- John Heywood's A
Dialogue Conteinyng the
Nomber in
Effect of all the
Prouerbes in the
Englishe Tongue (c. 1538),
while Queen Elizabeth I
referred to...
- 'pig' P4 Heywood, John (1555). Two
hundred Epigrammes, vpon two
hundred prouerbes, with a
thyrde hundred newly added.
Archived from the
original on 11 Mar...
- John Heywood's A
dialogue Conteinyng the
Nomber in
Effect of All the
Prouerbes in the
Englishe Tongue from 1546, as "wolde you
bothe eate your cake,...
- word had
begun to mean
specifically a female: 1546 J.
Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng.
Tongue i. x. sig. D, 'The boy thy husbande, and thou the
gyrle his...
- John
Heywood in "A
Dialogue Conteinyng the
Nomber in
Effect of All the
Prouerbes in the
Englishe Tongues"); It's best To let a
sleeping mastiff rest (1681...
- the Flie (1556) A
Dialogue Conteinyng the
Nomber in
Effect of All the
Prouerbes in the
Englishe Tongue,
Compacte in a
Matter Concernyng Two
Maner of Mariages...
- coutumières: Ou
manuel de pluſieurs & diuerſes reigles, ſentences, &
Prouerbes tant
anciens que
modernes du
Droict Couſtumier & plus
ordinaire de la...
- Jean Molinet,
Faictz Dictz D., v768). "The French-men haue a
military prouerbe; 'The
losse of a nayle, the
losse of an army'. The want of a
nayle looseth...
- John
Florio published Firste Fruites which yeelde familiar speech,
merie prouerbes,
wittie sentences, and
golden sayings. Also a
perfect induction to the...
-
Philosophers touchinge sundrye morall matters in Poesies, Preceptes,
Prouerbes, and Parables,
translated and
collected out of
divers aucthours into English...