Ascham
Cited as Ascham. — 21 quotations
Bolden
Ready speakers, being boldened with their present abilities to say more, . . . use less help of diligence and study.
Breeder
Italy and Rome have been the best breeders of worthy men.
Brent
Grapes grow on the brant rocks so wonderfully that ye will marvel how any man dare climb up to them.
Countenance
The election being done, he made countenance of great discontent thereat.
Crook
There is no one thing that crooks youth more than such unlawfull games.
Decline
After the first declining of a noun and a verb.
Haunt
Leave honest pleasure, and haunt no good pastime.
Life
By experience of life abroad in the world.
Meanly
A man meanly learned himself, but not meanly affectioned to set forward learning in others.
Miss
He did without any great miss in the hardest points of grammar.
Odd
The odd man, to perform all things perfectly, is, in my poor opinion, Joannes Sturmius.
Pamphlet
Sir Thomas More in his pamphlet of Richard the Third.
parse
Let him construe the letter into English, and parse it over perfectly.
Rabble
I saw, I say, come out of London, even unto the presence of the prince, a great rabble of mean and light persons.
Shaft
A shaft hath three principal parts, the stele [stale], the feathers, and the head.
Strange
I do not contemn the knowledge of strange and divers tongues.
Stringer
Be content to put your trust in honest stringers.
Weak
A voice not soft, weak, piping, and womanish.
Weed
Wise fathers . . . weeding from their children ill things.
Womanish
A voice not soft, weak, piping, and womanish, but audible, strong, and manlike.
Ywis
She answered me, “I-wisse, all their sport in the park is but a shadow to that pleasure that I find in Plato.”