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Mope, to be dull, stupid, v. 556
More sacks to the mill, a game, ii. 137
Morisco, a morris-dancer, iv. 55
Morris, the nine men's, ii. 202

Mort of the deer, the death of the deer,
iii. 19

Mort du vainqueur, or Mort du vin-

aigre, ii. 562

Mortified, religiously subdued, v. 452
Mot, word, vi. 552

Mother, the, hysterica passio, v. 661
Motion, a puppet, a puppet-show, i.

104. 314; iii. 68

Motley, the variegated dress of fools,
ii. 381; iv. 361

Mouse, a term of endearment, ii. 152
Mouse-hunt, a stoat, v. 183
Moused, mouthed, ii. 250

Mouth, a sweet, a sweet tooth, i. 131
Mow, to mop and mow, i. 45; v. 521
Mule, Bajazet's, ii. 593
Muliters, muliteers, vi. 194
Multitude, or multiplied, iv. 657
Mum-budget, a pass-word, i. 248
Muntzer, Thomas, iv. 453
Mure, wall, ii. 248

Muse, to wonder, to ponder, iv. 249
Muset, a little muse, vi. 505
Musingly, thoughtfully, iii. 64
Muss, a scramble, vi. 206

Mutines, mutineers, mutiny, iii. 146;
v. 556. 595

Mutton, a courtezan, i. 92. 315
Mutton, a laced, a dressed courtezan,

a gay strumpet, i. 92

My heart is full of woe, a tune, v. 187

Napless, or Naples, iv. 637
Naps, John, of Greece, ii. 451
Naught, to be, awhile, a phrase, ii. 354
Naughty, worth nothing, wicked, ill-
disposed, ii. 625

Nayword, a byeword, a password, i.
199. 248; ii. 669

Neapolitan bone-ache, the, iv. 517
Needles, or neelds, as one syllable, ii.

224; iii. 198. 305

Neif, a fist, ii. 233; iii. 465
Ne, nor, ii. 557

Neglection, neglect, iv. 498; vi. 434

Nether-stocks, stockings, iii. 356; v.659
Nettle, or metal, of India, ii. 676
Nice, trifling, slight, iii. 432; iv. 302;
v. 153. 192. 354

Nicely, scrupulously, vi. 438
Nicholas, St., his clerks, thieves, i. 131;
iii. 344

Nick, out of all, out of all reckoning,
or calculation, i. 142
Nicked, notched, vi. 203
Night-raven, perhaps the owl, ii. 35
Night-rule, night-revel, ii. 218
Nill, ne will, will not, vi. 426
Nine men's Morris, ii. 202
Nobless, nobleness, iii. 284

Noddy, the knave, or Nob; also a game
at cards, i. 93

No had, and no hath not, iii. 184
Nook, a corner, v. 236

Noise, a company of musicians, iii. 459
Nonce, for the occasion, iii. 330. 676
Not and but confounded, i. 389; ii.
174; iii. 161; iv. 549

Note, knowledge, v. 671. 704

Novum, or Novem, a common game at
dice, ii. 168

Nowl, the head, ii. 218
Nutmeg, a gilt, ii. 171

Oblique, or antique, iv. 572
Obolum, a halfpenny, iii. 368

Obsequious, funereal, iv. 152. 231; v.
88. 482; vi. 604

Obsequious, compliant, i. 230
Obstacle, obstinate, iii. 730

Obstruct, obstruction, vi. 191
Occupy, used indecently, iii. 463
Œiliads, eye-glances, i. 181; v. 703
O'ergrown with age, vi. 346
O'er-look, to bewitch, i. 252; ii. 306
O'er-raught, over-reached, over-took,
i. 371; v. 530

Of all loves, for love's sake, by all
means, i. 199. 367; ii. 212
Offering side, the advancing or chal-
lenging side, iii. 392

Old, an augmentative, i. 184; ii. 79.
336. 486; iii. 459; v. 409
Oldcastle, the name first given to Fal-
staff, iii. 437. 531

Once, once for all, at once, sometime,
i. 387; ii. 18; iv. 375. 644
On here, or on heroes, i. 194
Oosel-cock, black-bird, ii. 215
Opposite, an enemy, an adversary, i.
315; ii. 690; iii. 485; iv. 108. 639
Ordinant, directing, v. 597
Ouphes, elves, i. 239

Outsell, to excel, vi. 320
Over-scutch'd, over-slashed, iii. 484
Overseers of Wills, vi. 563
Overshut, to conclude, vi. 505

Owe, to own, i. 31. 279. 385; ii. 210.
551. 575. 661; iii. 51. 142. 180.
287; vi. 302. 463. 581. 669

Pack, to bargain, to contrive, v. 62
Packings, contrivances, v. 671
Pact, agreement, contract, ii. 76. 479
Paction, compact, contract, iii. 640
Paddock, a toad, v. 385. 560
Painted-cloth, common coloured hang-
ings, ii. 395; iv. 594
Palabras, words, ii. 54. 443
Pale, to impale, iv. 132
Pale, to inclose, vi. 177

Pall'd, waned, decayed, vi. 178
Pantaloon, the Italian, ii. 483
Parcel-gilt, partly gilded, iii. 448
Paris Garden, for bear-baiting, iv. 458
Parish top, ii. 646

Paritors, or apparitors, ii. 122
Parlous, perilous, ii. 212. 388; iv. 273
Part, to go away, to separate, i. 386
Partake, to take part, vi. 656
Parted, endowed, iv. 540

Partlet, Dame, the hen, iii. 385

Pash, a tuft of hair on the head, iii. 20
Pass, to surpass, v. 211

Pass not, care not for, iv. 79
Passionate, or compassionate, iv. 255
Passioning, grieving, i. 150
Patay, the battle of, iii. 702

Patch, the name of a fool, i. 384; ii.
218; iv. 519; v. 453
Path, to walk, v. 316

Patience perforce, patience of mere ne-
cessity, v. 123

Patterns, or pattens, ii. 339

Pavin, passing measures, a species of
dance, ii. 717

Pauca, few words, iii. 560
Paul's, St., the walks in, iii. 435
Pax, the image of the Saviour, iii. 588
Peacock, or paiocke, v. 545
Peat, a pet, a favourite, ii. 455
Peevish, silly, foolish, i. 155. 184. 398;
ii. 660; iii. 375. 595. 729; iv. 208.
330. 581; v. 178

Peg-a-Ramsay, a tune, ii. 667
Peize, to weigh, to balance, to prolong,
ii. 306; iii. 152

Pellicock, or Pillicock, a name, v. 679
Pelting, trifling, paltry, iv. 569
Perch, a common measure, vi. 424
Perdy, par Dieu, iii. 559; v. 546. 662
Periapts, amulets, iii. 723
Perjure, a perjurer, ii. 136; v. 674
Perjurious, false, i. 332

Persever, to persevere, i. 134; ii. 225
Persuade, or dissuade, vi. 217
Perspective, a natural, ii. 718
Perverse errant, or imperseverant, not
perceiving, vi. 328

Pew-fellow, a companion, iv. 318
Phantasm and Monarcho, ii. 126
Pheese, to beat, to chastise, to humble,
ii. 443; iv. 523

Philip, sparrows so called, iii. 132
Phill-horse, or Fill-horse, the shaft-
horse, ii. 286

Phillips, Augustine, the actor, v. 539
Pick, to pitch, iv. 461. 607
Pickt-hatch, the manor of, i. 197
Pight, pitched, fixed, iv. 594; v. 649;
vi. 365

Pilch, a leathern coat, vi. 407

Pilcher, a scabbard, v. 150

Pile of velvet, i. 269; ii. 613; iii. 65
Pill'd, peel'd, shaven, iii. 661

Pin and web, the cataract in the eye,
iii. 26

Pin, to cleave, in archery, to hit the
bull's eye, ii. 128; v. 137
Pioned, dug, i. 65
Pips on playing cards, ii. 462
Pitch and pay, a tavern phrase, iii. 569
Planched, planked, i. 320

Plantage, influence on plants, iv. 536
Plantain, the medical and surgical use
of, ii. 118; v. 110
Plates, money, vi. 242
Platforms, plots, plans, iii. 673

Plausibly, or plausively, by acclama-
tion, vi. 582

Plays, old, the prices of, iv. 477
Pleached, interwoven, plaited, ii. 18;
vi. 228

Pleading, or bleeding, iv. 631

Plot, or block, v. 710
Plurisy, superabundance, v. 582
Point-device, exactly, with great ni-
cety, ii. 397. 681

Point, no, or non point, ii. 113
Points, metal tags, iii. 76. 359; vi. 209
Poize, weight, v. 651

Poking-sticks for setting ruffs, iii. 77
Politic, or palated, v. 565

Polled, cut close, bared, iv. 690
Poltroon, a coward, iv. 117
Pomander, a ball of perfume, iii. 90
Pomewater, a kind of apple, ii. 129
Poor John, hake dried and salted, salt-
fish, v. 101

Porcupine, or porpentine, i. 394
Port, bearing, demeanour, v. 243
Port, weight, burden, vi. 232
Port, a gate, iv. 617
Portance, bearing, carriage, vi. 26
Post, or messenger, iv. 179
Post, the sheriff's, ii. 655
Potch, or podge, iv. 628
Potently, or portent-like, ii. 153
Pouncet-box for perfume, iii. 333
Powder, to salt, iii. 416

Practice, treachery, conspiracy, i. 20
Practice, fraud, contrivance, iv. 370
Practisants, or partizans, iii. 693
Praise in departing, a phrase, i. 60
Prefer, or preserve, i. 277; vi. 371
Pregnant, ready, prepared, ii. 685
Prepositions, the old use of, i. 393
Presenter, the, of a play, ii. 245
Presently, immediately, iv. 419; v. 253
Prest, ready, ii. 272; iv. 640; vi. 438
Pretence, design, purpose, intention,
v. 413. 630

Pretend, to intend, to purpose, i. 119;
iii. 701. 703; vi. 545
Prevision, or provision, i. 16

Prick of noon, and noontide prick, the
point of noon, iv. 130

Pricket, a stag of two years old, so
called, ii. 129

Priestly, or prenzie, i. 305

Prig, a thief, a cheat, iii. 68

Prime, youth, spring, ii. 557
Primero, or primavista, a game at cards,
i. 244; iv. 444

Print in, with nicety, i. 107; ii. 122
Printing, the invention of, iv. 87
Privy, private, vi. 316

Prize, privilege, iv. 135
Probal, or probable, vi. 57

Proceed, to take a degree, ii. 96
Proface, much good do it you, iii. 521
Proof, approval, ii. 505

Proper, of good, or handsome appear-
ance, i. 137; v. 617

Propertied, a theatrical term, ii. 709
Propose, talk, conversation, ii. 40
Prorogue, to protract, lengthen, v. 458
Provand, provender, iv. 638
Provincial, belonging to, or presiding

over, a province, i. 348
Pucelle, a low prostitute, iii. 667
Puck, or Pouke, a fairy, ii. 255
Pudder, pother, v. 673
Pugging-tooth, a thieving habit, or pro-
pensity, iii. 65

Pun, to pound, iv. 507
Punk, a prostitute, i. 200

Purchase, booty, iii. 345. 578; iv. 303
Purchased, obtained as booty, iii. 511
Push! an interjection, ii. 69; v. 257
Putter out, a traveller, an adventurer
of money, i. 60

Putting on, instigation, incitement, i.
326; iv. 652; vi. 348

Puttock, a worthless hawk, vi. 264
Pyramises, the pyramids, vi. 176

Quail'd, or cool'd, v. 457
Quarrel, or cruel, iv. 398
Quarry, a heap of dead game, iv. 607;
v. 386. 448

Quart d'ecu, eight-pence, ii. 607
Quat, a pimple, vi. 109
Queasy, or easy, iv. 704
Queen, or chine, iv. 459
Quell, slaughter, v. 403
Quelled, killed, v. 717
Quelled, or collied, vi. 53
Quern, a hand-mill, ii. 199
Quillets, quidlibets, trifles, iv. 52

Quintaine, the game of, ii. 364
Quips, taunts, scoffs, i. 140
Quit, to requite, to repay, iii. 580; iv.

347; v. 597

Quittance, requital, return, repayment,
iii. 431; v. 220

Quote, to note, to observe, i. 110; iv.
568; v. 116. 508; vi. 552

Rabato, an ornament for the neck then
in fashion, ii. 51
Rabbit-sucker, a young rabbit, iii. 365
Rack, vapour, i. 69

Rake up, to cover up, v. 713
Rank, the butter-woman's, ii. 390
Rank, full, overflowing, vi. 487
Rapier, for dancing, v. 24
Rapier and dagger, v. 599
Rapture of a baby, iv. 636

Rapture, or rupture, of the stormy sea,
vi. 411

Rascals, lean, poor deer, iii. 460. 708
Rase, or rash, to tear, to rend away,

iv. 282; v. 690

Rats, Irish, rhyming to death, ii. 392
Raught, reached, attained, ii. 130; iii.
618; iv. 131

Raught, reft or bereft, iv. 39; vi. 222
Ravin, ravening, ii. 581
Rayed, befouled, dirtied, ii. 493
Razed shoes, or raised shoes, v. 545
Ready and unready, dressed and un-
dressed, iii. 672; vi. 291
Rebate, to blunt, iv. 352
Recheat, a recall by horn, ii. 15
Reck, to care, to heed, i. 145; ii. 377;
v. 490

Reckless, careless, heedless, remorse-
less, iv. 337

Record, to sing, i. 156

Recorder, a musical instrument, v. 547
Red-lattice phrases, public-house lan-
guage, i. 197

Reechy, discoloured by smoke, grimy,
ii. 49; iv. 636; v. 560
Reed, counsel, advice, v. 490
Reek, to smoke, to evaporate, iv. 409
Regiment, government, vi. 193
Reguerdon, reward, iii. 691
Rejourn, to adjourn, iv. 631

Remorseful, compassionate, i. 144
Renege, to deny, to refuse, to renay, v.
654; vi. 133

Repeal, to recall, vi. 58
Reprove, to disprove, iv. 46
Repured, repurified, iv. 531

Reputing, valuing himself upon, iv. 46
Rere-mice, bats, ii. 207

Resolve, to dissolve, v. 483
Resolved, convinced, iv. 145
Respects, considerations, causes, v. 626;
vi. 512

Rest, to set up, ii. 555; v. 184
Resemblance, or disresemblance, un-
likeness, iv. 297
Retire, retreat, iv. 592
Retort, or reject, i. 347
R, the dog's letter, v. 143
Revile, to reproach, ii. 609
Ribald, filthy, bawdy, vi. 197
Riddles, the book of, i. 176

Ride the mare, to be hanged, iii. 448
Rigol, or ringol, a ring, a circle, iii.
506; vi. 579

Rim, the caul of the bowels, iii. 614
Ring, cracked in the, a phrase, v. 523
Ring, running at the, ii. 457
Rings, interchangement of, ii. 716
Rings of rush, for mock, or pretended
marriages, ii. 559

Rivage, bank, shore of a river, iii. 574
Rivo, a drinking exclamation, iii. 356
Robin Hood of England, ii. 356
Romano, Julio, iii. 107
Ronyon, scabby old woman, scurvy

witch, i. 236; v. 389

Rook, to roost, to squat, iv. 209
Rope-tricks, or rhetoricks, ii. 465
Roscius, the Roman actor, v. 522
Rosed, or roseate, v. 40
Roted, said by rote, iv. 667
Rother, horned cattle, properly red
cattle, v. 261

Round, plain, direct, i. 375; ii. 668;
iii. 603; v. 535. 553
Round, to whisper, iii. 23. 152
Rouse, carouse, drink, v. 483; vi. 49
Roynish, scurvy, scabby, ii. 372
Rue, herb of grace, iii. 280; v. 575
Ruffs on boots, ii. 577
Rug-headed Kerns of Ireland, iii. 245
Runaways, or enemies', v. 155

Rushes, for strewing floors of rooms,

iii. 376; v. 116; vi. 287
Rush-rings for mock-marriages, ii. 559

Sables, the wearing of, v. 540
Sack, Sherris, sherry, an Andalusian
wine, iii. 499

Sacring bell, on the elevation of the
host, iv. 426

Sad, grave, serious, i. 99; ii. 289. 692 ;
iii. 80. 192

Sadly, gravely, seriously, ii. 38
Sadness, gravity, seriousness, iv. 164
Safe, to save, to make safe, vi. 218
Saffron colour, fashion to wear, ii. 610
Sag, to swag, v. 453

Said, meaning done, ii. 380; iii. 415;
v. 65; vi. 432

Saint George's Fields, the windmill in,
iii. 480

Saint Nicholas' clerks, thieves, iii. 344
Sallet, and sallad, iv. 95
Salt-cellars, ancient, i. 132
Saltiers, satyrs, iii. 81

Salute, or elate, iv. 401

Samingo, San Domingo, the burden of

a drinking song, iii. 523
Sand-blind, ii. 284

Sanded, the colour of sand, ii. 237
Sanguinity, people of good blood, no-
bility, iii. 344
Save-reverence, v. 117
Sawn, seen, or sown, vi. 662
'Say, assay, sample, v. 727
'Say'd, essay'd, tried, vi. 390

Scaled, exposed, stripped, i. 310
Scaling, weighing, iv. 652
Scambling, scrambling, iii. 543
Scamels, or sea-mells, i. 49
Sconce, the head, i. 377

Scotch, to wound, to notch, iv. 689;
v. 421

Scouring, or skirring, riding over, iii.

620; v. 286. 554
Scrimers, fencers, v. 581
Scrowl, to write, v. 39
Scroyles, scabs, the rabble, iii. 146
Scull, a shoal of fish, iv. 587
Scurvy, scabby, leperous, ii. 568

'Scuse, excuse, ii. 335; v. 244; vi. 90

Seam, lard, grease, iv. 522
Sect, sex, iii. 460

Sectary, or Secretary, iv. 454

Seel, to close, to blind, as hawks, v.
422; vi. 207

Seeth, to boil, ii. 241. 243; iv. 526
Sennet, the sounding of a trumpet, iv.
44. 122

Sequel, sequence, iv. 17

Sere, tickled in the, v. 519
Serpigo, a tetter, a kind of leprosy, i.
301; iv. 519

Servant, a suitor to a lady, i. 105
Servant-poet, iii. 100

Sessa, cease, ii. 443; v. 680
Set, to stake down, iii. 283

Set thee down, sorrow, a proverbial
phrase, ii. 102

Several and common, ii. 114; vi. 650
Sewer, his office, v. 400
Shadowing, or shuddering, vi. 89
Shale, shell, outside, iii. 607
Shards, broken pottery, v. 592
Shards, the outer wings of a beetle, v.
422; vi. 183

Shares, or modes of payment, for actors

in our old theatres, v. 545
Sheen, bright, shining, ii. 199
Sheep and ship, i. 91

Shekels, sickles or circles, i. 292
Shent, rebuked, reproved, undone, i.
185; ii. 709; iv. 705; v. 549
Sherris, or Xeres, sack, iii. 499
Ship-tire, a peculiar kind of head-dress
for ladies, i. 216

Shirts, the price of, iii. 385
Shive, a slice, v. 26

Shove-groat or shovel-board shilling, i.
174; iii. 465

Shrive, to confess, or to take con-
fession, i. 383

Shrupp'd, or shut, iv. 567

Side sleeves, long sleeves, ii. 51

Siege, seat, i. 48. 325; v. 581; vi. 18
Sign, to denote, to mark, iv. 405
Sightless, or unsightly, iii. 154
Silly, simple, vi. 352

Simples sold in Bucklersbury, i. 216
Simular, a simulator, v. 674
Sin-bestained cloak, iii. 186

Singer, John, the actor, ii. 271; iv.
126; v. 539


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