1H6 V.iv.56 | [Warwick to all] Spare for no faggots; let there be enow |
AC I.iv.11 | [Lepidus to Caesar, of Antony] I must not think there are / Evils enow to darken all his goodness |
E3 IV.vi.49 | [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.i.217 | [Bates to disguised King Henry and Williams] We have French quarrels enow, if you could tell how to reckon |
H5 IV.ii.26 | [Constable to Dauphin, of the English army] our superfluous lackeys ... were enow / To purge this field of such a hilding foe |
H5 IV.iii.20 | [King Henry to Westmorland] If we are marked to die, we are enow / To do our country loss |
H5 IV.v.19 | [Orleans to Constable] We are enow yet living in the field / To smother up the English in our throngs |
Mac II.iii.5 | [Porter alone, as if to someone at the door] Have napkins enow about you |
Mac IV.ii.57 | [Macduff's son to Macduff's wife] there are liars and swearers enow to beat the honest men and hang up them |
MV III.v.20 | [Launcelot to Jessica] We were Christians enow before |
MV IV.i.29 | [Duke to Shylock, of Antonio's losses] Enow to press a royal merchant down |