10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «UNRUDE» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
unrude in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
unrude im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: Macbeth. 1873
Read, perhaps, unwraug/ll, or, perhaps, Sh. uses ' unrough ' for mug/1, as Jonson
docs 'unrude' for rude. See Every [Van out qf ln': Humour [vol. ii, p. I32, ed. Gifford,
where, on the phrase ' how the unrude rascal backbites him!' the editor says ...
William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness, 1873
2
The Works: In 9 Volumes. ... containing Eyery man out of his ...
Here's an unthankful spiteful wretch! the good gentleman vouchsafed to make
him his companion, because my husband put him into a few rags, and now see
how the unrude rascal backbites him !' [Aside Deli. Is he no more graced amongst
...
Ben Jonson, William Gifford, 1816
3
Scottish Dictionary and Supplement: In Four Volumes. Suppl. ...
UNRUDE, adj. Vile, impure.] Add; This term is still used in Ayrs., and expl. " Base,
vile, diabolical ; detestable;" as, " unrude bleeries," abominable falsehoods. In
O.E. it occurs in a moral sense, as nearly the same with the modern adj.
Worthless ...
Monk Mason. Read, perhaps, unwrought, or, perhaps, Sh. uses ' unrough ' ioi
rough, as Jonson does ' unrude ' for rude. See Every Man out of his Humour [vol.
ii, p. 132, ed. Gifford, where, on the phrase * how the unrude rascal backbites him
!
William Shakespeare, 2001
5
A Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language ...: ...
Base, vile, diabolical ; detestable □" as, " unrude bleeries," abominable
falsehoods. In O.E. it occurs in a moral sense, as nearly the same with the
modern adj. Worthless. " Here's an unthankfull spitefull wretch ! thegood
gentleman vouchsaft to ...
6
Middle English Dictionary
18/274: Swuch is meiShades read, bet godd. .reat Hwuch se wule beon of pe lut
of his leoueste freond. c!225(?c!200) SWard 10/79: Euch an bereS. .an unrude
raketehe gledread of fure forte. .drahen into inwarde helle hwuch se [Tit: hwuc se]
...
Hans Kurath, Sherman McAllister Kuhn, Robert E. Lewis, 2000
7
Comments on the Last Edition of Shakespeare's Plays
Steevens fays that unrough means smoothfaced, unbearded, but in that sense
the expression would be rather ludicrous ; perhaps we should read unwrought, or
perhaps Shakespeare uses unrough for rough, as Johnson does unrude for rude.
8
Concordances to the Katherine Group, MS Bodley 34, and the ...
7 an unrude ra'ketehe gled-read of fure. forte heoren ant alre binge schupent b' is
god unsehelich. I>e feont be finded ant for"bi b' he is to ure sihde unsehelich in
his ahne cunde. com 7 creap to cn'st bus cleopede. [Ukmseheliche godd e ...
Lorna Stevenson, Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Bob Douglas, 2000
9
A new dictionary of the English language
UN-RUDE, ad. Un seems here to be used as in Unrip, (A. S. On,) aug. and not
neg. j unless we are to take the speaker and not the poet as authority :—" The
unrude rascal backbites him ! . . . Unrude people they are." — B. Jonson. UN-
RUFFLE ...
10
Every Man Out of His Humour
The good gentleman vouchsafed to make him his companion (because my
husband put him into a few rags) and now 90 see how the unrude rascal
backbites him. Deliro. Is he no more graced amongst 'em then, say you?
Macilenu. Faith, like ...
Ben Jonson, Helen Ostovich, 2001