Page:Arte or Crafte of Rhethoryke - 1899.djvu/118

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��THE ARTE OR CRAFTE OF RHETHORYKE

��Nother (A) ; neyther (B) 46 : 25 nother .... nother = neither .... nor, 46 : 25; 49 : 34

Noughty 75 : 15 bad

Offyce, i. <?., duty (one of the " places " of Rhetoric) 51 13

On slepe 42 : 16 (to fall on slepe)

Ones 42 : 6 ; 52 : 8, etc., once

Oppresse 81 : 13 suppress, cover over

Oppressyd 78 : 13 repressed

Opyn 44 : 17; 53 : 32 plain, manifest

Or 42 : 13 ; or euer 42 : 27 ere

Orestes 82

Other (A) eyther (B) 47 : 17 either

Ought = owed 69 14.

Oiiide 71 (his " Metamorphosy " ) ; Epis- tles 76, 78

Parentele 57 : 14 ; 59 : 27 parentage

Penury 61 : 6 ("p. of wheat") dearth

Peregerine or straunge prohemes 52 : 26, foreign (Lat. Peregrina exordia)

Pernicion 56 : 18 destruction, severe punishment

Persuadible (B) ; Parsuadyble (A) 41 : 28 that which persuades, or is concerned with persuasion

Phrenesy 72 : n frenzy, madness

Placys 44 : 3 f. the Places or Topica of Rhetoric ; 44 : 8, 22, etc. 45 : 18 ("the places or instruments of a theme"). Cf. Wilson fol. 7a, 5oa, 62f, etc.

Plato 46, 54

Plato for Pluto 53

Playnes (A) ; playnnes (B) 44 : 30 ; plainness

Plutarche, his " Lives " 56

Poetes fayne and lye 53

Pointment 62 : 2 an agreement, ap- pointment

Policiane 57, 65, 66

Porcyus Cato 67

Pose 84:18; 85:2 to put the case, suppose

Poynte 73:3 to appoint

Preamble 50 : 10 f.

Preface 72 : 24. See Proeme

Prepensyd 41:23 considered before- hand

��Prepose (A) ; purpose (B) 42 : 3 propose

Pretenced 78 : 24 intended

Preuent 73 : 12 to secure in advance

Priuate 84 : 27 to deprive

Proeme 51:32; 52:24 preamble, ex- ordium proheme 52 : 3 etc.

Proposicion (in Rhetoric) 63 f.

Proposion 65 :g, 18; 68 : 12 for propo- sition

Propriete (A) = Property (B) 43 : 17 ; 75 : 31, etc., faculty, virtue

Purgacion (in Rhetoric) 80 : 37

Pyked 53 : 16, pointed, peaked ; 76 :35 picked

Pynchynge 51:29 to accuse, blame. Orig. Lat. perstringere

Quenes 76 : 36 queans, wenches

Raciocination 77 : 32 f.; 78 : 17 f. Redman (Robert], the printer 88 Redyng, town of 41 Refell 84 : 4 to refute Refellynge 71:4 refuting Reioyse 52 : 8 joy, cause of rejoicing Remocion of the faute 82 : 8 f. Reprouynge 58 : 4 disproving. See Improue

Saluste 56, 66, 81

Sceuola, Caius Mucius 61 f.

Seiunction 74 f., a part of " Diuision "

Selden 63 : 2 seldom

Sene 53 :28, scene, drama

Sensible 42 : i perceptible

Seruisable 41:16 prepared for render- ing service

Soilynge 64:10; 71:4, refuting or impugning

Somdele 54 : 18, etc., somewhat

Speces (A) ; spices (B) 44 : 33 ; 47 : 8 Species, or " kindes of oracions "

State (in Rhetoric) 71 f. etc. Lat. status, Gr. ffrdvis, the character of the case as determined by the nature of the proposition on which issue is joined. Cf. Wilson 48 b (for defini- tion)

Statute (v.t.) 46:16 ("to make or statute laws ")

Stegie, for Styx 53 : 31

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