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Examples

  • I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance to pawn; I have grated upon my good friends for three reprieves for you and your coach-fellow Nym; or else you had looked through the grate, like a geminy of baboons.

    The Merry Wives of Windsor 2004

  • I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance to pawn: I have grated upon my good friends for three reprieves for you and your coach-fellow Nym; or else you had looked through the grate, like a geminy of baboons.

    Act II. Scene II. The Merry Wives of Windsor 1914

  • I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance to pawn; I have grated upon my good friends for three reprieves for you and your coach-fellow Nym; or else you had looked through the grate, like a geminy of baboons.

    The Merry Wives of Windsor 1597

  • I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance to pawn; I have grated upon my good friends for three reprieves for you and your coach-fellow, Nym; or else you had looked through the grate, like a geminy of baboons.

    The Merry Wives of Windsor William Shakespeare 1590

  • I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance to pawn: I have grated upon 5 my good friends for three reprieves for you and your coach-fellow

    The Merry Wives of Windsor The Works of William Shakespeare [Cambridge Edition] [9 vols.] William Shakespeare 1590

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  • (noun) - A horse employed to draw a carriage with another. Metaphorically, a person intimately connected with another, generally applied to people in low life. --James Halliwell's Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, 1855

    January 26, 2018