10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ASINICO»
Discover the use of
asinico in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
asinico and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Works of Shakespeare ....: Troilus and Cressida, ed. by ...
Assinico] Asinico Q, Ff. 41. ;Sun] pound. Compare Heywood, 1 Edward IV. vol.
i. p. 19 (Pearson's Reprint) : “ Cavallero Spicing, the maddest slave that ever
pund spice in a mortar”; P. Holland's Plinie, book xix. p. 4, ed. 1634 : “they are to
be ...
William Shakespeare, William James Craig, Robert Hope Case, 1906
2
The Tragedie of Troylus and Cressida
I, do, do, thou sodden- witted Lord: thou hast no more braine then I have in mine
elbows: An Asinico may tutor thee. Thou scurvy valiant Asse, thou art heere but to
thresh Troyans, and thou art bought and solde a- mong those of any wit, like a ...
William Shakespeare, Charlotte Endymion Porter, Helen Archibald Clarke, 1910
3
The Works of William Shakespeare: Much ado about nothing. ...
Ay, do, do ; thou sodden-witted lord ! thou hast no more brain than I have in mine
elbows ; an asinico may tutor thee : thou scurvy- valiant ass ! thou art here but to
thrash Trojans ; 5o and thou art bought and sold among those of any wit, like a ...
William Shakespeare, Charles Harold Herford, 1904
4
The Works of Shakespeare
Ay, do, do ; thou sodden-witted lord ! thou hast no more brain than I have in mine
elbows ; an asinico may tutor thee : thou scurvy- valiant ass ! thou art here but to
thrash Trojans ; 5o and thou art bought and sold among those of any wit, like a ...
William Shakespeare, Charles Harold Herford, 1904
5
The Arden Edition of the Works of William Shakespeare
... in mine elbows ; an assinico may tutor thee, thou 31,32. When . . . another]
Omit Ff. 40. Ajax. Cobloaf I] Ajax Cob- lofe Q (in italics as part of Thersites' speech
). 48. Assinico] Asinico Q, Ff. 31. incursions] encounters with the 41. pun} pound.
William Shakespeare, William H. Craig, 1906
6
Folk-lore of Shakespeare
Dyce3 would spell the word " asinico," because it is so spelled in the old editions
of Shakespeare, and is more in accordance with the Spanish word.3 In "King
Lear" (i. 4), the Fool alludes to /Esop's celebrated fable of the old man and his ass
: ...
Thomas Firminger Thiselton Dyer, 1884
7
The works of William Shakespeare
Aspects, influence; I. iii. 92. Assinego, ass (Quarto, Folios, "Asinico"; Singer conj. "
asnico ") ; II. i. 48. Assubjugate, bring into subjection, debase; II. iii. 194. Attach' d,
"be a. with," have a feeling of; V. 148 TROILUS AND CRESSIDA Glossary. ...
William Shakespeare, 1901
8
The Shakespeare Cyclopædia and New Glossary: With the Most ...
From the Spanish asinico= a little ass. askance, vb. To cause to turn aside. Lucr.
637. askance, adv. Awry; with sidelong glance. V. and A. 342. aspect. Now
always used as nearly synonymous with appearance. Sh. uses it to express the
act of ...
9
The Tragedie of Troylus and Cressida, by William Shakespeare
I, do, do, thou sodden-witted Lord: thou hast no more braine then I have in mine
elbows: An Asinico may tutor thee. Thou scurvy valiant Asse, thou art heere but to
thresh Troyans, and thou art bought and solde among those ofany wit, like a ...
William Shakespeare, Charlotte Endymion Porter, Helen Archibald Clarke, 1910
10
Shakespeare's Non-Standard English: A Dictionary of his ...
(Ham 5.1.12–13, 48, Clown), Argo, their thred oflife is spun. (2H6 4.2.31, Bevis);
cf. DSUE argy-bargy; *asinego Span. asinico 'a little ass' hence 'fool': An Asinico
may tutor thee. Thou scuruy valiant Asse, (TC 2.1.46, Thersites), GTSW assinego
...