10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «FAITOR»
Discover the use of
faitor in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
faitor and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: Merchant of Venice ...
If so, Audrey may readily have accepted it as meaning faitor, which is exactly
what Steevens suggested. Faitor means a cheat, a vagabond, a villain. Pistol in 2
Hen. IV: II, iv, 173, says ' Down, down, dogs ! down, faitors !' and in Spenser we ...
William Shakespeare, 1890
2
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: As you like it. 1890
If so, Audrey may readily have accepted it as meaning faitor, which is exactly
what Steevens suggested. Faitor means a cheat, a vagabond, a villain. Pistol in 2
Hen. IV: II, iv, 1 73, says * Down, down, dogs ! down, faitors !' and in Spenser we ...
William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness, Modern Language Association of America, 1891
Faitor means a cheat, a vagabond, a villain. Pistol in 2 Hen. IV: II, iv, 173, says '
Down, down, dogs! down, faitors!' and in Spenser we have ' The false faitor
Scudamore.' If this be the jest, it is not, it must be confessed, side-splitting, but it is
quite ...
William Shakespeare, 1890
4
The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang
faitor. *, see FATER. fake . An action, esp. if illegal; a dodge; a sham (person or
thing): from ca 1825: low. James Greenwood, 1883, 'Naming the house in [this]
ridiculous way was merely a fake to draw attention to it.' For etymology, see the v.,
...
romiu omim; vol cmhs W.E.B. DuBois Writings Nathan Hiiggins, FAitor
Suppression of' the African Slave- Ihuie The Souls of Black Folk Dusk of Dawn
Essays 1360 pages Ralph Waldo Emerson Poetry & Essays Hamid ttloom, FAitor
Poetry ...
6
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: As you like it. 10th ...
Faitor means a cheat, a vagabond, a villain. Pistol in 2 Hen. IV: II, iv, 173, says '
Down, down, dogs ! down, faitors !' and in Spenser we have 'The false faitor
Scudamore.' If this be the jest, it is not, it must be confessed, side-splitting, but it is
quite ...
William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness, Samuel Burdett Hemingway, 1890
7
Quip for an Upstart Courtier
... and brought forth by an over worn refuse, that had spent her youth under the
ruins of Bawbies barn.”3 “O monstrous invective,” quoth I, “what reason have you
to be thus bitter against him?” “Oh, the villain,” quoth he, “is the devil's faitor,4
sent ...
8
Tyburn: London's Fatal Tree
housing and the criminal tendencies and practices of its inhabitants. Soon after
gaining Holborn itself, Fetter Lane was passed on the left. The origins of this
name may have been from the Old French faitor, a lawyer, because of the
numbersof ...
Alan Brooke, David Brandon, 2013
9
Le Morte Darthur : The Winchester Manuscript
But this faitor with his prophecy hath mocked me.' All that did Merlin, for he knew
well that and King Lot had been with his body at the first battle, King Arthur had
been slain and all his people distressed. And well Merlin knew the one of the ...
Thomas Malory, Helen Cooper, 1998
10
A Few Specimens of the Ars Logica Copleiana, Or, ...
down faitor ! Hold hook and line" (sajs he) " Down! down dogs ! down faitors ?
Have we not Hirenhere?"!! If Pythagoras could start up and give lectures in
London, he'd certainly find out, that ancient Pistol had turned {ergeant at law.
Butmaugre ...