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CliffsNotes Study Guides offer free help on a variety of academic subjects, such as literature, science, math, language, and more. Our Literature Notes include summaries, commentaries, essays on themes and plots, character analyses, quote explanations, and more. We also offer college and test prep resources.

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yeoman farmer or holder of the freehold to a property. These men were in effect landed gentry. (King Henry IV, Part 1) frieze: rough cloth. (Othello) frippery: old-clothes shop. (The Tempest) from the main: not the strong. (Julius Caesar) fulsome: fat. (The Merchant of Venice) fust: grow moldy. (Hamlet) credit pacific service union

fustian:

bombastic, ridiculously pompous (when used as an adjective). (Twelfth Night) gage: to bind as by oath or promise; to pledge. (King Henry IV, Part 1) gaged: indebted. (The Merchant of Venice); pledged. (Hamlet) gallow: frighten. (King Lear) galls his kibe: steps on (scrapes) his heel. (Hamlet) gamesome: sportive. (Julius Caesar) credit first service union

gaskins:

breeches. (Twelfth Night) gasted: frightened (as in aghast ). (King Lear) gauntlet: armored glove flung down as a challenge. (King Lear) gentle: noble, or well-born; mild or amiable. (Julius Caesar) get the start: i.e., a head start; the metaphor from the running of a race is carried on in the victor s palm in the next line. (Julius Caesar) card credit mobile service

gib:

tomcat. (Hamlet) give him o er: leave someone alone. (The Tempest) glazed: a combination of glared and gazed. (Julius Caesar) gleek: jest, mock. (Romeo and Juliet) goatish: the goat was frequently used to represent lechery by the Elizabethans. (King Lear) God-den: good evening, a contraction of the fuller God give you a good even. (Romeo and Juliet) card credit discover service

goodyears:

the word is usually taken to refer to the forces of evil, in accordance with the folk tradition of calling evil spirits by innocent names, e.g., little people for goblins. (King Lear) credit public service union

goose:

tailor s iron. (Macbeth) gouts: drops. (Macbeth) grace for grace: favor in return for favor. (Romeo and Juliet) gramercy: many thanks. (The Merchant of Venice) great wheel: the wheel of Fortune, and the great man (King Lear) in decline. (King Lear) green sour ringlets: fairy rings formed by toadstools. (The Tempest) card credit processing service

grise:

degree. (Othello) grizzled: gray. (Hamlet) gross and scope: general conclusion. (Hamlet) gross in sense: perfectly clear. (Othello) groundings: the poorer and less critical section of the audience who stood in the pit. (Hamlet) gudgeon: a fish. (The Merchant of Venice) gull: deceive and trick. (Twelfth Night) center credit service union

guttered:

jagged. (Othello) hams: knees. (Romeo and Juliet) haply: perhaps. (Hamlet) hard construction: uncharitable interpretation. (Twelfth Night) hardiment: hard blows. (King Henry IV, Part 1) harpy: a mythical beast having the head of a woman and the body, wings, and talons of an eagle: supposed to act as an agent of vengeance. (The Tempest) card credit service wireless

hart:

deer, with a pun on heart. (Julius Caesar) have at thee: on guard! (Romeo and Juliet) have old: have a great deal of trouble (a slang term). (Macbeth) hearts of controversy: in rivalry. (Julius Caesar) heath: a waste tract of land. (Macbeth) heat-oppressed: capable of being handled. (Macbeth) credit security service union

heave the gorge:

become nauseated. (Othello) heavy summons: a feeling of heavy drowsiness. (Macbeth) heir-apparent: next in line to the throne. (King Henry IV, Part 1) hests: commands. (The Tempest) hie: hurry. (Julius Caesar) high-lone: quite alone. (Romeo and Juliet) high-sighted: ambitious. (Julius Caesar) credit report service

hilding:

a good-for-nothing. (Romeo and Juliet) hinds: deer. (Julius Caesar) hit together: agree. (King Lear) hob, nob: hit or miss. (Twelfth Night) hold carelessly: think little of someone. (Romeo and Juliet) holidam: originally the holy relics upon which oaths were sworn; by the late 16th century this word was used as a weak asseveration or mild oath. (Romeo and Juliet) blogspot com christian

holp:

archaic form of helped. (Romeo and Juliet) horned man s: cuckold s. (Othello) housewives: hussies. (Othello) hugger-mugger: secret haste. (Hamlet) humour: feeling (of fear); to persuade by flattery; or a mood, temperament, or mist. (Julius Caesar) hunts-up: originally the sound that roused huntsmen, this expression means any morning greeting. (Romeo and Juliet) christian counseling credit

hurlyburly:

the noise and confusion of battle. (Macbeth) husbandry: thrift. (Hamlet) ides: the 15th day of the month. (Julius Caesar) ill-divining: foreboding evil. (Romeo and Juliet) Illyria: a mythical land somewhere in the Mediterranean. (Twelfth Night) impawn d: pledged. (King Henry IV, Part 1) credit federal service union

import:

concern. (Othello) in scarlet, to be: blush. (Romeo and Juliet) incarnadine: turn blood-red. (Macbeth) indign: unworthy. (Othello) ingraft: habitual. (Othello) ingrafted: deep-rooted. (Julius Caesar) insuppressive: unsuppressable, indomitable. (Julius Caesar) intentively: with full attention. (Othello) credit monitoring service

intermit:

hold off. (Julius Caesar) inurn d: buried. (Hamlet) Jacks: fellows (contemptuous). (The Merchant of Venice) jaunce: trudging about. (Romeo and Juliet) jaundice: a symptom of violent passion. (The Merchant of Venice) jealous: in the sense of suspicious. (Julius Caesar) jointress: partner. (Hamlet) credit division service

Jove:

King of the Roman gods. (Romeo and Juliet) jowls: bumps. (Hamlet) kisses Emilia: the usual Renaissance form of social courtesy. (Othello) knapped: knocked. (King Lear); nibbled. (The Merchant of Venice) knits up: straightens out. (Macbeth) knotted and combined locks: i.e., lying together in a mass. (Hamlet) card credit online service

ladybird:

a term of endearment, similar to lamb. (Romeo and Juliet) lay-to: use. (The Tempest) lazar-like: like leprosy. (Hamlet) leasing: the power of telling lies. (Twelfth Night) leman: sweetheart. (Twelfth Night) lethe: in classical mythology Lethe was a river in Hades, the waters of which induced forgetfulness. Here the association is with death generally. (Julius Caesar) consumer counseling credit inc

lief:

soon. (Hamlet) liver: the Elizabethans considered the liver to be the seat of the emotions. (The Merchant of Venice) liver, brain, and heart: the liver vied with the heart as the seat of the bodily passions in the Elizabethan physiology; the brain was to control the exercise of both the affections and the passions. (Twelfth Night) livings: possessions. (The Merchant of Venice) card credit fleet service

loath:

reluctant. (Twelfth Night) loggerheads: numbskulls. (King Henry IV, Part 1) long-ingraffed: long-standing. (King Lear) lown: rascal. (Othello) lym: bloodhound. (King Lear) magnificoes: magnates, great men. (The Merchant of Venice) maidenhead: virginity. (Twelfth Night) make shift: be able to, manage. (The Merchant of Venice) card consolidation credit

makes dainty:

comes shyly. (Romeo and Juliet) malapert: impertinent. (Twelfth Night) marchpane: confectionery made of almond paste, sugar, and marzipan. (Romeo and Juliet) marry: an oath, by (the Virgin) Mary! but in effect no stronger than indeed. (Romeo and Juliet) (Julius Caesar) masterless: abandoned. (Romeo and Juliet) credit free online report

maugre:

despite (Fr. malgre). (Twelfth Night) (King Lear) mazzard: head. (Othello) meet: proper. (Julius Caesar) meetest: fittest. (The Merchant of Venice) meiny: followers, attendants. (King Lear) memento mori: reminder of death (usually a skull). (King Henry IV, Part 1) meshes: net. (The Merchant of Venice) credit federal first service

mewed up to her heaviness:

encased in her grief. (Romeo and Juliet) micher: truant (our colloquial word moocher is derived from this). (King Henry IV, Part 1) miching mallecho: slinking mischief. (Hamlet) might not but: must. (Othello) minion: darling, favorite. (Macbeth) misprision: misunderstanding. (Twelfth Night) consumer credit service

moe:

more. (Julius Caesar) (The Merchant of Venice) moiety competent: sufficient portion. (Hamlet) moo: more. (Othello) mooncalf: monstrosity. (The Tempest) mortal arbitrament: settle a dispute by duelling to the death of one contestant. (Twelfth Night) motion of the liver: the liver was regarded as the seat of the passions. (Twelfth Night) center credit family service

mountebanks:

charlatans who sell quack medicine. (Othello) mouse-hunt: one who runs after women. (Romeo and Juliet) mow: make faces. (The Tempest) much ado: much trouble, fuss. (King Lear) much unfurnished: not ready. (Romeo and Juliet) Mugs: common name for a country bumpkin. (King Henry IV, Part 1) credit reporting service

mushrumps:

mushrooms. (The Tempest) music from the spheres: according to Pythagoras, the universe consisted of eight hollow spheres, inside of which the earth and all the other planets are fixed. The spheres produced a note, each of which combined to produce perfect harmony that is inaudible to the human ear. The earth is at the center of this system. (Twelfth Night) cca credit division service

mute:

slave whose tongue has been removed for security reasons, or silent person. Both mutes and eunuchs were associated with oriental courts. (Twelfth Night) naughty: insolent, wicked. A stronger term for the Elizabethans than for us. (Julius Caesar) new abroach: newly afoot (newly underway). (Romeo and Juliet) night-tripping fairy: it was commonly believed that elves and fairies sometimes exchanged well-favored babies for nasty ones, who were often called changelings. (King Henry IV, Part 1) credit free report service

nimble-footed:

madcap. (King Henry IV, Part 1) nimble-pinioned doves: nimble-winged doves. Doves pulled Venus chariot and were held sacred by her. (Romeo and Juliet) nonce: occasion. (Hamlet) nothing jealous: have no doubt. Frequently used by Elizabethans. (Julius Caesar) nuncle: an abbreviation of mine uncle; intimacies of address such as this were permitted to a licensed fool. (King Lear) card credit customer discover

O proper stuff:

A fine thing this! (Macbeth) occulted: hidden. (Hamlet) odd-even: between night and day. (Othello) o er ears: i.e., underwater. (The Tempest) of general assault: common to all men. (Hamlet) of wax: i.e., as handsome as if he had been modeled in wax, finer than men usually are. (Romeo and Juliet) credit repair report service

on the hip:

at my mercy. (Othello) orb: poetic word for world. (Twelfth Night) ordinary: a tavern. (Julius Caesar) othergates: otherwise (than). (Twelfth Night) out of haunt: away from others. (Hamlet) out of warrant: unjustifiable. (Othello) out: angry. (Julius Caesar) outface them: get the better of them. (The Merchant of Venice) credit legal repair service

overname:

name them over. (The Merchant of Venice) paddock: a toad, as in an attendant spirit that calls a witch when it is time to go on some evil errand. (Macbeth) pale Hecate: Hecate, goddess of the moon and the underworld, was queen of the witches and witchcraft. (Macbeth) palmy: flourishing. (Hamlet) palter: quibble or deceive. (Julius Caesar) cic credit monitoring service

pard or cat o mountain:

leopard. (The Tempest) parle: parley. (Hamlet) patch: clown or fool. (The Merchant of Venice) paunch: stab. (The Tempest) pearl: all that s good in the kingdom. (Macbeth) peize: piece out, delay. (The Merchant of Venice) pennyworths: small quantities (of sleep); pronounced pennorths. (Romeo and Juliet) ccs credit division service

pent-house lid:

the eyelid that resembles a sloped roof. (Macbeth) perdy: from the French par dieu, by God. (King Lear) periwig-pated: bewigged. (Hamlet) perpetual wink: endless sleep; death. (The Tempest) pignuts: peanuts. (The Tempest) plume up: gratify. (Othello) point-devise: to the point of perfection. (Twelfth Night) credit service union worker

poor pennyworth:

only a small quantity. (The Merchant of Venice) portance: behavior. (Othello) possets: a drink made from hot curdled milk, ale, wine, etc., and taken usually on retiring. (Macbeth) posy: inscription inside a ring, often in verse. (The Merchant of Venice) pout st upon: treat with contempt. (Romeo and Juliet) 1st credit service union

practicing upon:

plotting against. (Othello) praetor: magistrate. (Julius Caesar) prate: chatter, gossip. (Macbeth) prick: spur. (Julius Caesar) primy: in its prime, youthful. (Hamlet) princox: PRIN/ce of COX/combs; pert, saucy boy, upstart. (Romeo and Juliet) prithee: I entreat you. (Twelfth Night) card chase credit customer

prodigies:

unnatural events. (Julius Caesar) proof of constancy: test of endurance. (Julius Caesar) proper: belonging. (Julius Caesar) propertied me: made a tool of. (Twelfth Night) prorogued: adjourned (postponed). (Romeo and Juliet) pudder: tumult. (King Lear) puddled: muddied. (Othello) card chase credit service

puling:

whining. (Romeo and Juliet) purblind: quite blind or merely dimsighted. (Romeo and Juliet) is pure innocence: i.e., has the same childlike sincerity. (The Merchant of Venice) purple-hued malt-worm: purplefaced beer-drinkers. (King Henry IV, Part 1) pursy: sensual. (Hamlet) put foil: set it off by contrast. (The Tempest) citi credit monitoring service

put on:

incite. (Othello); reveal. (Julius Caesar) put to silence: a euphemism for executed. (Julius Caesar) put up our pipes: pack up. (Romeo and Juliet) quailing: cowardly giving up. (King Henry IV, Part 1) quaint: the word has various Elizabethan meanings: skillful, ingenious, delicate, elegant. (The Tempest) quick mettle: mentally sharp. (Julius Caesar) credit plus service union

quiddities:

subtle distinctions, hair-splitting. (Hamlet) quilets: quibbles. (Hamlet) quillets: quips. (Othello) rack d: reference to the rack, an instrument of torture. (Twelfth Night) rank garb: gross manner. (Othello) ranker: greater. (Hamlet) rated: upbraided. (Julius Caesar) razes: roots (from Latin, radix root). (King Henry IV, Part 1) credit farm service

reasonable shore:

the shore of reason, the mind. (The Tempest) receiving: sensitive understanding. (Twelfth Night) recks rede: takes no care of his own counsel. (Hamlet) reechy: literally smoky, foul. (Hamlet) reeking: sweating. (King Lear) remembrances: love-tokens. (Hamlet) rest you merry: a colloquial term of farewell, comparable to our All the best! (Romeo and Juliet) 1st credit federal service

reverb no hollowness:

i.e., make no noise, as a hollow vessel does when it is struck. (King Lear) rheumy: moist. (Julius Caesar) rive: split open. (King Lear); split in two. (Julius Caesar) robustious: ranting. (Hamlet) romage: rummage, bustle. (Hamlet) ronyon: a term of abuse or contempt. (Macbeth) credit paychex service tax

rouse:

draught of liquor, bumper, toast. (Hamlet) rump-fed: fed with expensive cuts of meat. (Macbeth) sable silver d: black streaked with white. (Hamlet) sallies: sudden advances in battle. (King Henry IV, Part 1) saws: maxims, aphorisms. (Twelfth Night) scant show well: scarcely appear attractive. (Romeo and Juliet) credit service tax

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