Freighting fouls. French characterized by Porția in her description of M. le Bon lords. D. P. Thofe girls of Italy, take heed of them; they say, our French lack Sure they are baftards to the English; the French ne'er got them Tempeft.1 language to deny, Number kill'd and taken prisoners at the battle of Agincourt French language. Scene in the French language between Catherine and an woman Frenchman to-morrow A. S. P. C. L. King John. 3 1 Ibid. 2 Ibid. 2 399 7 536134 541218 1 Henry vi. I 544112 2 Henry vi. 4 Cymbeline. old gentle 893 Henry v.3 4 522146 Much Ado About Netb. 3 2 133126 Done like a Frenchman, turn and turn again 1 Hen, vi. 3 K. Jobn. 3 Frets, call you these? quoth the; I'll fume with them Tam. of the Shrew. 2 Jul. Cafar. 2 747 246 4937232 Yon grey lines that fret the clouds are meflengers of day Call me what inftrument you will, though you can fret me, you cannot play upon Lear.3 1 946119 Richard ii. 3 3 43015 Ant. and Cleap. 410 Tam, of the Shrew. 2 794 12 4 9051 25 21013151 126319 121 I 2682 18 6 Ibid. 5 4 32153 43 230 Ibid. 54 43252 Comedy of Errors. 4 2 11325 You dare easier be friends with me than fight with my enemy Much Ado Ab. Noth. 4 1 139156 - It is a hard matter for friends to meet - Keep thy friend under thy own life's key As You Like It. 32 236139 Twelfth Night. 5| 132914 I 32919 Both he, and they, and you, yea, every man, shall be my friend again, and I'll be his -- 1 Henry iv. 51 468 217 2 Henry iv. 1 I 473 252 Make friends with fpeed never fo few, and never yet more need Ibid. 4 4 500 219 - A friend i' the court is better than a penny in purfe 590/144 623213 648 157 Ibid. 5 2 665 2 7 Henry viii. I 6731158 Wolfey's obfervations on the falling off of friends who have been made confidants 16. 2 I · Come, poor remains of friends, reft on this rock How had you been my friends elfe? why have you that charitable title from thoufands, did you not chiefly belong to my heart Timon of Athens.1 2 807 225 What need we have any friends, if we should never have need of them . Would moft refemble tweet inftruments hung up in cafes, that keep their founds to themielves All gone! and not one friend to take his fortune by the arm Friend. Happier is he that has no friend to feed, than fuch that do even enemies exceed Thou difeafe of a friend, and not himfelf A. S. P. C. L. Timon of Athenst 8091 4 1813141 2 819122 Ibid. 4 - What viler thing upon the earth, than friends, who can bring noblest minds to basest ends fhould affociate friends in grief and woe - Had I admittance, and opportunity to friend Ibid. 5 I 824 241 - All friends fhall tafte the wages of their virtue Titus Andronicus.5 3 855135 897 2 2 -The friends thou hast, and their adoption try'd, grapple them to thy foul with hoops of steel Friended. Not friended by his wish, to your high person his will is most malignant H. viii. 2 1 675244 is conftant in all other things, faving the office and affairs of love 33139 me to conceal For when did friendship take a breed of barren metal of his friend There's flattery in friendthip For it cannot be we thall remain in friendship -'s full of dregs 12719 1871 201216 Henry v.37 526146 7752 4 2 Ant. and Cleop. 2 2 Has friendship fuch a faint and milky heart, it turns in lefs than two nights 809 212 Ibid. 3 1 813142 Hamlet. 2 21013115 Othello. 3 3 1059221 Macbeth. 1 6 367213 Much Ado Ab. Noth. 5 2 144238 Tempeft. 4 Fritters. Have I lived to stand in the taunt of one that makes fritters of English Hamlet. 3 21021145 I 18 2 20 72238 72 233 110522 34 I 3781 I 3 57 2 21 6 779115 21018 241 Ibid. 5 5 Merry W. of Wind. 2 That, from the fenfe of all civility, I fhould thus play and trifle with your reverence Frants. Why ftands thefe royal fronts amazed thus And front but in that file where others tell fteps with me Frontier. Majesty might never yet endure the moody frontier of a fervant brow 1 H. iv. 1 2 77513 3 44515x 4 936 237 Mu. Alo Abt. Noth. 5 4 146110 infants of the fpring 1148153 2180117 Love's Labor Loft.1 Meafure for Measure. 75 4735 491 3 19154 As You Like It. 4 I 242 2 Say, that she frown; I'll fay, fhe looks as clear as morning rofes newly wash'd with dew Tam. of the Shrew. 2 1 261|2/21 Frown. Frown. To know the meaning of dangerous majesty when perchance it frowns, more Wherefore frowns he thus? 'tis his aspect of terror A. S. P. C.L. King Jobn 2 405110 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 cause Freward. The wench is ftark mad, or wonderful froward She is tolerably curft, and fhrewd and froward Romeo and Juliet.1 14212 8 Cymbeline. 3 Tam. of the Shrew. I 5 911|1|58 1255223 2 258138 Ibid. 2 1 262230 - See where the comes; and brings your froward wives as prisoners to her womanly perfuafion - Clarence, how evil it befeems thee Fructify. We should thankful be for those parts that do fructify in us more than he 3 Henry vi. Love's Labor Loft. 4 Frugal. I was then frugal of my mirth Merry Wives of Windfor. 2 Fruit. The weakest kind of fruit drops earliest to the ground, and fo let me M. of Ven. 4 He dies, that touches any of this fruit, till I and my affairs are answered As Y.L. It. 2 - If you will then fee the fruits of the sport, mark his first approach before my lady The ripeft fruit first falls, and fo doth he Like fair fruit in an unwholesome dish, are like to rot untasted My news fhall be the fruit to that great feaft Fruit of her womb. But I pray God, the fruit of her womb mifcarry -- - The fruit fhe goes with, I pray for heartily; that it find good time, Fruitful. One fruitful meal would fet me to 't She's fram'd as fruitful as the free elements Twelfth Night. 2 5 319232 Ricbard ii. 2 142145 Troil, and Cref. 2 3 869227 Cymbeline. 55 926155 Hamlet. 2 21010219 Othello. 2 3 1054247 2 Henry iv. 5 4 505 230 true heir to the Fruitfully. If your will want not, time and place will be fruitfully offered Frufe. I like thy armour well; I'll frufh it, and unlock the rivets all 3 Henry vi. 4 4 624257 and live H. viii. 51 696 250 Meaf. for Meaf. 4 3 96254 Othello. 231058117 Lear. 46 959223 1 Henry vi. 5 6 569151 Troi. and Cre5 6 8892 53 Tempeft. 3 3 14258 Ant. & Cleo. 5797144 Mer. of Ven. 2 2 203/2/45 Henry viii. 5 3 701125 Troil. and Creff 5 2 885 257 2 Henry iv. 2 1 479/2/42 Henry v. 2 3 Henry vi. 5630160 Fruftrated. Being fo fruftrated, tell him, he mocks the paufes that he makes -, lechery, fry Fub'd off And have been fub'd off and fub'd off, from this day to that Fuel. Well the fuel is gone, that maintain`d that fire Prol. to Troi, and Creff I am full forry, that he approves the common liar Tempeft. 1 Ibid. 2 Cymbeline. 2 Full fraught man. And thus thy fall hath left a kind of blot to mark the full fraught man 3 518113 い 8572 2 2150 97238 768133 1044140 110572/42 5 906114 A. S. P. C. L. Functions. Twas a commandment to command the captain and all the rest from their Meafure for Mcafure. I 2 76232 Or what is he of bafeft function, that says his bravery is not on my coft As You L. I. 2 7 233115 Funerals. Turn melancholy forth to funerals That function is mother'd in furmife; and nothing is, but what is not And in the pulpit as a friend speak in the order of his funeral Do not confent, that Antony speak in his funeral With mirth in funeral, and with dirge in marriage 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 Furbifb. And furbish new the name of John of Gaunt Twelfth Night. 4 Love's Labor Loft.1 Ibid. 1 754145 7541 50 21001 218 21003152 Furbib'd. With furbish'd arms Furies. Talked of fatan, and of limbo, and of furies - Then, Piftol, lay thy head in furies' lap Faft in us unus'd riddle And difcourfe fuftian with one's own fhadow Furious. To be furious, is to be frighted out of fear Furnace-burning beart Furnib. And have the counfel, which is the best to furnish me to-morrow His training fuch, that he may furnish and instruct Furnifbed. I am not furnish'd like a beggar How fhall we do? we are not furnish'd like Bohemia's fon You speak of him when he was lefs furnish'd than now he is 2 Henry iv. Taming of the Shrew. 4 3 Furtherance. Omit no happy hour, that may give furtherance to our expedition Henry v.1 Fury. And the were not poflefs'd with a fury -- By all the blood that ever fury breath'd My fury fhall abate, and I the crowns will take I dare your quenchlefs fury to more rage If not well, thou should'st come like a fury crown'd with snakes, not like a formal] Furzes sharp Fifiian. The ferving-men in their new fuftian Romeo and Juliet. 31 Hamlet. Tam. of the Shrer. 4 1 Ant. and Cleop. 311 790 218 2 538 217 Henry viii. 1 16732 6 7899 234 3 Henry vi. 2 I 610131 M. Ado Ab. N. 3 Mer. of Venice. 2 great teachers Henry viii. I 2 675213 Troilus and Creff. 2 3 868 220 923 248 982256 1070 2 24 Tempeft. 41 18122 410281 7 267 232 318232 31057 211 Fofiilarian. Fully Stuff 2 Henry iv. 2 Troilus and Creff. 1 3 4801 12 863132 Gad. I will go get a leas of brass, 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 Lear. I Romeo and Juliet. 4 2011 56 1846 111 Gadfbill. D. P. Gage. You shall not gage me by what we do to-night 1 Henry iv. Mer. of Venice. 2 441 2041 59 Pale trembling coward, there I throw my gage Richard ii. 1 Ibid. 111118 There is my gage, the manual feal of death, that marks thee out for hell - If that thy valour stand on sympathies, there is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to thine Ib. -There I throw my gage, to prove it on thee to the extremeft point of mortal breathing Some honeft chriftian truft me with a gage, that Norfolk lies Ibid. I 415120 1 431253 431262 Ibid. 4 432113 Ibid. 4 Henry v.4 Ibid. 4 Mer. of Ven. 1 Your differences fhall all reft under gage, till we affign you to your days of trial Some other times we drown our gain in tears Hamlet.1 11000 2 27 Tw. Night.15311144 Gain-giving. It is fuch a kind of gain-giving, as would, perhaps, trouble a woman If it be known to him that I gainfay my deed, how may he wound, and worthilymy falfhood Gait. Doth he not hold up his head, as it were, and strut in his gait Merry W. of Wind.14 5 210392 26 2 Henry iv. 1 Henry viii. 2 4 Love's Lab. Left. 51 684250 50135 1641 50 Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. 12531 41 Ibid. 4 All's Well. 2| 2 269 2 58 1283213 Twelfth Night.1 4310135 320 2 20 Winter's Tale. 4 3 356 2 34 458 1 37 4831 24 689 Gaited. You muft fend the afs upon the horse, for he is flow gaited Galen. My Galen 1 Henry iv. 31 21 2 Henry iv. 2 3 Lear. 4 6 959146 Love's Lab. Left. 31155128 Troi, and Greff 5 5 88122 3 Henry vi. 5 3 629226 57121 All's Well. 2 3 285258 Coriolanus. 2 1 713116 Meaf. for Meaf.2 2 83 244 Merry W.of Windfor. 2 2 The most fovereign prescription in Galen is but empyric qutique Gall. Which a difmifs'd offence would after gall - -- 'Twould be my tyranny to ftrike and gall them for what I bid them - What king so strong, can tie the gall up in the flanderous tongue Let there be gall enough in thy ink - You measure the heat of your livers with the bitterness of your galls Even thofe that were your father's enemies have steep'd their galls in Worfe than gall the daintieft that they tafte Whom from the flow of gall I name not, but from fincere motions Whofe gall coins flanders like a mint You have the honey ftill, but thefe the gall - O deadly gall, and theme of all our fcorns do Ibid. 1 Twelfth Night.3 2 321249 78,244 91/2 42 24772 24 2 4771 SI 516116 2 545 216 5901 8 67219 honey Henry v.2 2 1 Henry vi. 2 Henry vi. 32 Henry viii. Troilus and Creff1 3 8632 5 Ibid. 2 2 8681 Ibid. 4 5 881 |