«CURSELARIE» தொடர்புடைய ஆங்கிலம் புத்தகங்கள்
பின்வரும் புத்தக விவரத்தொகுப்புத் தேர்ந்தெடுப்பில்
curselarie இன் பயன்பாட்டைக் கண்டறியுங்கள்.
curselarie தொடர்பான புத்தகங்கள் மற்றும் ஆங்கிலம் இலக்கியத்தில் அதன் பயன்பாட்டுச் சூழலை வழங்குவதற்கு அதிலிருந்து பெறப்பட்ட சுருக்கமான சாரங்களைத் தொடர்புபடுத்துகின்றன.
1
New Readings in Shakespeare
C. J. Sisson. probable that it is mere inadvertence on the part of Shakespeare, or
of the compositor. Pistol is speaking. And in 2.1.33 we have 'Nor shall my Nell
keep lodgers'. READ: my Nell 2.77 I haue but with a curselarie eye Most editors ...
2
Early Modern Playhouse Manuscripts and the Editing of ...
... “Noblish” for “noblest,” “mixtfull” for “my full” or “mistful,” “curselarie” for “
cursitory”), and the Second Quarto of Hamlet (“concliue” for “conjunctive,” “cull-
cold” for “cold,” “massene” for “mazzard,” “histy” for “yeasty,” “trennowed” for “
winnowed”).
... has also proposed some misreadings of e for minims: 2.1.32 'hewne' for 'here',
2.3.21 'vp-peer'd' for 'upward', 3.8.12 'postures' for 'pasterns', 4.0.20 'creeple' for '
cripple', 5.2.45 'Femetary' for 'fumitory', and 5.2.77 'curselarie' for 'cursitory'.
William Shakespeare, Andrew Gurr, 2005
4
The First Quarto of King Henry V
'Tis easier for me to conquer the kingdom than to speak so much more French.
KATE Ah, your Majesty has false French enough to deceive. i5 \ur-stun ] Qi;
cursorary Q3, curselarie F i6 O'cniewed them] QI; O' re-glanced the Articles F i8
return ...
William Shakespeare, Andrew Gurr, 2000
5
The Complete Works of Shakespeare (40 Works)
I haue but with a curselarie eye O'reglanc't the Articles: Pleaseth your Grace To
appoint some of your Councell presently To sit withvs once more,with betterheed
Toresuruey them;we will suddenlyPasse our accept and peremptorie Answer ...
William Shakespeare, 2012
6
Comedies, Histories and Tragedies; Published According to ...
I haue but with a curselarie eye O're-glanc't the Articles : Pleaseth your Grace To
appoint some of your Councell presently To sit with vs once more, with better
heed To re-suruey them; we will suddenly Passe our accept and peremptorie ...
William Shakespeare, 1623
7
The Chambers Dictionary
[OE cursian, from curs a curse; ety doubtful; not connected with cross] curselarie.
cursenary See cursorary under cursor. cursitor kur'si-tjr. n a clerk or officer in the
Court of Chancery who made out original writs de cursu, ie of ordinary course; ...
8
The Chronicle History of Henry the Fifth: Reprint of First ...
I haue but with a curselarie eye O're-glanc't the Articles : Pleafeth your Grace To
appoint some of your Councell presently To sit with vs once more, with better
heed To re-furuey them; we will suddenly Passe our accept and peremptorie ...
William Shakespeare, Brinsley Nicholson, 1875
9
New Readings in Shakespeare
Charles Jasper Sisson. probable that it is mere inadvertence on the part of
Shakespeare, or of the compositor. Pistol is speaking. And in 2.1.33 we nave 'Nor
shall my Nell keep lodgers'. read: my Nell 2.77 / haue but with a curselarie eye
Most ...
Charles Jasper Sisson, 1961
10
The Life of Henry the Fift
I haue but with a curselarie eye O're-glanc't the Articles: Pleaseth your Grace To
appoint some of your Councell presently To sit with vs once more, with better
heed To re-suruey them; we will suddenly Passe our accept and peremptorie ...
William Shakespeare, 1863