| 1H6 I.i.94 | [Second Messenger to nobles, of the Dauphin] Reignier, Duke of Anjou, doth take his part [i.e. support him] |
| 1H6 III.i.81 | [Mayor to all] The Bishop and the Duke of Gloucester's men ... banding themselves in contrary parts |
| 2H6 V.ii.35 | [Young Clifford as if to War] Throw in the frozen bosoms of our part / Hot coals of vengeance! |
| 3H6 II.v.66 | [Son to himself] My father ... / Came on the part of York |
| AW I.ii.15.1 | [King to First Lord, of his gentlemen going into army service] freely have they leave / To stand on either part |
| Cor II.iii.36 | [Third Citizen to all, of the vote] the greater part carries it [i.e. the majority] |
| Cym I.ii.96 | [Innogen to Queen, of Cloten and Cymbeline] he takes his part / To draw upon an exile |
| Cym V.i.25 | [Posthumus alone] I'll fight / Against the part I come with |
| E3 IV.vi.50 | [King John to all] The twentieth part / Of those that live are men enow to quail / The feeble handful on the adverse part |
| H5 IV.vii.115.1 | [King Henry to Heralds] Bring me just notice of the numbers dead / On both our parts |
| KJ II.i.359 | [Bastard to King John and King Philip] let confusion of one part confirm / The other's peace |
| KJ III.i.293 | [Cardinal Pandulph to King Philip, of breaking the treaty] Upon which better part our prayers come in |
| KJ V.vi.2.2 | [Bastard to Hubert, responding to 'What art thou?'] Of the part of England |
| RJ I.i.114 | [Benvolio to Montague, of the fight] Came more on more, and fought on part and part [i.e. some on each side] |
| TC IV.v.156 | [Hector to Aeneas] signify this loving interview / To the expecters of our Trojan part |
| TC V.viii.15 | [Achilles to Myrmidons] Hark, a retreat upon our Grecian part |