10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «UNPRIZABLE»
Discover the use of
unprizable in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
unprizable and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Dictionary of the Language of Shakspeare
Ignoble; base; ignominious. I have offended reputation,A most unnoble swerving.
Antony and Cleopatra, iii. 11. 349 UNPRIZABLE. UNPERFECTNESS.
Imperfection. One unperfectness shows me another, to make me frankly despise
myself.
2
Pericles. The two noble kinsmen. Venus and Adonis. Lucrece. ...
... sense of” (WARBURTON) : “ Rather, ' not quickened with a new desire of
vengeance, not teeming with revenge' ” (J ormsos) : “ unpregnant of is not
quickened with or [not] having a lively sense of" (Csnnscorr). unprizable, not of
estimation, ...
William Shakespeare, 1877
3
A new study of Shakespeare: an inquiry into the connection ...
That face of his I do remember well : Yet, when I saw it last, it was besmeared As
black as Vulcan, in the smoke of war : A bawbling* vessel, ieas he captain of, For
shallow draught, and bulk unprizable ; Now, mark the name of this " bawbling ...
William Francis C. Wigston, 1884
4
The Works of William Shakespeare
Unprizable, not of estimation, of small account : For shallow draught and bulk
unprizable, iii. 386. unprizable, inestimable, priceless : your brace of unprizable
estimations, viii. 398 (Coles may be cited as illustrating the double meaning of
this ...
William Shakespeare, Alexander Dyce, 1891
... with or [not] having a lively sense of” (CALDECOTT). ' ' unprizable, not of
estimation, of small account: For shallow draught and bulk unprizable, iii. 386.
unprizable, inestimable, priceless: your brace of unprizable estimations, 646 (
Coles may ...
William Shakespeare, Alexander Dyce, 1868
6
Comedies: The merchant of Venice. Love's labour's lost. As ...
For shallow draught and bulk unprizable, With which such scathful grapple did he
make With the most noble bottom of our fleet, That very envy and the tongue of
loss Cry'd fame and honour on him. What's the matter? I Offi. Orsino, this is that ...
William Shakespeare, Sir Thomas Hanmer, Alexander Pope, 1743
7
CliffsComplete Twelfth Night
A bawbling vessel was he captain of, For shallow draught and bulk unprizable,
19–20. 23. 28. 32. 35 40 34. 39. 40. 44. 45 47. 48. 49. four negatives make your
two affirmatives: Feste knows his logic well. He means kissing. troth: truth. grace:
...
William Shakespeare, 2009
8
Shakespeare's Romance of the Word
(1.5.92-97) While the word "unprizable" chiefly means "inestimable" in the
passage, it also has overtones of "worthless." When "a (that way) accomplished
courtier" can with carnal purposes use Post- humus's well-meant words in his
courtship ...
So your brace of unprizable estimations, the one is but frail and the other casual.
A cunning thief, or a that-wayaccomplished courtier, would hazard the winning
both of first and last. 100 POS'I'HL'MUS Your Italy contains none so
accomplished ...
William Shakespeare, Sylvan Barnet, 1996
10
Shakespeare's Non-Standard English: A Dictionary of His ...
4.1.12, Antony); *unmitigable 'irresistible': her most vnmittigable rage, (Tem 1.2.
277, Prospero); unprizable *'not valuable': For shallow draught and bulke
vnprizable, (TN 5.1.51, Orsino), OED Unprizable a.1; unprovident 'wasteful': Who
for thy ...
Norman Blake, Norman Francis Blake, 2006