Page:The Sources of Standard English.djvu/222

Rh Ho haþ made þy chylde so blody? — Page 24. For ho so haunteþ comunly, &c. — Page 42. Þou mayst be wroþe sum body to chastyse. — Page 120. Þat of þe Iewes seye sum oun. — Page 294. He shulde be cumbrede sumwore. — Page 301. One of þys dayys shul &#x0293;e deye. — Page 105. Sum tyme was ones a Iew. — Page 241. And sette at no&#x0293;t þat he hadde told. — Page 242. Nat only for soules ys he herde, But also for, &c. — Page 324. Oftyn tyme a foule þo&#x0293;t, &c. — Page 388. Of gentyl men, þyr are but fo. — Page 270. Men sey, and have seyde here before. — Page 102. For yn as moche þat she douþ men synne, Yn so moche shal she have plyghte ynne, — Page 110. For to reyse þe devyl yn dede. — Page 12. As weyl as for soules yn purgatorye. — Page 110. Þarfore he þat ys ones baptysede. Ones for ever ys. — Page 300. To helpe chyldryn yn many kas Men wete never what nede one has. — Page 297. The dede mevede hys hede to and fro. — Page 74. Yn every sykenes aake hyt al weys. — Page 348. Men askede hym why he þedyr &#x0293;ede, Syn he was an holy man yn dede. — Page 246. A party hyt halpe þer un to. — Page 322. Þe þornes prykkede, the netles dyde byte. — Page 234. Alle þat we do jangle, þe fende doþe wryte. — Page 287. Y dar weyl seye þou hym dyffamest. — Page 361.