10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HARDOKE»
Discover the use of
hardoke in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hardoke and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
... was met even now with null; fum-t; smgmg '1l°"d 3 inks'. hem] lker» Blld furrow
weeds, °° , uettles, cuckoo-flowers, rd \ m"'l The folio has “Hardoke " ' Bgvmd ;, _ _
5. the qnartns “horurlockn clung Hue following line! Darnel, and all the idle ...
William Shakespeare, Howard Staunton, John Gilbert, 1860
2
The Dictionary of Shakespeare Words
Hardiment - (HARD-ih-ment) an obsolete word meaning an act of great valor,
bravery, or courage. Such deeds are the type that earn great rewards from those
in command. Hardoke - (HARD-ohk) a type of plant or weed. One of a number of
...
BookCaps, BookCaps Study Guides Staff, 2011
3
The Works of Shakespeare ....: King Lear, ed. by W.J. Craig
/mr-doeks] I print “ hor-docks,” the Quarto form, which is clearly the same word as
the Folio Hardoke, z'. e. probably the hoar or white dock. The New Eng. Dict,
following a suggestion of R. Prior in his Popular1Vames af .Brz'tz'sh Plants, 1879,
...
William Shakespeare, William James Craig, Robert Hope Case, 1905
4
Stockholm Studies in English
Seven of the names listed above are first recorded in Shakespeare, viz. cuckoo-
bud, Dian's bud, hardoke/hordock, hebenon /hebona, kecksy, long purples and
dead men's fingers. Other names first evidenced in Shakespeare are eryngo (for
...
5
Shakespeare's Plays: With His Life
NE IV. " With HOAR-DOCKS" — So one quarto ; another has it hor-ilocks ; and
the folio prints it hardoke» ; bnt it is no doubt the same word. The "hoar-dock," u
Sevens informs us, is the dock with whitish woolly leave«. Some commentators
read ...
William Shakespeare, Gulian Crommelin Verplanck, John Payne Collier, 1847
6
Shakespearean plant names: identifications and interpretations
A plant name harlock seems however to be unrecorded in modern dialects (see
Orton-Dieth and Orton- Wright; but cf. Wright). For Harlock as a surname (<OE har
'grey'+loc), see Reaney, p. 166. It is not very plausible that hardoke and ...
7
The Chambers Dictionary
[OE hard (heard); Du hard. Ger hart. Gothic hardus: allied to Or kratys strong]
hard2 hard. (Spenser and Scut) form of heard (see under hear). harden1, etc.
hardish. hardly, hardness. See hard1. harden2 Sec hards hardoke har'dok, (
Shakesp ...
8
The Chambers Crossword Dictionary, 3rd edition
... importune, wearisome 10 chargeable, oppressive 11 importunate, troublesome
burdock 04 gobo 05 clote 07 clotbur, hardoke 08 clotebur 09 cocklebur bureau
04 desk 06 agency, branch, office 07 counter, service 08 division 10 department,
...
9
Shakespeare's Words: A Glossary and Language Companion
... /I findin hardness;Cym III.vi.21 2 difficulty of understanding Cym V.v.432 [
Posthumus toLucius,of the letter leftby Jupiter] whose containing / Issofromsense
inhardness, that I can / Make no collection of it hardoke(n.) burdock(n.) hardruled(
adj.) ...
David Crystal, Ben Crystal, 2004
10
The Temple Shakespeare
BUR-DUCKs, the plant A rctrum Lap/in; (Hanmer's emendation; Qq., “ lmrdocks";
Ff. !, 2, “Hardoke:"; Fl'. 3, 4, “Ilardoeke” ; Farmer conj. 1778, “ harlorks “ ; Collier.
Steeveus conj. “ hour-docks "); IV. iv. 4,. B0'r, only; IV. vi. “8. :65 not come to an ...
William Shakespeare, Sir Israel Gollancz, 1895