1H4 II.iv.135 | [Prince Hal to Falstaff] you whoreson round man |
1H4 III.iii.154 | [Prince Hal to Falstaff] thou whoreson impudent embossed rascal |
2H4 I.ii.108 | [Falstaff to Lord Chief Justice] I hear ... his highness is fallen into this same whoreson apoplexy |
2H4 I.ii.14 | [Falstaff to Page] Thou whoreson mandrake |
2H4 I.ii.34 | [Falstaff to Page, of his tailor] A whoreson Achitophel! |
2H4 II.ii.81 | [Bardolph to Page] you whoreson upright rabbit |
2H4 II.iv.204 | [Doll to Falstaff] you whoreson little valiant villain [affectionate] |
2H4 II.iv.213 | [Doll to Falstaff] Come on, you whoreson chops! [affectionate] |
2H4 II.iv.226 | [Doll to Falstaff] Thou whoreson little tidy Bartholomew boar-pig [affectionate] |
2H4 II.iv.289 | [Falstaff to Prince Henry] Thou whoreson mad compound of majesty [affectionate] |
2H4 III.ii.178 | [Bullcalf to Falstaff, of his illness] A whoreson cold, sir |
Cym II.i.14 | [Cloten to Lords] Whoreson dog! |
Cym II.i.3 | [Cloten to Lords] a whoreson jackanapes must take me up for swearing |
Ham V.i.169 | [First Clown to Hamlet] your water is a sore decayer of your whoreson dead body |
KL I.iv.79 | [Lear to Oswald] You whoreson dog! |
KL II.ii.16 | [disguised Kent to Oswald, describing him] whoreson ... rogue |
LLL IV.iii.202 | [Berowne to Costard] you whoreson loggerhead |
TC II.i.39 | [Ajax to Thersites] You whoreson cur! |
TC II.iii.230 | [Ajax to all, of Achilles] A whoreson dog, that shall palter thus with us! |
TC V.i.25 | [Patroclus to Thersites] you whoreson indistinguishable cur |
TG IV.iv.41 | [Proteus to Launce] How now, you whoreson peasant! |
TS IV.i.115 | [Petruchio to Grumio] you whoreson malthorse drudge! |
TS IV.i.141 | [Petruchio to Servant] You whoreson villain |