16 adverbs to describe how to speake

Fetch me his head; he nere shall speake againe.

'tis fitt for groomes, not men magnanimous, to be so bashfull: speake boldly to them, that like cannon shott your breath may batter; you would hardly dare to take in townes and expugne fortresses, that cannot demolish a paltry woman.

You have here a New Booke; I can speake it clearely; for of all this large Volume of Comedies and Tragedies, not one, till now, was ever printed before.

Marry, who fyrst shall speake.

La. You speake Gloriously; the condition that assures Your pardon, 's only thisthat you conclude Here all your loose desires with a resolve Never to prosecute or hope to enjoy me.

2. And to speake indifferently, it is the hangman's Budget; and because he thought too much of his labour to set this head upon the bridge, and the legs upon the gates, he flings them into the streete for men to stumble at, but If I get him in my boate, Ile so belabour him in a stretcher, that he had better be stretcht in one of his owne halfepeny halters.

O how learnedly could I speake now, might I have licence!

The second clause, a warning against being too much carried away by excitements of play, is rendered by Hawkins, "Contend not, nor speake louder than thou maist with moderation;" and in the Washington MS., "affect not to Speak Louder than ordenary.

[Sidenote: right of] Speake lowdly for him.

I can speake no lower unlesse

"Poesie," writes Sidney, "therefore is an arte of imitation, for so Aristotle termeth it in his word Mimesis, that is to say, a representing, counterfeiting, or figuring forth: to speake metaphorically, a speaking picture."

Fetch me his head; he nere shall speake againe.

I speake perchance like a prophetique foole, But these are wise can counsaile with your bride; Wisedome adviseth timely to provide.

that highly [Sidenote: praysd,] (not to speake it prophanely) that neyther hauing the accent of Christians, nor the gate of Christian, Pagan, or Norman, haue so strutted and bellowed, [Sidenote: Pagan, nor man, haue] that I haue thought some of Natures Iouerney-men had made men, and not made them well, they imitated Humanity so abhominably.

[Sidenote: 234] showing: indeede to speake sellingly of him, hee is the card or kalender[10] of gentry: for you shall find in him the continent of what part a Gentleman would see.

Why, true; And other of thy blindnesses thou seest[?] Such one to love thou dar'st not speake unto.

16 adverbs to describe how to  speake  - Adverbs for  speake