Elizabethan Insults beginning with the Letter C The following Elizabethan Insults dictionary contains words and phrases from the plays of William Shakespeare.
Elizabethan Insults beginning with the Letter C
Caesar's ambition - which swelled so much that it did almost stretch the sides of the world (Cymbeline) Certainly, there is no truth in him (Antony & Cleopatra) Come, you are a tedious fool (Measure for Measure) Contemptuous base born callet (Henry VI Part 2) Courtesy would seem to cover sin (Pericles, Prince of Tyre) Curtailed of this fair proportion, cheated of feature by dissembling nature, deformed, unfinished (Richard III)
Elizabethan Insults beginning with the Letter C
Interesting examples of Elizabethan Words beginning with the Letter C The above online Elizabethan Insults dictionary contain old Elizabethan phrases beginning with the Letter C providing a valuable reference source when studying the literary works and plays of the famous Elizabethan author William Shakespeare.
Elizabethan Language Guide - An Elizabethan Online Dictionary Click the following links to access more information about the old English Elizabethan Language and the Elizabethan Online Dictionary for an easy to follow Elizabethan language guide!