This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A48812 | Interrogation is a short pause commonly of a compound axiome; perfect in sense, but not in sentence, marked thus? |
A48812 | who taught you to flee from the wrath to come? |
A10851 | Barbari,& insulsi terribilesque forent: Qualis ego, tantae cui vires? |
A10851 | What a simple sound is? |
A10851 | What are mutes? |
A35352 | He that knoweth not that he doth amiss, will not be corrected How many mischiefs doth idleness bring upon men? |
A35352 | Quid turpius arroganti imperitiâ? |
A35352 | Quàm multa mala hominibus affert otium? |
A35352 | What is more filthy than proud unskilfulness? |
A69015 | A kinde of argument, which conuinceth ones aduersary both waies as in saying: If hee bee a good man, why doe you speake euill of him? |
A69015 | At the first sending hereof, the people were in such admiration, that they said to each other, Manhu? |
A69015 | What is this? |
A19762 | For who in his familiar Epistles more succinct than Cicero? |
A19762 | Hath not Albertus? |
A19762 | Hath not Columbus? |
A19762 | Hath not Isidore? |
A19762 | Hath not Plinie? |
A19762 | In Orations, and otherwise, who more profuse? |
A19762 | NEscio cur tu, Nescio, ais, dulcedine quavis Ductus? |
A19762 | Sed quid cum ver a docebis? |
A19762 | The Interrogation point is figured thus(?) |
A19762 | WHat shall I say? |
A19762 | WHere can one walke along the streets, but hee May Schollers, Courtiers, and good Linguists see? |
A19762 | have not the best of naturall Historians and Geographers sufficiently depicted them? |
A19762 | or thee by whom the worke is done? |
A19762 | shall I the worke alone Applaud? |
A28472 | A Cord of Wood, A parcel of Fire- wood, set out as the Coal- fire, containing in measure — How shall we understand this without an Oedipus? |
A28472 | Are we not like to have an accurate account of obsolete, difficult, or foreign words from him who stumbles so miserably at plain Ember- week? |
A28472 | As first for Words of Ecclesiastical use, How grosly hath he abused the two common words, Candlemass and Ember- week? |
A28472 | Can it be imagined, that the learned Fitz- Herbert would be guilty of such an absurd Explication? |
A28472 | He may as well call it Somniatio; for the word in Domesday signifies a mustering of men, what then hath Dominatio to do with it? |
A28472 | If any one would pretend to make sence of this; to whom shall them and his relate? |
A28472 | In a third — Ubi notare est miserimam Authoris ignorantiam,& c. What then will Strangers think of it; what our own Countreymen? |
A28472 | MVst this then be suffered? |
A28472 | Quaver, A measure of time in Musick being the half of a Crotchet, as a Crotchet the half of a Quaver, a Semiquaver,& c. What fustian is here? |
A28472 | Villaine — Our Villains Regardant to Mannors were Glebae Abscriptitii, tied to Turk — What had our Villains to do with the Turk? |
A28472 | What then would a more knowing Reader discover, that should seriously peruse the whole? |
A28472 | Where then shall we find the other three quarters? |
A28472 | eng Phillips, Edward, 1630- 1696? |
A58162 | An Callidrys Bellonii? |
A58162 | Happa: Hap ye: Think you? |
A58162 | Holibut or Halibut; the biggest of all this kind, an Hippoglossus Rondel? |
A58162 | Quid enim in cude durius? |
A58162 | Rough Hounds; Mustelus, an laevis primus Salviani? |
A58162 | Sed quo commercio Graeci Scotis totius Europae longitudine dissi ● is vocabula impertiri potuerurit? |
A58162 | The Coddy moddy or lesser grey Gull: an Larus major Aldrov? |
A58162 | The Redgame: Grygallus minor, an Longolii Gallina Betula? |
A58162 | The Stone- smich or Stone- chatter; an Muscicapa tertia Alarov? |
A58162 | The White- throat: an Spipola prima Aldrov? |
A58162 | The great Gray Gull: an Wagel Cornubi- ensium? |
A58162 | The greatest Diver: Colymbus maximus, an Lum? |
A58162 | To Wonne or Wun: to Dwell: as where won you? |
A58162 | Topes; An Mustelus laevis secundus seu Canosa Salviani? |
A58162 | What Seel of day? |
A58162 | Where Fured you? |
A58162 | Whither went you? |
A58162 | an Asilus, an Luteola Turneri? |
A58162 | where dwell you? |
A54746 | A Cord of Wood, A parcel of Fire- wood, set out as the Coal- fire, containing in measure — How shall we understand this without an Oedipus? |
A54746 | Among the Greeks, who have better deserved of the World for the excellency of their Works, than Plato, Xenophon, Thucydides? |
A54746 | Are we not like to have an accurate account of obsolete, difficult, or foreign words from him who stumbles so miserably at plain Ember- week? |
A54746 | As first for Words of Ecclesiastical use, How grosly hath he abused the two common words, Candlemass and Ember- week? |
A54746 | Can it be imagined, that the learned Fitz- Herbert would be guilty of such an absurd Explication? |
A54746 | He may as well call it Somniatio; for the word in Domesday signifies a mustering of men, what then hath Dominatio to do with it? |
A54746 | Hinefare — Si quis occidit hominem& Reges& facit heinfaram, dat Regi xx? |
A54746 | If any one would pretend to make sence of this; to whom shall them and his relate? |
A54746 | In a third — Ubi notare est miserimam Authoris ignorantiam,& c. What then will Strangers think of it; what our own Countreymen? |
A54746 | MVst this then be suffered? |
A54746 | Phillips, Edward, 1630- 1696? |
A54746 | Phillips, Edward, 1630- 1696? |
A54746 | Quaver, A measure of time in Musick, being the half of a Crotchet, as a Crotchet the half of a Quaver, a Semiquaver,& c. What fustian is here? |
A54746 | Uillaine — Our Villains Regardant to Mannors were Glebae Abscriptitii, tied to Turk — What had our Villains to do with the Turk? |
A54746 | What then would a more knowing Reader discover, that should seriously peruse the whole? |
A54746 | Where then shall we find the other three quarters? |
A54746 | Who among the Latins have been more famous than Livie, Cicero, Salust? |
A28464 | An Interrogation point is made thus[?] |
A28464 | At first sending hereof the people were in such admiration that they said to each other, manhu? |
A28464 | But why may not Arthure be rather a Brittish word composed of Art ●, which signifies a Bear, and awr, signifying a man, Vir? |
A28464 | Est adhibenda fides rationi nominis hujus Compositi Frederic, duo componentia cujus Sunt Frederic, Frith, quid nisi Pax? |
A28464 | Hence''t is we use to say to those that are melancholy, what, alls- a- mort, or amortified? |
A28464 | How do Wife and Children? |
A28464 | If naught, why do you keep him company? |
A28464 | Ric, quid nisi regum? |
A28464 | Sic per Hendiaden, Fredericus, quid nisi vel Rex Pacificus? |
A28464 | The Interogation point thus[?] |
A28464 | his Father answered, the horse doth neigh: riding farther, the Son heard a Cock crow, and said, doth the Cock neigh too? |
A28464 | i. quid est hoc? |
A28464 | or what boot will you give me? |
A28464 | or when will the Altar be ready? |
A28464 | vel regia Pax? |
A28464 | what is this? |
A28464 | when shall the sacrifice be made? |
A17877 | And hops not like the Grecian elegies? |
A17877 | As for example: Was it my desteny, or dismall chaunce? |
A17877 | But this Barnzy knowes that his Matilda Skorning him with Haruy playes the wanton; Knowes it? |
A17877 | But whence showres so fast this angry tempest, Clowding dimme the place? |
A17877 | But why an Iambick in the third place? |
A17877 | Could I catch that Nimble trayter Skornefull Lawra, Swift foote Lawra, Soone then would I Seeke auengement; What''s th''auengement? |
A17877 | I slye; Whether? |
A17877 | If I graunt? |
A17877 | Perhaps; will lofty courtly wits not ayme Still at perfection? |
A17877 | Smith by sute diuorst, the knowne adultres Freshly weds againe; what ayles the mad- cap By this fury? |
A17877 | Some will redeeme me; fewe; yes, reade me too; Fewer; nay loue me; now thou dot''st I see; Will not our English Athens arte defend? |
A17877 | To Paules Churchyard; what in those cels to stād, With one leafe like a riders cloke put vp To catch a termer? |
A17877 | WHether thus hasts my little booke so fast? |
A17877 | What Deuine in hi ● Sermon, or graue Counseller in his Oration wil ● alleage the testimonie of a rime? |
A17877 | What more vnhappy life, what misery more? |
A17877 | What musick can there be where there is no proportion obserued? |
A17877 | Why droopst thou Trefeild? |
A17877 | by heau''n he can not; Can not? |
A17877 | or lye mustie there With rimes a terme set out, or two before? |
A17877 | or not striue to imitate them? |
A17877 | what''s the reason? |
A17877 | will Hurst the Banker Make dice of thy bones? |
A17848 | Abstulit hunc terrae matri maris vnda nouerca, Proh dolor? |
A17848 | Anglorum cur est gens quaevis invida genti? |
A17848 | Be not we eleaven heere, and thou but one all alone, and al we agreed, whereto shouldst thou sticke? |
A17848 | But what say you ●( quoth the King,) whenas he is a Clergyman? |
A17848 | Casius but Cattes- eies? |
A17848 | Credimus esse Deos? |
A17848 | Cum sim fenestra peruia, Si quod recepi nuntio, Quae putatur iniuria? |
A17848 | Cur damnatur apertio? |
A17848 | Et reges à regibus qui sibi succedunt? |
A17848 | Hee aunswered, that it was a verie little paine if a man would remember hell: Yea Frier( quoth the Gallant) but what and if there be no Hell? |
A17848 | Here lyeth Menalcas as dead as a logge ▪ That liued like a deuill& died like a dogge: Here doth he lye said I? |
A17848 | Hic situs est sitiens atque ebrius Eldertonus, Quid dico hic situs est? |
A17848 | I pray you tell me father when doth the Sunne change? |
A17848 | Miraris Ianam Craio sermone valere? |
A17848 | Nominibus certis credam decurrere mores? |
A17848 | Nonnè de militibus mili ● es procedunt? |
A17848 | Petus but Pink- eyed? |
A17848 | Phu ● nisi fusus? |
A17848 | Quid Diadema tibi pulcherrima? |
A17848 | Quis fuit Alcides? |
A17848 | Quis in igne positus igni non vratur? |
A17848 | Quis in mundo demorans castus habeatur? |
A17848 | Quis morritur? |
A17848 | Quis sim nosse cupis? |
A17848 | Saltem sordes quas ingeris, Cur non lauas per lachrimam Aut quarè non crueris Mentem fermentans azimam? |
A17848 | Sed cur lunaris facies fuscata videtur? |
A17848 | Sic per 〈 ◊ 〉 Fredericus, quid nisi vel rex, Pacificus vel regia pax? |
A17848 | So farre, quoth the Messenge? |
A17848 | Stemmata continuas, recitas ex ordine patres, Queis nisi tu similis, Rufule quid recitas? |
A17848 | Te totum dulcor perfundit,& indè vocaris, Pandulphus quid Pan nisi totum? |
A17848 | The ornament of our land was meant by him which placed only the Moone in heaven in full light with, QVID SINE TE COELVM? |
A17848 | Tu contra Stephanum cui copia multa virorum; Duxisti pautos, our paucos? |
A17848 | Tu modo qualis eris? |
A17848 | What? |
A17848 | Whates thy name gud fellow? |
A17848 | When they heard this they were halfe angry with him, What good fellow,( quoth one of the Northerne men) whare wannes thou? |
A17848 | Who is perfect? |
A17848 | Who would liue in others breath? |
A17848 | Will you sit still by the fire, and make goselings in the ashes with a sticke, as children doe? |
A17848 | aut quis Magnus Alexander? |
A17848 | cur? |
A17848 | ense: Quando? |
A17848 | or, Who is like God? |
A17848 | qualiter? |
A17848 | quid mundi quaeris honores? |
A17848 | quid tibi gemma? |
A17848 | quis Casar Iulius? |
A17848 | quis locus? |
A39127 | Banter, a pleasant way of prating, which seems in earnest, but is in jest, a sort of ridicule, What do you banter me? |
A39127 | Barker, a Salesman''s Servant that walks before the Shop, and cries, Cloaks, Coats, or Gowns, what d''ye lack, Sir? |
A39127 | Do the Waters Pass well? |
A39127 | Do you think to Sharp or Trick me? |
A39127 | Has he come it? |
A39127 | Has the Cull any Terra Firma? |
A39127 | Has the Fool any Land? |
A39127 | Have ye any Game Mother? |
A39127 | Have you rais''d the Recruits, c. is the Money come in? |
A39127 | How Chear you? |
A39127 | How Queerely the Cull Touts? |
A39127 | How fare you? |
A39127 | How fares your old Trunk? |
A39127 | How lies the Land? |
A39127 | How many Sieges have you had? |
A39127 | How stands the Reckoning? |
A39127 | How you Sail about? |
A39127 | How you Santer about? |
A39127 | Litter, any thing clatter''d up, out of Place or Order, What a litter here is? |
A39127 | May- games, Frolicks, Plaies, Tricks, Pastimes,& c. Do you make a May- game of me? |
A39127 | Peter Lug, Who is Peter Lug? |
A39127 | What Avails it? |
A39127 | What Boots it? |
A39127 | What a Bustle you make ▪ What a Hurry or Rattle you Cause? |
A39127 | What a Clutter you keep? |
A39127 | What a Pelt you are in? |
A39127 | What a Racket those Ramps keep? |
A39127 | What a Sad Pass things are come to? |
A39127 | What a Whimpering you keep? |
A39127 | What a busel these rude Children make? |
A39127 | What a stir you make? |
A39127 | What a toss and tumble? |
A39127 | What are you Mawdlin you Rake? |
A39127 | What do you Top upon me? |
A39127 | What do you fun me? |
A39127 | What you game me? |
A39127 | Who Christens the Health? |
A39127 | Who Cries Stinking Fish? |
A39127 | Who Leads? |
A39127 | Who Skinks? |
A39127 | Who Tosts now? |
A39127 | Who Touts? |
A39127 | Who goes worse Shod than the Shoe- maker''s Wife? |
A39127 | Who has any Lands in Appleby? |
A39127 | Who is at your Elbow? |
A39127 | Who let''s the Glass stand at his Door? |
A39127 | Will ye raise a Cloud, c ▪ shall we Smoke a Pipe? |
A39127 | Will you Melt a Bord ▪ c. Will you spend your Shilling? |
A39127 | You must not look a Given Horse in the Mouth, or what is freer then Gift? |
A39127 | are ye''neither Drunk, nor Sober? |
A39127 | c. Does your Nose stand fast? |
A39127 | c. do you stick a little Wax to the Dice to keep them together, to get the Chance, you wou''d have? |
A39127 | c. has he lent it you? |
A39127 | c. who looks out sharp? |
A39127 | do you Abuse or Expose me? |
A39127 | i. e. How many Stools have you had? |
A39127 | or who dispraises his own Ware? |
A39127 | what a Chafe your in? |
A43692 | ''T is Rowland calls; what wou''d my Swine? |
A43692 | ''T is certain, quoth he: Is''t certain, quoth she? |
A43692 | A Taylor once was bid to make a Gown; And who d''ye think''t was for? |
A43692 | And as through Stratford- Bow I came, Says one, How d''ye, Sir? |
A43692 | And do you love me there? |
A43692 | And first, says ne, an, utrum, whether You do intend to speak altogether, Or singly? |
A43692 | And so ● … 〈 … 〉 and oft cry Foh; And with 〈 … 〉 proh, cry Oh: As ô preceptor ● … 〈 … 〉 ● ras? |
A43692 | And the third year also future to that? |
A43692 | And then came in a very scurvy cur, Askt''em why they then made such a stir? |
A43692 | And why should she thus ravish me, And I not ravish her again? |
A43692 | Are a Females Eyes Such a notable Prize, As to offer thy Life for a Sacrifice? |
A43692 | Are you sure on''t? |
A43692 | But prethee say with who? |
A43692 | But when, Sir? |
A43692 | But where, Sir? |
A43692 | But why a Trident in his hand? |
A43692 | But why, Sir?'' |
A43692 | COme, my durty Pug, away; What the Pox d''ye mean to say? |
A43692 | Can Venus''s Philtres so prevalent be, That thou shouldst in a Phrensie thy weakness discover, And part with thy Manhood and Birthright so free? |
A43692 | Cause you slight me, quoth he: Do I slight you, quoth she? |
A43692 | Come then, says Noll, we''ll go, my Doll, And see the house before; And then, says he: What then, says she? |
A43692 | For shall I spare one, such a Rape hath done, And violence on my Soul hath lain? |
A43692 | How ca n''t be otherways, being stuft with Lunacie, And commonly light- headed used to be? |
A43692 | How much, Sir? |
A43692 | How, says iste, is that the man must do''t? |
A43692 | I am fickish, quoth he: are you sickish, quoth she? |
A43692 | I have, says Noll: What hast, says Doll? |
A43692 | I hope he does not think I''m running away? |
A43692 | I vow, says Noll, I love thee, Doll: But pray, Sir, tell me where? |
A43692 | I''d gi''thee, quoth he: Wou''d you gi''me, quoth she, But what, Sir? |
A43692 | I''d ha''thee, quoth he: Wou''d you ha''me, quoth she? |
A43692 | I''d hug thee, quoth he: Wou''d you hug me, quoth she? |
A43692 | I''d kiss thee, quoth he: Wou''d you kiss me, quoth she? |
A43692 | Is a Goddess engrav''d on her heavenly Brow? |
A43692 | Is it because thou lov''st to range And take thy swing about? |
A43692 | Is''t done, says he? |
A43692 | MY Nanny, quoth he: Why Janny, quoth she, Your will, Sir? |
A43692 | Nay, says necne, Whether or no: And so says anne: Says nonne, Is''t not so? |
A43692 | O, Master, why 〈 … 〉 me? |
A43692 | O, Sir,''t is most certain; and I say yes: For is not the next year future to this? |
A43692 | One askt him why he marri''d a Northern woman? |
A43692 | One askt why they were so cruel, To adde a flame unto the fewel Of that giddy Multitude, That then were so exceeding rude? |
A43692 | Or else dost think my Fortune lean, And can not entertain Thee in a handsome Miss- like mean? |
A43692 | Or were they at that time afraid To touch that Princely Coat? |
A43692 | PRethee, Caelia, tell me why Thou''st been so strange of late? |
A43692 | Quorsum then did ask''em to what end They quarrelled, and whither did it tend? |
A43692 | R.''T is Roger calls: What news, you Sot? |
A43692 | Says cupio, Then faith now I covet drink: I believe''t, says credo; but where''s the Chink Must purchase it? |
A43692 | Says fio, How came this to be made or done? |
A43692 | Says heus, Heark ye: so said ehodum too, What''s the cause ye make so much ado? |
A43692 | Says quamdiu then, How long shall we stay? |
A43692 | Says quare, Wherefore do ye jar? |
A43692 | Says quare, Wherefore should they do''t? |
A43692 | Says quomodo, But how can it be done? |
A43692 | Shall a purblind Boy Thy Courage destroy, And make thee submit like a Slave to a Toy? |
A43692 | Some are possest with dread; says atat, Out alas, What shall we do, being brought to this pass? |
A43692 | THe Adverbs had a Quarrel, as they say: Says ubi, Where? |
A43692 | That''s sic: sic, says he? |
A43692 | The Tables fill''d with Bottles were, We scarce cou''d set Tobacco there; That one to ask was then so bold, Whether the Bottles were to be sold? |
A43692 | Then all did call him cur, which made him cry, And why cur, says he? |
A43692 | Then ego amo, I love; tu amas, thou lovest; I lle amat, he loveth: Now which loves best? |
A43692 | This pish, pish, Groper, stand away? |
A43692 | Thus you''ve heard the meaning of all the four Conjugations; what need I say any more? |
A43692 | To my Chamber, quoth he: To your Chamber, quoth she? |
A43692 | Troth, friend, thought I, I''m o''thy mind: For I am so much gaul''d behind, There''s no place free, it is so tore, How cou''d it then gaul any more? |
A43692 | Truly, forsooth, I was never a Blab Of my Tongue: Wou''d you a done it? |
A43692 | Vnde askt from whence comes all this prate? |
A43692 | Vos amatis, ye love; why shou''d ye not? |
A43692 | WHy shou''d we ere Beauty fade, Slaves to Care and Age be made, Since our flying Youth can no more be had? |
A43692 | WHy should we ere think of Love? |
A43692 | We''ll not be confin''d: Can they want any thing that are merry? |
A43692 | What Goods, says Doll? |
A43692 | What Object now has took thy eye, That I am thus so soon laid by, As one that''s out of date? |
A43692 | What else, says she? |
A43692 | What is she some Angel, thou valuest her so? |
A43692 | What makes thy Master send thus every day? |
A43692 | What then, says Doll? |
A43692 | When a man is dumb, how can''s mind be exprest? |
A43692 | When we d we, says he? |
A43692 | Where is''t, says she? |
A43692 | Which way, says qua? |
A43692 | Whither shall we flie, says quo? |
A43692 | Who got the Child, says she, you Jade? |
A43692 | Who is''t, says he? |
A43692 | Why did you not cry out, you Drab, When first you saw he begun it? |
A43692 | Why did you not then sooner go, You errant Quean, before''t was known? |
A43692 | Why some Money, quoth he: O some Money, quoth she? |
A43692 | Why there, Sir? |
A43692 | Why this proud and coy denying,''Cause I there my hand did lay? |
A43692 | Why this stir? |
A43692 | Why where was I? |
A43692 | Why where, you Whore? |
A43692 | Why, why, says Doll? |
A43692 | Wil ● thou stoop to the checks Of the Feminine Sex, That dayly does study poor Mortals to vex? |
A43692 | are you lame, Or are you gaul''d, and is it sore? |
A43692 | in what place, I pray? |
A43692 | what,''cause y''are Foreman O''th''Jury? |
A43692 | why this denying? |
A28452 | And can there be any sorrow so great that these considerations can not consolate? |
A28452 | And shall a Lawyer( for the Bastinado given in a Court of Justice to his companion) be advanced? |
A28452 | And shall not your inferiours do the like with you? |
A28452 | And shall they that break all Laws, yet in this observe civility? |
A28452 | And shall we the most sinfull esteem it a blot to our reputation to be unrevenged on our brethren? |
A28452 | And who should be a fitter Mourner at the exequies of a fair Lady, than so compleat a servant of Ladies? |
A28452 | Another, Did the most innocent vouchsafe a part of his glory to pray for his enemies? |
A28452 | Are you Assistant to your friend? |
A28452 | Are you Judge amongst your neighbors and inferiors? |
A28452 | Art not thou then thrice as obscure as thou art renowned? |
A28452 | At length letting her tongue go( as dolourous thoughts guided it) she thus( with lamentable demeanor) spake, — Wilt thou give my sorrows no truce? |
A28452 | Be my ears unworthy, or my tongue suspected? |
A28452 | Because she doth deny, deny? |
A28452 | But alas, how can speech produce belief in him, whom sight can not perswade? |
A28452 | But having declared your self, you intend to be upright? |
A28452 | But whether rove I? |
A28452 | By Interrogation thus, Are not most men ignorant? |
A28452 | Can your belief lay hold on such a miracle? |
A28452 | Casting his eye( the Messenger of his heart) upon — Seest not thou these Trophies erected in his honor, and his honour shining in these Trophies? |
A28452 | Did the Sun ever bring fruitful Harvest; but was more hot then pleasant? |
A28452 | Did you mark ● is looks? |
A28452 | Did you note his speeches? |
A28452 | Did you truly conceive the particular proceedings of the Action? |
A28452 | Do you converse with your superiors, to learn of them to be able to judge them, and benefit your self? |
A28452 | Do you grudge me part of your sorrow being sister in Nature, I would I were not so far off a Kin in fortune? |
A28452 | Do you not see that this is a sallet of wormwood, vvhile mine eyes feed upon the Ambrosia of your beauty? |
A28452 | Do you see( my friend) how I hug your attributions? |
A28452 | Dost thou desire to be known? |
A28452 | For suppose you marry into some worthy Family; suppose they inrich you with some new friends; may not a vain of thriving rob me of your acquaintance? |
A28452 | H.C. What is it that you should thus conceal from me? |
A28452 | HOw much my sm ● ll deserts are overballanced by your unspeakable goodn ● ss? |
A28452 | Hath this world a Government? |
A28452 | Have you any Fathers that be not sometimes froward? |
A28452 | Have you any of your children, that be not sometimes cumbersom? |
A28452 | Have you not seen a stately kinde of courtesie, and a proud kinde of humility? |
A28452 | He is a swaggerer amongst quiet men? |
A28452 | How can I commit a sacriledge against the sweet Saint that lives in my inmost Temple? |
A28452 | How canst thou be a stranger to my purposes, that art the Treasurer of my secrets? |
A28452 | How is this suffered? |
A28452 | How laudable it is to repair the ruines of his own decayed Palaces and Granges? |
A28452 | I can not deny it; you look for some sense? |
A28452 | I partly believe it: But you finde none? |
A28452 | If I grant you an advantage over me,''t is but what you have asserted: I answer the same Post, and to many besides yours; But what is this? |
A28452 | In Europe, how canst thou be famous? |
A28452 | In deliberating sometimes you are amazed; as, Whom shall I blame? |
A28452 | Is it not a safer gain of popularity, with ceremonies, then with discovering your Nature? |
A28452 | Love moved Biblis to be enamoured on her own brother Caunus, and Pasiphae to accompany vvith a Bull? |
A28452 | My own preservation, lessens not my contribution to the Publicke ▪ must I bee, or I can not be able? |
A28452 | Now in these persons is there ever a stedfast decency, and uniform difference of manners observed wheresoever you find them? |
A28452 | O Parthenia, no more Parthenia, what art thou? |
A28452 | O what may not depraved love do, since sincere amity can not avoid suspition? |
A28452 | Parentheses( Interrogation(?) |
A28452 | Sometimes the occasion is taken from some quality or other thing, whereto your self gives shew of life; as, Hope tell me, what hast thou to hope for? |
A28452 | Sometimes we enter into Communication; as, Were it your case, what would you answer? |
A28452 | That they are not necessary, you can not say, for what more necessary in your life, then to write well? |
A28452 | The most covetous man longs not to get riches out of that ground which can bear nothing; Why? |
A28452 | The way to ease our selves is hard, yet not impossible: but what is it? |
A28452 | Then, as a Husband, do but observe how kind he is, and withall how chast? |
A28452 | There is Occupatio and Subjectio in Arcadia, if she contemned, then thus — if otherwise, then& c. Did I walk abroad to see my delight? |
A28452 | Tormented, tormented? |
A28452 | Vnkindness moved me, and what can so trouble my courses, or wrack my thoughts as unkindness? |
A28452 | What a paradise of unspotted goodness his filthy though ● s sought to defile? |
A28452 | What doth better become wisdom then to discern what is worthy loving? |
A28452 | What doth not a bad servant when once he possesseth the easie nature of his Master? |
A28452 | What doth not a plaistered sanctity for the subversion of the simple? |
A28452 | What else will happen unto you, bu ● to court a phantasie which loos ● ing your hold, will leave you nothing but the sorrow of your illusions? |
A28452 | What hath your poor servant deserved to have his own misfortune loade ● with your displeasure? |
A28452 | What kinsman of his unabused, what friend undeceived, what companion uncorrupted, can speak for him? |
A28452 | What more agreeable to goodness then to love it, so discerned? |
A28452 | What plainer meaning then, sleep among thieves? |
A28452 | When Asia and Africa, that have thrice as many people, hear not of thy actions? |
A28452 | Where? |
A28452 | Why will you give me with so sparing a hand, the riches of your presence? |
A28452 | Why? |
A28452 | Will you have more? |
A28452 | With what a witty ignorance she would understand? |
A28452 | You commend his wisdom? |
A28452 | You would be counted liberal? |
A28452 | You would thrive in bargaining? |
A28452 | alas, alas; why loved I? |
A28452 | and disobey our Fathers? |
A28452 | and what you conceive will be the sequels, chiefly of neerest connexion? |
A28452 | but is quiet among swaggerers? |
A28452 | but who would not grieve more, to see his experience controlled? |
A28452 | doth not a commendations, a hat, a good word, a good- morrow, p ● rchase more hearts then a moneths familiar pratling; with a flock of rude people? |
A28452 | hate our children? |
A28452 | how full of warm expressions of love, and yet how far from wanton? |
A28452 | if such glory can dwell with corruption, what Celestial excellencies are in the Saints above? |
A28452 | may not I lose you? |
A28452 | nay, may not you lose your self in a labyrinth of worldly cares? |
A28452 | now in earnest I could laugh,& c. Why loved I? |
A28452 | read with favor, and censure with mercy; — Why should not that, which is one, rest in unity? |
A28452 | shall I make learning hateful to you by my reprehensions? |
A28452 | shall I make my silence accessary to your idleness? |
A28452 | shall we that profess Laws, maintain outrage? |
A28452 | shall we therefore curse the Sun? |
A28452 | what shall I pretend? |
A28452 | where can he dye with honor? |
A28452 | where can he live without shame? |
A28452 | whither do you lead me? |
A28452 | who would not gaze himself into admiration, when he shall see so rich a treasure in so pure a Cabinet, unmatched vertue in matchless beauty? |
A28452 | you will grow contemptible, you offer Reconciliation? |
A28452 | your strength will forsake you, you dispraise your adversaries? |
A44736 | & c. wheras we shold say, Were you ever in France? |
A44736 | And are all kind of persons used th ● ●, whether Forren, or Natives? |
A44736 | And doth not the Kingdom of Navarr appertain to the King of France? |
A44736 | And with your favor, Whither did you direct your way from the City of Burgos? |
A44736 | Ay tambien nota de Interrogacion, que se figura assi? |
A44736 | But do you call Valladolid a Village, being so great a place, and where the Catholick Court kept so long? |
A44736 | But el is often o ● itted, being included in the Verb, which is of the third person, as hà comido, have you din''d? |
A44736 | Como es esto, que siendo el Rey de España tan gran Monarca, no tiene una Corte correspondiente a su grandeza? |
A44736 | DIOS le dè muy buenos dias Señor Don Felipe, años hà que no le he visto; digame si fuere, servido, donde hà estado tanto tiempo? |
A44736 | De España? |
A44736 | De Sarogoça por doude adereçava vm sus passos? |
A44736 | Did it fortune you to see the House of Celestina? |
A44736 | El Reyno de los Algarves no pertenece a la corona de Portugàl? |
A44736 | En aquellos lugares fronteros no se hallan Guardas que miran a los Passageros? |
A44736 | Es possible esso? |
A44736 | Estar is much us''d in salutation, and in reference to health, as como esta mi padre, how doth my father? |
A44736 | From Saragossa whither did you direct your journey? |
A44736 | From Spain? |
A44736 | From thence whither did you bend your cours? |
A44736 | GOD give you very good dayes Sir Philip, It is a great while since I saw you; tell me, if you be pleas''d, Where have you bin so long? |
A44736 | God bless me, and what was the cause( under favor) that made you to undergo such a journey? |
A44736 | Haga me merced de informarme que quiere dezir Venta? |
A44736 | How can that be, the Spanish King being so great a Monarch; and hath he not a Court correspondent to his greatnes? |
A44736 | I have read that Philip the second asking Andrea Doria a great Seaman Which was the best Port in all Spain? |
A44736 | I pray, do me the favor as tell me what Venta is? |
A44736 | If to subdu ones Self, if to obtain A Conquest o''re the Passions, bee to Raign, Here lies the Gretest King( who can say more?) |
A44736 | In French she is of that weight that she makes somtimes a whole word of her self, as Voulez vous y aller, Will you go thither? |
A44736 | In lieu of qual what, and como how, these two words que tal are us''d, which is a pure Spanicism, as que tal est à mi hermano, how doth my brother? |
A44736 | In those frontire places, are ther not Gards to look what Travellers passe? |
A44736 | Is it possible that you did not find such in your travels, Spain being so good a Countrey, and abounding in all things? |
A44736 | Is it possible? |
A44736 | Los terceros Possessivos son Her hers, con sus Plurales their theirs; como her distaf su rueca, her maidenhead su virginidad; whose ring is this? |
A44736 | Para que why, to what end? |
A44736 | Pues al partir de san Sebastian adonde se encaminava? |
A44736 | Pues llama vm, Valladolid Villa siendo un Lugàr tan grande, y adonde la Corte Catolica residio tanto tempo? |
A44736 | Pues que me dize? |
A44736 | Que hath no Plural, as quien and qual have, as quien es aquel hidalgo, who is that Gentleman? |
A44736 | Que son los otros dominios que tiene la Corona de Portugal? |
A44736 | Somtimes to avail, as de que sirve todo esso, what purpose serves all this? |
A44736 | The Kingdom of the Algarves, doth it not appertain to the Crown of Portugal? |
A44736 | The Spaniards have a peculiar Idiom, to use que tanto for quanto in Inter ● ogations, as que tanto es del mes? |
A44736 | The third Possessif is Her hers, with their Plurals their theirs; as Her Distaf su rueca, her Maiden head su Virginidàd; whose ring is this? |
A44736 | Ther is also a Note of Interrogation, and is figur''d thus? |
A44736 | Ther is an observable phrase in Spanish, Que serà de mi? |
A44736 | Thine also stands for a Possessif of it self to a question, as Whose land is that? |
A44736 | Thine tambien es possessivo de si mesmo a una pregunta, como whose land is that? |
A44736 | Thine; cuya a tierra es aquella? |
A44736 | Well, when you parted from San Sebastian, whither did you direct your cours? |
A44736 | What do you tell me? |
A44736 | What other Dominions are there, over which the Crown of Portugal doth Lord it? |
A44736 | What will become of mee? |
A44736 | When you read this; I know you wil bee apt to say, That a Fools bolt is soon shot, or cry out, Witt whither willt thou? |
A44736 | Y con su licencia, de Burgos para donde se encamino sù merced? |
A44736 | Y no es el Reyno de Navarra del Rey de Francia? |
A44736 | Y se haze esto a todo genero de personas Estrangeros y Naturales? |
A44736 | Yr is taken in divers senses, as como le va, how goes it with you? |
A44736 | a Londres, do you go to London? |
A44736 | a que proposito to what purpose? |
A44736 | alli la Torre Encantada, y el artificio con que se sube el agua del Rio hasta lo alto de la Cindad que es tan curioso y renombrado? |
A44736 | alli por ventura la casa de Celestina? |
A44736 | and whence com you now? |
A44736 | but quien in the singular is counted more elegant, as quien son ellos mercaderes? |
A44736 | cuyo cavallo es aquel, whose horse is that? |
A44736 | dias hà,''t is a pretty while since: que tanto hà que estays aqui, how long have you bin here? |
A44736 | en aquel negocio, how went it with you in that busines? |
A44736 | es possible que no las aya en su viage, siendo España tan buena tierra, y abundante de todo? |
A44736 | have you bin in France, Sir? |
A44736 | hee sayed, And old Courtier Sir; What Courtier sayed Sir Thomas? |
A44736 | how far is it from London to Lancaster? |
A44736 | hà buelto del palacio, how long is it that you have returned from Court? |
A44736 | less: tienes de comer? |
A44736 | menos, hast thou clothes? |
A44736 | mine; cuya espada es esta? |
A44736 | mine; whose Glove is that? |
A44736 | no, hast thou any mony? |
A44736 | no: tienes vestidos? |
A44736 | or according to the words, That sellest thy self unto mee for such a wise man? |
A44736 | porque, porque razon for what reson, why? |
A44736 | que is what or that, que es esto, what is this? |
A44736 | que se le da a el, what doth hee care for it? |
A44736 | que serà de ti? |
A44736 | que tal se halla mi madre, how doth my mother? |
A44736 | que tanto ay de Londres a Lancastra? |
A44736 | que va a mi en esto, what doth it concern mee? |
A44736 | quien es son aquellos mercaderes, who are those merchants? |
A44736 | quien, que, qual, as quien canta, who sings? |
A44736 | tampoco, hast thou meat? |
A44736 | tengo tan buenos parientes como vos, I have as good kindred as you: o quan dulcemente canta, how sweetly do you sing? |
A44736 | then answer is made, esta bueno loado sea Dios, he is well praised be God: como esta V M. how do you do Sir? |
A44736 | valgame Dios, y qual fue la causa( eon licencia) que le hizo emprender aquel viaje? |
A44736 | what day of the months is it? |
A44736 | what will become of thee? |
A44736 | will you sup with mee? |
A44736 | y de donde viene agora? |
A44736 | you have not bin in France, Sir? |
A18944 | A fooles coat — Clitellae non conveniunt bovi? |
A18944 | Ad quem dies es profecturus? |
A18944 | Adeóne hospes es in hac regione? |
A18944 | An ego occasionem mihi ostentatam tam brevem tam optatam tam insperatam amitterem Should I let so fit an occasion slip? |
A18944 | An me putas Apologum comminisci? |
A18944 | Are not you ashamed? |
A18944 | Are you such a stranger here? |
A18944 | Calles Gallicè? |
A18944 | Came you a foot or horse backe? |
A18944 | Can I doe all at once? |
A18944 | Can you speake French? |
A18944 | Cui bono sunt? |
A18944 | Cui possit o ● rep ● re taedium? |
A18944 | Cui tandem rei? |
A18944 | Cui tandem rei? |
A18944 | Did not your conscience gall you? |
A18944 | Did you speed? |
A18944 | Doe not thinke much to tell? |
A18944 | Doe you flout me so at the first? |
A18944 | Doe you know in whose company you are? |
A18944 | Doe you love me no better? |
A18944 | Doe you pronounce right? |
A18944 | Doe you thinke I tell you a lye? |
A18944 | Doth no man finde fault with the reckoning? |
A18944 | Ecquid animi vobis est? |
A18944 | Ecquid novarum rerum affers è LONDINO? |
A18944 | Ecquis homo est? |
A18944 | Erat concio frequens? |
A18944 | Est aliud quod me velis? |
A18944 | Et quis Herculem vituperat? |
A18944 | Fateberi ● si divinâro? |
A18944 | For what thing I pray you, Sir? |
A18944 | For what thing I pray you? |
A18944 | God grant him long to live Itáne contemnor abs te? |
A18944 | Haeremus in vado, quis nos expediet? |
A18944 | Have we lived to see this? |
A18944 | Have you any thing else to say? |
A18944 | Have you that you looked for? |
A18944 | Have your wits about you Quid multis moror? |
A18944 | Hee had neede first helpe himselfe before hee helpe thee Hanccine ego contumeliam tam insignem in me accipiam? |
A18944 | How am I deceived? |
A18944 | How can I? |
A18944 | How did hee loose himselfe from that trouble? |
A18944 | How doe you all doe? |
A18944 | How doth all? |
A18944 | How feele you your selfe? |
A18944 | How is he changed? |
A18944 | How many ● ises shall wee make up? |
A18944 | How old are you? |
A18944 | How w ● ll doth a loose Gowne become her? |
A18944 | How you talke sirrah? |
A18944 | In what respect? |
A18944 | Is all well? |
A18944 | Is any man —? |
A18944 | Is it true? |
A18944 | Is there no newes? |
A18944 | Itáne statim me scommate excipis? |
A18944 | Laeta satis principia — — Sed quid longa dies? |
A18944 | May I trust you? |
A18944 | Nec quid dixeris, sed quorsum? |
A18944 | Nemo reclamat iniquae rationi? |
A18944 | Nihílne re ● istic novae? |
A18944 | Non reclamabat tibi conscientia? |
A18944 | Nonnè vides camelum saltantem? |
A18944 | Not what, but why? |
A18944 | Num contigit praeda quàm venabaris? |
A18944 | Nunquid tuis mandas per me? |
A18944 | Nunquid vis? |
A18944 | Nè gravare commemorare? |
A18944 | Obsecro quomodo sese ab hoc nodo expediebat? |
A18944 | Pedes advenis an eques? |
A18944 | Periculum faciam quàm sis bonae fidei? |
A18944 | Q ● antâ de spe decidi? |
A18944 | Quae Pallas istuc tibi misit in mentem? |
A18944 | Quae hunc agitant intemperiae? |
A18944 | Quam bella bellaria? |
A18944 | Quam decet nullo adstricta cingulo vestis, ac liberis diffluens laciniis? |
A18944 | Quanti istum locas? |
A18944 | Quanti venalis? |
A18944 | Quantula res? |
A18944 | Quantū mutatus ab illo? |
A18944 | Quas malum ambages mihi commemoras? |
A18944 | Quem vicarium constituit? |
A18944 | Quid agis rei? |
A18944 | Quid causae est? |
A18944 | Quid dici potuit hac sententiâ sanctius? |
A18944 | Quid est bonae rei? |
A18944 | Quid est quod me velis? |
A18944 | Quid istuc verbi est? |
A18944 | Quid licêris aut licitâris cum nihil sis empturus? |
A18944 | Quid loquebatur? |
A18944 | Quid officio inofficiofius? |
A18944 | Quid si coelum ruat? |
A18944 | Quid si divinem? |
A18944 | Quid te remoratum est? |
A18944 | Quid tibi aegrè est? |
A18944 | Quid tu es hominis? |
A18944 | Quid tu es hominis? |
A18944 | Quid venatur meus Spudaeus? |
A18944 | Quid verbis opus est? |
A18944 | Quis Deus aut quis ven tus te illuc adegit? |
A18944 | Quis Thales docuit te istud? |
A18944 | Quis audivit vocem campanae? |
A18944 | Quis potuit dexterius, deterius? |
A18944 | Quo colore possit excusari? |
A18944 | Quo nomine? |
A18944 | Quo ore appellabo hominem? |
A18944 | Quomodo se res habent tuae? |
A18944 | Quorsum haec igitur? |
A18944 | Quorsum ille musicus humilis in templo? |
A18944 | Quot annos numeras? |
A18944 | Quota Venus finiet ludum? |
A18944 | Quâ tandem horâ soles lectum relinquere? |
A18944 | Quî possim ego? |
A18944 | Rem certam narras? |
A18944 | Sed nè persequamur fabulas Democriticas, nonnè comperimus experimentis? |
A18944 | Shall I take this at his hand? |
A18944 | Sonásne probè sermonem Gallicum? |
A18944 | Such a little bit? |
A18944 | Tantillum fragmentulum? |
A18944 | To what purpose then? |
A18944 | Ut responsat nebulo? |
A18944 | Vidésne quod sodalitium tibi claudat latus? |
A18944 | Vivi pervenimus illuc? |
A18944 | Was it a great cogregation? |
A18944 | What a deale of doe tell you me of? |
A18944 | What a small matter? |
A18944 | What ailes the man? |
A18944 | What are you doing? |
A18944 | What can they say for it? |
A18944 | What doe you let it for? |
A18944 | What good doe they? |
A18944 | What good newes? |
A18944 | What hindred you? |
A18944 | What if I should guesse? |
A18944 | What is all the honour of the world without a good conscience? |
A18944 | What is the matter? |
A18944 | What is your pleasure with me? |
A18944 | What learned man taught you that, or who made you so w ● se? |
A18944 | What man are you? |
A18944 | What meane you by that? |
A18944 | What need I say more? |
A18944 | What need all this roaring? |
A18944 | What newes at London? |
A18944 | What seeke you for? |
A18944 | What shoul ● a cow doe with a cart saddle? |
A18944 | What strooke it? |
A18944 | What time are you wo nt to rise? |
A18944 | What troubles you? |
A18944 | What will it cost? |
A18944 | What winde blew you hither? |
A18944 | What would you? |
A18944 | When goe you? |
A18944 | Where left you last? |
A18944 | Who are you I pray? |
A18944 | Who can be weary? |
A18944 | Who can cleanse such a clowne? |
A18944 | Who could ever please all? |
A18944 | Who could have done it better, worse? |
A18944 | Who ever denied it? |
A18944 | Who heard the clocke? |
A18944 | Who is his Deputy? |
A18944 | Who perswaded you? |
A18944 | Who will helpe Dunne out of the mire? |
A18944 | Who will helpe you? |
A18944 | Why doe not you reade it your selfe? |
A18944 | Why so I pray you? |
A18944 | Will you tell me if I guesse? |
A18944 | With what face can I speak to him? |
A18944 | Would you any thing with me? |
A18944 | — Cui bono? |
A43142 | ''T is I, your Husband, said Saleware, do n''t you know my voice? |
A43142 | Alexander when a woman was brought to him one evening, demanded of her why she came so late? |
A43142 | Art well? |
A43142 | But what think you of his Opinion? |
A43142 | CAst our Nabs and Cares away, This is beggars Holiday, In the world look out and see, Where''s so happy a King as he? |
A43142 | Can there be no remedy for this Vice? |
A43142 | Could you not finde some other way to abuse me, but by this the most insufferable? |
A43142 | Dearest, said he, what is the matter? |
A43142 | Do you not wonder that there should be so many Pick- Pockets about t ● e st ● eets, notwithstanding that there is a Watch in every corner? |
A43142 | How are Painters call''d cunning Fellows? |
A43142 | How are Players said to be Philosophical? |
A43142 | How are Trumpeters said to be subject to sickly Distempers? |
A43142 | How are great Eaters said to be the most valiant men? |
A43142 | How comes it to pass that tall men for the most part are not wise? |
A43142 | How doth a Drunka ● d make himself known to the sober men of this life? |
A43142 | How is a Cook said to be a man of the worst digestion? |
A43142 | How may Coblers be said to be good men? |
A43142 | How may a Fool resemble a wise Man? |
A43142 | How may a man use Tobacco that it may do him good? |
A43142 | How should a man behave himself to his Friends? |
A43142 | Lucullus being asked one day by his Servant, whom he had invited to his feast, seeing so much meat prepared? |
A43142 | Of all things that you know which do you esteem most precious? |
A43142 | On whom ought not benefits to be bestowed? |
A43142 | Q. Wherefore is it that we are for the most part ill conceited of them that have their Hair of one colour and their Beard of another? |
A43142 | Tradewel seeing his man in so great a confusion, could not but smile to himself, asking him what was the matter? |
A43142 | What Employments, or Places of Command have any of this Society of Drunkards at Sea- service? |
A43142 | What Orders have they amongst them for their better Government? |
A43142 | What Spice doth a City- Sergeant love best? |
A43142 | What are the Companiens of Bacchus? |
A43142 | What are the Customes of this Learned Society of Drunkards, which they have ordained like the Laws of the Medes and Persians, to be unalterable? |
A43142 | What are their Civil Officers, who is their Mayor- Domo or Grand Steward? |
A43142 | What are their Martial Preferments; who amongst them is Colonel of a Regiment? |
A43142 | What are their Penal Statutes, Forfeitures and W ● its? |
A43142 | What difference is there betwixt a Drunkard and a Brewers- horse drawing of a Dray laden with full barrels of Beer? |
A43142 | What distinction do you make betwixt a Friend and a Foe? |
A43142 | What do several sorts of Colours signifie? |
A43142 | What harm then( said he) can your consent to my proposals do to your Husbands friendship or your Honesty? |
A43142 | What is a Drunkard like? |
A43142 | What is a Prodigal like? |
A43142 | What is an idle Justice of Peace like? |
A43142 | What is the Diet so much esteemed of by Citizens wives? |
A43142 | What is the pleasure of Drunkenness? |
A43142 | What is their Writ of, By what Right? |
A43142 | What may a Taylor be chiefly commend ● for? |
A43142 | What may a good Client be compared to? |
A43142 | What may a sample fellow in good Cloaths be compared to? |
A43142 | What men are dangerous in a Common- wealth? |
A43142 | What other Officers, have they in Respect and Dignity, Civil or Martial? |
A43142 | What said the Drunkard to those that pe ● swaded him to pay his money, and not to put himself to so publike disgrace as to sit in the Stocks? |
A43142 | What was the Opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild Fowl? |
A43142 | What''s he that hath a fine wit in jest? |
A43142 | What''s the best remedy for a woman that''s troubled with the falling sickness? |
A43142 | What''s the first Commodity a young Shop- keeper puts off? |
A43142 | Where''s the Nation lives so free, And so merry as do we? |
A43142 | Whether doest thou profess thy self a Knave or a Fool? |
A43142 | Whether is a fault committed in Drunkenness to be punished or remitted? |
A43142 | Which of the two is more sufferable a Tyrant, or a Hangman? |
A43142 | Who are Tenants in Dower? |
A43142 | Who are those that draw death out of which others preserve life? |
A43142 | Who is Admiral amongst them of the narrow Seas? |
A43142 | Who is Camp Master? |
A43142 | Who is Captain of a foot Company? |
A43142 | Who is Clerk of the Kitching? |
A43142 | Who is Corporal of the Field? |
A43142 | Who is Drum Major? |
A43142 | Who is Foreman of the Jury? |
A43142 | Who is Gentleman of a Company? |
A43142 | Who is Lanspresado? |
A43142 | Who is Marshal of the Field? |
A43142 | Who is Master of a Ship? |
A43142 | Who is Master- Gunner? |
A43142 | Who is Masters Mate? |
A43142 | Who is Mr. Comptroler? |
A43142 | Who is Mr. of the Ceremonies? |
A43142 | Who is Mr. of the Ordnance? |
A43142 | Who is Oliver, or Master of the Novelties? |
A43142 | Who is Principal Secretary? |
A43142 | Who is Proctor? |
A43142 | Who is Pyrat of the Narrow Seas? |
A43142 | Who is Register? |
A43142 | Who is Sutler? |
A43142 | Who is Swabber? |
A43142 | Who is Tenant amongst them in Fee- simple? |
A43142 | Who is Tenant at Will? |
A43142 | Who is Trumpetter? |
A43142 | Who is a Free- holder? |
A43142 | Who is a Mr. of Misrule? |
A43142 | Who is a good Navigator? |
A43142 | Who is an Intelligencer? |
A43142 | Who is an expert Geometrician? |
A43142 | Who is an old Souldier? |
A43142 | Who is he that shudies Cosmography? |
A43142 | Who is he that studies the Metaphysicks? |
A43142 | Who is publlick Notary? |
A43142 | Who is the Cook? |
A43142 | Who is the Ensign- Bearer? |
A43142 | Who is the Vice- Admiral? |
A43142 | Why are Carpenters said to be civil, well informed, and governed men as any in a Common- wealth? |
A43142 | Why are Carriers said to be wise men? |
A43142 | Why are Citizens Wives so affected with Hats? |
A43142 | Why are Fidlers compared to Camelions? |
A43142 | Why are Glasiers said to be good Arbitrators? |
A43142 | Why are Musquetiers of all other Souldiers said to be the most lazy? |
A43142 | Why are Printers said to be the most lawless men in a Kingdom? |
A43142 | Why are Saylors so seldom rich? |
A43142 | Why are Scriveners said to be hard- hearted Fellows? |
A43142 | Why are Smiths of all other Trades said to be the most irregular and wicked? |
A43142 | Why are Tapsters said to be well esteemed? |
A43142 | Why are Taylors like Woodcocks? |
A43142 | Why are bitter Almonds eaten in the time of tipling, said to preserve for a good space of time from Drunkenness? |
A43142 | Why are not Women so soon Drunk; but old folks suddenly oovercome with Wine? |
A43142 | Why are they called unfortunate men? |
A43142 | Why are those that wear long hair in the readiest way to make Fryars? |
A43142 | Why did Nature allow of Mercury? |
A43142 | Why did the Ancients paint Fortune with a double fore- head, the one side bald, and the other hairy; and why also blind? |
A43142 | Why do Foot- boys for the most part wear linnen stockings? |
A43142 | Why do Lawyers- Clerks write such wide Lines? |
A43142 | Why do fat men love their ease so much? |
A43142 | Why do many hold that there is a World in the Moon? |
A43142 | Why do the Women in Newgate beg singing? |
A43142 | Why do the eyes of a 〈 ◊ 〉 for the most part water? |
A43142 | Why do those that are drunk in beholding of one thing think that they see many? |
A43142 | Why do we usually say that the Philosophers- stone and need to turn all Metals into Gold? |
A43142 | Why had a Barber more reason to be honest and trusty than another Trade? |
A43142 | Why have Hosts usually such red Noses? |
A43142 | Why have many men no Beards? |
A43142 | Why is Prison a good Instrument of Reformation? |
A43142 | Why is a Barber said to be such an active man? |
A43142 | Why is a Cholerick man said to be no wiser than an Horse? |
A43142 | Why is a Hangman said to be one of a contemplative life? |
A43142 | Why is a Midwife so commendable a Trade? |
A43142 | Why is a Miller said to be the fittest Husband for a Scold? |
A43142 | Why is a Tooth- drawers said to be an unconscionable Trade? |
A43142 | Why is he that draws Beer not called a Drawer, as well as he that draws wine? |
A43142 | Why is it better to fall into the Claws of Crows and Ravens than of Flatterers? |
A43142 | Why is it said to be no Charity to give a blind man an Almes? |
A43142 | Why may Tobacco shops be said for to be such dangerous places for to come into? |
A43142 | Why so silent? |
A43142 | Why, did you promise only to delude? |
A43142 | Would you be serv''d so your self? |
A19300 | And which will follow( g?) |
A19300 | And why diuide you r, and d? |
A19300 | Are all men partakers of this benefit of Redemption purchased ● y Christ? |
A19300 | Are all persons without exception, to bee admitted to the Supper of the Lord? |
A19300 | Are there any moe of them? |
A19300 | Are there not thrée vowels in your? |
A19300 | Are you able to doe this of your selfe? |
A19300 | Are you to vse the Commandements as Prayers? |
A19300 | As Christ hath taught me, saying? |
A19300 | Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord? |
A19300 | Because it hath thrée vowels, without any of the thrée exceptions? |
A19300 | But Sir, you haue vsed( e) in the end of many words not sounded, when neither it changeth, sound, nor maketh the syllable long: why is that? |
A19300 | But tell me, why pronounce you not( e) in the end of people? |
A19300 | By the fall of Adam? |
A19300 | Could there no other mean ● or person bee found in Heauen or Earth to saue you, but the Sonne of God must doe it? |
A19300 | Doe all words of the plurall number end in es? |
A19300 | Doth not str, spell stra? |
A19300 | Doth this Scripture or word of God containe in it all points of true religion, and euerything necessary for the Saluation of a Christian? |
A19300 | For I demand what he vnderstands, when hée readeth a Chapter in the Bible? |
A19300 | For why? |
A19300 | Hath euery man this faith in himselfe? |
A19300 | Haue I now no more to obserue for distinct reading? |
A19300 | How be the Commandements diuided? |
A19300 | How comes it to passe that you are become a sinner in Adam? |
A19300 | How did he create you? |
A19300 | How diuide you them? |
A19300 | How doe you proue that you are a sinner? |
A19300 | How is God knowne? |
A19300 | How is faith gotten? |
A19300 | How is it strongthened and increased in you? |
A19300 | How is your faith strengthenea by Baptisme? |
A19300 | How is your faith strengthened by the Supper of the Lord? |
A19300 | How know you that this is not written with g, e? |
A19300 | How ma- ny ex cep- ti- ous hath it? |
A19300 | How many Consonants may come in the beginning of a word? |
A19300 | How many Sacraments be there in the Church of God? |
A19300 | How many be there of the first Table? |
A19300 | How many be there? |
A19300 | How many of the second? |
A19300 | How many parts be there of this Creed? |
A19300 | How many persons are there? |
A19300 | How many syllables are in this word rewarded? |
A19300 | How many things are to be considered in a Sacrament? |
A19300 | How many wayes may you expresse this sound si? |
A19300 | How must you pray? |
A19300 | How proue you it? |
A19300 | How proue you that? |
A19300 | How shall I be sure, which thrée may be joyned? |
A19300 | How shall any man know whether hee haue this true and sauing faith, or no? |
A19300 | How spell you Iesus? |
A19300 | How spell you Might? |
A19300 | How spell you lo? |
A19300 | How then shall I know which are Consonants may begin a word, and therefore must be joyned? |
A19300 | How was that? |
A19300 | How write you Circle? |
A19300 | How write you people? |
A19300 | How? |
A19300 | I am the Lord thy God,& c. a Commandement, or Preface? |
A19300 | If this be custome without reason, what certainty shall I hold? |
A19300 | If you doe ill, fy on vs all: Ah, is it so? |
A19300 | If your syllable begin with( b) what consonants may follow? |
A19300 | In Baptisme, which is the signe signified? |
A19300 | In the Supper of the Lord, which bee the signes that may bee seene? |
A19300 | In whose name? |
A19300 | Is it enough that you thanke him with your lips alone? |
A19300 | Is then the same reason to bée obserued, if there come thrée or moe Consonants together in the middest of a word? |
A19300 | Js there no way to escape it and be saued? |
A19300 | MY soule, praise the Lord, speake good of his Name: O Lord, our great God, how dost thou appeare, So passing in glory, that great is thy fame? |
A19300 | Must he needs be God and Man? |
A19300 | No ▪ Why? |
A19300 | Now ma ● ny let- ters may be in a syl- la- ble? |
A19300 | Rehearse the summe of your faith? |
A19300 | Rehearse them? |
A19300 | Scholler, Sir: I doe not well vnderstand what you meant by a syl- la- ble? |
A19300 | Shall I neuer else find two vowels in one syllable? |
A19300 | Spell from? |
A19300 | Spell of? |
A19300 | Tell me now in truth: How rich art thou? |
A19300 | Tell me then from this Scripture how many Gods there be? |
A19300 | The body and bloud of Christ? |
A19300 | The second is, if there be a Dip- thong, as in may ▪ your, then haue you two vowels in one syl- la- ble? |
A19300 | Then you may not pray to Saints or Angels, or to God in the name of Saint or Angell? |
A19300 | To strengthen our Faith, and to further our Repentance? |
A19300 | To what end then serueth it? |
A19300 | To what end then serueth the Law? |
A19300 | To what end? |
A19300 | To whom must you pray? |
A19300 | VVHat Religion doe you professe? |
A19300 | VVHat is the first thing next to be learned? |
A19300 | VVHo will aduenture his credit with me in apposing for the victory? |
A19300 | W ● at is Prayer? |
A19300 | What are these words: For thine is the Kingdome, the power and the glory, for euer? |
A19300 | What are these words; Our Father which art in Heauen? |
A19300 | What be the fruits of faith? |
A19300 | What be they? |
A19300 | What call you the holy Scriptures? |
A19300 | What can now hinder me, why I should not readily and distinctly read any English? |
A19300 | What doe the Commandements of the first Table teach you? |
A19300 | What doe the Commandements of the second Table teach you? |
A19300 | What doe they signifie? |
A19300 | What doe you owe to God for all his benefits? |
A19300 | What doe you professe in Baptisme? |
A19300 | What else is there to be obserued? |
A19300 | What hast thou that is thine owne? |
A19300 | What if a man should did you write this word? |
A19300 | What if you can not tell what vowell to spell your syllable with, how will you doe to finde it? |
A19300 | What is Christian Religion? |
A19300 | What is Faith? |
A19300 | What is God? |
A19300 | What is the Law of God? |
A19300 | What is the best way to spell a long word, as this admonition? |
A19300 | What is the other help ● you haue to increase Faith? |
A19300 | What is the punishmant for the breach of the Law? |
A19300 | What is the se- cond ex- cep- ti- on? |
A19300 | What is the second vse? |
A19300 | What is the thing signified? |
A19300 | What is the third ex- cep- ti- on? |
A19300 | What kind of words be they? |
A19300 | What let- ters make a syl- la- ble a- lone? |
A19300 | What meane you by a Consonant? |
A19300 | What meane you by the plurall number? |
A19300 | What must he doe that will come worthily to the Supper of the Lord? |
A19300 | What vse hath( o) for you giue it no sound? |
A19300 | What was his sinne? |
A19300 | When a question is asked, we marke it thus? |
A19300 | When thrée consonants begin a syllable, how shall I know which they be? |
A19300 | Where learne you that? |
A19300 | Wherein must he examine himselfe? |
A19300 | Whereof did he create it? |
A19300 | Which be they? |
A19300 | Which be they? |
A19300 | Which be they? |
A19300 | Who are they that shall haue their part in the death of Christ? |
A19300 | Who are to be not admitted? |
A19300 | Who be they? |
A19300 | Who created the World? |
A19300 | Who is this Christ? |
A19300 | Who made you? |
A19300 | Who ordained them ▪? |
A19300 | Why may we not say that( k) is not pronounced in these aswell as( c)? |
A19300 | Why put you in( gh) for m, i, t, e, spelleth mite? |
A19300 | Why put you w to a? |
A19300 | Why so? |
A19300 | Why then d ● th Christ say; This is my Body? |
A19300 | Why wander yee in vanity, and follow after lies? |
A19300 | Why were you th ● ● created? |
A19300 | Why? |
A19300 | Why? |
A19300 | Will any two vowels make a Dipthong? |
A19300 | You told me, you would obserue something more in words ending in es; I pray you what is it? |
A19300 | a Period,? |
A19300 | did he saue vs? |
A19300 | how long after the departure out of Egypt, and the Law giuen? |
A19300 | how long before Christ? |
A19300 | l, o? |
A19300 | or how long after Christ? |
A19300 | or how long after the Flood? |
A19300 | seeing you were so perfectly created? |
A19300 | verse 1 VVHerewith shall a young man clense his way? |
A19300 | verse 3 What vantage or what thing, Get''st thou thus for to sting, Thou false and flatering lyer? |
A19300 | verse 5 With God the Lord who may cōpare? |
A19300 | vs now come to the meanes of strengthening of faith, as of the Sacraments and Prayer: and first, what is a Saorament? |
A59234 | & c. And they reasoned with themselvs, saying, If we shall say from heaven, he will say unto us, Why did ye not then believe him? |
A59234 | & c. how is she become as a widow? |
A59234 | ( i. e.) Is ignorance fit to commend learning, or folly me ● ● to praise wisdom? |
A59234 | ( i. e.) how long wilt thou delay to send me help? |
A59234 | A note of Interrogation marked thus —? |
A59234 | Addubitatio sola est, — Heu quae nunc tellus, quae me aequora possunt Excipe ● e? |
A59234 | After whom is the King of Israel come out? |
A59234 | Alas, what can saying make them believe, whom seeing can not perswade? |
A59234 | Am I a God at hand? |
A59234 | An mihi cantando victus non redderet ille? |
A59234 | And against whom hast thou exalted thy voyce, and lifted up thine eyes on high? |
A59234 | And he saith unto them, Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath dayes, or to do evill? |
A59234 | And shall so eminent a vertue be expelled, thrust out, banished, and cast away from the City? |
A59234 | And thou Lord, how long? |
A59234 | And would any wise man ever have so said? |
A59234 | Are they Hebrews? |
A59234 | Are they Ministers of Christ? |
A59234 | Art thou in poverty? |
A59234 | Art thou rich? |
A59234 | Can a man take fire in his bosome, and his cloaths not be burnt? |
A59234 | Can a woman forget her sucking child? |
A59234 | Can one goe upon hot coles, and his feet not be burnt? |
A59234 | Can the Host of Heaven help me? |
A59234 | Can the flag grow without water? |
A59234 | Can the rush grow up without mire? |
A59234 | Can the rush grow up without mire? |
A59234 | Can the stag grow without water? |
A59234 | Cicero for Milo: What should Milo hate Clodius, the flower of his glory? |
A59234 | Creditis avectos hostes? |
A59234 | Darest thou presume to praise him? |
A59234 | David when he would abase himself, cryes out; Who am I, O Lord God? |
A59234 | Dicet aliquis; Haec igitur est tua disciplina? |
A59234 | Did I walk abroad to see my delight? |
A59234 | Did the Sun ever bring fruitful Harvest, but was more hot than pleasant? |
A59234 | Did you mark his speeches? |
A59234 | Dixi, filium habeo; ah quid dixi? |
A59234 | Dost thou now govern the Kingdom of Israel? |
A59234 | Doth God prevert judgement? |
A59234 | En quid agam? |
A59234 | Esau speaking of his brother Jacob, saith, Is he not rightly called Jacob? |
A59234 | Et procul, ò miseri, quae tanta insania, cives? |
A59234 | Et quae tanta fuit Romam tibi causa videndi? |
A59234 | Et quisquam numen Junonis adoret? |
A59234 | Facinus est vincire civem Romanum, scelus verberare, prope patricidium necare: quid dicam in crucem tollere? |
A59234 | Facti quasi poenitentia: Sed quid ego ità gravem personam induxi? |
A59234 | For doe I now perswade men, or God? |
A59234 | For this thy shameful and accursed fact, what shall I call thee? |
A59234 | Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me: lest I be full and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord? |
A59234 | God hath given them the spirit of slumber: what''s that? |
A59234 | Hath this world a government? |
A59234 | Have not I commanded thee? |
A59234 | Have we not prophesied in thy name; have we not cast out Devils in thy name, and done miracles in thy name? |
A59234 | Have you any fathers that be not sometimes froward? |
A59234 | Have you any of your children that be not sometimes cumbersome? |
A59234 | How is my Sun, whose beams are shining bright, Become the cause of my dark ugly night? |
A59234 | How is this suffered? |
A59234 | How much then is a man better then a sheep? |
A59234 | If I be a Master, where is my fear? |
A59234 | If I have spoken evill, bear witnesse of the evill: but if well, why smitest thou me? |
A59234 | If he be a good man, why speak you ill of him? |
A59234 | If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? |
A59234 | If then I be a father, where is mine honour? |
A59234 | If thou doe well, shalt thou not be accepted? |
A59234 | In English, What doe you and your sister make? |
A59234 | Is Ephraim my dear son? |
A59234 | Is any thing too hard for God? |
A59234 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
A59234 | John 21.15,& c. Thus Christ speaks to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas lovest thou me more then these? |
A59234 | Joseph was amongst his brethren, did I say brethren? |
A59234 | Men and Brethren, what shall we doe to be saved? |
A59234 | My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
A59234 | My soul is sore vexed, but thou O Lord how long? |
A59234 | Nomadumque p ● tam connubia supplex? |
A59234 | Non arma expedient, totaque ex urbe sequentur? |
A59234 | Nunquid, vos Medici, quid characteres ficti? |
A59234 | O Lord our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the world? |
A59234 | O Naves, referent in mare te novi Fluctus: O quid agis? |
A59234 | Oh death, where is thy sting, oh grave, where is thy victory? |
A59234 | Or how do I captiv''d in this dark plight, Bewail the case, and in the cause delight? |
A59234 | Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing: Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter? |
A59234 | Paul corrects his doubtfulnesse of Agrippa''s belief, where he saith, Believest thou King Agrippa? |
A59234 | Paul uses the words of Epicures, What advantages it me, if the dead rise not? |
A59234 | Prima velut mediis, mediis ita Epanodos i m a Consona dat repetens: Crudelis tu quoque mater; Crudelis mater magis, an puer improbus ille? |
A59234 | Quam bene, Caune, meo poteras gener esse parenti? |
A59234 | Quam bene, Caune, tuo poteram nurus esse parenti? |
A59234 | Quem alienum fidum invenies, si tuis hostis fueris? |
A59234 | Quid faciam? |
A59234 | Quid facies facies Veneris cum veneris antè? |
A59234 | Quid his immoror? |
A59234 | Quid hoc esse censes? |
A59234 | Quid hoc esse existimas? |
A59234 | Quid memorem, efferam, repetam? |
A59234 | Quid non mortalia pectora cogit Auri sacra fames? |
A59234 | Quid plus videret, qui intrasset? |
A59234 | Quid tu& soror facitis? |
A59234 | Quis Locus aut Lacus? |
A59234 | Quousque tandem, Catilina, abutere patientiâ nostrâ? |
A59234 | Quàm celeriter Pompeio duce belli impetus navigavit? |
A59234 | Sed haec utcumque ignoscenda, illud quis ferat? |
A59234 | Sed quid opus est verbis? |
A59234 | Sed vos qui tandem? |
A59234 | Sees ● not thou these Trophies erected in his honor, and his honor shining in these Trophies? |
A59234 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
A59234 | Shall we therefore curse the Sun? |
A59234 | Some man will say, How are the dead raised up? |
A59234 | Superatne& vescitur aura Aetherea, nec adhuc crudelibus occubat umbris? |
A59234 | Tantamne rem tam negligenter agier? |
A59234 | Tell us( say they) for whose cause is this evill come upon us? |
A59234 | That they are not necessary, you can not say; for what more necessary in your life, then to write well? |
A59234 | The chief Priests and the Elders of the people came unto Christ, as he was teaching and said, By what authority dost thou these things? |
A59234 | They will marry, having condemnation; Now, least any might, What, for marrying? |
A59234 | Thou that preachest a man should not steal, dost thou steal? |
A59234 | Thou that sayst a man should not commit adultery, dost thou commit adultery? |
A59234 | Thou therefore which teachest another, teachest thou not thy self? |
A59234 | Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth he yet find fault? |
A59234 | Thus Virgil, Ah Corydon, Corydon, what madnesse hath thee moved? |
A59234 | Thus in English, Whether the worst, the child accurst, or else the cruel mother? |
A59234 | Unkindness moved me, and what can so throuble me, or wrack my thoughts are unkindness? |
A59234 | Vbi gentium? |
A59234 | Vos agri, vos parietes obtestor; an non sudabatis, cum tantum nefas hoc loco perpetrabatur? |
A59234 | Were it your case, what would you answer? |
A59234 | What didst thou covet? |
A59234 | What have I to do with the multitude of your sacrifices, saith the Lord? |
A59234 | What man is there living, but will pitty such a case, if he be a man? |
A59234 | What profit hath a man of all his labour which he hath under the Sun? |
A59234 | What shall I doe? |
A59234 | What then? |
A59234 | What''s more odious then labour to the idle, fasting to the glutton, want to the covetous, shame to the proud, and good laws to the wicked? |
A59234 | When we demand a question; as, Cujum pecus? |
A59234 | When we earnestly affirm; as, Quousque tandem, Catilina, abutere patientiâ nostra? |
A59234 | Where is the wise? |
A59234 | Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? |
A59234 | Whither shall I goe from thy Spirit? |
A59234 | Who are these that flie as a clowd, and as the Doves to their windows? |
A59234 | Who art thou, O great Mountain? |
A59234 | Who can understand his errors? |
A59234 | Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
A59234 | Who is a God like unto thee? |
A59234 | Who more worthy of renown, honour and same, then Caesar? |
A59234 | Whom hast thou reproached, and blasphemed? |
A59234 | Why did the knees prevent me? |
A59234 | Why dyed I not from the womb? |
A59234 | Why should I sharply reprove him? |
A59234 | Will the Lord cast off for ever? |
A59234 | Wilt thou believe a Scot? |
A59234 | Would you judge him unworthy to be your friend, that began his fidelity with an inviolable Covenant never to be an enemy? |
A59234 | a wretch? |
A59234 | ad i d, quod est hujus causa caput, festinet oratio: In English thus, Why stay I upon these things? |
A59234 | after a dead dog, and after a flea? |
A59234 | am I not also a God a far off? |
A59234 | an Meliboei? |
A59234 | and hate our children? |
A59234 | and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto? |
A59234 | and whence comest thou? |
A59234 | and will he be favourable no more? |
A59234 | and with what bodies shall they come? |
A59234 | audistis gravissima, sed audietis graviora: In English, But these things howsoever to be forgiven, who can bear that? |
A59234 | aut quid misero mihi denique restat? |
A59234 | aut ulla putatis Dona carere dolis Danaum? |
A59234 | before Zerubbabel thou shalt be a plain,& c.( i. e) Thou lookest very big and great, but who art thou? |
A59234 | can Angels help me? |
A59234 | can these inefriour creatures help me? |
A59234 | did you note his looks? |
A59234 | disobey our fathers? |
A59234 | from heaven, or men? |
A59234 | habere me? |
A59234 | how doth the City sit solitary, that was full of people? |
A59234 | if he be naught, why doe you keep him company? |
A59234 | is he a pleasant childe? |
A59234 | nay but, oh man, who are thou? |
A59234 | or doe I seek to please men? |
A59234 | or doth the Almighty pervert justice? |
A59234 | or loweth the Oxe over his sodder? |
A59234 | or whither shall I flie from thy presence? |
A59234 | or why the breasts that I should suck? |
A59234 | quid deinde rogabo? |
A59234 | quid istis? |
A59234 | quid plura? |
A59234 | quid vocabula ignota? |
A59234 | quo terrarum abiit? |
A59234 | roger, anne rogem? |
A59234 | rursusne procos irrisa priores Experiar? |
A59234 | shall we sin because we are not under the Law, but under grace? |
A59234 | sic notus Vlysses? |
A59234 | so am I: are they Israelites? |
A59234 | so am I: are they the seed of Abraham? |
A59234 | the children of Israel taunt at Moses, Because there were no grave ● in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in the wilde ● nesse? |
A59234 | to save life, or to kill? |
A59234 | uses 〈 … 〉 h ● ● affirmation Do they not erre that devise evill? |
A59234 | what didst thou desire? |
A59234 | what didst thou wish? |
A59234 | what is thine occupation? |
A59234 | what shall I pretend? |
A59234 | what was he that might be compared to him, either in courage of heart, in fortitude of minde, or magnanimity of nature? |
A59234 | where is the Scribe? |
A59234 | whither shall I flie? |
A59234 | who amongst men was his equal in knowledge, understanding, policie and wisdom? |
A59234 | who hath resisted his will? |
A59234 | who more worthily esteemed, beloved, reverenced and honoured then noble Cesar? |
A59234 | whom shall I blame? |
A59234 | why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly? |
A59234 | — Quid non mortalia pectora cogis Auri sacta fames? |
A16874 | * And what do you? |
A16874 | * But who, I pray you noted? |
A16874 | * But why art thou so* shreud a boy? |
A16874 | * Doe you wish mee r to call the rest? |
A16874 | * Haue you neuer vttered the English speech before this? |
A16874 | * Haue you not heard? |
A16874 | * How earely I pray you? |
A16874 | * IS there any amongst you r desirous of play? |
A16874 | * Is it heard? |
A16874 | * May not I doe the same that mice doe? |
A16874 | * Neuer spake you English before? |
A16874 | * Not? |
A16874 | * Those present, or those absent? |
A16874 | * What a clock is it? |
A16874 | * What saiest thou? |
A16874 | * You youthes, about what doe you contende? |
A16874 | * can stir you vp? |
A16874 | * could you not hear? |
A16874 | * for what would you doe? |
A16874 | * hath it sounded, or not yet? |
A16874 | * instituted 〈 ◊ 〉 taught? |
A16874 | * therefore what a clock is it? |
A16874 | * what thou wilt? |
A16874 | * when shall it be dined? |
A16874 | And nothing more? |
A16874 | Are you so taught? |
A16874 | Art thou so wicked& a biter? |
A16874 | At what a clock? |
A16874 | BOyes, what noise is there, as if[ your] Master* were absent? |
A16874 | But dare you buy stollen things? |
A16874 | But if your father shall enter in after, do you not salute him? |
A16874 | But if your mother be away, whom salute you? |
A16874 | But indeed, can you* tell mee readily why you loue[ him?] |
A16874 | But what will you bring now for the excuse of your selfe? |
A16874 | But when heardest thou mee* speake English? |
A16874 | But whence* had you[ it]? |
A16874 | But why say you r this knife to be stollen? |
A16874 | C. But how can you be stirred vp? |
A16874 | C. It is an vnprofitable& dangerous* skill, and* not granted to vs. D. r[ Are you not delighted] t ● shoot? |
A16874 | C. Know you not? |
A16874 | C. MOther what a clock is it? |
A16874 | C. What am I taught? |
A16874 | C. Where? |
A16874 | C. Whether? |
A16874 | C. Who* should raise you vp? |
A16874 | C. Wilt thou snort all the day? |
A16874 | C. Your master is entred into the schoole: yet thou askest whether it be time? |
A16874 | C.* Hath the clock smitten, or no? |
A16874 | C.* Wouldest thou beate indeed? |
A16874 | D. Could our master fore know what would ● all out? |
A16874 | D. Do you dote? |
A16874 | D. For what cause? |
A16874 | D. Haue you learned musick? |
A16874 | D. Hoe,* why r doe you suffer[ me] to sleep so long? |
A16874 | D. How long agoe entred he? |
A16874 | D. How? |
A16874 | D. Is it time? |
A16874 | D. Ought you not to r salute me before? |
A16874 | D. Sith you are so desirous of play, I pray you, what liketh i ● you to doe? |
A16874 | D. What wil you that I tel[ you?] |
A16874 | D. What, doth fishing please you? |
A16874 | D. Why not? |
A16874 | D. r Haue you called me in vary deed? |
A16874 | D. r What seems the hand- ball vnto you? |
A16874 | D. r Wherefore? |
A16874 | D. r[ Doth it not like you] t ● hunt? |
A16874 | D.* Doe you not like riding? |
A16874 | D.* What a clock is it then? |
A16874 | D.* What say you? |
A16874 | D.* What? |
A16874 | D.* Why, what* would you do? |
A16874 | D.[ Doe you not delight] t ● swim? |
A16874 | E. Can you not awake, vnlesse you be* raised vp? |
A16874 | E. Doe your parents* spend so many* pots of ale,[ and] can they not* spare so much from their throat, that they may buy a combe? |
A16874 | E. How* then could you not heare the bell? |
A16874 | E. What? |
A16874 | E. Why doe you not buy? |
A16874 | E. Will you rise hereafter more early? |
A16874 | E. r HOe you, from whence come you so late? |
A16874 | E.* Heard you not the sound of the bell? |
A16874 | E.* What heare I? |
A16874 | F. Doe you command mee t ● r run back straight way, afte ● I haue* deliuered it? |
A16874 | F. No man will* lend vs. E. Wherefore? |
A16874 | F. Shall I say nothing? |
A16874 | F. What if he be not at home? |
A16874 | F. Will you not* be angry, if I confesse the truth? |
A16874 | G. And where do dogs sit? |
A16874 | G. But where shall I sit? |
A16874 | G. Is he in the wine- tauerne? |
A16874 | G. What will you doe there? |
A16874 | G. Whither haste you? |
A16874 | G. Will you heare? |
A16874 | G. With whom went hee thither? |
A16874 | H. And knowest thou where? |
A16874 | H. But how will you change it? |
A16874 | H. But* doest thou knowe how thou sittest? |
A16874 | H. In a little booke? |
A16874 | H. O thou mad fellow, may we fight here being consecrated to the same studies, indued with the same precepts of vertue? |
A16874 | H. What businesse[ is it?] |
A16874 | H. What haue you done? |
A16874 | H. What will you doe? |
A16874 | H. What will you? |
A16874 | H. When? |
A16874 | H. Who calls me? |
A16874 | H. Why then doe you say, lest they complaine of you? |
A16874 | H. Will not this* bee knowne to our master? |
A16874 | H. You haue* detained mee ouer long? |
A16874 | H.* And what then? |
A16874 | H.* Doe you bid me to* open r other mens letters? |
A16874 | Haue you bought it? |
A16874 | Holde your peace,[ our] master is present, if he should see vs talking and r a ● ke, what can we answer? |
A16874 | How are you called? |
A16874 | How long agoe? |
A16874 | How many houres haue I slept? |
A16874 | How oft* in the week? |
A16874 | If I haue deserued r nothing? |
A16874 | In what thing will you declare this loue? |
A16874 | Is any of your schoole- fellowes r notably learn ● d? |
A16874 | Is it risen now? |
A16874 | L. Hoe, tell me,* was there any mention of me? |
A16874 | L. So earely? |
A16874 | L. What haue I done? |
A16874 | L. Where? |
A16874 | L. Whether? |
A16874 | L. Why so? |
A16874 | L.* Doe you delude me? |
A16874 | M. Baker, goe to, tell me what hindred you? |
A16874 | M. Come hither, why were you not heere to day? |
A16874 | M. Where are the names of thē which were away? |
A16874 | M. Why r cald you not me also among[ your] other guests? |
A16874 | M.* What, this euery day? |
A16874 | N. What haue I done? |
A16874 | N.* Why then did hee mis- call mee? |
A16874 | Now ask* what you will? |
A16874 | O mad[ boy]* dost thou beleeue that all are so* austere as thou art? |
A16874 | Obey both of them as much as* may be? |
A16874 | Of all good fellowship tell[ me] what day? |
A16874 | Of all loue tell mee, wh ● you haue got this* knife ● P. Why aske you that? |
A16874 | Of how many yeares[ of age] are you? |
A16874 | Of one[ yeare] of two[ yeares] of ten,& c.* What yeare* goe you on? |
A16874 | Ought you not to kemb your head, before you came to the schoole? |
A16874 | P. In what[ words?] |
A16874 | P. What I? |
A16874 | P. What besides? |
A16874 | P. What will you doe? |
A16874 | P. What* say you? |
A16874 | P. What, in other words, then in which we are wo nt to salute other men? |
A16874 | P. What? |
A16874 | P. When? |
A16874 | P.* Am I to doe any thing besides that which I am wo nt? |
A16874 | Peter, Paul,& c. How many yeares* old are you? |
A16874 | R. For how much? |
A16874 | R. Haue you not another man ● knife? |
A16874 | R. How* saucily answere yo ● mee? |
A16874 | R. Neither haue you any knife? |
A16874 | R. Where is it? |
A16874 | R. Where r got you this knife? |
A16874 | R. Why should I not* dare when it is true? |
A16874 | R. Will you yeeld to me? |
A16874 | R. Wilt thou know? |
A16874 | S. For what cause? |
A16874 | S. Haue you noted me? |
A16874 | S. How saucily* r I pray you? |
A16874 | S. Should I not cry out, when* he dare tell such[ lies?] |
A16874 | S. Tell[ me]* who was present? |
A16874 | S.* To thee most notable lier? |
A16874 | S.* To whom haue I spoken? |
A16874 | Say you[ so?] |
A16874 | T. Are they single men, or maried? |
A16874 | T. Doe these loue you? |
A16874 | T. Doe they giue[ him] nothing? |
A16874 | T. Doe your mastersteach you these things? |
A16874 | T. Haue you done* any good in learning? |
A16874 | T. How many scholars haue they? |
A16874 | T. How many syllables* hath a Dactyle? |
A16874 | T. Is he so poore? |
A16874 | T. Is that Wert r a towne or ● village? |
A16874 | T. MOther,* when shall we dine? |
A16874 | T. No? |
A16874 | T. Of what sort? |
A16874 | T. The Infinitiue mood placuisse, whereof is it gouerned, or of what doth it depend? |
A16874 | T. What doe they teach you? |
A16874 | T. What learne you? |
A16874 | T. What manner of schoolemasters haue you there? |
A16874 | T. What ones are your schoole- fellowes? |
A16874 | T. What part of speech is Vltima? |
A16874 | T. What signifieth the last? |
A16874 | T. Whereof* consists it? |
A16874 | T.* CHild, r haue you* a pen and ink horne? |
A16874 | T.* Doe you loue your master? |
A16874 | T.* Doe you remember any little verse without book? |
A16874 | T.* How doth hee agree with the citizens? |
A16874 | T.* How then fell it out, that you should come hither* for to study? |
A16874 | T.* Shall I make a triall of you? |
A16874 | T.* What kinde of verse is this? |
A16874 | T.[ And] are they r of great learning? |
A16874 | V. By and by, if so be that you* wait a little? |
A16874 | V. How? |
A16874 | V. I beseech you, from whence haue I r drawen them otherwise? |
A16874 | V. Whither,* O good sir, so quickly? |
A16874 | WHo hath* the note for speaking English? |
A16874 | WHy come you* mon ● slowly to the schools* than the rest? |
A16874 | Well, what doe you after? |
A16874 | What are you wo nt to doe? |
A16874 | What aske you? |
A16874 | What is[ your] name? |
A16874 | What punishment shall I* impose if you doe deceiue mee? |
A16874 | What r dooest thou feare stripes more after dinner, than after sleep? |
A16874 | What r doth it belong to me whether it be* cleare or cloudie? |
A16874 | What say you r entering? |
A16874 | What will you giue me if I shall* get you leaue to play? |
A16874 | What will you? |
A16874 | When is the r pottage wo ● ● to seeth? |
A16874 | Where is[ my] shirt? |
A16874 | Where shall I finde him? |
A16874 | Whom haue you noted? |
A16874 | Why dost thou so cry out? |
A16874 | Why then rest you so securely in the morning? |
A16874 | Why then* am I blamed for doing this? |
A16874 | Why* skippe you[ so]? |
A16874 | Will you not, that we obey our parents? |
A16874 | Would you haue me to beleeue you? |
A16874 | doth not wrastling delight you? |
A16874 | enough there? |
A16874 | fishing with hook, or fishing with net? |
A16874 | haue you an ● thing that is* this boyes? |
A16874 | or r where? |
A16874 | r What need is there of any letter? |
A16874 | r Why? |
A16874 | r wets vs.* Whether doth wrastling delight you? |
A16874 | were you deafe? |
A16874 | where then? |
A16874 | ● HAue you not* a knife* that you may lend mee? |
A16874 | ● Wherefore? |
A16874 | ● r Will you heare what a one ● was? |
A16874 | ● ● aue you lost a knife indeed? |
A16874 | ● ● hat a one was it? |
A48527 | & spatium loci respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quantum? |
A48527 | A Note of Interr ● gation, thus,(?) |
A48527 | Ad quam regulam specialem pertinet? |
A48527 | Adeò, ideò, ità, sic, tam, talis, tantus, tot, tantum abest,& c? |
A48527 | After one hath found out the Principal Verb, what must he then do? |
A48527 | After what Verbs may Ut be also used? |
A48527 | An credis hanc anum tam deliram futuram esse? |
A48527 | And how are the Common Names of Places( i. e ▪ Nouns Substantives common, denoting place) uttered? |
A48527 | And in what Case is the space of a place put answering to Quantum, How much or how far? |
A48527 | Are all Interjections imperfect V ● ices? |
A48527 | Are all Verbs in ● o of the second Conjugation? |
A48527 | Are n ● t some Adverbs compared? |
A48527 | Are not Verbs of the Infinitive sometimes put absolutely and figuratively? |
A48527 | Are there any Exceptions to this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there any more of the Letters quiescent? |
A48527 | Are there any other Verbs that govern an Ablative? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions from this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions from this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions on this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions, but that a, of the first Conjugation must be long? |
A48527 | Are there no Redundants of other Declensions, besides those of the second and fourth Declension? |
A48527 | Are there no other Feminines that want the Plural Number? |
A48527 | Are there not many Nouns and Verbs undeclined? |
A48527 | Are there not many Verbs in io, which are not of the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | Are there not some Datives of Nouns Substantives used adverbially? |
A48527 | Are these all the more usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Before you examine the following Parts of the Syntaxis, be pleased to tell me, to how many Heads the examination of any declined word may be reduced? |
A48527 | But are there not some Prepositions, that are never found but when they are compounded with Verbs? |
A48527 | But do not Poets often use the Accusative Cases of Nouns Adjectives of the Neuter Gender in both Numbers for Adverbs? |
A48527 | But have we not many English words in which several Letters are quiescent, or not pronounced? |
A48527 | But how can hic, ille, iste, and is be Demonstratives and Relatives too? |
A48527 | But how can it be, that Passives have an Imperative Mood, seeing that a Passion can not be commanded? |
A48527 | But how do Cedo, vado, rado,& c. make their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | But how many ways are Participles changed into Nouns? |
A48527 | But may not some Impersonals become Personals? |
A48527 | But may not some of them sometimes have the Plural Number? |
A48527 | But may there not be same Exceptions made on these Rules of the Accents? |
A48527 | But may they not couple sometimes divers Cases? |
A48527 | But of what quantity are Ablatives in a, and Numerals of Nouns of Number in ginta? |
A48527 | But what Nouns of the fifth Declension are excepted? |
A48527 | But what is the meaning of this Rule, Haec sed ui mutant in sum? |
A48527 | But what say you of Natus, commodus, incommodus, utilis, inutilis, vehemens, par, aequalis? |
A48527 | But what say you of Verbs doubling the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | But why do you chuse to call this Mood the Subjunctive, rather than either the Optative or Potential? |
A48527 | But will they always have a Nominative after them when they have it before them? |
A48527 | Can all Verbs govern an Infinitive Mood after them? |
A48527 | Can not a Verb Neuter, seeing it ends in( O) as well as a Verb Active, take( R) to make it a Passive? |
A48527 | Can unus, signifying but one, have the Plural Number? |
A48527 | Conjugation? |
A48527 | Do all Nouns of the Singular Number speak but of One? |
A48527 | Do all other Nouns Participials require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Do all these always govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Do none of the Prepositions serve to a Genitive? |
A48527 | Do none of these that are excepted, ever make their Preterperfect Tense in ivi, according to the Rule of the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | Do the Periphrastical Tenses of the Passive Voice vary their Gender according to their N ● minative and Substantive? |
A48527 | Do they change their Gender? |
A48527 | Do you accuse me of Theft, or Murther, or both? |
A48527 | Dost thou love? |
A48527 | Emphasis est cum plùs significamus quàm expressè dicimus; ut, tu audes ista loqui, cantando tu illum? |
A48527 | Fa ●, nil, nihil, instar, cornu, genu, gummi, frugi? |
A48527 | Haec habeo, lateo,& c. wherein Compound Verbs differ from the Simple? |
A48527 | Have Impersonals a Nominative Case before them? |
A48527 | Have you no more Prepositions but those that serve to the aforesaid Cases? |
A48527 | Hordea, farra, ● orum,& c? |
A48527 | Hostis habet muros, pro hostes habent Q. Quid est Hellen ● sinus in Et ● mologiâ? |
A48527 | How and from whence do we form their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | How are Adjectives of one ending, and Participles of the Present tense declined? |
A48527 | How are Adjectives of two endings declined? |
A48527 | How are Impersonals put? |
A48527 | How are Pronouns divided according to their Species? |
A48527 | How are Verbs Deponents declined? |
A48527 | How are ille and ipse declined? |
A48527 | How are is and qui declined? |
A48527 | How are noster, and tuus, suus, vester declined? |
A48527 | How are quis and quid declined? |
A48527 | How are quòd and ut distinguished in making Latin, for both signifie that? |
A48527 | How are such Participles as are changed into Nouns called? |
A48527 | How are the Proper Names of great Places used, to wit, of Countries, Islands, and Provinces? |
A48527 | How are the Signs of the Cases delivered in short? |
A48527 | How are the second sort of Defectives in Case called? |
A48527 | How are the third Persons of the Imperative Mood Active and ● assive, ending in to, and tor, called by Grammarians? |
A48527 | How are the third sort of Defectives in Case called? |
A48527 | How are these Eight Parts of Speech divided? |
A48527 | How are these formed of the Preterperfect Tense of the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | How are these four kinds of Participles dec ● ined? |
A48527 | How are they declined? |
A48527 | How are they declined? |
A48527 | How comes it to pass that one Substantive oftentimes agrees with another Substantive in the same Case? |
A48527 | How comes nihil to be a Noun when it signifies nothing? |
A48527 | How differ your Persons in Verbs from Persons in Nouns and P ● ● nouns? |
A48527 | How do all other Nouns in( 〈 ◊ 〉) form their Superlative Degree? |
A48527 | How do the three Gerunds end? |
A48527 | How do the two Supines end? |
A48527 | How do these five sorts of Verbs differ one from another? |
A48527 | How do you compare the said three Degrees of Comparison? |
A48527 | How do you decline Articles together and severally with a Noun? |
A48527 | How do you decline Gerunds, and what are they, are they Verbs or Participles? |
A48527 | How do you decline them? |
A48527 | How do you know the kinds of Participles? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Common end, which you say is out of use? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Deponent end? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Neuter end? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Neuter signifie? |
A48527 | How doth it d ● ffer from a Noun? |
A48527 | How doth it differ from Orthoepia? |
A48527 | How doth it signifie? |
A48527 | How doth it signifie? |
A48527 | How doth the Genitive Case singular of each of the declensions end? |
A48527 | How is Duo declin''d? |
A48527 | How is Prosodia divided? |
A48527 | How is Quisquis declined? |
A48527 | How is a Noun Adjective of three terminations declined? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Active known? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Deponent declined? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Passive known? |
A48527 | How is c pronounced or spelt before a, e, ae, oe i, y, o, u? |
A48527 | How is g spelt or pronounced before an e, or i, and how before a, o, and u? |
A48527 | How is hic declined? |
A48527 | How is iste declined? |
A48527 | How is meus then declined? |
A48527 | How is the Sup ● ne of a Simple Verb known, being the Third Part of As in praesenti? |
A48527 | How is the quantity of syllables known, and by how many manner of ways? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Future in Rus, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Future in dus, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Present Tense? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Present or Preter Tense Passive, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you the Ablative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Accusative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Dative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Genitive Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | How know you the Subjunctive Mood? |
A48527 | How know you the Vocative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the quantity of words that end in s? |
A48527 | How many Articles are there, and whence are they borrowed? |
A48527 | How many Breathings or Spirits are there? |
A48527 | How many Cases are there? |
A48527 | How many Concords or Agreements are there? |
A48527 | How many Conjugations have Verbs? |
A48527 | How many Declensions may Adjectives be said to have? |
A48527 | How many Declensions of Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Declensions of Pronouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Degrees of Comparison are there? |
A48527 | How many Dipthongs are there? |
A48527 | How many Examples have you to decline and conjugate all perfect Verbs by? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there from these regular and general Rules of Comparison? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there from this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this second Special Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this third Special Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions have you from this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Genders are there? |
A48527 | How many General Rules are there for the declining of Nouns Substantives Proper? |
A48527 | How many Letters are there in the Latin Tongue? |
A48527 | How many Masculine Exceptions hath it? |
A48527 | How many Moods are there? |
A48527 | How many Mutes are there? |
A48527 | How many Numbers are there? |
A48527 | How many Parts of Grammar are there? |
A48527 | How many Parts, or how many sorts of Words are there in the Latin Tongue or Speech? |
A48527 | How many Persons are there in Verbs? |
A48527 | How many Persons hath a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Adjectives? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Derivatives are there, and why are they so called? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Relatives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Substantives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun- Primitives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Rules are there for the declining of Nouns Adjectives? |
A48527 | How many Rules of Masculine Exceptions not encreasing are there? |
A48527 | How many Special Rules have you to know the Gender by the encrea ● ● ng or not encreasing of the G ● ni ● ive Case? |
A48527 | How many Tenses or Times are there? |
A48527 | How many are declined? |
A48527 | How many are of the first sort, that according to different Terminations are of different Genders? |
A48527 | How many are undeclined? |
A48527 | How many fold are the Rules? |
A48527 | How many fold are these half Vowels? |
A48527 | How many fold is Government? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Letter as to it s found? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Noun Adjective from its manner of signifying? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Noun Substantive, according to its signification? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Syllable? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Tone or an Accent? |
A48527 | How many fold is the plain or analogous Syntaxis? |
A48527 | How many half Vowels are there, and what is a half Vowel? |
A48527 | How many kind of Participles are there? |
A48527 | How many kinds of Epicenes are there? |
A48527 | How many kinds of Verbs Personals are there? |
A48527 | How many manner of ways is a Pronoun us''d? |
A48527 | How many of th ● se Primitives may also be called Relatives? |
A48527 | How many of the Parts of Speech are declined with case, and how many without case? |
A48527 | How many serve to an Ablative? |
A48527 | How many serve to an Accusative? |
A48527 | How many sold is a Consonant in Latin? |
A48527 | How many sorts are redundant in the Nominative Case? |
A48527 | How many sorts are there of Deficient Heteroclites? |
A48527 | How many sorts o ● Redundants are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Conjunctions are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Derivatives are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Feet are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Heteroclites or Irregular Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Nouns Heteroclites are there that change their Gender and Declension? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Proper Names are there of the Feminine Gender? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Proper Names are there of the Masculine Gender? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Redundant Substantives are there? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Noun? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Verb? |
A48527 | How many things do you observe in this Second Part of Propria quae Maribus? |
A48527 | How many ways may Prepositions be changed into Adverbs? |
A48527 | How many 〈 ◊ 〉 of Adverbs are th ● re? |
A48527 | How many- fold is a Verb? |
A48527 | How many- fold is an Adjective, according to its declining? |
A48527 | How may I know which are Intransitive Verbs? |
A48527 | How may a Verb Impersonal of the Passive Voice signifie? |
A48527 | How may one come to know every kind of Verb, and what Tense it is of? |
A48527 | How may one know of what declension a Pronoun is? |
A48527 | How may one know the Gend ● r in Pronoun Substantives? |
A48527 | How may one know the quantity of the middle syllables, and what syllables are reckoned to be the middle syllables? |
A48527 | How may the Cases be known one from the other? |
A48527 | How may the Genders of Nouns be known? |
A48527 | How may the four Conjugations be known asunder? |
A48527 | How may this Mood, or Figurative Way of Speaking be resolved? |
A48527 | How may 〈 ◊ 〉 know Adverbs? |
A48527 | How shall the Nominative Case be set in Making or Construing Latin? |
A48527 | How then doth the Genitive Case of each Declension end, and how do all the rest of the Cases end that proceed from those Genitives? |
A48527 | If a Question be asked by Cujus, ● a, jum; as, Whose Saying is this? |
A48527 | If the Present Tense end in po, how must the Preterperfect Tense end? |
A48527 | If the Present Tense end in quo, how doth the Preterperfect Tense end? |
A48527 | In declining and conjugating of Verbs, what am I chiefly to mind? |
A48527 | In these two parts, we use these or the like Forms of Speech: Nam, Enim, Erenim, Quippe, Nimirum, quid enim? |
A48527 | In what Case are the Proper Names of Cities and Towns put in, when they signifie moving to a place, and answer to the Question Quo, Whither? |
A48527 | In what Case is it put answering to the Question, How long? |
A48527 | In what Case is the Term or Word of Time put, answering to the Question When? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts is the Accidence divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts may Propria quae Maribus be divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts may it be divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Voices are these Examples formed? |
A48527 | Is a Hand a Noun? |
A48527 | Is a Vowel before two Consonants in the same word always long? |
A48527 | Is every w ● rd ending in Ing, a Participle of the Present Tense? |
A48527 | Is it always set before the Verb? |
A48527 | Is not the Subjunctive used sometimes instead of the Imp ● ● ative? |
A48527 | Is the first Verb always the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | Is there no Exception on this Rule? |
A48527 | Is there no exception? |
A48527 | Is there no other Rule for an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | It is a Mood that shews a Reason true or false; as Ego amo, I love; or else asks a Question and doubteth, as, Amas tu, Dost thou love? |
A48527 | May all Adverbs be compared? |
A48527 | May not Gerunds elegantly be turned into Nouns Adjectives? |
A48527 | May not s and u be added to Liquids? |
A48527 | May there not divers cases be put to the same Verb? |
A48527 | May these Verbs have no other Case of the Crime? |
A48527 | Must not the same Way and Method be used when a Latin is to be construed or turned into English, as when an English is given to be made into Latin? |
A48527 | Must one always thus seek out the Nominative Case? |
A48527 | My Neighbours, What do Boys do in the School? |
A48527 | No: For, 1. if a Question be asked; as, Am ● stu? |
A48527 | No; for it governs sometimes an Accusative? |
A48527 | Now we have done with single Letters, I pray, what must he do that will Spell right, and Write true Orthography? |
A48527 | Of old they were wo nt to govern the same Case as the Verb whence they were derived; as, Quid tibi hanc curatio est rem? |
A48527 | Of what Gender are all Nouns of the fifth Declension? |
A48527 | Of what Gender is every Noun that ● ndeth in um? |
A48527 | Of what Gender is every wor ● that d ● th not alter its Termination? |
A48527 | Of what are Gerunds in do governed? |
A48527 | Of what are Gerunds in dum governed? |
A48527 | Of what do Feet consist? |
A48527 | Of what is the Comparative Degree formed? |
A48527 | Of what quantity are words that end in i? |
A48527 | Operae, Custodiae, Copiae, Vigiliae, Excubiae, Curae? |
A48527 | PRopria urbium& oppidorum quae in loco significant,& respondent ad quaestionem, Vbi? |
A48527 | Per quam regulam? |
A48527 | Propria urbium& oppidorum ubi motus ad locum significatur,& ad quaestionem Quo? |
A48527 | Propria urbium& ● ppidorum à loco aut per locum significantia& ad quaestionem, unde aut Quâ? |
A48527 | Purge, Quit, or Assoil? |
A48527 | Q What doth üo make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | Q What if the Present Tense ends in ecto? |
A48527 | Q Why so? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Casus, generis& numeri est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Casûs, Numeri& Personae est haec dictio? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Generis est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Modi est& Temporis? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus generis sunt omnia pronomina? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus gradus Comparationis est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus vel quotae declinationis? |
A48527 | Q. D ● es Comparison belong to all Nouns? |
A48527 | Q. Doth Valeo always govern an Ablative Case of the price? |
A48527 | Q. Hatb every Mood and Tense three Persons in both Numbers? |
A48527 | Q. Hath this Rule no Exceptions? |
A48527 | Q. PRopositâ voce quid faciendum est? |
A48527 | Q. QVid est Figura? |
A48527 | Q. Quae est haec particula? |
A48527 | Q. Quae pars orationis est proxima sc? |
A48527 | Q. Quae particula est haec quoque? |
A48527 | Q. Quae particula est haec? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam aliae responsiones aliquando redduntur? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam dicuntur vitia vocis& orationis& quomodo distinguuntu ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam sunt Syntaxeos Figurae quae in Regimine inveniuntu ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam& quot sunt Pronomen Substantiva& Adjectiva? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adjectivum est hoc quoad significationem? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adjectivum est quoad inflexionem? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adverbium est? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Nomen est quoad Speciem& Figuram? |
A48527 | Q. Quale genus Verbi est hoc? |
A48527 | Q. Quale pronomen est hoc in praelectione tuâ? |
A48527 | Q. Qualis est haec Praepositio? |
A48527 | Q. Quare est Subjunctivi Modi? |
A48527 | Q. Quare est talis Casûs? |
A48527 | Q. Quen ● ● ● Figurae 〈 ◊ 〉 vel spectantur ratione Con ● ● nientiae in partibus declinabilibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quibus casibus inserviunt Praepositiones? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Anastrophe? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Antistolcon, s ● ● Ant ● thesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Aphaeresis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Apocope? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Archai ● mus? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Archaismus in Etymologiâ? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Asyndeton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Ellypsis quae dicitur Figura Syntaxeos in detractione? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Enallage in Etymologiâ? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Enallage, quae est Figura Syntaxeos in immutatione? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Epenthesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hellenismus seu Graecismus in Syntaxi? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hendiadis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hysteron Proteron sive Hysterologia? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Metathesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Parag ● ge? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Participium? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Pleonasmus? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Polysindeton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Prolepsis seu Praesumptio? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Pronomen? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est S ● noope? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Substantivum Communes seu Apellativum? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Substantivum? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Syllepsis seu Conceptio Laetine dicta? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synchisis seu Hyperbaton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synecdoche quae ad Hypallagen referri potest? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synthesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est haec particula sc? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est ● ● esis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid sunt Inseperabiles Praep ● sitiones? |
A48527 | Q. Quid sunt participia omnia? |
A48527 | Q. Quo ● ● unt Figurae Etymslogiae? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo Accident is immutatio dici solet? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo comparatur? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo inflectis? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo inflectis? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo spectatur Figura Syntaxeos ratione Convenientiae? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo vocis immutatio dicitur? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo& quibus Figuris figuratur Syntaxis ratione Convenientiae in partibus indeclimibilibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quot accidunt Participio? |
A48527 | Q. Quot accidunt nomini? |
A48527 | Q. Quot participia veniunt à Verbis Deponentibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quot participia veniunt à Verbis Passivis? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt Figurae Orthographi ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt species Participiorum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt species Pronominum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt tempora Participiorum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot up ● ● ces sunt Figurae Syntaxeos? |
A48527 | Q. Quot ● plices sunt Figurae Grammaticae? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est Conceptio seu Syllepsis? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est Pronomen? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est directa Conceptio? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est gradus Comparationis? |
A48527 | Q. Si sit nomen quale nomen est? |
A48527 | Q. Si sit nomen vel Verbum,( nam hae sunt principales partes orationis) quid faciendum est? |
A48527 | Q. Vnde formatur? |
A48527 | Q. Whence is a Participle of the Present Tense formed? |
A48527 | Q. Whence is it formed, and what is the Sign thereof? |
A48527 | Q: Quid est Hypallage quae est altera species Aenallages? |
A48527 | Quare mutatur Consonans vel Vocalis? |
A48527 | Quid gladium demens ● omana stringis in ora? |
A48527 | Quid tibi nos mendice homo tactio est? |
A48527 | Quid tibi nos mendice homo tactio est? |
A48527 | Quis gremio Enceladi doctique Palaemonis adfert Quantum Grammaticus meruit labor? |
A48527 | R. Ad primam, secundam, tertiam,& c. Q. Quomodo s ● is? |
A48527 | R. Est Adverbium, Temporis, Loci, Quantitatis, Qualitatis, Numeri, Negandi, Affirmandi, Demonstrandi, Ordinis,& c. Q. Quot sunt accidentia Adverbio? |
A48527 | R. Est,& c. Q. Quare? |
A48527 | R. Primae, secundae,& c. Q. Vnde dignoscitur declinatio? |
A48527 | R. Quatuor, significatio, Comparatio, species& Figura? |
A48527 | R. Regitura Conjunctione:& cohaereret cum Nominativo,& c. Q. Quare est Infinitivi? |
A48527 | R. ● st M. F. N. C. D. G. Q. Si sit Substantivum Proprium, Quale est Proprium? |
A48527 | Sed haec omnesque Figurae Grammaticales ad Pleonasmum, Ellipsin,& Enallagen reduci possunt, Q. Quid est Prothesis? |
A48527 | Seeing Orthographia teacheth us with what Letters every Syllable and Word are to be writ, what is a Letter? |
A48527 | Some Verbs are said to be Transitive, others Intransitive, how may I know which is which? |
A48527 | Spatium temporis respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quamdiu? |
A48527 | TErminus temporis respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quando, quid sit factum? |
A48527 | Take the Case following the Verb, by asking whom, or what? |
A48527 | Tense? |
A48527 | The Construction of which, of the undeclined Parts of Speech, doth now remain? |
A48527 | The cause, by Quare, Wherefore, for what cause or reason? |
A48527 | The instrument answers to the Question made, by Quocum, With what? |
A48527 | The manner of doing, by Quomodo, How or by what means? |
A48527 | The price of the thing answers to Quanti, For how much, or how great a price? |
A48527 | They are, an, ne, utrum, whether; ne ● ne, anne, whether or no; nonne ▪ is it not so? |
A48527 | To what Impersonals is the Preposition ad properly added? |
A48527 | Under how many Heads may Syntaxis thus divided he considered? |
A48527 | Vapulo, vaeneo, liceo, exulo, fio? |
A48527 | Verba haec simpli ● ia? |
A48527 | Verbalia in io antiquè regebant casum verbi unde derivata erant; ut, Quid tibi hanc curatio est rem? |
A48527 | Vnde componitur? |
A48527 | Vnde derivatur? |
A48527 | WHAT doth Propria quae Maribus contain, and to what part of Grammar doth it belong? |
A48527 | WHAT is the Accidence, and why is it so called? |
A48527 | WHat Part of Grammar is that which teacheth us to make and speak Latin? |
A48527 | WHat doth As in Praesenti contain? |
A48527 | WHat doth Quae genus contain? |
A48527 | WHat is Grammar? |
A48527 | WHat is Prosodia? |
A48527 | What Adjectives are there besides of three terminations that are otherwise declin''d? |
A48527 | What Adjectives govern an Ablative Case, or a Genitive of the thing? |
A48527 | What Adjectives govern an Accusative and sometimes a Genitive or Ablative? |
A48527 | What Adverbs derived an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs 〈 ◊ 〉 there of Number? |
A48527 | What Article hath the Doubtful Gender, and what belongs it to? |
A48527 | What Article hath the Epicene Gender? |
A48527 | What Articles hath the Common of three, and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | What Articles hath the Common of two, and what belongs it to? |
A48527 | What Case are plùs, ampliùs, and minùs, joyned to? |
A48527 | What Case do Adverbs govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Gerunds and Supines govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Hem and Apage govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Heus and Ohe govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Participles govern when they are changed into Nouns? |
A48527 | What Case do Participles of Verbs Passives commonly govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Pronouns want? |
A48527 | What Case do Reminiscor, obliviscor, recordor, and memini govern? |
A48527 | What Case do they govern? |
A48527 | What Case do ullus, alius, alter, uter, and neuter lack or want; and how are they declined? |
A48527 | What Case doth Poti ● r govern? |
A48527 | What Case have Gerunds in di sometimes, instead of the Case of their Verbs? |
A48527 | What Case is of the second Person? |
A48527 | What Case is that which is called Octavus Casus? |
A48527 | What Case is that which is called the Rectus Casus? |
A48527 | What Case shall the casual word be, which comes next after the Verb, and answers to the Question, Whom or What, made by the Verb? |
A48527 | What Case will Adverbs of the Comparative and Superlative Degree have? |
A48527 | What Case will Nouns of Diversity govern? |
A48527 | What Case will Participles govern? |
A48527 | What Case, or where then is the Seventh Case? |
A48527 | What Cases do Conjunctions govern, being the next in order? |
A48527 | What Cases do Interjections govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Prepositions govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Prepositions serve to? |
A48527 | What Cases do Proh, ah and vah govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Substantives govern? |
A48527 | What Cases else may aestimo govern? |
A48527 | What Cases will Paenitet, taedet, miseret, miserescit, pudet, piget, govern? |
A48527 | What Cases will all Nouns of the fisth Declension have in the Plural Number, and what is the Rule? |
A48527 | What Conjunctions do couple like Cases? |
A48527 | What Exceptions are there belonging to the first Declension? |
A48527 | What Exceptions are there under the second Declension? |
A48527 | What Genitives are those? |
A48527 | What Genitives of Nouns Adjectives will Domus only admit of? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Neut ● rs are there excepted from the second Special Rule? |
A48527 | What Neuters of Nouns encreasing short are excepted under the third Spec ● al Rule? |
A48527 | What Objections can you make against the foregoing Rule? |
A48527 | What Part of Government doth next follow? |
A48527 | What Participles govern an Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What Particles are there that govern Moods? |
A48527 | What Parts of Speech govern Cases? |
A48527 | What Parts of Syntaxis are we next to examine? |
A48527 | What Prepositions serve to an Accusative and Ablative? |
A48527 | What Pronouns are of the fourth Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns are they that may be of any Person? |
A48527 | What Pronouns be of the first Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns be of the second Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns may be added to the fifteen? |
A48527 | What Rule am I to observe concerning the right parting and joyning of Syllables? |
A48527 | What Rules am I principally to observe concerning the Accents? |
A48527 | What Tenses are formed of the Preterperfect Tense of the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the first Declension, what''s the Example, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the fourth Declension, which are the Examples of it, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the second Declension, what are the Examples, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the third Declension, what are the Examples, and whence comes it ●? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Future Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Present Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterimperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterpluperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Verb is that you call the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | What Verbs are excepted from this Rule? |
A48527 | What Verbs are there of this sort? |
A48527 | What Verbs are those that will govern two Accusative Cases after them? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs of this sort are most to be observed? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the first Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the second Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the third Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Words are there excepted from this General Rule? |
A48527 | What Words follow the Rule of Proper Names? |
A48527 | What and how many are those Nouns Pentaptots that want the Vocative Case? |
A48527 | What and how many other Exceptions are there wherein the Compound Verbs do differ from the Simple? |
A48527 | What are Prepositions when they are set alone, without any Case serving to them? |
A48527 | What are Supines? |
A48527 | What are peculiarly belonging to the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Affirming? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Chance? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Flatte ● ing? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Quanti ● y? |
A48527 | What are th ● se 〈 ◊ 〉 a thing not fin ● shed? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Asking and Doubting? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of C ● mparis ● n? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Chusi ● g? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of D ● nying? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Exhorting? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Order? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Qu ● lity? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of W ● shing? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of gathering together? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A48527 | What are the Feminines excepted? |
A48527 | What are the Points and Stops used in Writing and observed in Reading? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of Verbs that belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of them, and which is the Rule? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of those that are deficient in Case called? |
A48527 | What are the four Examples of the four Conjugations? |
A48527 | What are the fourth sort of Defectives in Number? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Adverbs? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Defectives? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Redundants, and the Rule for declining of them? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of Nouns that do change their Gender and Declension, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of Verbs that belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of those that are deficient in Number? |
A48527 | What are the seventh sort of Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What are the sixth and last sort of Variants, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of Redundants, that, under different Terminations, are of the same Gender and Signification? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of Verbs governing a Dative? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of those that are deficient in Number? |
A48527 | What are these Terminations of the Preterperfect Tense, mi, ni, pi, qui, made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What are these of the fourth Declension called, and why so called? |
A48527 | What are those of Calling? |
A48527 | What are those of Likeness? |
A48527 | What are those of Pa ● ting? |
A48527 | What are those of Sh ● wing? |
A48527 | What become of Prepositions when they govern no Case? |
A48527 | What comes next concerning the Government of Prepositions? |
A48527 | What comes next, or what is the second Part of Syntaxis in the Gorvernment of Words? |
A48527 | What do Gerunds in di depend upon? |
A48527 | What do hic, haec, hoc signifie? |
A48527 | What do the Compounds of nosco make in the Supines? |
A48527 | What do the Great or Capital Letters signifie, when they are writ alone? |
A48527 | What do you mean by Construction? |
A48527 | What do you mean by double Consonants, and how many are there of them? |
A48527 | What do you mean when you say, S, est suae potestatis litera? |
A48527 | What doth dio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth gio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth lo make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth mo make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth no in the Present Tense, make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth pio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth psi make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth ri make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth rio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth si make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth the first Part teach? |
A48527 | What doth ti make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth tio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth ui make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth vi make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth xi in the Preterperfect Tense make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What ease and benefit doth the considering and reducing of Syntaxis under these particulars produce? |
A48527 | What follows next after the Cases in the Accidence? |
A48527 | What follows next? |
A48527 | What if Actives want the Supines? |
A48527 | What if Verbs Substantive ● and Passives have an Acc ● sative or Dutive Case before them? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in co? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in do? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in go? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in ho? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in ro, how doth the Preterpersect end? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in sco? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in cio? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in so? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in to? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in vo? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in xo? |
A48527 | What if the Preterperfect end in bi, how shall the Supine end? |
A48527 | What if the first Person of the Present Tense end in bo, in Verbs of the third Conjugation? |
A48527 | What if the former word end in a short Vowel, the word following beginning with two Consonants? |
A48527 | What if two Vowels joyned together make but one sound and are spelt at once? |
A48527 | What is Caesura? |
A48527 | What is Case, the next Accident of a Noun? |
A48527 | What is Comparison? |
A48527 | What is Concord, the first of the twelve Parts? |
A48527 | What is Diastole or Ectasis? |
A48527 | What is Eclipsis? |
A48527 | What is Government in Syntaxis? |
A48527 | What is Mood, for we ● ave sp ● ke already of the kinds of Verbs? |
A48527 | What is Number, being the first Accident belonging to a Noun? |
A48527 | What is Orthographia? |
A48527 | What is Person in a Verb? |
A48527 | What is Scanning? |
A48527 | What is Speech, of which you tell me there are eight parts? |
A48527 | What is Sy ● tole? |
A48527 | What is Synaeresis, called also Synecphonesis and Syn ● zesis? |
A48527 | What is Synalaepha? |
A48527 | What is Syntaxis? |
A48527 | What is Time or Quantity, being the third part of Prosodiâ? |
A48527 | What is a Conjunction? |
A48527 | What is a Consonant? |
A48527 | What is a Double, called in Latin Duplex, and how many of them? |
A48527 | What is a Foot? |
A48527 | What is a Gender? |
A48527 | What is a Liquid, and how many Liquids are there? |
A48527 | What is a Mute? |
A48527 | What is a Noun Adjective? |
A48527 | What is a Noun Substantive? |
A48527 | What is a Participle? |
A48527 | What is a Preposition? |
A48527 | What is a Syllable? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Impersonal: and how known in English? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Impersonal? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Personal? |
A48527 | What is a Verb? |
A48527 | What is a Verse? |
A48527 | What is a Vowel? |
A48527 | What is an Accent properly? |
A48527 | What is an Adverb? |
A48527 | What is an Apostrophus, which may be added to the Accents? |
A48527 | What is an Interjection? |
A48527 | What is ci in the Preterperfect Tense made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is di made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is gi made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is it to have the Signification increased or diminished? |
A48527 | What is li made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is the Adverb abhinc joyned to? |
A48527 | What is the Article of the F. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | What is the Common of two Exception under the first Sp ● cial Rule? |
A48527 | What is the Comparative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Doubtful Exception from this Special Rule? |
A48527 | What is the Example, and how many Terminations hath the fifth Declension? |
A48527 | What is the Figure Diae ● esis or Dialysis? |
A48527 | What is the Forming or Conjugating of a Verb? |
A48527 | What is the Fourth Part of As in Praesenti? |
A48527 | What is the Imperative Mood? |
A48527 | What is the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What is the Last Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | What is the Neuter Exception of Nouns not increasing? |
A48527 | What is the Positive Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for Redundant Adjectives? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of Compound Verbs, being the Second Part of As in Praesenti? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of Simple Verbs in io, of the fourth Conjugation, declined like Audio? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in eo, of the second Conjugation, declined like Doceo? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in o, of the first Conjugation, declined like Amo? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in o, of the third Conjugation, decli ● ed like Lego? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for those that govern a Genitive? |
A48527 | What is the Rule of Verbs of the Infinitive Mood, and of what are they governed? |
A48527 | What is the Second Observation? |
A48527 | What is the Sign of the Comparative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Superlative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Carmen and Versus? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Neutro- passiva, and Neutralia- passiva? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Quid and Quod? |
A48527 | What is the difference between a Noun and a Verb? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Rule of Deficients in Number, and what are the words? |
A48527 | What is the fifth thing belonging to a Pronoun? |
A48527 | What is the first Exception? |
A48527 | What is the first Part in the government of Cases? |
A48527 | What is the first Person? |
A48527 | What is the first Rule of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | What is the first Supine governed of? |
A48527 | What is the forbidding Adverb? |
A48527 | What is the fourth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fourth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fourth general Rule? |
A48527 | What is the last Exception? |
A48527 | What is the last Rule of Desectives in Number? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the first Rule of Variants? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the first Special Rule, Nomen non cr ● s ● ens? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Insertion, At horum nunc est Deponens? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Aliquando Relativum, aliquando& nomen Adjectivum? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, At sunt quae flexu,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Haec proprium quendam sibi fle ● um,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Nil variat facio? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Verse in the Figurative Syntaxis, Mobile fit fixum si fixum menie subaudis? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of, A lego nata,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of, Haec si componas,& c. the third general Exception of Verbs Compounds that differ from their Simple? |
A48527 | What is the meaning thereof? |
A48527 | What is the next Accident of a Noun after Declension? |
A48527 | What is the next Part of Grammar? |
A48527 | What is the next more usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | What is the second Exception on Praeteritum dat idem? |
A48527 | What is the second Exception? |
A48527 | What is the second Person? |
A48527 | What is the second Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | What is the third Exception? |
A48527 | What is the third Exception? |
A48527 | What is the third Person? |
A48527 | What is the third general Rule for knowing the first syllables? |
A48527 | What is to be observed in the forming of the Preterperfect Tense of Verbs in each Conjugation? |
A48527 | What is to be observed of the Compounds of Cano? |
A48527 | What kind of Rule is this, to wit, Faeminei generis sunt mat ● r, humus,& c? |
A48527 | What kind of Verbs are sum, possum, volo, nolo, malo, edo, fio, fero, feror, for they are not declined as Regular Verbs? |
A48527 | What may a Verb Active be made? |
A48527 | What may a Verb Passive be made? |
A48527 | What may be objected against the said Rule, that is, Propria Foemin ● um? |
A48527 | What mean you by a Degree of Comparison? |
A48527 | What mean you by this? |
A48527 | What more have you to say of this Rule, Omnia Verba acqulsitivè? |
A48527 | What must he first learn that is to make a Verse? |
A48527 | What must we do in th ● se Verbs that want the Future in rus? |
A48527 | What observation do you make of que and u, in spelling? |
A48527 | What observe you of Sum; and some other Verbs? |
A48527 | What observe you of the sound of ti? |
A48527 | What of the foregoing Pa ● ticles use to begin, and what use to follow? |
A48527 | What other Adjectives govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Exceptions have you of a Vowel, not being short, before another in the same word? |
A48527 | What other Exceptions have you, besides this Greek one? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs of this Rule do borrow or vary their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What other Verbs place will govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What other sort of Verbs may govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What part of Construction comes in the twelfth and last place? |
A48527 | What part of Government comes next? |
A48527 | What part of Government comes next? |
A48527 | What part of Government falls under the ninth place? |
A48527 | What part of government follows next? |
A48527 | What qu ● ntity are words that end in ys and y? |
A48527 | What quantity are words ending in c? |
A48527 | What quantity are words ending in e? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in as? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in b, d, t? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in es? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in is? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in l? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in n? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in o? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in os? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in r? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in u? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in us? |
A48527 | What say you of Communis, alienus, immunis? |
A48527 | What say you of Compos, impos, consors, exors, particeps, potens, impotens,& c? |
A48527 | What say you of Hic, ille and iste, how are they distinguished? |
A48527 | What say you of Mereor? |
A48527 | What say you of Nouns derived of Verbs, or Verbals in i ●? |
A48527 | What say you of Nouns of the Neuter Gender of the second declension? |
A48527 | What say you of Reus, certior, sollicitus, and conscius? |
A48527 | What say you of Verbs which have the force of comparison, or signifie exceeding? |
A48527 | What say you of a and e, before the Tenses in bam and bo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Adverb ne, of forbidding? |
A48527 | What say you of the Case or Rule of the Relative? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Maneo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Pango? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Pasco, belonging to this Rule, Verba haec simplicia? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Placeo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of claudo, quatio, lavo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of scalpo, calco, salto? |
A48527 | What say you of the Construction of Pronouns? |
A48527 | What say you of the Government of Prepositions? |
A48527 | What say you of the Penultima of Adjectives in anus, arus, orus, osus, and of Adverbs in atim and itim? |
A48527 | What say you of the Preterperfect Tenses in vi and si? |
A48527 | What say you of the Question and Answer to it? |
A48527 | What say you of the last syllable save one of Adjectives in inus? |
A48527 | What say you of the other Cases of Verbs Passives? |
A48527 | What say you of the second Concord, wherein is the Agreement? |
A48527 | What say you of the third Concord, which may be referred to the second? |
A48527 | What signification have their Participles? |
A48527 | What significations have Gerunds? |
A48527 | What sort of Adjectives govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What sort of Adjectives govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What sort of Letters are r and y said to be? |
A48527 | What sort of Nouns are those that follow the Rule of Relatives in Construing and Covernment? |
A48527 | What sort of Verbs belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What sort of Words are used to be added to Comparatives and Superlatives? |
A48527 | What things belong to all the Eight Parts of Speech? |
A48527 | What use do Prepositions chiefly serve to? |
A48527 | What will edo make when it is compounded? |
A48527 | What words are of the fifth sort, and what is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are of the sixth sort of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | What words are of the sourth sort, and what is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are of the third sort, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are there of the Common of two excepted from the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words are those by which the Question of the instrument, cause, or manner of doing, are answered by? |
A48527 | What words of the Common of two are excepted under this Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words of the Doubtful Gender are excepted from the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words of the Doubtful Gender are excepted under the first Special Rule? |
A48527 | What 〈 ◊ 〉 Verbs govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What''s the meaning of the Rule it self? |
A48527 | What, or how many Participles can a Verb Deponent have? |
A48527 | When a Question is asked by a word that may govern divers cases; as, For how much have you bought this Book? |
A48527 | When an Answer is made by one of these Possessives, Meus, tuus, suus noster, vester ▪ as, Whose House is that? |
A48527 | When doth in govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | When doth sub govern an Accusative? |
A48527 | When doth super govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | Where do we make use of great Letters? |
A48527 | Where doth the Second Part of Propria quae Maribus, that is, Rules for the declining of Substantives Common, begin? |
A48527 | Where doth the first sort of Nouns, called Defectives, begin, and what are they? |
A48527 | Where shall one find this( re) and( ris) to know the Conjugation by? |
A48527 | Which Pronouns are of the third Declension? |
A48527 | Which and how many are the General Rules? |
A48527 | Which and what is the first part of Speech? |
A48527 | Which are Electives,( viz) such as imply a choice? |
A48527 | Which are the Feet of three syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the Feet of two syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the Interjections of Mirth? |
A48527 | Which are the Root or Principal Tenses in Conjugating of a Verb Active or Neuter? |
A48527 | Which are the common Verbs of Esteeming? |
A48527 | Which are the eleventh sort? |
A48527 | Which are the fifth sort of Verbs governing a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the first 〈 ◊ 〉 in the A ● ● idence? |
A48527 | Which are the fourth sort of Verbs that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the kinds of Diastole in Caesura? |
A48527 | Which are the more worthy Persons? |
A48527 | Which are the most usual sort of Verses? |
A48527 | Which are the ninth sort of them? |
A48527 | Which are the rest of th ● m? |
A48527 | Which are the sixth sort of Verbs that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the special Rules of the last syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the tenth sort of Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the thirteenth sort of these Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are those Prepositions that serve to both the Accusative and Ablative? |
A48527 | Which are those Twelve Parts or Heads? |
A48527 | Which are those of Sorrow? |
A48527 | Which are those of dread? |
A48527 | Which is die third Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | Which is the Article of the M. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | Which is the Article of the N. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | Which is the Eighth Part of As in Praesenti, being the second Rule of Verbs Irregular Variant? |
A48527 | Which is the Ninth Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Seventh Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Sixth Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Third Part of Speech? |
A48527 | Which is the eighth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth Rule observable in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth Rule, or fifth sort of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the first Rule of the Figurative Syntaxis, and what''s the meaning thereof? |
A48527 | Which is the first irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the first? |
A48527 | Which is the first? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Accident belonging to a Noun? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Rule or thing to be observed in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the last general Rule of knowing the first syllables? |
A48527 | Which is the next Part of Construction or Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the place of the Nominative? |
A48527 | Which is the second Declension of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the second Rule for the declining of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the second Rule of the Figurative Syntaxi ●? |
A48527 | Which is the second Special Rule for the Gender and declining of Nouns Substa ● tives common? |
A48527 | Which is the second irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the seventh general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth Observation or Rule in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the third Rule for the declining of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the third Rule of the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the third irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the third usual so ● ● of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the twelfth sort of them? |
A48527 | Which is your Rule for Verbs governing a Genitive, and what sorts of Verbs are they? |
A48527 | Which of them comes first? |
A48527 | Whose Book is this? |
A48527 | Why are not Adjectives compared when a Vowel comes before Us? |
A48527 | Why are the four first declined, and the four last undeclined? |
A48527 | Why are these called Persons in a Verb? |
A48527 | Why are they called Primitives, and what are they called besides? |
A48527 | Why are they set before the Genders and Declensions? |
A48527 | Why are they so called? |
A48527 | Why can not the Infinitive Mood, or the Verb that follows the Relative or Conjunction, be the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | Why do the Gerunds and Supines belong to the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | Why do they say Quî in the Ablative Case? |
A48527 | Why do you leave out the Optative and Potential Mood? |
A48527 | Why do you say commonly, Is there any exception? |
A48527 | Why doth not Comparison belong to a Noun Substantive? |
A48527 | Why doth the Imperative Mood want the first Person singular? |
A48527 | Why is it call''d the Nominative? |
A48527 | Why is it called I ● p ● ● sonal, is it because it wants the Persons? |
A48527 | Why is it called a Participle? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Accusative Case? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Dative Case? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Why is that which ends in u, called the latter Supine? |
A48527 | Why is that which ends in um, called the first Supine? |
A48527 | Why is the Ablative called Latinus Casus? |
A48527 | Why may they not be Verbs, seeing they retain their Construction? |
A48527 | Why must these six so agree together? |
A48527 | Why say you most commonly? |
A48527 | Why was a Participle invented? |
A48527 | Why was a Pronoun invented? |
A48527 | With how many Articles is a Noun Substantive declin''d? |
A48527 | Yes; as, Haeccine fieri flagitia? |
A48527 | a Pronoun? |
A48527 | a Verb Common, signifies also like a Verb Passive? |
A48527 | a Verb Personal agrees with its Nominative Case? |
A48527 | an Indicative and a Subjunctive? |
A48527 | and, why is it called so? |
A48527 | and, why is it called so? |
A48527 | of Nouns Irregular, called Redundants, or that have overmuch? |
A48527 | of Pronunciation? |
A48527 | of the undeclined sort? |
A48527 | such as give an answer to the Adversatives? |
A48527 | such as grant somewhat to be said against? |
A48527 | such as lessen the meaning? |
A48527 | such as make Inferenees? |
A48527 | those that couple both Sence and Words? |
A48527 | those that imply a Condition? |
A48527 | those that imply a Difference? |
A48527 | those that imply an Exception? |
A48527 | those which ask a Question? |
A48527 | those which imply a Reason? |
A48527 | those which part the Sence and not the Words? |
A48527 | 〈 ◊ 〉, when we enquire, whether or by whom a Fact was committed; as, An Clodius occide ● i ● 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A54745 | & enim quam tu domum, quam urbem adiisti, quod fanum denique, quod non eversum atque extersum reliqueris? |
A54745 | ''T is a thousand pities Bess, yet I''le search among my acquaintance, It may be my chance to do thee a kindness; what Trade dost thou love best? |
A54745 | ? |
A54745 | A Gentlewoman that was always jealous of Latine, hearing one say bona mulier? |
A54745 | A Wit meeting of a Usurer, desired him to lend him some money, Sir, said the Usurer, I do not know you? |
A54745 | A countrey Painter painting of a small Parish Church, and writing false Orthography, one askt him, that overlookt his work, why he spelt so false? |
A54745 | A cowardly Captain askt a Soldier whether he knew him or no? |
A54745 | A fearful bashful Countrey- fellow was askt, whether he would go to bed to his bride? |
A54745 | A. J. N. do confess my self to be as base a villain as thou art, and therefore let me see thee to morrow by such an hour in Hide Park? |
A54745 | A. Qualis vita, fuit ita, Q. why are women like a piece of Grogram? |
A54745 | A. VVhy are curled haired men sooner gray then others? |
A54745 | A. what is the swiftest thing in the world? |
A54745 | Alas poor Scholar, Whither wilt thou go? |
A54745 | Alas poor Scholar, whither wilt thou go? |
A54745 | Alas poor Scholar, whither wilt thou go? |
A54745 | Alas poor Scholar, whither wilt thou go? |
A54745 | And how is it proper? |
A54745 | And if she have a gown, and other womens garments of a greater price then thou, whether hadst thou rather have hers or thine? |
A54745 | And nothing goes down but drink, Friends, whether are your stomachs flown? |
A54745 | And this is Queen Elizabeth, How the Spaniards did infest her? |
A54745 | And what doth the contradiction signifie? |
A54745 | And what negative? |
A54745 | And what the Negative? |
A54745 | Are not Instruments numbered among helping Causes? |
A54745 | Are not also greaters feigned? |
A54745 | Are not dislikes also known by denying the likes? |
A54745 | Are not lessers also sometimes feigned? |
A54745 | Are not proper circumstances also mingled with common causes sometimes? |
A54745 | Are not the notes sometimes omitted? |
A54745 | Are there not notations also from disagreeings? |
A54745 | At what season doth the patient husband love the scold his wife best? |
A54745 | At what time do womens breasts begin first to increase? |
A54745 | Atticus, why? |
A54745 | Ay, but Richard will you think so hereafter? |
A54745 | B. make another song in praise of Sack? |
A54745 | B. what is a creditor? |
A54745 | Be not notes of dislikes sometimes wanting? |
A54745 | Because in some persons the heart sendeth not heat to that side? |
A54745 | Bishopricks are void In Scotland; shall I thither? |
A54745 | Bring forth authority for this? |
A54745 | But Aspatia spake to Zenophon himself, I pray thee( said she) if thy neighbor have a better horse then thou, hadst thou rather have his or thine? |
A54745 | But I cry''d no, I''de have Peggie, with that she jeer''d me, saying, What are you love- sick Tom? |
A54745 | But Sweet Diana what strange fears have I, That am confirm''d how men can swear and lie? |
A54745 | But although the disjunction be absolutely true, and also necessary, may there not be a necessity that the parts should be separately necessary? |
A54745 | But are there no special examples fitted to this kind? |
A54745 | But are they not more frequent from adverses? |
A54745 | But do not examples set forth this head more clearly? |
A54745 | But doth Thais give me many thanks for it? |
A54745 | But from whence arises all my trouble? |
A54745 | But how if there be many? |
A54745 | But if I defend him whom thou accusest, why should I not be angry with thee, who accusest him whom I defend? |
A54745 | But if Romes people ask me happily, Why not''mongst Judges on the Bench sit I; And do that which they love, fly that they hate? |
A54745 | But if he have a better wife then thou hast, whether hadst thou rather have his or thine? |
A54745 | But if he have better ground then thou, whether hadst thou rather have? |
A54745 | But if that Oracles true things do tell, Then this in our name see thou do declare? |
A54745 | But if the connexion be contingent, and only put for probability, how shall it be judged then? |
A54745 | But is method only set forth in matter of the arts and doctrine? |
A54745 | But is not the disjunction oftentimes from condition? |
A54745 | But may not example be under this head? |
A54745 | But tell me how it is with you? |
A54745 | But what did this Tubero his sword do in the Pharsalian Army? |
A54745 | But what if any part happen to be besides its parts? |
A54745 | But what if any thing were taken away in the compound syllogism? |
A54745 | But what is the consequent part of the syllogism? |
A54745 | But what is the most special species? |
A54745 | But what wilt thou give me for this Jone? |
A54745 | But wherefore this superfluity of speech? |
A54745 | But whereupon dependeth the judgement of the copulative enunciate? |
A54745 | But why do I rage? |
A54745 | But why should reason hope to win a victory, that''s so unkind, and so unwelcome to my mind? |
A54745 | CElia, thy sweet Angels face May be call''d a heavenly place; The whiteness of the starry way, Nature did on thy forehead lay? |
A54745 | Can you in few words give an illustration or description of the body? |
A54745 | Come say away Girle; Hey down a down a derry down, Hey down a down a derry do? |
A54745 | Dear Lady, why should you not affect that love which you your self have created? |
A54745 | Divideth living creatures into five species? |
A54745 | Do not Deprecations then proceed from hence? |
A54745 | Do you not hear the Nightingale Madam? |
A54745 | Do you think, Sir, that that which is ruin''d by the Eyes, can ● e belov''d by the Heart? |
A54745 | Do''s it not bring a very great addition to my Lords Estate? |
A54745 | Dost thou not understand it is determined, that either those who have done this thing are homicides or revengers of liberty? |
A54745 | Doth Clodius lay snares for Milon? |
A54745 | Doth not his head and eye- brows altogether bald, seem to favour of malice, and cry out of deceit? |
A54745 | Each Term he ask''d his Father Blessing, most gravely and demurely, Who then did give him Shillings Ten; and must he dye obscurely? |
A54745 | Even Volcatio if he had come freely, would he have given a little book? |
A54745 | Fair Goddess of the pottage pot, how done you do tzip morning? |
A54745 | Fill thy sad matter with thy vertues grave, Hot glory doth decay, it none can save: Who had known Hector if Troy well had been? |
A54745 | First my mother brought me forth, then I the daughter bring forth my mother again? |
A54745 | Fond man what glory hast thou won, Or praise, a Virgin thus to have undone? |
A54745 | For by what Eyes of the Mind( saith he) could your Plato behold the frame of so great a Work, whereby he maketh it constructed and builded of God? |
A54745 | For he did swagger, drink, and game, indeed, what would he not? |
A54745 | Forth cometh she at length with mighty train, In her long robe, with many a long seam? |
A54745 | From hence, because it declareth the causes, Q. Shew some example now of the distributions of the genus into species? |
A54745 | From whence is derived the power of feeling? |
A54745 | From whence proceed tears? |
A54745 | From whence proceeds jealousie? |
A54745 | From whence then is that universal famousness and excellency? |
A54745 | Give a Poetical example? |
A54745 | Give a Poetical example? |
A54745 | Give a poetical example? |
A54745 | Give a poetical example? |
A54745 | Give an Orators example? |
A54745 | Give an example of a gradation, without a rethorical climax? |
A54745 | Give an example of a negative general syllogism? |
A54745 | Give an example of a negative special? |
A54745 | Give an example of a special syllogism? |
A54745 | Give an example of it? |
A54745 | Give an example of it? |
A54745 | Give an example of obligation? |
A54745 | Give an example of that which effecteth by Nature? |
A54745 | Give an example of the Cause that effecteth by it self? |
A54745 | Give an example of the affirmative special syllogism? |
A54745 | Give an example of the former? |
A54745 | Give an example of the latter? |
A54745 | Give an example of the solitary Cause with Principals and Fellows, out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example of this out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give an example of this? |
A54745 | Give an example of this? |
A54745 | Give an example ott of some Historiographer? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give an example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give an example? |
A54745 | Give another example after this manner? |
A54745 | Give another example of a proper syllogism? |
A54745 | Give another example of this kind of syllogism? |
A54745 | Give another example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give another example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another example? |
A54745 | Give another exmple? |
A54745 | Give another poetical example? |
A54745 | Give example from some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example of a negative proper? |
A54745 | Give example of an affirmative proper? |
A54745 | Give example of another general syllogism? |
A54745 | Give example of feigned equals? |
A54745 | Give example of proper syllogisms? |
A54745 | Give example of the Adjunct out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example of the Subject out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example of the first sort? |
A54745 | Give example of the first? |
A54745 | Give example of the notes out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example of the second? |
A54745 | Give example of this out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example of this? |
A54745 | Give example of those which are done by denying of parts? |
A54745 | Give example of what you have here shewed out of the art of Grammer? |
A54745 | Give example out of an Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Orator? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example out of some Poet? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give example? |
A54745 | Give examples? |
A54745 | Give examples? |
A54745 | Give further example? |
A54745 | Give me a more familiar example? |
A54745 | Give some example from some Orator? |
A54745 | Give some example of it? |
A54745 | Give some example of that which effecteth by counsel? |
A54745 | Give some examples of Relates? |
A54745 | Go to then, if she have a better husband then thou, hadst thou rather have hers? |
A54745 | Go to then, what, or how is the question? |
A54745 | HOw long shall I a Martyr be, To love and Womans cruelty? |
A54745 | Have not Vertues and Vices their effects also? |
A54745 | Have not feigned likenesses equal force with these above? |
A54745 | Have we not an obligation set forth sometimes with a pledge? |
A54745 | Have you seen Carnation grow, Fresh blushing through new flakes of snow? |
A54745 | Have you seen the pretty gleam That the Strawberry leaves in cream? |
A54745 | Have you seen with more delight, A red Rose growing through a white? |
A54745 | Having spoken of contraries affirming, we are come to contraries denying, what are they then? |
A54745 | He comes into the Park, like the son of Death, arm''d with the accouterments of Mortality, Sword and Pistol? |
A54745 | He had no Curtains to his Bed, yet still paid for his quart, While Coin did last; and shall he dye? |
A54745 | He hated all the Female sex, who knows his private grudge; And must he therefore dye forgot? |
A54745 | He lived in a Garret high, as high as any Steeple; And shall he dye? |
A54745 | He lov''d his Dog, Icleped Trou, his Dog he loved Pye; Shall Tobit live for his Dogs sake? |
A54745 | He made the Ballad of the Turk, and sung it in the street; And shall he dye, and no man heed it? |
A54745 | He quoted Dod and Clever; I nothing got, He got a Cloak and Bever: Alas poor Scholar, whither wilt thou go? |
A54745 | Her sides be long, her belly lank; of her legs what should I say? |
A54745 | Here Henry Cary, Lord Hunsdon rests, what a noise a makes with his name? |
A54745 | Here Thomas Cecil lies: Who''s that? |
A54745 | Here it seemeth is signified from the disjunst, that one only is true? |
A54745 | Hitherto the first part of Logick in Invention hath been expounded, the other part followeth in Judgement; what then is Judgement? |
A54745 | Hitherto you have expounded the first arguments, those derived from the first follow, what are they then? |
A54745 | Ho, ho, ho, I have hit it, Peace good- man Fool? |
A54745 | How are Hermophrodites begotten? |
A54745 | How are disagreeings manifested? |
A54745 | How are they judged? |
A54745 | How are they manifested? |
A54745 | How by Fortune? |
A54745 | How by Necessity? |
A54745 | How can that be? |
A54745 | How contingent? |
A54745 | How did Master Not of the Inns of Court love a citizens wife? |
A54745 | How did a gentleman of late requite him that gave him the horns? |
A54745 | How did the gentleman requite his blind bears courtesie? |
A54745 | How did the late King serve one that was importunate to be knighted? |
A54745 | How do the English love the Spaniards? |
A54745 | How do the Orators follow this method? |
A54745 | How do thy joys, though in their greatest dearth, Transcend the proudest pleasures of the earth? |
A54745 | How doth a man look after the recreations of a bridal night? |
A54745 | How doth it effect by an external faculty? |
A54745 | How doth the Efficient Cause effect by an Accident? |
A54745 | How effecteth it by it self? |
A54745 | How effecteth it by its own faculty? |
A54745 | How else? |
A54745 | How false? |
A54745 | How impossible? |
A54745 | How is a Lesser judged? |
A54745 | How is it affirmed? |
A54745 | How is it denied? |
A54745 | How is it done? |
A54745 | How is it general? |
A54745 | How is it special? |
A54745 | How is it that women go so unwillingly to bed, and rise the next day so lusty? |
A54745 | How is kissing used? |
A54745 | How is that great vertue impudence here abused? |
A54745 | How is the Cause divided? |
A54745 | How is the discreet Enunciat judged to be true? |
A54745 | How is the false or ridiculous judged? |
A54745 | How is the second kinde of handling this kinde of argument? |
A54745 | How is the taste best discerned? |
A54745 | How lastly? |
A54745 | How long did the learned guess that the world would last? |
A54745 | How many Kindes hath it? |
A54745 | How many are the manners of distinction? |
A54745 | How many bones are there in the body of a man? |
A54745 | How many miles is the earth in circuit? |
A54745 | How many parts hath Logick? |
A54745 | How many parts hath the antecedent? |
A54745 | How may carnal copulation be civilly defined? |
A54745 | How may one distinguish of the height of things? |
A54745 | How mean you Page? |
A54745 | How might Naylers female be rightly named Mary Magdalene? |
A54745 | How necessary? |
A54745 | How now, what dost think Jocky? |
A54745 | How prithee now? |
A54745 | How prove you this last by testimony and example? |
A54745 | How should a man behave himself to a coy Lady? |
A54745 | How true? |
A54745 | How would I chide thee in this angry vain? |
A54745 | How? |
A54745 | I am not angry, wo can angry be With him that loves a Mistress? |
A54745 | I see you came, Sir, with a resolution not to be deny''d, having brought an argument so perswasive to Women, as that of Novelty; but pray what is it? |
A54745 | If a man calls his wife Whore, what follows by consequence? |
A54745 | If any part of the syllogism want, what is it said to be? |
A54745 | If it be your Difficulties, Sir, that can create your Glory, why do you complain? |
A54745 | If the parts of the disjunct proposition shall be more then two, how shall they be judged then? |
A54745 | In Defiance of Drinking- sack WHat a Devil ail our Poets all, For drink, for drink thus always to call? |
A54745 | In the Latine of Enuntiatum, it is called Enuntiation? |
A54745 | Is bright Sylvia gentle bowrs, To your gloomy walks unknown? |
A54745 | Is it a great act to over throw the city Rome, to beat a Knave, to kill a Parricide, what shall I say? |
A54745 | Is it lawful for a lover to make use of any other Lady then his own? |
A54745 | Is it not sometimes from the Subject to the Adjunct? |
A54745 | Is it not sometimes without notes? |
A54745 | Is lying of any ancient standing? |
A54745 | Is not a certain Logical gradation, sometimes joyned with a Rethorical climax taken from hence? |
A54745 | Is not the genus handled by the species? |
A54745 | Is not the order of the parts oftentimes confounded? |
A54745 | Is not this conjunction also denied more manifestly by denying the consequent? |
A54745 | Is there not a Symbol in Conjugates of agreeing arguments? |
A54745 | Is there not a reciprocal affection in both these? |
A54745 | Is there not also a gradation from lessers? |
A54745 | It is thus concluded and judged by Horace, Epist, 1. Who freer is he, that as a servant dwelleth? |
A54745 | It seemeth by this that if the disjunction be contingent, it is not absolutely true, but is only opinionable? |
A54745 | It seemeth by this that method doth continually pass from universals to singulars? |
A54745 | It seemeth by this, when a hidden truth of things is more subtily searched for, that this argument hath small force of proof? |
A54745 | It should seem by this, that contraries are sequences of contraries? |
A54745 | It should seem by this, that the one being affirmed, the other is denied? |
A54745 | It should seem then that the distinction of the whole into parts is distribution? |
A54745 | It should seem then that the perfect definition is nothing else then an universal symbol of the causes, constituting the essence and nature of things? |
A54745 | It was ask''d, Whether it were more dangerous for Ladies to dance upon the Ropes, or to dance upon the Ground? |
A54745 | It was ask''d, Who was the fittest man to marry a flat nos''d woman? |
A54745 | It was ask''d, Why Maiden- heads was so much priz''d? |
A54745 | It was demanded of a Lady, Whether she had rather marry a Fool or a Wiseman? |
A54745 | It was demanded, What was the humor of those people that dyed for Love? |
A54745 | It was demanded, Why women are many times more quick witted then men? |
A54745 | Johnson what reparation he would tender to his honor for spitting in his face? |
A54745 | Johnsons Chair at Robert Wilsons Tipling- house in the Strand? |
A54745 | Make the disjunction appear clearer? |
A54745 | Make this plain by example? |
A54745 | Make this plain by example? |
A54745 | Make this plainer by examples? |
A54745 | Make this plainer? |
A54745 | Make this plainer? |
A54745 | Make this plainer? |
A54745 | Make this plainer? |
A54745 | Marry Jone, cry I still, but when wilt thou marrie, Jone? |
A54745 | May a lover die with too much loving? |
A54745 | May not Comparatives also argue Fictions? |
A54745 | May not Impudence be numbered amongst these kind of Causes? |
A54745 | May not distribution of genus into species be comprised under this head? |
A54745 | May not notation be also from comparatives? |
A54745 | May not time also be reduced unto this Head? |
A54745 | May there not be rendred a reason of the names? |
A54745 | Nature made thee her seal, she meant thereby: Thou shouldst Print more, not let the Copie die; What, hast thou vow''d an aged Maid to die? |
A54745 | Now Marriot is dead, who is the greatest eater? |
A54745 | Of all fishes in the sea, which is the swistest? |
A54745 | Of all knaves, why is there greatest hope of a Cobler? |
A54745 | One asking a Poet where his wits were? |
A54745 | One asking another what Superscription he had best write to his Mistress on his letter, was told, Venus Lass of his affections? |
A54745 | One askt in which part of the house a gentlewoman did use to lie? |
A54745 | One askt why men should think there was a world in the moon? |
A54745 | One being askt what countrey man a Plough man was? |
A54745 | One boasted himself to be a wit, saying, That the world ● ● ke him to be all wit? |
A54745 | One drinking of a cup of burnt Claret, said that he was not able to let it down, another askt him why? |
A54745 | One perswaded another, because she was rich, to marry a whore, saying, it was not too late for her to turn? |
A54745 | One said he was so tender hearted, that he could not abide to kill a louse? |
A54745 | One said painters were cunning fellows, the other askt why? |
A54745 | One said to a sturdy begger, friend, it is a custom amongst those of your trade, if a man doth not give you, to rail at him? |
A54745 | One saying that he was sorrowful, that such a Venison Pasty was eaten? |
A54745 | One seeing a man and his wife fighting, askt another why he did not part them? |
A54745 | One told a gentleman that went by water, that his cloak burnt? |
A54745 | Or follow Windebank And Finch, to see if either Do want a Priest to shrive them? |
A54745 | Or he that in his moneys love excelleth? |
A54745 | Or morning blushes when day breaks? |
A54745 | Or why doth sullen ● ate consine My heart to thee, that is not mine? |
A54745 | Poor soul she lives in quiet? |
A54745 | Porter dye? |
A54745 | Porter rid himself and his company of the Fidlers? |
A54745 | Proceed further in explicating the Subject? |
A54745 | Proceed to farther example? |
A54745 | Proceed to farther examples? |
A54745 | Proceed to further example? |
A54745 | Proceed to further example? |
A54745 | Proceed to further example? |
A54745 | Proceed to further example? |
A54745 | Proceed to further examples? |
A54745 | Produce Tully''s words avouching this syllogism? |
A54745 | Produce authority for this syllogism? |
A54745 | Produce some Orator avouching this syllogism? |
A54745 | Produce some Orator for this syllogism? |
A54745 | Produce the authority of some ancient avouching this syllogism? |
A54745 | Produce the example of some Orator for this syllogism? |
A54745 | Prove this by some Poet? |
A54745 | Q Give another example? |
A54745 | Q Shew another syllogism of this kinde? |
A54745 | Q VVhat is a mans reason compared unto? |
A54745 | Q What is simple? |
A54745 | Q wherefore is it that we are most ticklish under the soles of the feet, and under the armpits? |
A54745 | Q, It may be thought then that this part of Logick is called both Judgement and Disposition from hence? |
A54745 | Q, VVhat said the boy to the Cuckold, when he askt him why he stared him so in the face? |
A54745 | Q, Why do lovers blush on the bridal night? |
A54745 | Q. Avouch some other authority after the like manner? |
A54745 | Q. Doth it alwayes assume the same? |
A54745 | Q. Doth not earnest affection sometimes flow from these Relates? |
A54745 | Q. Ezplicate the Subject further? |
A54745 | Q. Shew another example of the special syllogism? |
A54745 | Q. Shew another example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew another syllogism of this kinde? |
A54745 | Q. Shew example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the contrary? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of these examples? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat are Conjugates? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat be the kinds of these arguments? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat become of the Turk that daunced on the ropes, and stood on his head with his heels upright on an exceeding high pole? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat creature is that which bites with his tongue? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat creatures of all others live the longest? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat did one compare tall men unto? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat did the old Book- sellers Dedication Horse cost him that he use to ride on up and down the countrey? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat differences a woman from a man? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat if there had not ben been an Act against building? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is a bawd? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is a meer scholler? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is a whore- master? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is an hyporcritical Puritan? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is description? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is the imperfect called? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat is the wisest of all other things? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat said the Lady to the Gentleman that often used that protestation, That he would pawn his soul on it? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat said the Squire when he found his man Harry in bed with his own Curtizan? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat said the wench to the genleman, that hit her a clap on the breech, and cryed, I marry, here is a plump one indeed? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat subject is the least worthy of a mans thoughts? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat things are Chiefly in opposition to true love? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat trick did a scholler that was a lewd rogue, use after he had often sent to his father, and could get no money from him? |
A54745 | Q. VVhat two dissillables are those that divide the world? |
A54745 | Q. VVhen I lived I fed the living, now I am dead I hear the living, and with swift speed walk over the living? |
A54745 | Q. VVhen doth the voice change in men? |
A54745 | Q. VVhen policy trips up a mans heels, what is it called? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy did Nailor stand in the Pillory? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do lovers delight in amorous histories? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do lovers look so pale and lean? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do not whores conceive? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do they use to paint Cupid bare- headed? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do we see our breaths in the winter, but not in the summer? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do whores paint? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy do women take those for asses that are too importunate? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is Cupid painted a Child? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is a whores trade opposite to all others? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is it dangerous to marry a widow? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is it probable that Eve studied Astronomy? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is love painted naked? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is the heart placed in the midst of the body? |
A54745 | Q. VVhy is the language of a scold most moving? |
A54745 | Q. Whence comes it that those that are born deaf are also dumb? |
A54745 | Q. Whence is distribution taken? |
A54745 | Q. Whence is it that those people that wash in the winter in warm water feel more cold then those that wash in cold water? |
A54745 | Q. Whence is the first distribution? |
A54745 | Q. Wherefore is it that in summer we drink more, and in winter we eat more? |
A54745 | Q. Wherein consists the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Wherein is the force of this example? |
A54745 | Q. Whereupon then dependeth the necessity of the disjunction? |
A54745 | Q. Whither doth S. A. go when he dies? |
A54745 | Q. what Officer keeps his Oath most strictly to the City? |
A54745 | Q. what Rhetorick is most graceful in a woman? |
A54745 | Q. what answer did one return him that desired to borrow his cloak? |
A54745 | Q. what answer did the poor scholler give to the begger, that said that he had a licence to beg? |
A54745 | Q. what are Horse- keepers and Oastlers, though the times are never so mutual? |
A54745 | Q. what are agreeings after a certain manner? |
A54745 | Q. what are lovers oaths like? |
A54745 | Q. what are names? |
A54745 | Q. what are the kinds of special? |
A54745 | Q. what are the kinds? |
A54745 | Q. what are the kinds? |
A54745 | Q. what birds of all others are the most perfect heralds of the Spring? |
A54745 | Q. what companion should a man be most private withal? |
A54745 | Q. what creatures of all others, as Naturalists write, are the worst that the earth nourisheth? |
A54745 | Q. what did the fellow near Doctors Commons do that sent his wife for salt? |
A54745 | Q. what do the eyes chiefly betray? |
A54745 | Q. what is Common? |
A54745 | Q. what is a Bawd like? |
A54745 | Q. what is a Bragad ● ● ia welsh- man? |
A54745 | Q. what is a Mountebank? |
A54745 | Q. what is a domineering fellow to be compared unto? |
A54745 | Q. what is a fellow of a house? |
A54745 | Q. what is a flatterer? |
A54745 | Q. what is a proper Axioma? |
A54745 | Q. what is a special Axioma? |
A54745 | Q. what is an idle magistrate like? |
A54745 | Q. what is cast beauty like? |
A54745 | Q. what is congregative? |
A54745 | Q. what is particular? |
A54745 | Q. what is that which being first water assumes the form of a stone, and still retains it? |
A54745 | Q. what is that which makes no difference betwixt a wise man and a fool? |
A54745 | Q. what is that, which having taken we have lost, and having not taken we have kept still? |
A54745 | Q. what is the Cause? |
A54745 | Q. what is the Efficient Cause? |
A54745 | Q. what is the compound axioma? |
A54745 | Q. what is the distribution from subjects? |
A54745 | Q. what is the greatest traveller next to a man? |
A54745 | Q. what is the least part of the body, yet darkens the whole body? |
A54745 | Q. what is the meaning of the word Marriage? |
A54745 | Q. what is the most lascivious part of a woman? |
A54745 | Q. what is the nick- name of Mistress M. T? |
A54745 | Q. what is the other distribution? |
A54745 | Q. what is the profitablest sign, that one that hath a handsome wife, can hang at his door? |
A54745 | Q. what is the reason that captain Bulmur could not make his boat leap out of the water, and fly over London Bridge? |
A54745 | Q. what is the reason that the out- landish woman is so hairy? |
A54745 | Q. what made the Water- Poet believe he was a cuckold? |
A54745 | Q. what may a Middlesex- man be called? |
A54745 | Q. what may a Musician be compared unto? |
A54745 | Q. what may an Antiquary be compared unto? |
A54745 | Q. what may an importunate Dun be compared unto? |
A54745 | Q. what may be said of a common whore? |
A54745 | Q. what may be said of him that speaks great Gun- powder words? |
A54745 | Q. what may be said of one that speaketh hard words? |
A54745 | Q. what replied the fellow when one bid him hold his horse? |
A54745 | Q. what reply did he make to the Physitian, that said that his liver was nought? |
A54745 | Q. what reply was made to her that had never a Child, yet she thankt God that she had a husband of very good parts? |
A54745 | Q. what said Sir Benjamin Ruddiard of Master P? |
A54745 | Q. what said she to her husband, that named all the cuckolds in the town? |
A54745 | Q. what said the Gardiner to his wife when she came to see him hang''d? |
A54745 | Q. what said the Lady to her son that was a great gamester, when she was likely to be drowned? |
A54745 | Q. what said the Saylor when the ship was set on fire in the coast of Peru? |
A54745 | Q. what said the Vintner of Southwark, when the Parson killed his wife in the Percullis? |
A54745 | Q. what said the gentleman to his wife, when she desired him to give her a flap of the coney? |
A54745 | Q. what saying pleases a foolish Sollicitor best? |
A54745 | Q. what stone is that which neither yields to the fire, nor the hammer? |
A54745 | Q. what thing is that which being blind it self, leads the blind, and bears him that bears it? |
A54745 | Q. what trick will the Vintners use after walnuts are out of season, to keep up their price of sack? |
A54745 | Q. what was Jeffry''s the Queens little dwarf''s usual hiding place? |
A54745 | Q. what was the reply to one that gave him this complement, Sir, I wish that every hair of my head were a groom to do you service? |
A54745 | Q. what''s an excellent receipt to keep a woman honest? |
A54745 | Q. what''s the best Rhetorick a man can use? |
A54745 | Q. when may a lover fall out with his Mistress? |
A54745 | Q. when will Playes be in request? |
A54745 | Q. where is the center or middlemost part of the earth? |
A54745 | Q. wherefore are the morning studies best? |
A54745 | Q. wherefore in winter do we smell perfumes less then in summer? |
A54745 | Q. wherefore is it that by the rubbing of our eyes, we cease to sneeze? |
A54745 | Q. whether is the water or the earth bigger? |
A54745 | Q. which is most jealous, the man or the woman? |
A54745 | Q. which is the quickest of the sences? |
A54745 | Q. who are those that are near the Suns rising, and see the first day, yet themselves are of the colour of the night? |
A54745 | Q. why are Fidlers so unfortunate? |
A54745 | Q. why are Glasiers good Arbitrators? |
A54745 | Q. why are Players like to poor Philosophers? |
A54745 | Q. why are Scriveners hard hearted fellows? |
A54745 | Q. why are Tailers like woodcocks? |
A54745 | Q. why are children os ● ner like their fathers then their mothers? |
A54745 | Q. why are great eaters the most valiant men? |
A54745 | Q. why are short and dim sighted people, more given to love then others? |
A54745 | Q. why are there so many whores and so few bawds? |
A54745 | Q. why d ● s ● ● e of our Lay Preachers hold forth so long? |
A54745 | Q. why did a Pulpit cuffer about London, cry out so for bows and arrows, bows and arrows? |
A54745 | Q. why did the ancients paint on the borders of Cupids robe, Life and Death? |
A54745 | Q. why do some women blush so? |
A54745 | Q. why do the Dutch eat so much butter? |
A54745 | Q. why doth a Knight take place of a Gentleman? |
A54745 | Q. why doth a chaste woman love him exceedingly that had her virginity? |
A54745 | Q. why have Hoasts red noses? |
A54745 | Q. why have some stinking breaths? |
A54745 | Q. why is a Drunkard a good Philosopher? |
A54745 | Q. why is a miller the fittest husband for a scold? |
A54745 | Q. why is corn a quarrelsome creature? |
A54745 | Q. why is immoderate venery hurtful? |
A54745 | Q. why is it better to marry a widow then a maid? |
A54745 | Q. why is it dangerous to abuse a Physician? |
A54745 | Q. why is it necessary for women to learn a Roman hand? |
A54745 | Q. why is the flesh of the lungs white? |
A54745 | Q. why must an Apothecaries shop needs be healthful? |
A54745 | Q. why should not a married wan be called ass in his wives presence? |
A54745 | Richard, thou dost well to tell me some of thy humors; But art thou not terrible mad when th''art drunk, and quarrelsome withall? |
A54745 | SHall I pass over in silence, Fairest, so excessive a happiness? |
A54745 | Set forth Catullus his words wherein he thus concludeth? |
A54745 | Set forth the words of Phillis in Ovid so judging? |
A54745 | Shew some syllogism of this kind? |
A54745 | Shew the force of this example? |
A54745 | Ships, Ships, Ships, I discover, Crossing the Main; Shall I in, and go over, Turn Jew or Atheist, Turk, or Papist, To Geneva, or Amsterdam? |
A54745 | Sir Thomas Ruthat, what of him? |
A54745 | Sir, We are going to play, will you please to make one, or do you like it better to entertain the Ladies? |
A54745 | Sir, you have a strong faith to speak so highly of one whom you have known no otherwise then in the formalities of a Visit? |
A54745 | Sit ye still, O revengers of this mans death, whose life if you thought you could restore, would you? |
A54745 | So had his — Q. what is an Hoast? |
A54745 | Such is the sacred hunger of gold, Then come to my pack where I cry, What do you lack, what do you buy? |
A54745 | THe last sad May- day know ye not? |
A54745 | Tell me, I pray thee, thou wife of Zenophon, if thy neighbor should have better gold then thou, whether hadst thou rather have hers or thine? |
A54745 | Th''art fair Fabulla, rich, and all''s a maid, Can you deny,''t is truth that I have said? |
A54745 | The Question was put, Whether Colatinus were not a cuckold for all that Lucretia stabb''d her self? |
A54745 | The Question was put, Whether a wise, beautiful, or wealthy woman were to be chosen? |
A54745 | The Question was put, Why women used to spit when they heard men speak bawdy? |
A54745 | The first kinde of the Cause, in the Efficient and Matter being expounded; the second followeth, in the Form and the End; what therefore is the Form? |
A54745 | The first part of my task is ended now, The moneth is done my little book also: Junus is done, another moneth beginneth? |
A54745 | The man that drinketh all his life, What can he do unto his wife? |
A54745 | The people wondering at the Eclipse of the Sun? |
A54745 | Then it seemeth that succint brevity is not always in this kinde? |
A54745 | Then pray, Sir, why do you not believe that which I say, for all Oracles are truth? |
A54745 | Then quoth he, How do you sell your Cherries, good Woman? |
A54745 | They have been ploughed so much, that they can of necessity yield no crop, Q. VVhy do we sleep better on the right side then on the left? |
A54745 | They may seem by this to be together by nature? |
A54745 | This reciprocation seemeth to be more obscure, as because the testimony is true, the witness is also true? |
A54745 | Thou art a wise and considerate man what sayest thou? |
A54745 | To another Chappel now come we, the people follow and chat; This is the Lady Cottington, and the people cry, Who''s that? |
A54745 | To one that excepted that another had saluted his Mistress? |
A54745 | To one that said that lead was the basest mettal of all mettal? |
A54745 | To show that without any contestation he governs both by sea and land; Q. why is marriage compared to a sea voyage? |
A54745 | To signifie, that betwixt true lovers, there should be nothing covered or concealed Q. VVhat is the greatest wonder in a little circuit? |
A54745 | To whom may a man best commit a secret? |
A54745 | VVhat is the suddenest and most successful way of address to a widow? |
A54745 | VVhy do husbands for the most part seek wives, and not wives husbands? |
A54745 | Very well, Sir, at your service; pray how have you done? |
A54745 | WHat is Logick? |
A54745 | WHen thou dost see my Letter, dost thou know Whether''t is my right hands Character or no? |
A54745 | WIll you know my Mistress face? |
A54745 | What Almanack maker writes truest this year? |
A54745 | What Lady was that, which daunced best at the Ball in Lincolns- inn- fields? |
A54745 | What answer did the Lawyer return to him that askt him, whether his long discourse was not troublesome to him? |
A54745 | What answer did the Taylors boy give to him, that when he presented him with his masters Bill, said, that he was not running away? |
A54745 | What answer did the wench return to him( being barefoot) that askt her, whether or no she wore her every dayes stockings? |
A54745 | What answer was given to him, that disswaded one from marrying of a wife, because she was no wiser? |
A54745 | What are Chamber- maids like unto? |
A54745 | What are Contradicents? |
A54745 | What are Contraries? |
A54745 | What are Disparates? |
A54745 | What are Diverses? |
A54745 | What are Equalls? |
A54745 | What are Likes? |
A54745 | What are Opposites? |
A54745 | What are Privants? |
A54745 | What are Relates? |
A54745 | What are dislikes? |
A54745 | What are famous Sentences? |
A54745 | What are likes called? |
A54745 | What are our Bodies? |
A54745 | What are parts? |
A54745 | What are the Notes of it? |
A54745 | What are the affections of a true Axioma? |
A54745 | What are the affections of an axioma? |
A54745 | What are the attendants on love? |
A54745 | What are the genus and species notes of? |
A54745 | What are the joyes of love? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of Opposites? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of confession? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of definition? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of disagreeings? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of it? |
A54745 | What are the kindes of quality? |
A54745 | What are the kindes? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of Judgement? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of a compound syllogism? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of a simple Axioma? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of a syllogism? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of dianoia? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of it? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of testimony? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of the simple syllogism? |
A54745 | What are the kinds of the species? |
A54745 | What are the kinds? |
A54745 | What are the manners of distinction? |
A54745 | What are the most frequent notes of speech for this Argument? |
A54745 | What are the notes of likeness, whereby it is concluded in one word? |
A54745 | What are the other derived arguments? |
A54745 | What are the outward signs of the body, to judge of the inward disposition of the mind? |
A54745 | What are the proper notes of dislikes? |
A54745 | What are the proprieties in this explicated Syllogism? |
A54745 | What are the testimonies of the living? |
A54745 | What are the three first members formed in the womb? |
A54745 | What are these absolute agreeings? |
A54745 | What are those others? |
A54745 | What are those swellings and pimples that are usually in the face? |
A54745 | What are unequals? |
A54745 | What art is that which makes use of the wildest things in the world? |
A54745 | What be the Kindes? |
A54745 | What be the Kindes? |
A54745 | What be the Kindes? |
A54745 | What be the Kindes? |
A54745 | What be the kindes of Comparisons? |
A54745 | What be the kindes of Quantity? |
A54745 | What be the kindes of humane testimony? |
A54745 | What be the kindes of unequals? |
A54745 | What be the proper notes of it? |
A54745 | What be these notes? |
A54745 | What be they? |
A54745 | What belongeth to an Axioma of the arts? |
A54745 | What benefit redoundeth from hence? |
A54745 | What breaks the shell at the coming forth of the chicken? |
A54745 | What city is that which is founded in the water, compassed with water, and hath no other walls but the seas? |
A54745 | What creature of all others sheds tears at his death? |
A54745 | What did the fellow to his wise, that said she was neither sick nor well? |
A54745 | What do the ancients hold for one of the greatest wonders of the world? |
A54745 | What else cometh under this Head? |
A54745 | What expectest thou the authority of the Speakers, whose silence thou beholdest to be their pleasures? |
A54745 | What first caused the name of Fortune? |
A54745 | What further is comprised under this head? |
A54745 | What further is necessary to these equals? |
A54745 | What further is required? |
A54745 | What further may be reduced hitherto? |
A54745 | What further may be reduced under this head? |
A54745 | What further? |
A54745 | What further? |
A54745 | What further? |
A54745 | What game do men love best? |
A54745 | What if the French men come? |
A54745 | What if the bed should speak what it knows? |
A54745 | What if thou sayest the thing thou dost not mean, ● nd should to Turnus give his life again? |
A54745 | What is Agreeing? |
A54745 | What is Copulative? |
A54745 | What is Distribution from Adjuncts? |
A54745 | What is First? |
A54745 | What is Invention? |
A54745 | What is Juvenals Opinion of it? |
A54745 | What is Lesser? |
A54745 | What is Proper? |
A54745 | What is Quantity? |
A54745 | What is Simple? |
A54745 | What is a Catholique Axioma? |
A54745 | What is a Pyrate? |
A54745 | What is a Segregative Axioma? |
A54745 | What is a Syllogism? |
A54745 | What is a Tinker? |
A54745 | What is a connexed Axioma? |
A54745 | What is a connexed syllogism? |
A54745 | What is a disjoyned similitude? |
A54745 | What is a disjunct axioma? |
A54745 | What is a distribution? |
A54745 | What is a legal testimony? |
A54745 | What is a meer Pettifogger? |
A54745 | What is a meer common Lawyer? |
A54745 | What is a member? |
A54745 | What is a perfect definition? |
A54745 | What is a precise Sister? |
A54745 | What is a proposition? |
A54745 | What is a whore? |
A54745 | What is affirmative? |
A54745 | What is affirming? |
A54745 | What is agreeing absolutely? |
A54745 | What is an Argument? |
A54745 | What is an Artificial Argument? |
A54745 | What is an Homogene Axioma? |
A54745 | What is an axioma? |
A54745 | What is an equal Argument then? |
A54745 | What is an ordinary Fencer? |
A54745 | What is common? |
A54745 | What is continual likeness? |
A54745 | What is contract? |
A54745 | What is definition? |
A54745 | What is discreet? |
A54745 | What is distribution from the causes? |
A54745 | What is distribution of the genus into the forms of the species? |
A54745 | What is general? |
A54745 | What is genus? |
A54745 | What is greater? |
A54745 | What is it called, and whence receiveth it the name? |
A54745 | What is it called? |
A54745 | What is it called? |
A54745 | What is love? |
A54745 | What is method? |
A54745 | What is notation? |
A54745 | What is perfect? |
A54745 | What is proper testimony? |
A54745 | What is reported of the Executioner? |
A54745 | What is said to be the beautifullest thing in the world? |
A54745 | What is simple? |
A54745 | What is species? |
A54745 | What is that that which effecteth by the 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 … 〉 ans? |
A54745 | What is that which effecteth by the first me ● ns? |
A54745 | What is that which effecteth by the second means? |
A54745 | What is that which is milk in his dam, or fire, of a mingled seed, brought forth by others, and produceth not his like? |
A54745 | What is that which knoweth not it self to speak, understandeth not a word, yet conceals not, but repeats the voice of him that speaks? |
A54745 | What is that, which being contained in it self, yet from it thousands do dayly grow and issue? |
A54745 | What is the Affirmative called? |
A54745 | What is the Effect? |
A54745 | What is the Matter? |
A54745 | What is the Subject? |
A54745 | What is the affection in the definition? |
A54745 | What is the affection in the distribution? |
A54745 | What is the assumption? |
A54745 | What is the benefit of Adjuncts? |
A54745 | What is the benefit of it? |
A54745 | What is the benefit of sneezing? |
A54745 | What is the best way of dealing with a seemingly zealous Lay brother? |
A54745 | What is the difference betwixt an honest and dishonest woman? |
A54745 | What is the disjunct syllogism? |
A54745 | What is the distribution from the effects? |
A54745 | What is the dolefullest Latine that a lover can speak? |
A54745 | What is the end? |
A54745 | What is the explicated Syllogism? |
A54745 | What is the female sex without the male? |
A54745 | What is the first? |
A54745 | What is the first? |
A54745 | What is the first? |
A54745 | What is the force of this example? |
A54745 | What is the force of this example? |
A54745 | What is the highest respect, an honest wife can tender her husband? |
A54745 | What is the kinds of the genus? |
A54745 | What is the latter part of the word jealousie? |
A54745 | What is the most general genus? |
A54745 | What is the mystery of greatness? |
A54745 | What is the negative hereof? |
A54745 | What is the perfect definition called? |
A54745 | What is the principal distribution? |
A54745 | What is the profit of it? |
A54745 | What is the second disjunct? |
A54745 | What is the second kind of the simple explicate syllogism? |
A54745 | What is the second manner of the connexed syllogism? |
A54745 | What is the subalternate genus, and the subalternate species? |
A54745 | What is the worst argument a Vintner can use against the late act for the prizes of wine? |
A54745 | What is then the collection of the parts to the making up of the whole? |
A54745 | What is this affirmative called? |
A54745 | What is this called? |
A54745 | What is this called? |
A54745 | What is this latter properly called? |
A54745 | What is to be considered in method? |
A54745 | What kinde of people are those, that sleep not with their own faces? |
A54745 | What little fish is that in the sea, which is the greatest wonder for its strength? |
A54745 | What may a covetous Lawyer be compared unto? |
A54745 | What may a porter of the city gates becompared unto? |
A54745 | What may be a second kind of the effections of an Axioma? |
A54745 | What may be comprised under the Head of divine testimony? |
A54745 | What may be further under this head? |
A54745 | What may be said of a covetous rich man? |
A54745 | What may be said of a young fellow that is in love with a whore? |
A54745 | What may be said of the surred Giant in the last Lord Mayors show? |
A54745 | What may farther be under this head? |
A54745 | What may further be comprised under this Head? |
A54745 | What may further be comprised under this head? |
A54745 | What may further be comprised under this head? |
A54745 | What may further be under his Head? |
A54745 | What may further be under this Head? |
A54745 | What may further be under this Head? |
A54745 | What may the Law be most fitly compared unto? |
A54745 | What may these parts be called? |
A54745 | What more? |
A54745 | What part is last formed in the womb? |
A54745 | What place is the worst to learn French in? |
A54745 | What replied the Vintner to the Gentleman after he had drawn him good wine, and he said it had a whiff with it? |
A54745 | What reply was made to him that said, He did not use to give the wall to every Cockscomb? |
A54745 | What said Pope Urban the eighth to an English Gentleman that kist his toe? |
A54745 | What said a Gentleman to the Ladies, amongst whom, one of them let a fart? |
A54745 | What said he that saw a fellow in a very cold morning on the gallows in his shirt? |
A54745 | What said one that perceived a fellow in Bedlam more distracted then the rest, Sir were you ever married? |
A54745 | What said one to a Lady that had so many patches on? |
A54745 | What said the Farrier to the Emperick, when he would have given him money for a drench for his horse? |
A54745 | What said the Gentleman to the Citizen that with his hat in his hand began a health to all the cuckolds in the world? |
A54745 | What said the Horse- courser to the Justice, when he said; If he were not hang''d, he would be hang''d for him? |
A54745 | What said the Tyler to his man when he fell through the rafters of the house? |
A54745 | What said the Welsh- man, that by his reading saved his life, when after they had burnt him in the hand, they bid him cry, God save the King? |
A54745 | What said the captain when his leg was shot off, and they cryed for a Chyrurgion? |
A54745 | What said the fellow that had lost one of his ears for his former fact, and was for another crime condemned to lose the other? |
A54745 | What said the fellow to the sleeping watchman, when he stole away his lanthorn? |
A54745 | What said the gentleman to the thief, when he was wak''t by chance, and heard him breaking in? |
A54745 | What said the wench that was brought before the Judge about a rape, when he askt her, whether the fellow offered any violence, or the like? |
A54745 | What search hath found a being, where I am not, if that thou be there? |
A54745 | What seed is that which joyneth all the countries of the world together? |
A54745 | What shall follow? |
A54745 | What shall follow? |
A54745 | What shall the negative and contradiction be? |
A54745 | What shift did he make for to pay for his pint of Sack that he call''d for at the Kings- head in Fleet- street? |
A54745 | What sport doth women like best? |
A54745 | What then are the laws of the proper documents of the arts? |
A54745 | What then if any doubt shall arise from it? |
A54745 | What then shall precede pand be first? |
A54745 | What then? |
A54745 | What think you of the wife, that said the Taylor her husband, was not fit for her? |
A54745 | What tyrannick Mistriss dare, to one Beauty, Love confine? |
A54745 | What unsubstantial bubbles are the beast of humane Joys? |
A54745 | What was old Chaucers Saw? |
A54745 | What was said to the dwarf? |
A54745 | What was that which little Jeffry''s the Queens dwarfs mothers health was drunk out of? |
A54745 | What was the Welsh- mans meaning, when he said, He had the law in hu ● own hand? |
A54745 | What weight? |
A54745 | What were those two stars that the sea- man cryed out for in the storm, as onely desirous to see, before he was cast away? |
A54745 | What will never be out of fashion? |
A54745 | What''s that which is too hard for one to keep, enough for two, and too much for three to keep? |
A54745 | What''s the news from the Paris- garden? |
A54745 | When a man dies, which is the last part of him that dies, and which of a woman? |
A54745 | When all the meat was on the Table, What man of knife or teeth was able To stay to be intreated? |
A54745 | When does the world end with an old man? |
A54745 | When doth the voice change in women? |
A54745 | When is a Cuckolds Almanack out of date? |
A54745 | When should the longest grace be said? |
A54745 | When will Saint James''s Fair up again? |
A54745 | When will the Vintner at Aldersgate pull off the Mourning from his sign? |
A54745 | Where could all England then have found so brave a man as he? |
A54745 | Where is reputation measured by the acre? |
A54745 | Where is thy wit? |
A54745 | Where was Casca? |
A54745 | Where was Roscius? |
A54745 | Wherefore is it that the Eccho reports more clearly to our hearing, the last syllable than the first? |
A54745 | Whether do the Gallants go to Hide Park to hear the Cuckow or the Nightingal? |
A54745 | Which is the seat of the memory? |
A54745 | Who hath more pleasure on the bridal night, the man or the woman? |
A54745 | Who invented the first lie of the great Giant? |
A54745 | Who unbounded as the air, all may court, but none decline; Why should we the Heart deny As many Objects as the Eye? |
A54745 | Who was famous for his memory? |
A54745 | Who will not commend the high- soaring Larks, Or a Pidgeon- pye, worth three or four Marks, With Rabbets all butter''d about? |
A54745 | Whoev''r was drunk that wanted Eloquence? |
A54745 | Whose cock, whose dog, whose servant may be kept at the Cheapest rate? |
A54745 | Why are Tobacco- Shops of all other places most dangerous? |
A54745 | Why are Tobacco- shops and Bawdy- houses coincidents? |
A54745 | Why are all the senses in the head? |
A54745 | Why are little men more prompt, subtil, and Chollerick then great? |
A54745 | Why are so many whores gone beyond sea? |
A54745 | Why are some left handed? |
A54745 | Why are the lips moveable? |
A54745 | Why are there so few of the sect of the Adamites? |
A54745 | Why are there so many Pick- pockets in every corner, though there be, for the most part, a watch in every Street? |
A54745 | Why are they called Quakers? |
A54745 | Why are those that have their hair of one colour, and their beards of another, for the most part, accounted dangerous persons? |
A54745 | Why are we colder after dinner then before? |
A54745 | Why are women more silent in love then men? |
A54745 | Why are women most jealous? |
A54745 | Why are women said to be the weaker vessels? |
A54745 | Why are women smoother then men? |
A54745 | Why can not the Devill take tobacco through the nose? |
A54745 | Why can not the Spaniards so properly now as formerly, for their keeping of forts, be compared to crab- lice? |
A54745 | Why can women endure thin clothing in the winter better then men? |
A54745 | Why did Adam take the apple from Eve? |
A54745 | Why did Apelles paint Cupid with these words, Spring- time and Winter? |
A54745 | Why did Mrs. H. make her Husband a Wastecoat of her Willow colour''d Stuff- petticoat? |
A54745 | Why did Paris see the Goddess naked, when he was appointed to give his judgment about the ball? |
A54745 | Why do Apprentises wear no cuffs? |
A54745 | Why do Exchange- men so seldom speak truth? |
A54745 | Why do Lawyers Clerks write such wide hands? |
A54745 | Why do Lawyers wear such short gowns? |
A54745 | Why do gelded animals grow more fat then others? |
A54745 | Why do gentlemen so powder their Periwigs? |
A54745 | Why do lovers shed their hair so fast? |
A54745 | Why do lovers sit up with one another whole nights? |
A54745 | Why do lovers so kiss the eyes of their mistresses? |
A54745 | Why do men become bald? |
A54745 | Why do some ladies breasts leap, and as it were daunce when they talk with their lovers? |
A54745 | Why do some men love wenches better then their wives? |
A54745 | Why do some mens hair curle? |
A54745 | Why do some stammer and some lisp? |
A54745 | Why do the Anabap ● ists hate churches? |
A54745 | Why do the Poets bestow arrows on Cupid? |
A54745 | Why do young whores turn old bawds? |
A54745 | Why doth Cupid, of a blind archer, shoot so well? |
A54745 | Why doth a drunkard think that all things turn round about him? |
A54745 | Why doth marriage free a man from all cares? |
A54745 | Why doth nature produce moystures? |
A54745 | Why doth one gape when another gapes? |
A54745 | Why doth the stomach digest? |
A54745 | Why have gelded men shrill voices? |
A54745 | Why have those that lie on their backs so many dreams and visions? |
A54745 | Why have women thicker bloods then men? |
A54745 | Why hurtful light, or ought else did I see? |
A54745 | Why is Cupid pictured blinde? |
A54745 | Why is Cupid pictured flying? |
A54745 | Why is a Barber said to be such an active fellow? |
A54745 | Why is a Hang- man a person of a contemplative profession? |
A54745 | Why is a Midwives trade of all others most commendable? |
A54745 | Why is a Tooth- drawer a kind of an unconscionable trade? |
A54745 | Why is a prisoner the best fencer? |
A54745 | Why is a soldier so good an antiquary? |
A54745 | Why is every creature sad after copulation? |
A54745 | Why is it not proper to call a Tapster a Drawer? |
A54745 | Why is it unlikely that Sailors should be rich men? |
A54745 | Why is it unwholsome to lie on ones back? |
A54745 | Why is love compared to a maze? |
A54745 | Why is love painted with flowers in one hand, and a fish in another? |
A54745 | Why is one squint- eyed most circumspect of all others? |
A54745 | Why is sweet mistress so usual a complement? |
A54745 | Why is wealth better then wit? |
A54745 | Why is wit compared to brush- wood, and judgment to tinder? |
A54745 | Why may Aretin be accounted an expert artillery man? |
A54745 | Why may not Machivel be reputed as honest as some modern Politicians? |
A54745 | Why shall the first be in the most general place and order? |
A54745 | Why shall the subalternates follow? |
A54745 | Why should a fair womans neck be awry? |
A54745 | Why should a man chuse a little wife? |
A54745 | Why should you do so, Sir? |
A54745 | Why, what hurt have I done you? |
A54745 | Will you then die for me, Sir? |
A54745 | Wilt thou leave the city? |
A54745 | With what words did one challenge another that had abused him, but was not his equal? |
A54745 | Women are by themselves betray''d, And to their short joys cruel? |
A54745 | Would you cause it to be born and dye at the same instant? |
A54745 | You have expounded Comparison in Quantity, Comparison in Quality followeth; what therefore is Quality? |
A54745 | You have expounded hitherto the simple syllogism, what now is the compound syllogism? |
A54745 | You have expounded the artificial arguments, the inartificial followeth; tell me then what an inartificial argument is? |
A54745 | You have expounded the common affection of Axioma''s, the kinds follow, what are then the kinds of an Axioma? |
A54745 | You have expounded the first agreeing argument: the disagreeing followeth, what then is disagreeing? |
A54745 | You have manifested in its self the axiomatical judgement by axioma''s; the dianoetical followeth: what therefore is dianoia? |
A54745 | Your Venson Pasty, if well soakt, If not, I wish the Cook were choakt, What say you to such meat? |
A54745 | dist thou not me restrain? |
A54745 | doth he not seem to be compounded from the foot to the head,( if a man may conjecture by his shape) of frauds, fallacies, lies? |
A54745 | have I scratch''d you, or prickt you with any of my loose pins, or have I trod upon your corns? |
A54745 | if it had happened to thee amongst thine inhumane Pots, who would not accounted it filthy? |
A54745 | if they be parricides, why were they honored of thee, and called to this order by the Roman people? |
A54745 | is she glad? |
A54745 | may no ill betide him? |
A54745 | or shall I publish it, to render it more great? |
A54745 | quid enim accessisti, quo non attuleris tecum istum diem? |
A54745 | sayest thou so? |
A54745 | what are the benefits of good sents and perfumes? |
A54745 | what death would a Dutch man soonest chuse? |
A54745 | what devices? |
A54745 | what didst thou desire? |
A54745 | what didst thou wish? |
A54745 | what if dreams and wishes had been all true? |
A54745 | what ironhinges? |
A54745 | what is a Sexton? |
A54745 | what is an Almanack maker? |
A54745 | what is good manners in a Chamber- maid? |
A54745 | what is the name of that fish, which of all others, pleases women best? |
A54745 | what labour? |
A54745 | what lever? |
A54745 | what ministers were there of so great a work? |
A54745 | what payes Venus more custom then all the world besides? |
A54745 | what said she to him that sound her at it behind the door in a Tavern? |
A54745 | what said the Cuckold to him that he sound a bed with his wife? |
A54745 | what said the French madam to her husband, when she went to bed to her Lodger in the next room? |
A54745 | what said the gentleman to him that wrangled with him at cards and called him knave? |
A54745 | what thing is that which is neither fire, nor moon, nor star, yet it shines only in the night? |
A54745 | wherefore is the world round? |
A54745 | whether is the man or woman more constant in love? |
A54745 | which at all times is the best bed- fellow? |
A54745 | who was to feel the force of thy weapon: where was thy minde, eyes, hands, courage? |
A54745 | who would not be? |
A54745 | who''l be their Hector now to get''em pretty Babies? |
A54745 | why are Taylers of such esteem? |
A54745 | why are the Italians said to be so jealous? |
A54745 | why are women at all seasons more prone to love then other creatures? |
A54745 | why did Apolinares receive Marcus Brutus with incredible honor? |
A54745 | why did the admired Painter Xerxes figure Cupid in a green robe? |
A54745 | why is that saying, That the falling out of lovers is the beginning of love? |
A54745 | why may an Hypocritical Puritan be said to be a bastard? |
A54745 | why was Marcus Brutus by thy means freed from the law, if he were absent more then ten days from the city? |
A54745 | why was the provinces given to Cassius and Brutus, why were their questors added? |
A54745 | why were the number of Legates increased, and this done by thee? |
A54745 | ● hose sides did the sharp point aim at? |