297 214 King Jobn.(2 Gain-giving. It is fuch a kind of gain-giving, as would, perhaps, trouble a woman Ham. 5 - 2 2 Henry iv. 1 if it be known to him that I gainsay my deed, how may he wound, and worthily my Gait. Doth he not hold up his head, as it were, and ftrut in his gait With pretty and with swimming gait Henry viii. 2 Merry W. of Wind. 396/2/5 2/1039/2/26 1474/243 I 4 684/2/50 50135 Love's Lab. Left. 5 1 164/1/50 Mid. Night's Dream. 2 This palpable grofs play hath well beguil'd the heavy gait of night In gait and countenance furely like a father Addrefs thy gait unto her I will answer you with gait and entrance Hath not my gait in it, the measure of the court He had no legs, that practis'd not his gait I do know him by his gait What majesty is in her gait I ken the manner of his gait Go your gait, and let poor volk pafs Methought thy very gait did prophecy a royal nobleness To fupprefs his further gait herein Gaited. 2 180140 fvid.5 1 195/2/34 Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. You must fend the afs upon the horfe, for he is flow gaited Calathe. Now here he fights on Calathe his horfe Galen. My Galen Ibid. 4 I 253141 2 269258 All's Well.2 1 283213 Twelfth Night.14 310135 Ibid. 3 1/ 320/2/20 Winter's Tale. 43 356234 1 Henry iv. 3 1 458 137 2 Henry iv. 2 3 483124 Henry vi. 3 2 689221 Julius Cæfar. 374029 Ant. and Cleap.33 783141 Trai. and Creff4 Lear. 4 5 881/1/50 61 959 146 Ibid. 53 964139 Hamlet. 1 21001237 Love's Lab. Luft. 3 1 155 128 Trei, and Cre55 889/1/22 3 Henry vi. 5 3 Merry W. of Windfir. 2 The most fovereign prefeription in Galen is but empyric qutique 629/2 285/258 All's Well 2 3 Coriolanus. 2 1 713 2 Meaf. for Meal 2832 'Twould be my tyranny to strike and gall them for what I bid them do You measure the heat of your livers with the bitterness of your galls Ibid. 41 2 Ibid. 13 Twelfth Night. 2 321 2 Henry iv.12477224 Ibid. 12 477151 Even thofe that were your father's enemies have fleep'd their galls in honey Hen. He may well in fretting spend his gall Worfe than gall the daintieft that they tafte Whem from the flow of gall I name not, but from fincere motions Whofe gall coins flanders like a mint You have the honey fill, but thefe the gall O deadly gall, and theme of all our fcorns 1 Henry vi 2 Hery vi Heary will. Troilus and Craf 2 2 516/1/16 545/2/16 2 590 673/2/19 8631 4 $68 Ibid. 2 Gall Gall. A peftilent gall to me Lear. I'll touch my point with this contagion; that, if I gall him slightly, it may be death A. S. P. C.L. 4936 19 Hamlet. 4 71032237 Let it not gall your patience We have galls; and, though we have some grace, yet have we fome revenge Gallants, I am not as I have been Ibid. 4 3 1073 2 42 Where is this young gallant, that is fo defirous to lie with his mother earth As You L. It. 1 Bring forth the gallant, let us hear him speak 3 2229 250 Henry vi. 5 5 630229 • The reformation of our travell'd gallants that fill the court with quarrels, talk, and Gallant fpringing, brave Plantagenet, that princely novice, was ftruck dead by thee Gall'd. My ftate being gall'd with my expence 'A has a little gall'd me, I confefs 2337145 2 Who may'ft fee, plainly as heaven fees earth, and earth fees heaven, how I am gall'd Winter's Tale. 2 Henry iv. 44932 Richard iii. 4 4 659236 Coriolanus. 2 3 718144 Or else it would have gall'd his furly nature Gallery. Your gallery have we pafs'd through, not without much content in many fingularities Galley. Aboard my galley I invite you all Gallia. From Gallia I crofs'd the feas on purpose, and on promise to see your grace Cym.1 Galliard. What is thy excellence in a galliard, knight Why doft thou not go to church in a galliard, and come home in a coranto There's nought in France that can be with a nimble galliard won Galling the gleaned land with hot affays I have seen you gleeking and galling at this gentleman twice or thrice Gallow. The wrathful skies gallow the very wanderers of the dark Gallows. Complexion is perfect gallows were on land, this fellow would not drown A fhrewd unhappy gallows too and knock, are too powerful on the highway Shall there be gallows standing in England, when thou art king If I hang, I'll make a fat pair of gallows Let gallows gape for dog, let men go free Titus Andron. 2 Lear. 32 947 122 I 12 6 Love's Lab. Loft. 52 Winter's Tale. 4 2 348 241 2443 215 1 Henry iv. 1 2 Henry vi. 4 2 448 233 5232 53 Mark'd for the gallows Belong to the gallows, and be hang'd, you rogue 594 9 700 252 485 220 36: 210 Ibid. 5 11033243 The gallows does well: but how does it well? it does well to thofe that do ill Ham. 11033246 Gallows-maker. The gallows-maker; for that frame out-lives a thoufand tenants Galloway nags. Thruft him down ftairs! know we not Galloway nags 2 Henry iv. 2 4 Gallow-glaffes. From the western ifles of Kernes and Gallow-glaffes, is fupply'd Mach. 1|2| 2 Henry vi. 4 9 598 114 767 I 522211184 233 335212146 Gambol. Gambol. And fuch other gambol faculties he hath, that fhew a weak mind and an able body I the matter will re-word; which madness would gambol from Game. Cry'd game As waggish boys themselves in game forfwear A. S. P. C. L. 86|1|46 2 Henry iv. 2 4 486146 Hamlet. 3 4 1025 126 M. W. of Windf.2 3 57236 Midf. Night's Dream.1 1177 236 Ibid. 3 2 187235 K. John. 4 2 403261 3447232 1 Henry iv. All's Well. 5 3 304146 4 677263 Gamefter. She's impudent, my lord; and was a common gamefter to the camp You are a merry gamefter Gamut. To teach you gamut in a briefer fort, more pleasant, pithy, and effectual Taming of the Shrew. 31 264 22 Gangren'd. The fervice of the foot being once gangren'd, is not then respected for ; what before it was And dull unfeeling barren ignorance, is made my gaoler to attend on me You are my prifoner, but your gaoler fhall deliver you the keys that restraint 2 94 53 333 Ibid. 1 2 334/2/20 Gap. If he had been forgotten, there had been a gap in our great feaft up your Cymbeline. 1 Macbeth. 3 1 2 697 9 772221 Cymb. 3 7 907|2|44 The gap that we shall make in time, from our hence going till our return Lear. 1 2 933211 Gapes. Now old defire doth on his death-bed lie, and young affection gapes to be his heir Garbage. The cloy'd will, ravening first the lamb, longs after for the garbage Garboils. Read the garboils fhe awak'd So much uncurbable her garboils Garden. Thy curious knotted garden Othello. 2 Ibid. 2 2 Love's Labor Loft. 1 1 149 237 Wither garden; and be henceforth a burying place to all that do dwell in this houfe |