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Belly-pinch'd wolf

In greediness

A.S. P. C. L.

8

Troilus and Creff4 186511142
Cymbeline. 3 3 908 210
Lear. 2 4 9451
Ibid. 3 1 946|1|29
Ibid. 3 4 948 246

If wolves had at thy gate howl'd that ftern time, thou should't have faid, good

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are frail too-as the glaffes where they view themselves, which are as eafy broke as

they make forms

Meaf. for Meaf. 4

862

Ibid.

men their creation mar, in profiting by them

4

we are as foft as our complexions are, and credulous to false prints
Be that you are, a woman; if you be more, you're none
That's the way; for women are light at midnight
That a woman conceiv'd me, I thank her

Ibid.

862 86211

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Much Ado Ah. Noth.

2 123230

Qualities expected to be found in one woman before he comes into Benedick's graces

Ibid. 2 3 12923

That no woman fhall come within a mile of my court, on pain of lofing her tongue

Love's Labor Loft.1

-Penalty for talking with a woman within three years

Ibid. 1

1148 217 1 148 2 28

- With a wench, with a child of our grandmother Eve, a female; or for thy more fweet understanding, a woman

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Speech of Biron against keeping the oath, taken by him and his companions, not to fee woman

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- We cannot fight for love, as men may do; we should be woo'd, and were not made

to woo

- Thofe that she makes fair, she scarce makes honest
Those that the makes honest, she makes very ill-favour'dly
Do you not know I am a woman, when I think I must speak
Certainly a woman's thought runs before her actions

I hope it is no dishonest defire, to desire to be a woman of the world
are made to bear, and so are you

As You Like It. 1 2 225163

Ibid. 1 2 225165

Ibid. 3 2 236 248

Ibid. 41

242 255

Ibid. 5 3

2471 54

Taming of the Shrew. 2 1

261 254

- Kindness in women, not their beauteous looks, shall win my love

Ibid. 4 2

267 228

Ibid. 5 2

276 2|14

– mov'd, is like a fountain troubled

-

281150

An we might have a good woman born but every blazing star, or at an earthquake, 'twould mend the lottery well

How easy is it, for the proper falfe in women's waxen hearts to fet

All's Well.13
their forms
Twelfth Night.22 314134-
Ibid. 2 4 316235
Ibid. 2 4 316|2|44

Let ftill the woman take an elder than herfeif; fo wears the to him
are as roses, whofe fair flower being once difplay'd, doth fall at every hour
There is no woman's fides can bide the beating of fo strong a passion as love doth
give my heart

fay fo, that will fay any thing

Ibid. 2 317149 Winter's Tale. 1 2 335154

For every inch of woman in the world, ay, every dram of woman's flesh, is falfe Ib. 2 I 340 138 From all that are took fomething good, to make a perfect woman

Ibid. 51357 255

8/2/49

will love her, that she is a woman, more worth than any man; men, that she is the rareft of all women

Ibid. 5358 2

- You should be women, and yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are fo

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Woman. No woman fhall fucceed in falique land

and faid they were devils incarnate

Then come, o' God's name, I fear no woman

These women are fhrewd tempters with their tongues

She is a woman, therefore to be won

A. S. P. C.L
Henry 12 511162
Ibid. 23 5811 I

1 Henry vi. 2 5462
Ibid. 1 2 546|2|29
Ibid. 5 4 566 217

Being a woman, I will not be flack to play my part in Fortune's pageant 2 Hen. vi. 1 2 5742 18
Thefe are no women's matters

A woran's general; what should we fear
Oh, tyger's heart, wrapp'd in a woman's hide

Ibid. 1 3 576135

3 Henry 12 6071 12
Ibid. 1 4 6082 60

-are foft, mild, pitiful, and flexible? Thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough, remorfeless

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Was ever woman in this humour woo'd? was ever woman in this humour won

- Relenting fool, and shallow, changing woman

Two women plac'd together make cold weather

You, that have fo fair parts of a woman on you, have too a woman's heart
She is the goodliest woman that ever lay by man

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-Great-belly'd women, that had not half a week to go, like rams in the old time of war, would shake the prefs, and make them reel before them

Ibid.4694115

- In that day's feats, when he might act the woman in the scene, he prov'd best man i' the field

Coriolanus. 2) 2 715 7134

There were drawn upon a heap a hundred ghaftly women, transformed with their

fear

Julius Cæfar. 13 7451 56
Julius Cafar-2 4 7512 55
Antony and Cleop1 2 7692 45

Ay me! how weak a thing the heart of woman is
Under a compelling occafion, let women die
Other women cloy the appetites they feed; but she makes hungry, where most
the fatisfies

-There is never a fair woman has a true face

Ibid. 22 7762 30
Ibid. 2 6 779245

― are not in their best fortunes strong; but want will perjure the ne'er touch'd veftal

- But e'en a woman; and commanded by fuch poor paffion as the maid that and does the meanest chares

Ibid. 310 7881 16

milks,

Ibid. 4 1 797210

-The devil himself will not eat a woman: I know that a woman is a dish for the gods, if the devil dress her not

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- She is a woman, therefore may be woo'd; she is a woman, therefore may be won

Titus Andronicus. 2 1 837132
Troilus and Creffida. 1 2 861221

- are angels, wooing
-I with'd myself as man; or that we women had men's privilege of speaking first 16.3 2 873251
- A woman impudent and manish grown, is not more loath'd than an effeminate

--

man in time of action

Ibid. 33 $7653 -Ah! poor our fex! this fault in us I find, the error of our eye directs our mind 16.5 2886227 - The vows of women, of no more bondage be, to where they are made, than they are to their virtues

Cymbeline. 2 4 9051 55

There's no motion that tends to vice in man, but I affirm it is the woman's part 1.2490623

- There was never yet fair woman, but she made mouths in a glass

Ibid. 3 6 913224
Lear.3 2 9471 72

Were you a woman, youth, I should woo hard, but be your groom

-

If the live long, and in the end, meet the old course of death, women will all turn monsters

-being the weaker veffels, are ever thrust to the wall

Frailty, thy name is woman

fear too much, even as they love

characterized by lago

· Deserving women characterized by Iago

Ibid. 3 79521231

Romeo and Juliet. 1 1 967225

That we can call thefe delicate creatures ours, and not their appetites Woman'd. And think it no addition, nor my wish, to have him see me woman'd Womanhood. The warrant of womanhood

Hamlet. 1 210031

Ibid. 3 21020152
Othello. 2 11052|2|12

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Ibid. 2 11053
Ibid. 3 310622 12
Ibid. 3 41066240
67

Merry Wives of Windfor. 4 2

·And for womanhood, maid Marian may be the deputy's wife of the ward to thee

Womanife. He never was fo womanish

Women's men. So our leader's led, and we are women's men
Woman-poft. What woman-poft is this

Woman's taylor. What trade art thou, Feeble?-A woman's taylor, fir

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A. S. P. C. L.

Winter's Tale. 2 342 50
Richard H. 14141,29

Woman-tyr'd. Thou dotard, thou art woman-tyr'd, unroofsted by thy dame Partlet here,
Woman's war. 'Tis not the trial of woman's war
Woman's reapons. O, let not woman's weapons, water-drops, stain my man's cheeks

Wombs. Good wombs bave born bad fons

So her plenteous womb, expreffeth his full tilth and husbandry
Following her womb

Lear. 2 4 945225
Tempeft.1 2
Meaf. for Meaf 5
Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2

But am in that dimension grossly clad, which from the womb I did participate

- Sin-conceiving womb

3146 79454 180 148

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Twelfth Night. 5 1
King John. 213921 37

- Ah, Gaunt, his blood was thine; that bed, that womb, that metal, that felf mould that fashioned thee, made him a man

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From forth the kennel of thy womb, hath crept a hell-hound that doth hunt us all to death

a million

2 Henry iv. 4 3 496150. Henry v. 37 526254 Rickard iii. 4 4 659230 Julius Cafar. 2768234 Romeo and Juliet. 5994162 Othello. 310511 I

If every of your wishes had a womb, and foretel every wish,
The fatal cannon's womb
There are many events in the womb of time, which will be delivered
on. Maine, Blois, Poitiers, and Tours, are won away, 'long all of Somerset, and
his delay

1 Hen. vi. 4 3 562152

Treil. and Creff 3
Mu. Ado About N.4

Hard to feem won; but I was won, my lord, with the first glance Wonder. I am fo attir'd with wonder

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873 239 1 138|2|16| Ibid. 5 4 146 145

Masters, I am to difcourfe wonders; but ask me not what; for, if I tell you, I am

no true Athenian

I was feven of the nine days out of wonder

- That we with thee may spend our wonder too, or take off thine

— A notable paffion of wonder appear'd in them

-

-

Mid. Night's Dream. 4 2 191 260
As You Like It. 32 236129
All's Well 21283457
Winter's Tale. 5 2 360121

- Such a deal of wonder is broken out within this hour, that ballad-makers cannot be able to exprefs it

And the mute wonder lurketh in men's ears

Ibid. 5 2 360|1|30| 15102 6

Henry v. 1

But thou, 'gainst all proportion, didft bring in wonder, to wait on treafon and on

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That would be ten days wonder, at the leaft: that's a day longer than a wonder lafts

Whilft I am bound to wonder, I am bound to pity too

Henry vi. 3 2 618 13 Cymbeline. 79001 I Ibid. 53 921142

You are made rather to wonder at the things you hear, than to work : any
Wonder of nature. I once writ a fonnet in his praife, and began thus, Wonder of nature

Henry

Wonderful. Keep a gametter from the dice, and a good student from his book, and it is wonderful

7 525223 5842

Merry W of Wind | 3| 1|

– O, wonderful, wonderful and most wonderful, wonderful and yet again wonderful

Wonder-wounded hearers

Wondrous monument

Want. He was wont to call me ufurer

Talbot is taken, whom we wont to fear

'Tis not his wont to be the hindmost man

As You Like It.3 2 236146
Hamlet. 1103125

Tam. of the Shretv. 32 265 221
Mer. of Ven. 3209113
Henry vi. 2 545 214
2 Henry vi. 3 | 583134

It then draws near the feafon, wherein the fpirit held his wont to walk

Wonted. And make his eye-balls roll with wonted fight

Hamlet 1

Mid. Night's Dream. 3

Woo. Yet will I woo for him; but yet fo coldly, as heaven it knows, I would not have him speed

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Two Gent of Verona. 4 3
4139
Mu. Ado Ab. Noth 5 2 144223
Ibid. 5 2 145 1
Love's Labor Loft.5 2 170111

Nor did with unbashful forehead woo the means of weakness and debility

What a life is this, that your poor friends muft woo your company
For I am rough, and woo not like a babe
7 N

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- Dumain transform'd four woodcocks in a dish

O, this woodcock! what an afs it is

We have caught the woodcock, and will keep him muffled

Now is the woodcock near the gin

Richard ii.31

Julius Cafar. 3 2 756134 Titus Andron. 2 1 837921 Two Gent. of Verona.2 2 292 2 Mu. Ado About Netb. 3 1 1321 1 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2 189149 Ibid. 4 1 1901 7 Ibid. 41190|2|59

Much Ado About Noth.5 1 142224 Love's Labor Loft. 4 3 161|1|44 Tam. of the Shrew.12 258252 All's Well.41 2961 19 Twelfth Night. 253182 5 Ibid. 4 2 327239

And fear to kill a woodcock, left thou difpoffefs the foul of thy grandam

So ftrives the woodcock with the gin

- Springs to catch woodcocks

As a woodcock to my own fpringe

Wooden flavery

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Woodland. I am a woodland fellow, fr, that always lov'd a great fire
Woodman. He's a better woodman than thou tak ft him for

-

3 Henry vi.14 608 139 Hamlet. 1310052 5 Ibid. 5 21040/2.46 Tempest 31 1313 Troil. and Crefft 3 863126 1 Henry vi. 54 566229 Richard iii. 634459

All's Well.4 5300243

Meaf. for Meaf4 3 95/2,53 Cymbeline.36 913

You, Polydore, have prov'd best woodman, and are matter of the feast Woodmonger. You shall be a woodmonger, and buy nothing of me but cudgels Henry v.5 | 537

Woodville. D. P.

1 Henry vi.

Woo'd. With wisdom I might fear; my Doricles, you woo'd me the falfe way

That woo'd the flimy bottom of the deep But his occafions might have woo'd me first Wuners. She mocks all her wooers out of fuit

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Winter's Tale. 4 3 35129
Richard tii.1 4641 223

Timon of Athens.3 3814211 Much Ado About Noth 2 1 128 157

One thing more rests, that thyself execute;-to make one among these wooers

He is the blunteft wooer in christendom

To her gol, a jolly thriving wooer

- Prepare her ears to hear a wooer's tale

A wooer, more hateful than the foul expulfion is of thy dear husband Cymbeline. 2 Wcoes. She wooes you by a figure

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Two Gent. of Verona. 2 1 M. Ado Abt. Noth. 2 woof, to enter

Troil, and Greff. 5 Merry W. of Wind. 3 2 in fealed bags Tid 3 4 Much Ado Abt. Ntb. 2 1

- Henceforth my wooing mind fall be exprefs'd in ruffet yeas, and honeft kerfey

noes

Love's Labor Loft.5 2 170119

For wooing here, until I fweat again: and fwearing till my very roof was dry with oaths of love

poer craftsmen with the craft of smiles

Tfaith, Kate, my wooing is fit for thy understanding

Wooingly. The heaven's breath fmells wooingly here Woolen bag-pipe

Mer.of Ven.3 2 211215 Richard ii. 4 419) Henry v.5 2 539 44 Macbeth.16 367) Merch. of Venice. |4| 1215 Coriolanus.3 27234 Henry v. 2 4 452 244

Woollen vaffals, things created to buy or fell with groats
Worfack, How now, wool-fack? what mutter you
Weelvis. Why in this woolvish gown should I stand here, to beg of Hob, and Dick

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drink up Efi

Worcefier. At Worcester muft his body be interr'd; for fo he will'd it

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Antony and Cleon
Hamlet.S
K. John.

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Whereupon the earl of Worcester hath broke his staff, refign'd his stewardship, and

all the houshold fervants filed with him to Bolingbroke

-, Earl of. D. P.

Word.

-

His word is more than the miraculous harp

A fine volley of words

An exchequer of words

Slow in words, is a woman's only virtue

of denial in thy labra's here

His word might bear my wealth at any time

Tire the hearer with a book of words

Every word ftabs

are a very fantastical banquet

That I maintain the change of words

A man of fire-new words

They have liv'd long on the alms-basket of words

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Here are a few of the unpleasantest words that ever blotted paper
The fool hath planted in his memory an army of good of words
Not one word to throw at a dog

1

47 34 116162

124 Ibid. 2 1 127

Ibid. 2

1

39

19

3 29 55

Ibid. 41138256

Love's Labor Loft.

Such Ethiop words, blacker in their effect than in their countenance

Ibid.
Mer of Ven.

1149 21 1165

I 21218 Ibid. 3 5 214 11

As You Like It.13

227 31 Ibid. 4 3 244 19

His plaufive words he fcatter'd not in ears, but grafted them to grow there, and to

bear

Let every word weigh heavy of her worth

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- Her name's a word; and to dally with that word, might make my sister wanton

are very rafcals, fince bonds difgraced them

are grown fo falfe, I am loth to prove reafon with them
I do come with words as medicinal as true; honeft as either
While I threat, he lives; words to the heat of deeds top cold breath gives Macbeth 2
I have no words, my voice is in my word

Not a word of his but buffets better than a fist of France

I was never fo bethumpt with words

Thy word is but the vain breath of a common man

3341 263 1369219 7 386||

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Winter's Tale 2

Ibid.
King John. 2
Ibid. 2

2

Ibid.

394 2 2 394 2 54 13961 26

52

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The hopeless word of, never to return, breath I against thee upon pain of life

That word feem'd buried in my forrows grave

We three are but thy felf, and fpeaking fo, thy words are but as thoughts, therefore be bold

The time was, father, that you broke your word

Ibid. 21 422 2 2 Henry iv. 234831

I know not the phrafe; but I will maintain the word with my fword, to be a foldier-like word

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Thefe haughty words of her's have batter'd me like roaring cannon shot
He dies, we lofe; I break my watlike word

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Let not his fmoothing words bewitch your hearts

2 Henry vi.

For every word you fpeak in his behalf, is flander to your royal dignity
Let my words ftab him, as he hath me

Ibid.

573 588

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I cannot give due action to my words, except a fword, or fceptre, balance it -The words would add more anguish than the wounds

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Why fhould calamity be full of words?-windy attorneys to their client woes

Ibid. 5 5 6317

Richard iii. 4 4 6602 1

And your words, domesticks to you, ferve your will, as't please yourself pronounce
their office

- are no deeds

Where's your commiffion, lords? words cannot carry authority fo mighty
He that will give good words to thes, will flatter beneath abhorring

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