The Man in the Moone: Or, The English Fortune Teller : from the Unique Copy, Printed in 1609, Preserved in the Bodleian LibraryJames Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps Percy Society, 1609 - 56 pages |
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Common terms and phrases
amongst answered Mockso apparell barber-surgeon beautie beleeve belly betide blacke pots body breath breefe chastitie Cibi commeth conceit concupiscence creature deede detestation diseases divell doth dranke drinke drunkard drunkennesse dublet enemie entereth to know Extortioner face faire fashion feare fellow Fido follie forsooth fortune-teller Fortune-teller's oration gallant gate gentleman Glutton goeth gotten hang head hee hath herselfe honest honour husband idlenesse Jealous kindnesse knocked know his fortune labour lascivious leafe leane lilly live looke looketh Lover lust maketh marriage master May-pole meat minde miserable Mockso describeth Mockso describing myselfe naturall necke never Opinion pale Parasite perswade pleasure Prodigall Quod requitall rich runne sawce Serving-man serving-men shal shame shee shew shunne sinne smoake solitarinesse spaniell swade tell thee thereof thinke thou tobacko Tobackonist unto usurers usury vertuous villanie virgine wagges walked wandring Wanton Wife wasteth whatsoever wicked woman words yourselfe