-
translating into
Englishe a man very mete. For the use of
these two
wordes in
aunswering a
question is this. No
aunswereth the
question framed by the affirmative...
- that is to saie,
prompte saiynges.
First gathered by Erasmus:
Philippus aunswered, that the
Macedonians wer
feloes of no fyne
witte in
their termes but...
-
Rightes and
Liberties of the Subjectes: with the
Kinges Majesties Royall Aunswere thereunto in full Parliament.
Sunday Observance Act 1627 (repealed) 3 Cha...
-
Rightes and
Liberties of the Subjectes: with the
Kinges Majesties Royall Aunswere thereunto in full Parliament.
Citation 3 Cha. 1. c. 1
Introduced by Edward...
-
grossely bestowed,
neither doth the
substance of his
workes sufficiently aunswere the
subtiltie of his titles. By the 19th century, the
Confessio was regarded...
-
prick The
hartes of kinges, then
there is no remorce, But oftentimes, to
aunswere theire desire, The
subjectes feele both famine,
sworde and fire. A version...
- counter-poyson,
modestly written for the time, to make
aunswere to the
obiections and reproaches,
wherein the
aunswere to the Abstract,
would disgrace the holy discipline...
-
those who made the rent. Cox gave him no
further trouble. His 'Apologie or
Aunswere' is in 'A
Parte of a Register' (1593), p. 86 sq. On the
appearance of the...
-
constituendam Ecclesiæ
Pontificiae ἀποστασίαν collecta, London, 1583. An
aunswere to a
certaine Booke,
written by M.
William Rainoldes ...
entituled A Re****ation...
- England's
greatest enemy.
According to
Richard Grafton's chronicle: The king
aunswered by
these wordes: Well, we do
consider that our
people and
Commons go about...