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Wenches. Three or four wenches, where I ftood, cry'd, alas, good foul
Wench-like-words. Do not play in wench-like-words with that which is fo ferious Cym. 4
Wenching. What 's become of the wenching rogues? I think they have fwallow'd one

another

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Troil. and Creff54
Meaf. for Miaf.4 3
Comedy of Errors. 1

645

A. S. P. C. L.

Julius Cæfar. 1 2

744 232

2

917 126

888254 96243

I

104/2/36

Mid. Night's Dream. 3

2

1882 5

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Wept. She wept heartily, and said she cared not

M. Ado Ab. Noth. 5

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Antony and Clep.3

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782 251

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Wether. I am a tainted wether of the flock, meeteft for death
Wezand. Cut his wezand with a knife

Whale. What tempeft, I trow, threw this whale, with fo many tuns of oil in his belly,
afhore at Windfor

Were. I cannot but remember that fuch things were, that were most precious to me Macb. 4
-I were beft not call

3

382 2 37

Cymbeline. 3

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Macbetb. 3 3 375110

Richard ii.

413

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D. P.

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3 Henry vi.

603

Twelfth Night. 3

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Merch. of Venice. 4
Tempeft. 2

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298 252

Troil. & Creff: 5
Hamlet. 3

5

889 125

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Tro. & Cref. 1
Hamlet. 5

18581 8

21037 211 111157

1

Wheat. He, that will have a cake out of the wheat, must tarry the grinding
Wheaten garland. As peace fhould ftill her wheaten garland wear
Wheel. She had transform'd me to a curtail dog, and made me turn i' the wheel Com. of Err. 3|2|
Mark what I fay,-attend me where I wheel

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Troil. and Cref57 890111

Let go thy hold when a great wheel runs down a hill, left it break thy neck with
following it

"Tis true; the wheel is come full circle

It is a maffy wheel, fix'd on the fummit of the highest mount

O, how the wheel becomes it

Wheeling. To an extravagant and wheeling stranger

Lear. 2

49432 6 Ibid. 5 3 964 138 Hamlet. 3 31022247

Ibid. 4 5 1030127 Othello. 1 11045121

Wheel of fire. I am bound upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears do fcald like molten
lead

Lear. 4 7 960156

Wheel'd feat. Whilft the wheel'd feat of fortunate Cæfar, drawn before him, branded)
his bafeness that enfued

Wheezing lungs

Ant. and Cleop. 412
Troil, and Cre5

7952 19

1

884144 5242 6

Whelks. His face is all bubukels, and whelks, and knobs, and flames of fire Hen. v. 3 6
Whelm. She is my prize, or ocean whelm them all
Merry Wives of Wind. 2 2 55136
Whelp'd. Thou waft whelp'd a dog; and thou shalt famifh a dog's death Tim. of Ath. 2
Whelps. Two of thy whelps, fell curs of bloody kind, have here bereft my brother of

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Whereuntil. Under correction, Sir, we know where until it doth amount Love's L. L-ft.5

I will whet on the king

Twelfth Night.

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1092 113 589158 I 106 122

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2

574 29

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100 2 8

2

171

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320 247

K. Jobn. 3 4 401245 1578231

I pr'y thee, peace, good queen; and whet not on thefe too furious peers 2 Hen. vi.
And withal whet me to be reveng'd on Rivers, Vaughan, Grey
And whet on Warwick to this enterprize

May be, he hears the king does whet his anger to him
Since Caffius first did whet me against Cæfar, I have not slept
This vifitation is but to whet thy almost blunted purpose

Now the fharpens,-well faid Whetstone

3 Hery ai.

Richard iii. 1

3 641116

2

Henry viii. 3 2
Jul. Cæfar. 2

606236 689148 1747 151

Troil.

Wheifione. Be this the whetstone of your fword: let grief convert to anger

Whey-face. What foldiers, whey-face

Whiff Wit the whiff and wind of his fell sword the unnerv'd father falls

Hamlet. 3 4/1024/246 Macbeth. 43 382 243 and Creff: 5 2 886123 Macbeth. 5 3 384150 Hamlet. 221015130 Whiffier.

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I'll whip you from your foining fence

I, that have been love's whip.

-to your tents as roes run o'er the land

For his prefence must be the whip of the other
Which to hinder, were in your love a whip to me

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Henry v. 5 ch.
Tempeft. 3 2
Meaf. for Meaf.21
Mu. Ado Ab. Noth. 5 I
Love's Labor Loft. 3 1
Ibid. 5 2

All's Well. 4 3 297142
Winter's Tale. I 2334136

him, fellows, 'till like a boy, you fee him cringe his face, and whine aloud for mercy

Wilt thou whip thine own faults in other men

me, ye devils, from the poffeffion of this heavenly fight

Ant. and Cleop. 311 789154

Timon of Athens. 5 2 8261 4
Othello. 5 21078 255
All's Well. 2

me

Whipping. Do you cry, O lord, fir, at your whipping, and spare not
Whipping-cheer. And she shall have whipping-cheer enough, I warrant her
Whipfler. I am not valiant neither, but every puny whipster gets my fword
Whip-flock. Malvolio's nose is no whip-stock
Whipt. I whipt me behind the arras

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Thou shalt be whipt with wire

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2 Hen. iv. 5 4 505220 Othello. 5 2 1078217 Tw. Night. 2 3 314227 Mu. Ado Abt. Notb. 1 3 1252 8 Antony and Cleop.2 5 778 125

They'll have me whipt for speaking true, thou'lt have me whipt for lying; and fometimes I am whipt for holding my peace

Whirls. And justice whirls in equal measure

And whirl along with thee about the globes

Whirligig. And thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges
Whirling. Thefe are but wild and whirling words

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Lear. 4 936228
Love's Lab. Left. 4 3 164 223
Titus Andronicus. 5 2 852143
Twelfth Night. 51332215
Hamlet.
Two Gent. of Verona.

Hear the shrill whistle, which doth order give to sounds confused

I have been worth the whistle

Whistling to the air

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Hamlet. 3

Winter's Tale.|1
2 Henry vi. 3
Troil. and Creff.
Hamlet. 1
Tempeft. 1

51008 126 2 26125 2 1018226

2 338219

2 590211 38641 7

11000 210

2 5252

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Winter's Tale. 4 3356161

Henry v.3cb. 519161
Lear. 4

Ant. and Cleop.2

Merry W. of Windfor.1
Midj. Night's Dream. 31

So fhall I no whit be behind in duty to fair Bianca, so belov'd of me Tam. of the Sb. 1

The wafte is no whit leffer than thy land

Woe, woe, for England! not a whit for me

Our youth and wildness fhall no whit appear

Well, more or lefs, or ne'er a whit at all

No whit lefs than in his feats deferving

White. This princefs of pure white

'Twas I won the wager, though you hit the white

2954142

So white, and fuch a traitor

White-death. Let the white-death fit on thy cheek for ever

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White-bair. That white-hair is my father, and all the reft are his fons Treil. and Creff: 2860,2
White-lim'd. Ye white-lim'd walls

White-liver'd runagate, what doth he there
Whiteness. And the whiteness in thy cheek is apter than thy tongue to tell thy errand 2 H. v.
White-fkirted meads

White Surrey. Saddle white Surrey for the field to-morrow

Whiting-time. It is whiting-time, fend him by your two men to Datchet-Mead

2 7762 6

I

Richard ii. 2

46 1 183253 225917 1420244

I

Richard . 3

4 652214

Julius Cæfar.2

I 748135

Titus Andronicus. 4 2

846252

906 137

186162

276259

All's Well.2 3

286 2 2

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Whitfun Morris-dance. With no more, than if we heard that England were buried with a Whitfun Morris-dance

Whittle. There's not a whittle in the unruly camp but I do prize it at my love Tim of Ath. 5 3

Whizzing. The exhalations whizzing in the air

Who is 't can read a woman

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Whitmore, Walter. D. P.

Whitflers. Carry it among the whitfters in Datchet-Mead

'bolfome. If it shall please you to make me a wholsome answer

A. S. P. C. L.

Hamlet. 3 2 1021 243

Whoo-bub. Had not the old man come in with a whoo-bub, against his daughter, and the king's fon

.

Winter's Tale. 4
Ibid. 4 3

3

355 226 351,225

Whoop. He make the maids to answer, whoop, do me no harm, good man

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That admiration did not whoop at them

jug! I love thee

Whoop'd. And suffer'd me by the voice of flaves to be whoop'd out of Rome
Whoping. And yet again wonderful, and after that out of all whooping
Whores. Thou that giv'ft whores indulgences to fin

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Triple-turn'd whore

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This fell whore of thine hath in her more deftruction than thy fword
Enough to make a whore forfwear her trade, and to make whores
Hold thy whore, Grecian !-now for thy whore, Trojan

If the fon of a whore fights for a whore, he tempts judgment
She hath bought the name of whore thus dearly
Muft, like a whore, unpack my heart with words, and fall a curfing, like a very
drab, a fcullion

Hamlet. 2 2 10162 7

Villain, be fure thou prove my love a whore; be fure of it; give me the ocular
proof

Was this fair paper, this moft goodly book, made to write whore upon
I took you for that cunning whore of Venice, that married with Othello

Othello. 3 31063 210
Ibid. 4
2 1071 119
Ibid. 4 21071141

To do the aft that might the addition earn, not the world's mafs of vanity could make me

Ibid. 4 2 10721 18 Hamlet.5 21038 1

Whor'd. He that hath kill'd my king, and whor'd my mother
Whore of Babylon. But then he was rheumatic; and talk'd about the whore of Babylon

Where-mafter defcribed

Henry v.2 3
Timon of Athens. 2

Whore-master-man. An admirable evafion of whore-master-man, to lay his goatith dif

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5181 9 2 811139

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Troil, and Creffida. 5

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Two Gent. of Verona. 2

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Comedy of Errors. 4

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Love's Lab. Loft.4

3

162216

Tam. of the Shrew. 4

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2 Henry v.1

2477.1 19

Lear. 1

I 929 128

Ibid. 1

4 935 223

Com. of Errors. 2 2 107152

Wick. There lives within the very flame of love a kind of wick, or fnuff, that will

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Hamlet. Wicked. And now am I, if a man should speak truly, little better than one of the wicked

4 710322 I

1 Henry iv. 1 2 444 113 him

I difprais'd him before the wicked, that the wicked might not fall in love with

2 Henry iv. 2 4 487127

Thofe wicked creatures yet do look well-favour'd, when others are more wicked Lear. 2 4 945162 Wickedness. Difoyal! the word is too good to point out her wickednefs M. A. Ab. Noth. 3 2 133240 What rein can hold licentious wickedness, when down the hill he holds his fierce

career

I'll never care what wickedness I do if this man come to good

Henry . 3 3 5221 3
Lear. 3 7 952227

Wide. I never heard a man of his place, gravity, and learning fo wide of his own re-
fpe&t

Is my friend well, that he doth speak fo wide
No, no; no fuch matter, you are wide

Widoro weeps an hour in clamour, and a quarter in rheum

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For many a thousand widows fhall this his mock, mock out of their dear husbands

Henry v. 2 513/2/23
Willow.

Widow. To wring a widow from her custom'd right

Were it to call king Edward's widow-fifter

Be thou quoth I, accurs'd for making me, so young, so old a widow
'Tis I that made thy widows

If once a widow, ever I be a wife
Widow-maker.

a widow-maker

Wield. I do love you more than words can wield the matter

Wife, the danger of trusting her with herself

Our revolted wives fhare damnation together

- are fold by fate

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Do not curft wives hold that felf fovereignty only for praise' sake, when they ftrive
to be lord o'er their lords

Here's a small trifle of wives: alas, fifteen wives is nothing
fhe is my goods, my chattels, she is my house, my houshold stuff,
my horse, my ox, my any thing

22041 14

Oh! it grieves my foul, that I must draw this metal from my fide to be

M.W. of Wind. 2
Ibid. 3
Ibid. 5

2

2

592 5

5

73233

Love's Labor Loft. 4
Merchant of Venice. 2

I

157145

my field, my barn,
Tam. of the Shrew. 3 2

Ibid. 4 1

2662 53 269133

Ibid. 5 2

276 27

3

281110

Ibid. 1 3 281113

Ibid. 2 3 286255

Ibid. 3 2 291133

cook; both Winter's Tale. 4 3

35044

Ibid. 5

1

358 142

K. Jubn. 3

1

397 I

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He that comforts my wife, is the cherisher of my flesh and blood
Ergo, he that kiffes my wife is my friend

A poor physician's daughter my wife !-Disdain, rather corrupt me ever
Till I have no wife, I have nothing in France

When my old wife liv'd, upon this day, she was both pantler, butler,
dame and fervant

No more fuch wives; therefore, no wife

All's Well. 1

Let wives with child, pray that their burdens may not fall this day
Now fhall I fee thy love, what motive may be stronger with thee than the name of
wife

So that this land, like an offenfive wife, that hath enrag'd him on to offer ftrokes;
as he is ftriking holds an infant up

539245

Will hang upon my tongue like a new-married wife about her husband's neck Hen. v.5 2
2 Henry iv. 4494228
So worthless peasants bargain for their wives, as market-men for oxen, fheep, or
horfes

Their wives be as free as heart can wish, or tongue can tell

1 Henry vi. 56569235 2 Henry vi. 4 7 5971 2

How will my wife, for flaughter of my fon, fhed feas of tears, and ne'er be fatisfy'd

3 Henry iv. 25 614256

If you do fight in fafeguard of your wives, your wives will welcome home the con-
querors

Richard iii. 5 3668144

If your business seek me out, and that way I am wife in, out with it boldly Hen. viii. 3 1 686247 No man living could fay, this is my wife, there; all were woven so strangely in one piece

When it pleaseth their deities to take the wife of a man from him, it fhews to man the tailors of the earth

I take to-day a wife, and my election is led on in the conduct of my
What nearer debt in all humanity, than wife is to the husband

A fellow almost damn'd in a fair wife

Wife-like. More goddess like than wife-like

Wight. O bafe Gongarian wight

I ken the wight, he is of substance good
Armado is a moft illuftrious wight

O braggard vile, and damned furious wight

With venomous wights the ftays, as tedious as hell

She was a wight,-if ever fuch wight were

Wild. In an act of this importance, 'twere moft piteous to be wild
Never did I hear of any prince fo wild, at liberty

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My father is gone wild into his grave, for in his tomb lie my affection
If I chance to talk a little wild, forgive me, I had it from my father
It almoft turns my dangerous nature wild

Henry v.2

1 515114

Treil. and Creff.4 2 878221

Othello. 2

11053 114

Winter's Tale. 2

I

340 231

1 Henry iv. 5

2

469 216

2 Henry iv. 5
Henry viii.

2

503212 4677233

Timon of Athens.5 1815128
Ibid. 5 3 827149

Richard ii.4

- So foon fhall we drive back of Alcibades the approaches wild
Wilderness. Such a warped flip of wilderness ne'er iffu'd from his blood Meaf. for Meaf3
I dare meet Surry in a wilderness, and spit upon him
A wilderness is populous enough, fo Suffolk had thy heavenly company 2 Henry vi. 3
Environ'd with a wilderness of fea
Wild-ful. There is not a more fearful wild-fowl than your lion, living M. Night's D.
Titus Andron. 3

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I 432143

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842 161 1831147

Wild-fowl. What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild-fowl
Wild-goofe. Why then my taxing like the wild-goofe flies

Winter's not yet gone if the wild-geefe fly that way

A. S. P. C. L.

Twelfth Night.14 21 327|2|30
As You Like It. 2 7 233122
Lear. 2

Thou haft more of the wild-goofe in one of thy wits, than, I am fure, I have in my whole five

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Wildly. How wildly then walks my estate in France

What means our coufin, that he stares and looks fo wildly

Wild mare.

Rides the wild mare with the boys

4 943136 49791 6 K. Jobn. 4 2 404136 Richard .5 3 437118 2 Henry iv. 2 4 486142

Romeo and Juliet.2

Wildness. The breath no fooner left his father's body, but that his wildnefs, mortify'd in him, feem'd to die too

Wild night. "Tis a wild night

Wiles. Sure thefe are but imaginary wiles

Upon my wit, to defend my wiles

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Wilful. To wilful men, the injuries, that they themselves procure, must be their fchool-mafters

Wilful-blame. In faith, my lord, you are too wilful-blame

Com. of Errors. 4
Troilus and Creff

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Wilfulness. Nor never Hydra-headed wilfulness so foon did lofe his feat
Wilful-oppofite. The Dauphin is too wilful-oppofite

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Mer. W. of Wind.x

Mu. Ado About Netb. 5

I am Edward, your king and Warwick's, and must have my will
And, for this once, my will shall stand for law

If your will país, I fhall both find your lordship judge and juror
The cause it is my will, I will not come

Antony only, that would make his will lord of his reason
characterized

Bleffed be thofe, how mean foe'er, that have their honeft wills
The cloy'd will ravening first the lamb, longs after for the garbage
My will to her confent is but a part

All's Well. 2

K. Jobn. 2

Richard ii. 2

371 14

1285114

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Our bodies are our gardens; to the which our wills are gardeners
Foh one may fmell in fuch a will moft rank, foul difproportion, thoughts un-

natural

Ibid. 3 3 1062120

[laft or teftament] What is your will?-I never made my will yet, I thank heaven; I am not fuch a fickly creature

So is the will of a living daughter curb'd by the will of a dead father

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I can produce a will that bars the title of thy fon; a wicked will, a woman's will, a canker'd grandam's will

K. Jobn. 2
Ant. and Cleop.34

Made his will, and read it to publick ear

Bid a fick man in fadness make his will:-O, word ill urg'd to one that is fo ill

Will'd. We do no otherwife than we are will'd

They will'd me fay fo

William. D. P.

Williams. D. P.

783234 1969 227 3 547122 686155 223

Romeo and Juliet. 1
1 Henry vi.
Henry vii. 31

As You Like It.

Willingly. And though we willingly confented to his banishment, yet it was againft our will

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Willow cabin. Make me a willow cabin at your gate, and call upon my foul within the
houfe

Willow garland. I'll wear a willow garland for his fake
Willow tree. I offered him my company to a willow tree
Wilshire, Earl of, hath the realm in farm

Wimpled. This wimpled, whining, purblind, wayward boy
Win me, and wear me

But we must win your grace to go with us to Bristol castle

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