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Kitchen & Home | Mixers & Attachments | Kenwood | Kitchen & Dining. This handy, two- in- one device cuts through the most laborious kitchen chores. With its high quality, traditional slicing, shredding and rasping drums for vegetables, salad, cheese, chocolate and nuts, you'll wonder how you ever managed without it. And it's just as good with juices and purées, using a slow rotating scroll to crush the food to release the juice. DISCLAIMER. Please check that this attachment is compatible with your Kenwood Kitchen Machine. Also note the difference between: Kenwood Chef, Kenwood Chef Premier, Kenwood Titanium Chef, Kenwood Cooking Chef, Kenwood Major, Kenwood Major Premier, Kenwood Titanium Major, Kenwood Prospero and Kenwood KMix Machines. For more information on attachments and compatibility, please refer to your user manual or visit "kenwoodworld. Shakespeare's Words | Frequently Encountered Words. MND III. i. 1. 07 [Bottom alone, of his companions] This is a knavery of them to make me afeard. Ham III. ii. 2. 72 [Hamlet to Ophelia] You shall see anon how the murderer gets the love of Gonzago’s wife. H4 II. iv. 3. 1 [Prince Hal to Poins, of Francis the drawer] do thou never leave calling ‘Francis!’, that his tale to me may be nothing but ‘Anon’H5 IV. ' 22 Gazzetta del Sud Anno XXXVIII Martedì 11 Aprile 1989 LA CARTA DELLA SALUTE. 4 i PER PAZIENTI SEMPRE MENO PAZIENTI IN CLINICA SENZA PAGARE. Julio Battisti - Venda de livros, e-books, video-aulas e cursos online. Conteudos gratuitos, tutoriais e artigos. Kitchen & Home; Mixers & Attachments; Kenwood; Kitchen & Dining; Buy online in South Africa from Loot.co.za. The Prospero satellite, also known as the X-3, was launched by the United Kingdom in 1971. It was designed to undertake a series of experiments to study the effects. Kitchen & Home; Kitchen & Dining; Buy online in South Africa from Loot.co.za. Buy Kenwood KM240 Prospero Stand Mixer - Stainless Steel at Argos.co.uk, visit Argos.co.uk to shop online for Stand mixers. Enter your search criteria in the boxes below. To use more than one criterion, enter the criteria in the appropriate boxes then select the And or Or radio. Several of the content-carrying words in Shakespeare are used so often that we find it helpful to approach them in the manner of a language-teaching phrase-book. Fluellen to Gower, of the French behaviour] 'tis as arrant a piece of knavery .. Cym II. iii. 3. 6 [Cymbeline to Cloten] Attend you here the door of our stern daughter? Ham IV. iii. 6. 0 [Claudius, as if to the King of England] if my love thou holdest at aught. Ham V. ii. 3. 57 [Horatio to Fortinbras] If aught of woe or wonder. TG V. iv. 2. 0 [Proteus to Silvia] Though you respect not aught your servant dothavaunt (int.). H4 I. ii. 8. 9 [Falstaff to Servant] Hence! Avaunt! KL III. vi. Prospero Books R2-d2Prospero Books R2d2![]() Edgar as Poor Tom, to imaginary dogs] Avaunt, you curs! Mac III. iv. 9. 2 [Macbeth to Banquo’s ghost] Avaunt, and quit my sight! Cym IV. iv. 2. 7 [Belarius to Arviragus and Guiderius] aye hopeless / To have the courtesy your cradle promised. R2 V. ii. 4. 5 [York to Duchess of York, of Bolingbroke] Whose state and honour I for aye allowbase (adj.) 1 dishonourable, low, unworthy. AYL II. vii. 7. 9 [Jaques to Duke Senior] what is he of basest function. AYL III. ii. 6. 4 [Touchstone to Corin] civet is of a baser birth than tar. E3 III. iii. 1. 83 [Edward to Prince Edward, of the latter's heart] never base affections enter there. H6 V. v. 4. 9 [Suffolk to all] Disgrace not so your king / That he should be so abject, base, and poor / To choose for wealth 2 low- born, lowly, plebeian, of lower rank. Cor I. i. 1. 55 [Menenius to First Citizen] one o'th'lowest, basest, poorest / Of this most wise rebellion. Ham V. ii. 6. 0 [Hamlet to Horatio] ’Tis dangerous when the baser nature comes / Between .. H6 I. ii. 8. 0 [Pucelle to Dauphin, of Our Lady] Willed me to leave my base vocation. KL I. ii. 1. 0 [Edmund alone] Why brand they us / With ‘base’? TNK II. iii. 2 [Gaoler's Daughter alone] I am base, / My father the mean keeper of his prison 3 poor, wretched, of low quality. H6 I. i. 1. 37 [Third Messenger to all] A base Walloon .. Thrust Talbot with a spear into the back. H6 IV. vi. 2. 1 [Talbot to John Talbot, as if to Orleans] Contaminated, base, and misbegotten blood I spill of thine. TNK III. iii. 4. 4 [Palamon to Arcite] Base cousin, / Darest thou break first? Ham III. i. 1. 12 [Hamlet to Ophelia] transform honesty from what it is to a bawd. R2 V. iii. 6. 6 [York to King Henry, of Aumerle] So shall my virtue be his vice's bawdbecome (v.) 1 be fitting, befit, be appropriate to. AYL I. i. 7. 4 [Orlando to Oliver] I will no further offend you than becomes me for my good. H6 V. iii. 1. 70 [Suffolk to Reignier] Set this diamond safe / In golden palaces, as it becomes. R2 II. i. 1. 40 [King Richard to all, as if to John of Gaunt] let them die that age and sullens have; / For both hast thou, and both become the grave 2 grace, honour, dignify. AC I. i. 4. 9 [Antony to and of Cleopatra] whom everything becomes. Cor I. iii. 1. 0 [Volumnia to Virgilia, of Marcus] considering how honour would become such a person. H6 IV. vii. 2. 3 [Talbot to his dead son] O thou whose wounds become hard- favoured Deathbecome (v.) 3- -5befall (v.) 1 happen, occur, take place, turn out. AYL IV. iii. 1. 03 [Oliver to Rosalind and Celia disguised] Lo, what befell! H4 I. i. 1. 77 [Morton to Lord Bardolph] What hath then befallen, / Or what hath this bold enterprise brought forth. H6 V. iii. 3. 3 [Warwick to all] more such days as these to us befall! MND V. i. 1. 53 [Snout to all] In this same interlude it doth befall / That I .. E3 II. ii. 2. 3 [Derby to Edward] Befall my sovereign all my sovereign's wish. R2 II. i. 1. 29 [John of Gaunt to Richard] My brother Gloucester .. Whom fair befall in heaven. R3 I. iii. 2. 81 [Queen Margaret to Buckingham] fair befall thee and thy noble house! R3 I. iv. 1. 6 [Clarence to Keeper] a thousand heavy times .. That had befallen us befall of (v.). CE IV. i. 2. 5 [Antipholus of Ephesus to Angelo] Belike you thought our love would last too long Ham III. Hamlet to Horatio, of Claudius and the play] belike he likes it notbeshrew, ’shrew (v.). Cym II. iii. 1. 41 [Innogen to Pisanio, of he ring] ’Shrew me, / If I would lose it for a revenue / Of any king’s in Europe. H6 III. i. 1. 84 [Gloucester to his enemies] Beshrew the winners. MND II. ii. 6. 0 [Hermia to Lysander] much beshrew my manners and my pride / If Hermia meant to say Lysander lied. Oth IV. iii. 7. 7 [Desdemona to Emilia] Beshrew me, if I would do such a wrongbeshrew (v.) 2bethink (v.). MV I. iii. 2. 9 [Shylock to Bassanio] that I may be assured, I will bethink me. R2 II. iii. 8 [Northumberland to Bolingbroke] I bethink me what a weary way / From Ravenspurgh to Cotswold will be found. TN III. iv. 2. 89 [Sir Toby to Viola as Cesario, of Sir Andrew] he hath better bethought him of his quarrelbethink (v.) 2- -4brave (adj.). AYL III. iv. 3. 6 [Celia to Rosalind, of Orlando] O, that's a brave man! He writes brave verses, speaks brave words, swears brave oaths . Ham II. ii. 3. 00 [Hamlet to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern] this brave o'erhanging firmament. H4 IV. i. 7 [Hotspur to Douglas] a braver place / In my heart's love hath no man than yourself. Tem III. ii. 9. 7 [Caliban to Stephano, of Prospero] He has brave utensilsbrave (adj.) 2- -3, (n.), (v.). Ham III. iii. 7 [Claudius to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, of the danger seen in Hamlet] doth hourly grow / Out of his brows. LLL IV. iii. 2. 24 [Berowne to King, of Rosaline] What peremptory eagle- sighted eye / Dares look upon the heaven of her brow. LLL IV. iii. 1. 83 [Berowne to all] When shall you hear that I / Will praise .. A gait, a state, a browbrow (n.) 2- -6chide (v.). AC I. iv. 3. 0 [Caesar to Lepidus, of Antony] to confound such time / .. As we rate boys. AYL III. Phebe to Rosalind as Ganymede] I pray you chide a year together; I had rather hear you chide than this man woo. AYL IV. i. 3. 2 [Rosalind to Jaques] almost chide God for making you that countenance you arechide (v.) 2- -4colours (n.). Cym I. v. 1. 8 [Iachimo to all, of Posthumus' banishment] the approbation of those that weep this lamentable divorce under her colours. E3 IV. vii. 2 [Prince Edward to King John] Thy bloody ensigns are my captive colours. H6 IV. ii. 5. 6[Talbot to all] God and Saint George .. Prosper our colours in this dangerous fight! MM I. iv. 8. 8 [Isabella to Lucio] Commend me to my brother. MV III. ii. 2. 32 [Salerio to Bassanio] Signor Antonio / Commends him to you. MW I. iv. 1. 52 [Fenton to Mistress Quickly, of Anne] If thou seest her before me, commend me. TG II. iv. 1. 21 [Proteus to Valentine] Your friends .. H6 IV. i. 7. 0 [King to Talbot] are you not content? Talbot] Content, my liege? Yes. 1H6 V. iii. 1. Suffolk to himself] I could be well content / To be mine own attorney in this casecontent (adj.) 2- -3,(n.), (v.)Corse (n.)Corpse, dead body. Ham V. i. 1. 63 [First Clown to Hamlet] we have many pocky Corses nowadays. H6 I. i. 6. 2 [Bedford to Messenger] What sayest thou, man, before dead Henry’s Corse? E3 II. i. 2. 56 [Countess to Edward] He that doth clip or counterfeit your stamp / Shall die. H6 II. iv. 6. 2 [Richard to Somerset] Meantime your cheeks do counterfeit our roses 2 pretend, feign, make believe. AYL III. v. 1. 7 [Phebe to Silvius] Now counterfeit to swoon. AYL IV. iii. 1. 67 [Rosalind as Ganymede to Oliver, of her fainting] a body would think this was well counterfeited. Cor II. iii. 9. 9 [Coriolanus to Fourth Citizen] I will counterfeit the bewitchment of some popular mancounterfeit (n.), (adj.)course (n.)course of action, way of proceeding. Cym III. iv. 1. 13 [Pisanio to Innogen] I have consider'd of a course. R2 II. i. 2. 13 [York to Richard] by bad courses may be understood / That their events can never fall out goodcourse (n.) 2- -8, (v.)crave (v.)beg, entreat, request. CE I. ii. 2. 6 [First Merchant to Antipholus of Syracuse] I crave your pardon. H6 I. i. 1. 59 [Third Messenger to Bedford] The Earl of Salisbury craveth supply. H6 II. iii. 1. 2 [Messenger to Countess] acording as your ladyship desired, / By message craved, so is Lord Talbot comecrave (v.) 2- -3cuckold (n.)[mocking name] man with an unfaithful wife. AW II. ii. 2. 4 [Clown to Countess, of his answer] As fit as .. Ham IV. v. 1. 20 [Laertes to Claudius] Cries cuckold to my father. MW II. ii. 2. 97 [Ford alone] Fie, fie, fie! Cuckold, cuckold, cuckold! Oth III. iii. 1. 65 [Iago to Othello] That cuckold lives in bliss / Who certain of his fate loves not his wrongercuckold (v.)discover (v.) reveal, show, make known. Cym III. v. 9. 6 [Cloten to Pisanio] Discover where thy mistress is. MA I. ii. 1. 0 [Antonio to Leonato] the Prince discovered to Claudio that he loved my niece. TN II. v. 1. 54 [Malvolio to himself] Daylight and champain discovers not more! H6 III. i. 1. 96 [Exeter alone, of the peers' agreement] So will this base and envious dis. Cord breed. MM III. Duke to Lucio, of the Duke] he shall appear to the envious a scholar. R2 III. iii. 6. 5 [Bolingbroke to all, of King Richard as the sun] he perceives the envious clouds are bent / To dim his glory. TNK II. i. 3. 19 [Palamon to Gaoler] Devils take 'em / That are so envious to meenvy (n.)fain (adv.) [usually with would] gladly, willingly. Ham II. ii. 1. 31 [Polonius to Claudius] I would fain prove so. Ham IV. vii. 1. 90 [Laertes to Claudius] I have a speech o'fire that fain would blazefain (adj.), (v.)false (adj.)treacherous, traitorous, perfidious. Ham IV. v. 1. 2 [Gertrude to all] this is counter, you false Danish dogs! H6 IV. i. 6. 3 [Gloucester to all, of Burgundy] such false dissembling guile. R2 I. iii. 1. 06 [First Herald to all, of Bolingbroke] On pain to be found false and recreantfalse (adj.) 2- -8, (n.), (adv.)fare (v.) get on, manage, do, cope. Cym III. i. 8. 2 [Cloten to Lucius] if you fall in the adventure, our crows shall fare the better for you. |
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