Do we say rogue or rouge

rogue 931 occurrences

Where have you hid the Fiddles, you Rogue? Scar.

Yes, Rogue, yes, for which I'll have thy Life.

Tell me, and tell me quickly, Rogue, who were those Traitors that were hid but now in the Disguise of a piece of Hangings.

Oh, Rogue! have I found you? Har.

So, so, all things go gloriously forward, but my own Amour, and there is no convincing this obstinate Woman, that 'twas that Rogue Harlequin in Disguise, claim'd me; so that I cannot so much as come to deliver the young Ladies their Letters from their Lovers.

That I shou'd not know that Rogue Harlequin.

Are not you a damn'd Rogue to put these Tricks upon me, and most dishonourably break all Articles between us? Har.

I'll warrant you some Rogue that has some Plot on my Niece and Daughter.

I'll leave the Rogue to his own Management.

The first English translation (by James Mabbe) of Aleman's famous romance is, indeed, entitled The Rogue, and it had as running title The Spanish Rogue.

The first English translation (by James Mabbe) of Aleman's famous romance is, indeed, entitled The Rogue, and it had as running title The Spanish Rogue.

This curious phrase, which is both distorted cant and canine, would appear to mean 'your rogue's phiz'.

" The friar sat him down in the shade of the willows and sighing, mopped his face again; quoth he: "Now may the curse of Saint Augustine, Saint Benedict, Saint Cuthbert and Saint Dominic light upon him for a lewd fellow, a clapper-claw, a thieving dog who hath no regard for Holy Churchforsooth a most vicious rogue, monstrum nulla virtute redemptum a vitiis!

Yet, my son, hereby the mercy of heaven is a treasure the rogue hath overlooked, a pasty most rarely seasoned that I had this day from my lord's own table.

Feed a murderer, a rogue banned by Holy Church, a serf that hath raised hand 'gainst his lord?

He should have hanged when the witch his daughter burned, but that Sir Pertolepe, with most rare mercy, gave to the rogue his life.

"Thou art either rogue or fool!" BELTANE.

" "Nay," answered Beltane, "first let us reason together, let us hark to the wisdom of Folly and grow wise" "Ha, Roger!" cried one of the men, "tap me this tall rogue on his golden mazzard!"

" Now at this some laughed and some growled, and one stood forth before his fellows staring upon Beltane 'neath close-drawn, grizzled brows: "'Tis a rogue, and shall dance for us upon a string!" laughed he.

So hie thee hence with the hangman and save thy rogue's skin.

" "Lord, 'tis what they call a Pardoner, that dealeth in relics, mouldy bones and the like, see you, whereby they do pretend to divers miracles and wonders" "Verily, verily," nodded the little man placidly, "I have here in my wallet a twig from Moses' burning bush, with the great toe of Thomas a' Didymus, the thumb of the blessed Saint Alban" "Ha, rogue!"

I felt like the Arab who owned the rarest mare in the desert, but who was coming up with the thief who had stolen her, himself riding an inferior beast, and all because the rogue did not understand the secret of making the mare do her best.

A rogue himself, Mr. Daggett was afraid I might get rid of my personal property before he could issue an execution by the regular mode; and he anticipated frightening or constraining me into an arrangement.

Mr. Daggett will keep me here a few weeks; when he finds I am employing agents to sell my effects, I fancy he is sufficiently a rogue himself to apprehend the money will get beyond the reach of his execution, and he will offer to compromise.

What his own apprehensions were, till she hauled up her ports and hoisted her proper colors, is uncertain; but then, being perfectly convinced, he slipped his cable, got under sail, ordered his men to arms without any show of timidity, dropping a first-rate oath, that it was a bite, but at the same time resolved, like a gallant rogue, to get clear or die.

rouge 404 occurrences

The Turks had got an immensely strong position about Talat ed Dumm, the 'Mound of Blood,' where stands a ruined castle of the Crusaders, the Chastel Rouge.

Yet with talents like these, and an excellent heart, The man had his failings, a dupe to his art: Like an ill-judging beauty his colours he spread, And beplastered with rouge his own natural red; On the stage he was natural, simple, affecting 'Twas only that when he was off he was acting.

The next morning my new owners smeared their faces with rouge, and painted their eyes with black grease; then they dressed themselves in white tunics, and set their wretched goddess on my back, and marched out, leaping and brandishing great swords and axes.

The most vivid picture we have of the vices of the leading classes of Roman society are painted by a contemporaneous Pagan historian,Ammianus Marcellinus,and many a Christian matron adorned herself with the false and colored hair, the ornaments, the rouge, and the silks of the Pagan women of the time of Cleopatra.

They reminded him of the hole through which he had looked out on the plague-stricken cabin at the Maison de Mort Rouge, and he guessed that through them came what little fresh air found its way into the dungeon.

The Federals fight with heroic courage at the Mont-Parnasse Station, the Rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs, and the Croix-Rouge; from the corners of the streets, from the windows, from the balconies proceed shots rarely ineffective.

He went to the council of the Château Rouge, whither General Lecomte was about to be taken, and made himself conspicuous by the persistency with which he called for the death of that general.

The white ladies dress fashionably, generally à la Françoise; have straight figures, and with the help of a little cotton, judiciously disposed, and sometimes, the smallest possible portion of rouge, contrive to look rather interesting; in general, they are lamentably deficient in tournure and en-bon-point.

POURPRE, couleur rouge; riche étoffe rouge.

POURPRE, couleur rouge; riche étoffe rouge.

ROUGE, qui est de la couleur du sang.

ROUGIR, rendre ou devenir rouge.

ROUGISSANT, E, qui devient rouge.

© 22Sep22, A681938. R58304, 2Feb50, Herman C. Martens (E) LA DANSEUSE ROUGE, pièce en 4 actes et un epilogue y compris l'acte que l'auteur a supprimé, pour la representation de Charles Henri Hirsch.

SEE La danseuse rouge.

It was an imposing sight, with thousands of steel-helmeted figures sac au dos et bayonnette au canon, marching and counter-marching in the cold sunshine, looking in the distance more like troops of Louis XIII than an evolution from the French conscript of the ante-bellum days of the pantalon rouge.

Mais il ajoute que, le jour de la fête du saint l'accés du rocher et de la chapelle reste libre; que l'Océan y forme, comme fit la Mer rouge, au temps de Moise, deux grands murs, entre lesquels on peut passer à pied sec; et que ce miracle, que n'a lieu que ce jour-, dure tout le jour.

Elles sont, pour l'écriture, de la même main que le voyage de la Brocquière; mais quoique des trois ouvragés celui-ci ait du paroître avant les deux autres, tout trois cependant, soit par economie de reliure, soit par analogie de matières, ont été réunis ensemble; et ils forment ainsi un gros volume in-folio, numéroté 514, relié en bois avec basane rouge, et intitulé au dos, Avis directif de Brochard.

No. 319, couvert en basane rouge.

She has not yet put on her cap, but her grey hair is profusely powdered; and, with no other garments than a short under petticoat and a corset, she stands for the edification of all who pass, putting on her rouge with a stick and a bundle of cotton tied to the end of it.

Alternately dissolute and cruel, gay and vindictive, the Parisian vaunts amidst debauchery the triumph of assassination, and enlivens his midnight orgies by recounting the sufferings of the massacred aristocrates: women, whose profession it is to please, assume the bonnet rouge [red cap], and affect, as a means of seduction, an intrepid and ferocious courage.

In every place where there are half a dozen houses is planted an unthriving tree of liberty, which seems to wither under the baneful influence of the bonnet rouge.

Perhaps the bishop's wife received a young woman who smoked cigarettes, and asked her hostess for rouge, and the publican's wife received a countess.

I often think that I ought to play nothing but rouge et noir.

"See what foreign education does!" cried a Mandarin de Grandissime of the Baton Rouge Coast.

Do we say   rogue   or  rouge