1H4 II.iv.411 | [Prince Hal to Falstaff as King Henry] What manner of man, an it like your Majesty? |
2H6 II.i.9 | [Suffolk to King] No marvel, an it like your majesty, / My Lord Protector's hawks do tower so well |
2H6 V.i.72 | [Iden to King, of whether he was the one who had killed Cade] I was, an't like your majesty |
AYL V.iv.213 | [Rosalind as Epilogue] as many of you as had ... complexions that liked me |
Cym II.iii.53 | [Messenger to Cymbeline] So like you, sir, ambassadors from Rome |
H5 III.chorus.32 | [Chorus, of the French King's offer] The offer likes not |
H8 I.i.100.2 | [Norfolk to Buckingham] Like it your grace, / The state takes notice of the private difference / Betwixt you and the Cardinal |
H8 IV.ii.100.1 | [Messenger to Katherine] An't like your grace-- |
H8 V.iii.148 | [Lord Chancellor to King Henry] may it like your grace / To let my tongue excuse all |
Ham II.ii.80.2 | [Claudius to Voltemand, of his report] It likes us well |
Ham V.ii.259 | [Hamlet to all, of his foil] This likes me well |
KJ II.i.533 | [King Philip to King John, of the proposal] It likes us well |
KL I.i.200 | [Lear to Burgundy, of Burgundy taking Cordelia] If aught ... may fitly like your grace |
KL II.ii.88 | [disguised Kent to Cornwall, of Oswald] His countenance likes me not |
MM II.i.154 | [Elbow to Escalus] First, an it like you, the house is a respected house |
MM II.i.33.1 | [Provost to Angelo, responding to him] Here, if it like your honour |
MM V.i.74.2 | [Lucio to Duke, identifying himself] That's I, an't like your grace |
R3 III.iv.49 | [Hastings to all, of Richard] There's some conceit or other likes him well |
TC V.ii.105 | [Troilus as if to Diomedes] that that likes not you / Pleases me best |
Tem IV.i.239 | [Trinculo to Stephano] We steal by line and level, an't like your grace [i.e. if it pleases you] |
TG II.vii.52 | [Julia to Lucetta, of wearing some clothes] e'en what fashion thou best likes |
TG IV.ii.54 | [Host to disguised Julia] The music likes you not |
TS IV.iv.55 | [Tranio as Lucentio to Baptista] at my lodging, an it like you. / There doth my father lie |
TS IV.iv.62 | [Baptista to Tranio as Lucentio, of the arrangement] It likes me well |
WT IV.iv.711 | [Shepherd to Autolycus, of where he is going] To th'palace, an it like your worship |
WT IV.iv.724 | [Shepherd to Autolycus] Are you a courtier, an't like you, sir? [riposte in 725] [and throughout the scene] |
WT V.ii.151 | [Autolycus to Clown, of amending his life] Ay, an it like your good worship |