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Nothing. Before I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing

A. S. P. C. L.

1 Henry iv. 1 444/11

When yet you were in place, and in account nothing fo strong and fortunate as 1 b.514681 6

Than idly fit to have my nothings monster'd

- And wak'd half dead with nothing

He was a thing of nothing, titleless

That you do love me, I am nothing jealous

Enjoy thy plainnefs, it nothing ill becomes thee doubting your present affistance

Coriolanus. 2 2 715212
Ibid. 4 5 729213

Ibid. 51 733120

Julius Cafar

2 7432/31

Antony and Cleop. 26779121
Timon of Athens.31 8131

For thefe my prefent friends-as they are to me nothing, fo in nothing bless them,

and to nothing are they welcome brings me all things

Dufty nothing

Ibid.

2

6 818120

Ibid. 5 3 827219

Troilus and Cre3 2 874157

'Twas but a bolt of nothing, shot at nothing, which the brain makes of fumes Com.42 9181

I am nothing: or if not, nothing to be were better

The wrongs he did me were nothing prince-like

can come of nothing: speak again

The quality of nothing hath not fuch need to hide itself

If it be nothing, I shall not need spectacles

So much the rent of his land comes to

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Ibid. 2918222 Ibid. 5 5 926|2|34 Lear.I 1930149 Ibid. 1

2933111

Ibid. 2933113
Ibid. 4936129
Ibid. 14 9381 26
Ibid. 2 2 942116

Romeo and Juliet. 4 1989150

Hamlet. I

21001 2

48

Ibid. 4 51010129 Coriolanus. 3 707240 Ibid. 23 7181

Notice. To my poor unworthy notice, he mock'd us, when he begg'd our voices
Notify. She gives you to notify

Merry Wives of Wind. 2 2

She is ftirring, fir; if she will stir hither, I shall seem to notify unto her

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54 230 Othello. 3 110591 S

Romeo and Juliet.s
Macbeth. 3

1994 144

373225

Lear. 4 937 124

All's Well.

Othello.

1 Henry iv. Troilus and Cref":\

No-verbs. Shall I lose my priest, my Sir Hugh? no, he gives me the pro-verbs and the

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When gallant springing, brave Plantagenet, that princely novice, by thee

Triple-turn'd whore! 'tis thou hath fold me to this novice Nought. Marry, fir, be better employ'd, and be nought awhile Nouns. Od's nouns

277 214 21071 250 4452125

4

4 880 2

I 3 58252 S 791 29 All's Well. 21 283 2

was struck dead

6

Richard iii. 4 643145 Antony and Cleop. 410 794112 1223 220

As You Like It.1

Merry Wives of Wind. 4 653

- Talk of a noun and a verb, and fuch abominable words, as no christian ear can endure to hear

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2 Henry vi. 47596125
1 Henry vi. 1

Love's Labor Loft.S
King John.s

Ibid. S
Coriolanus.

Now. When I did him at this advantage take, an ass's now! I fix'd upon his head

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1712 3

411213 411/2/16

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Mud. Night's Dream. 3 2 185134 Richard iii. 2) 1 64125 Much Ado About Notb. 1. 12014

And by the ground they hide, I judge their number upon, or near, the rate of thirty thoufand

Now is he for the numbers that Petrarch flowed in

Number'd beach.

Numbness. Bequeath to death your numbnefs, for from him dear
Nun. Blefledness of living a nun's life

2 Henry iv. 41 492222 Romeo and Juliet. 4 978225 Cymbeline. 17 859:45 life redeems you W. T. 5 3 3622 2 Mid. Night's Dream. 11 176136

A nun of winter's fifterhood kifles not more religiously; the very ice of chastity is in them

- Asfit as the nun's lip to the friar's mouth

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A. S. P. C. L.

Nunci. She will attend it better in thy youth, than in a nuncio of more grave afpectT.N.[1] 4 319,149 Nand. How now, nuncle

Nuptial. This looks not like a nuptial

Much Ado About Noth. 4

A father is, at the nuptial of his fon, a guest that best becomes the table W. Tak. 43 Nurfe. Which is the manner of his nurse, or his dry-nurfe

Lear.1 4

Merry Wives of W1

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Richard .13
Richard iii. 41

935 253 137 2'53 3538 48 234 417245

657148

Truth fhall nurse her

Henry viii. 5 4

702126

Your pratttling nurfe into a rapture lets her baby cry, while the chats him Coriolanus. 211
Nurfe. D. P. Tit. Andronicus. p. 831.
to Juliet Romeo and Juliet.
Nurfer. See where he lies inherfed in the arms of the most bloody nurfer of his harms

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Narfery. It may well ferve a nursery to our gentry, who are sick, for exploit

Nurfb-a Quickly tell me so mush

Nurfing. Firt pay me for the nurfing of thy fons

Nurture. On whofe nature nurture can never flick

-

1 Henry vi. SI breathing and All's Well. Merry Wives of Windfer. 3 2 59

Yet am I inland bred; and know fome nurture
Nits. I have a ventrous fairy, that shall seek the fquirrel's hoard, and fetch the new

nuts

There can be no kernel in this light nut

-'A were as good crack a fufty nut with no kernel
Thou wilt quarrel with a man for cracking nuts, having no other reason but because
thou haft hazel eyes

Cymbeline. 5
Tempef. 4 I 18

5

927

As You Like It. 2

7

233135

Midf. Night's Dream. 4
All's Well. 2 5
Troilus and Cref. 2

2

189 261

289 213 1866158

Romeo and Juliet. 3

1

981 260

Merry Wives of Windfor. 1
2 Henry iv. 5

I 47139

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Love's Labor Loft.52

17227

Winter's Tale. 4 2

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Nut-fbell. I could be bounded in a nut-shell, and count myself a king of infinite space Ham. 2
Nym. D. P.

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O. Than all the fiery O's and eyes of light

Midf. Night's Dream. 3 2

186 48

Or may we cram within this wooden O, the very cafques that did affright the air

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An oak but with one green leaf on it, would have answered her M. Ado About Noth. 2 I
Under an oak, whose boughs were mofs'd with age, and high
antiquity

top bald with dry

As You Like It.4 3244253
Many ftrokes, tho' with a little axe, hew down and fell the hardest timber'd oak 3 H.vi. 1
Hews down oaks with rushes
Coriolanus.I

To a cruel war I fent him; from whence he return'd with his brows bound with oak_b.1
And for his meed was brow-bound with the oak

He is the rock, the oak not to be wind-shaken

When the fcolding winds have riv'd the knotty oaks

When fplitting winds make flexible the knees of knotted oaks
Clofe as oak

Oak cleaving thunder-bolts

Oaken garland. He comes the third time home with the oaken garland

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705 137

37071 S

Ibid. 2 2 745 236

Ibid. 5 2 73515 Julius Cafar. 3 745138 Troilus and Cre1 3 862128 Othello. 3 3 1061 238 Lear. 3 2 946 237 Coriolanus, 2] 313825

Tavo Gent. of Verona. 2 3

Ibid. 2 6

Ibid. 2 6

Ibid. 4 3

- Thou didst then rend thy faith into a thousand oaths, and all those oaths defcended into perjury

29 13 32131 32/145

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A. S. P. C. L.

Will fhall break it, will, and nothing elfe

Oath. Your bold-beating oaths

Your oath is pafs'd to pafs away from these
Having fworn too hard a keeping oath, study to break it, and not break my troth Ib. 1

So he diffolv'd, and fhowers of oaths did melt

- taken by the lovers of Portia

Mid. Night's Dream. 1 1
Merch. of Venice. 29
Ibid. 4 I

I have an oath in heaven: fhall I lay perjury upon my foul
Athing ftuck on with oaths upon your finger, and riveted with faith
Pardon this fault; and by my foull fwear, I never more will break
When I break my oath, let me turn monster

The oath of a lover is no ftronger than the word of a tapfter
Full of ftrange oaths, and bearded like the pard

unto your flesh 16.5
an oath with thee 76.5
As You Like It.1 2
Ibid. 3 4

Merry Wives of Windfor.12 2
Love's Labor Loft.

54,1,20 147 224

14814

Ibid. 21

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Ibid. 2 7

233 230

So God mend me, and all pretty oaths that are not dangerous
With oaths kept waking, and with brawling fed

Ibid. 41

24347

Taming of the Shrew. 4 3

2702 9

With the divine forfeit of his foul upon oath

All's Well.3

6

Your oaths are words and poor conditions, but unfeal'd

'Tis not the many oaths, that make the truth; but the plain single vow, that is vow'd true

293 237

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When he fwears oaths, bid him drop gold, and take it

Ibid. 4 3

298 256

Though you would feek to unfphere the ftars with oaths
Not for Bohemia, nor the pomp that may thereat be glean'd, for all the fun fees,
or the close earth wombs, or the profound fea hides in unknown fathoms, will break
my oath

He profefles no keeping of oaths; in breaking them he is ftronger than Hercules Ib. 4 3
A terrible oath with a fwaggering accent, effect of

299 128

Twelfth Night. 3 4

324148

Winter's Tale. 1

2334 2 7

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I have a king's oath to the contrary

On keeping prior oaths before fubfequent ones

Thy voluntary oath, lives in this botom, clearly cherished

- Upon your oath of service to the pope, go I to make the French lay down

Engaged by my oath (which heaven defend a knight should violate)

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- And giveft fuch farcenet furety for thy oaths, as if thou never walk'dst Finsbury

-Broke oath on oath, committed wrong on wrong

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Ibid. 3 3 399223

their arms 16.51 407141 Richard ii. 3 416 159 Ibid. 2 3 42529

further than

1 Henry iv. 3 I 459 10

Ibid. 4 467

22

Ibid. 5 1 4681IL
15152 1

Henry v.2
Ibid. 2 3 518122

- Only downright oaths, which I never ufe till urg'd, nor never break for urging Ibid. 5 2

5392

6

And may our oaths well kept and profp'rous be

Ibid. 5 2

541 226

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- of the Governor of Paris to Henry VI.

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As doth a ruler with unlawful oaths

Ibid. 5 6

569|2|10

-Salisbury's reasons for breaking a finful oath

2 Henry vi. 51

60113

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- An oath is of no moment, being not took before a true and lawful magistrate

2

606 221

For a kingdom any oath may be broken: I'd break a thousand oaths to reign one year

- The world goes hard, when Clifford cannot spare his friends an oath

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Ibid. 1

Ibid. 6 616 I 8

Ibid. 3 I 617130

-To keep that oath, were more impiety than Jepthah's when he facrificed his daughter 16.5 1 628244

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Coriolanus. 5 5 738248 Julius Cafar. 2 1748 112 Ibid. 2 1748122 Ant. and Cleop. 2 2 775 27 that god he fwears Titus Andronicus. 51 851115 As if I borrow'd my oaths of him, and might not spend them at my pleasure Cym. 2 I 901134 Whofe falfe oaths prevail'd before my perfect honour Ibid. 3 3 908 238 Swore as many oaths as I fpake words, and broke them in the fweet face of heaven Lr. 3 4 948 240 Oathable. You are not oathable,-although, I know, you'll swear Timon of Athens. 4 3 821133 Taming of the Shrew.3 2

- To think, that, or our caufe, or our performance did need an oath You have broke the article of your oath

-An ideot holds his bauble for a god, and keeps the oath, which by

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I cannot draw a cart, nor eat dried oats; if it be man's work, I will do it Lear. 5 3 962 225

Oatcake, Hugh

Obduracy. Thou think'st me as far in the devil's book, as thou and Falstaff for obduracy and perfiftency

Obdurate. Withal obdurate, do not hear him plead

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A.S. P. C. L.

Obedence. I am your wife in all obedience,

Induc. to Taming of the Sbrew.

2254,2, 8

From whofe obedience I forbid my foul
Our people quarrel with obedience

King John. 4

3

4061 23

Henry v. 51

4071 27

And true obedience, of this madness cur'd, stoop tamely to the foot of majesty 2 Hiv. 4 - To which is fixed, as an aim or butt, obedience

2

4951 42

- Tractable obedience is a flave to each incenfed will
The hearts of princes kifs obedience, so much they love it

Henry v.
Henry viii.
Ibid. 3

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Ant, and Cleop. 5
Cymbeline. 2
Ibid. 3

1 687222 2798 2 44 3903235 4 910112 4253117 175

I am old, my lords, and all the fellowship I hold now with him is only my obedience 16. 3
I hourly learn a doctrine of obedience

You fin against obedience, which you owe your father

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Induc. to Tam.of the Shrew.
Midf. Night's Dream.
2 Henry vi. 5

Cymbeline. 51
Othello. 5

Lear. 4

Two Gent. of Verona.

K. Jobn. 4

Have now the fatal object in my eye, where my poor young was lim'd, was caught, and kill'd

His eye revil'd me as his abject object

5991 28 9201 36 21078||13| 19532 19

I 23/1/16

3 4061 3

3 Henry vi. 5 6 631228 Henry vii. I 1 6732 48 7. Cafar. 4758 32 Timon of Athens. 4 3 821116

A barren-fpirited fellow; one that feeds on objects, arts, and imitations
Swear against objects

This object, which takes prifoner the wild motion of mine eye, fixing it only here Cy.17900 29
The object poifons fight

Objected. It is well objected; if I have fewest, I subscribe in filence
Objections. Speak on, fir; I dare your worst oftjections

Oblique. All is oblique; there's nothing level in our curfed natures,

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The nature of his great offence is dead, and deeper than oblivion we do bury the

- incenfing relicks of it

Nor from the dust of old oblivion rak'd

O, my oblivion is a very Antony, and I am all forgotten
And blind oblivion fwallow'd cities up

Troilus and Creffida. 3 2 874155

- Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, wherein he puts alms for oblivion, a great fiz'd monster of ingratitude

Ibid. 3 3 876114

What's paft, and what's to come, is ftrew'd with husks, and formless ruin of oblivion 16.4882246 Obloquy. Which were the greateft obloquy i' the world in me to lose which obloquy fet bars before my tongue Obfcenely. When it comes fo fmoothly off, fo obfcenely, as it were, so -There we may rehearse more obscenely, and courageously Obfcured in the circle of this foreft

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Who hath most fortunately been inform'd of my obfcur'd course Obfequies. These tears are my sweet Rutland's obfèquies

What curfed foot wanders this way to-night, to cross my obfequies, rights

Her obfequies have been as far enlarg'd as we have warranty Obfequious. You are obfequious in your love

- And so obfequious will thy father be

- forrow

Lear. 2 2 942 150

3 Henry vi.14

6091 9

and true love's
Romeo and Juliet. 5 3 9951 23
Hamlet. S 1|1035|2|44|

Merry Wives of Windf. 4 2
3 Henry vi. 2

Hamlet.

Obfequiously. Whilst I awhile obfequiously lament the untimely fall of virtuous Lancaster

65211

5 615113 210022 4

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Obfervance. Followed her with a doting obfervance
Obfervancy. Nor of them look for fuch obfervancy, as fits the bridal
Obfervants. Than twenty filly ducking observants, that stretch their duties nicely Lear. 22 941215

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Othello. 3 4 1066|1|33

Love's Labur Loft.3 1154257 Midf. Night's Dream.4 1 1901 19 As You Like It. 2 7 232236 Hamlet. 3 11018151 1 Henry vi. 55 567252 Coriolanus.5 31 73543 Obftruct.

A..S P. C. L.

Ant. and Cleop. 36784126 Meaf. for Meaf. 31 88212

Otruct. Being an obstruct 'tween his luft and him
Obruction. To lye in cold obstruction
Obtain'd. The other when she has obtain'd your eye, will have your tongue too W. Tale. 5358243
Occafions. My purfe, my perfon, my extremeft means lye all unlock'd to your occafions

Mer. of Venice.1

-O, that woman that cannot make her fault her husband's occafion, let her never

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go fit and weep 'till I can find occasion of revenge What occafion now reveals before 'tis ripe

Withhold thy fpeed, dreadful occafion

1982 46

As You Like It. 41243132 Tam. of the Sbrev. 2 1 260 46 Twelfth Night. 51 330140 King John. 4 2 404133

And only stays but to behold the face of that occasion that shall bring it on 1 H. v. 13 447230

I will allow the occafion of our arms

And are enforc'd from our moft quiet fphere by the rough torrent of -There is occafions and caufes, why and wherefore in all things

And when I give occasion of offence, then let me die

A very little thief of occafion will rob you of a great deal of patience

- He married but his occasion here

2 Henry iv.13 478 157 occafion Ibid. 4493131 Henry 5537 14 3607217

3 Henry vi.
Coriolanus. 2 1 712134
6 7818

Ant, and Cleop.

And, I am proud, fay, that my occafions have found time to use them toward a fupply of money

He hath only fent his prefent occafion now

Which many of my near occafions did urge me to put off

I would breed from hence occafions, and Ishall, that I may speak

, noble Glofter, of fome prize

- Could not you take fome occafion without giving

A finder out of occafions

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Occupation. You that stood fo much upon the voice of occupation

'Tis my occupation to be plain

2 H. iv.

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Romeo and Juliet.2

Occurrents. So tell him, with the occurrents more or lefs, which have folicited Hamlet. 5
Ocean. She is my prize, or ocean whelm them all

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Occupy. Thefe villains will make the word captain as odious as the word occupy

55136

Merry W. of Windf. 2 2 And calmly run on in obedience, even to our ocean, to our great King John K. John. 5 4 41030 -Alas, poor Duke, the task he undertakes, is-numbering fands, and drinking oceans

dry

Richard ii. 2 2 4241 21

-I have feen the ambitious ocean fwell, and rage, and foam, to be exalted with the threat'ning clouds

At whofe burden the anger'd ocean foams

Julius Cæfar. 3 745 39 Ant. and Cleop.2779 3

The ocean, over-peering of his lift, eats not the flats with more impetuous haste Ham. 4510291ST Octavia. D. P.

Odd. An odd man, lady? every man is odd

767

Ant. and Cleop.
Troi. and Creff 4 5 881 22
Ibid. 4 5 883 238
Othello. 1045

- The general ftate, I fear, can scarce entreat you to be odd with him
Odd even. At this odd even and dull watch of the night
Odd numbers. They say there is divinity in odd numbers, either on nativity, chance, or
death

Merry W. of Windor. 51

Odds. Is most at odds with his own gravity and patience that ever you faw
-Then he fhall have no odds

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Ibid. 3 1

58

Σ

271

Tam. of the Shrew. 4 3 Call him a flanderous coward and a villain, which to maintain, I would allow him odds

For I defire nothing but odds with England

- Yields up his life unto a world of odds

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Richardi. 1) 414
Henry v. 2 4 519222
Ibid. 4 4 562232
Ibid. 5 6 569 214

Five men to twenty!-tho' the odds be great, I doubt not, uncle, of our victory 3 H. vi. 1 2 607117

A poor earl's daughter is unequal odds

But Hercules himself muft yield to odds

'Twas odds belike when valiant Warwick fled

I do not know that Englishman alive, with whom my foul is any jot at odds

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