by Corry Shores
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[Literature Entry Directory]
[Shakespeare Entry Directory]
alarum. alarm, n.
Forms: 4-7 alarme, 6-7 all arme, 7 all-arm, all' army, 6- alarm. Also: 4 alarom, 6 alarome, 7 allarum, 6- alarum. I. As a phrase. 1. int. An exclamation meaning ‘To arms!’ Obs. 3. quasi-n. The call to arms, whether by using the exclamation alarme! or by any equivalent means. With cry, lilt, sound, blow, strike, etc. Obs. II. As n. with pl. 4. a. A call to arms; a signal calling upon men to arm. alarums (or alarms) and excursions, a stage-direction occurring in slightly varying forms in Shakes. Hen. VI and Rich. III (e.g. 3 Hen. VI, v. ii. init.); hence used playfully by recent writers for: skirmishing, confused fighting or onsets, sudden divagations, etc.
belike, adv.
caitiff, n.
Jack, n.1
2. a. (As a common noun.) A man of the common people; a lad, fellow, chap; esp. a low-bred or ill-mannered fellow, a ‘knave’. Obs. 1596 Shakes. Tam. Shr. II. i. 290 A mad-cap ruffian and a swearing Iacke
lour'd. lour, lower, v.
1. intr. Of persons, their eyes, countenances, etc.: To frown, scowl; to look angry or sullen. Also, to be depressed or mournful. Const. at, on, upon; rarely in indirect passive. b. quasi-trans. To express by frowning. 2. transf. and fig. Chiefly of the clouds, sky, a tempest, etc.: To look dark and threatening. Const. on, over, upon. 3. Chiefly Sc. To crouch, lurk, skulk. Obs.
mew'd. mew, v.3
prate, n.
The act or action of prating; talk; (in later use esp.) idle, profitless, or irrelevant talk; chatter, prattle; (also) an instance of this.
tetchy, techy, a.
1. Easily irritated or made angry; quick to take offence; short-tempered; peevish, irritable; testy
tush, int. (n.3)
An exclamation of impatient contempt or disparagement.
vizard, n.
yon, dem, a., and pron.
1. A demonstrative word used in concord with a n. to indicate a thing or person as (literally, or sometimes mentally) pointed out: cf. THATdem. adj. 1. Formerly often, as still in some dialects, simply equivalent to that (those); but chiefly, and in later literary use almost always, referring to a visible object at a distance but within view: = ‘that (those)...over there’.
*Entries from the Oxford English Dictionary
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