Shakespeare Lexicon and Quotation Dictionary by Alexander Schmidt
Author:Alexander Schmidt
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 048622726X
Publisher: Dover Publications
F.
Fa, the fourth note in the gamut: ut, re, sol, la, mi, fa, LLL IV, 2, 102. C fa ut, Shr. III, 1, 76. fa, sol, la, mi, Lr. I, 2, 149. Used as a verb: I’ll try how you can sol, fa, Shr. I, 2, 17. I’ll re you, I’ll fa you, Rom. IV, 5, 121.
Fabian, name in Tw. II, 5, 1. III, 4, 281 etc.
Fable, subst. 1) a fiction: these antique—s, Mids. V, 3. but that’s a f. Oth. V, 2, 286.
2) a lie (euphemistically): sans f. Err. IV, 4, 76. I recount no f. LLL V, 1, 111.
Fabrie, vb. 1) to tell fictitious tales: H6C V, 5, 25. 2) to tell falsehoods: H6A IV, 2, 42.
Fabric, 1) structure, frame: Tp. IV, 151. Wint. I, 2, 429. Cor. I, 1, 123.
2) a large building: manhood is called foolery, when it stands against a falling f. Cor. III, 1, 247.
Fabulous, 1) fictitious: H8 I, 1, 36. 2) full of. lies: report is f. and false, H6A II, 3, 18.
Face, subst. 1) the visage: Ven. 157. Sonn. 17, 8. Tp. II, 1, 206. III, 1, 49. IV, 173. Gentl. II, 1, 142. III, 1, 103. IV, 4, 72. 160. 190. V, 2, 8. V, 4, 114 etc. etc. to make —s to distort one’s f.: LLL V, 2, 649. Cor. II, 1, 83. Mcb. III, 4, 67. leave thy damnable —s, Hml. III, 2, 263. can any f. of. brass hold longer out? LLL V, 2, 395. I have not the f. to say …, Cor. IV, 6, 116. to put a strange f. on his own perfection, Ado II, 3, 49. if. he break, thou mayst with better f. exact the penalty, Merch. I, 3, 137. turn thy f. in peace, John V, 2, 159 ( depart), so buxom, blithe, and full off. Per. Prol. 23 ( beautiful? or of. a full face, of. a florid appearance?), hadst thou Narcissus in thy f. Ant. II, 5, 96. I’ll tell thee wonders. With that f.? LLL I, 2, 145 (Jaquenetta’s reply, evidently implying doubt), from f. to foot, Cor. II, 2, 112. to f: Ado V, 1, 307. John II, 390. R2 I, 1, 15. H5 V, 2, 30. H8 V, 3, 47. breatheth in her f. Ven. 62; cf. Err. II, 2, 137. H4A II, 4, 214 etc. break it in your. Err. III, 1, 76 ( before your eyes), stand in his f. to contradict his claim, John II, 280. slept in his f. H4A III, 2, 82. laughed in his f. H6C II, 1, 60. look in this gentleman s f. Meas. II, 1, 154. John II, 495 etc. look me in the f. Mids. III, 2, 424. H6A I, 1, 140. Ant. III, 3, 12 etc. he smiled me in the f. H5 IV, 6, 21. pale destruction meets thee in the f. H6A IV, 2, 27. ravish your daughters before your —s, H6B IV, 8, 32. H6C II, 2, 14. II, 6, 39. Caes. V, 3, 35 etc.
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