CORSICA BUKU YANG BERKAIT DENGAN «UPBRAY»
Ketahui penggunaan
upbray dalam pilihan bibliografi berikut. Buku yang berkait dengan
upbray dan ekstrak ringkas dari yang sama untuk menyediakan konteks penggunaannya dalam kesusasteraan Corsica.
1
Poetical Works ...: Account of the author's life, etc.- The ...
That when the Varlett heard and saw, streightway He wexed wondrous wroth,
and said ; " Vile Knight, That knights and knighthood doest with shame upbray,
And shewst th' ensample of thy childishe might, With silly weake old woman ...
2
Faerie queene. book III-V
Who, with the sudden stroke astonisht sore, Upon the ground awhile in slomber
lay; The whiles his Love away the other bore, And, shewing her, did Paridell
upbray,2 “ Lo! sluggish Knight, the victors happie pray ! So fortune friends 3 the
bold.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1842
3
Encyclopaedia perthensis, or, Universal dictionary of the ...
By way of reproach. — He is upbraiding/y called a poet. Ben Jonson. • To
UPBRAY. v. a. [A word formed from upbraid by Spenser, for the fake of a rhyming
termination.] To flume. — Vile knight, that knighthood dost with shame upbray.
Spenser ...
4
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser: With a Memoir
45 That when the Varlett heard and saw, streightway He wexed wondrous wrath,
and said: “Vile Knight, That knights and knighthood doest with shame upbray,1
And shewst th' ensample of thy childishe might, With silly, weake old woman that
...
Edmund Spenser, Francis James Child, 1866
5
Encyclopaedia Perthensis; Or Universal Dictionary of the ...
To UPBRAY. v. a. {A word formed from upbraid by Spenser, for the fake of a
rhyming termination.] To stiame.— Vile knight, that -knighthood dost with shame
upbray. Spenser. * UPBROUGHT. part. pass, alupbring. Educated ; nurtured.
Who, with the sudden stroke astonisht sore, Upon the ground awhile in slomber
lay ; The whiles his Love away the other bore, And, shewing her, did Paridell
upbray,9 " Lo ! sluggish Knight, the victors happie pray ! So fortune friends 3 the
bold.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
7
Poetical Works: Essay on the life and writings of Edmund ...
That when the Varlett heard and saw, strcightway He wexed wondrous wroth,
and said ; " Vile Knight, That knights and knighthood doest with shame upbray,
And shewst th' ensample of thy childishe might, With silly weake old woman thus
to ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
8
The Faerie Queene: Complete in Five Volumes: Book One; Book ...
1 whether: whither. 2 streight behight: ordered immediately. 3 hap: lot, chance.
caught: taken up. 5 6 upbray: disgrace. 7 wott: know, suppose. 4 shonned
followes eke: follows even 8 thrillant: piercing. when avoided. 9 vengeable:
terrible; cf.
Edmund Spenser, Abraham Stoll, 2008
9
The new encyclopædia; or, Universal dictionary ofarts and ...
By way of reproach. — He is upbraidU^ly called a poet. Ben Jonson. *7»
UPBRAY. v. a. [A word fotmeel from Upbraid by Spenser, for the lake of a rhyming
termination.] To shame. — Vile knight, that knighthood dost with Ola me upbray.
Encyclopaedia Perthensis, 1807
10
Etymons of English words
UPBRAID, v. a. to reproach, exprobate, twit; S. upgebredan ; O. E. upbray, obraid,
from G. brigda ,- D. breide ; Swed. bn'zda, brfi ; Scot. brag. UPHOLD, v. a. to hold
up, lift on high, support, maintain, keep in repair, furnish; G. uphalda ,' Swed.
John THOMSON (M.R.I. and A.S.), 1826