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Alphabetical [« »] ladder 17 laddes 3 laden 9 ladie 53 ladies 270 lading 2 ladle 1 | Frequency [« »] 53 fortuned 53 ground 53 heaven 53 ladie 53 remaine 53 secretly 53 weeping | Giovanni Boccaccio Decameron Concordances ladie |
bold = Main text Day, Novellgrey = Comment text
1 1, 5| dayes journey, where the Ladie~ ~Marquesse then lay; he 2 2, 6| whereby the poore distressed Ladie became more savage and wilde 3 2, 6| measure for the losse of her Ladie, and bemoaning her~ ~owne 4 2, 7| more mildly appeased~ ~the Ladie, who seemed well-neere dead, 5 2, 7| After he had once seene this Ladie (whose faire~ ~feature pleased 6 2, 7| may well imagine, that the Ladie was extraordinarily afflicted~ ~ 7 2, 7| fall into the Sea. When the Ladie heard thereof, and saw~ ~ 8 2, 7| concerning the rare beauty of the Ladie; the Duke questioning~ ~ 9 2, 7| Chamber, where he~ ~(while the Ladie was soundly sleeping) stood 10 2, 7| place, where~ ~(with the Ladie, whom he so deerely affected) 11 2, 7| to the shore; and the~ ~Ladie being sodainly seized on, 12 2, 7| Cappadocia, leaving his Ladie and Wife (for her safety) 13 2, 7| and~ ~with whom the faire Ladie was left in guard; although 14 2, 7| Merchant, and likewise the Ladie, hearing these~ ~words, 15 2, 7| there being: mooving the Ladie in the matter, to understand 16 2, 7| termed by the name of their Ladie Abbesse) demaunded of~ ~ 17 2, 8| thousand deaths.~ ~ The Ladie seeing her desire disappointed, 18 2, 8| have none (answered the Ladie) wee will bestow one on 19 2, 8| howbeit (like a wise and noble Ladie) much she inwardly~ ~commended 20 2, 8| enquiry~ ~concerning the Ladie with whom hee had left his 21 3, 1| after the death of the Ladie Abbesse, when Massetto beganne 22 3, 5| made~ ~love to the foresaid Ladie, some busie-body put it 23 3, 5| few words to your vertuous Ladie, and so farre off in~ ~distance 24 3, 6| selfe shall see it. The Ladie was not a little~ ~joyfull 25 3, 7| Father, wherefore he said:~ ~Ladie, to the end that I may comfort 26 3, 9| If~ ~the Count (quoth the Ladie) love my daughter, and have 27 4, 4| or parcell, but onely a Ladie, for whose sake I have~ ~ 28 6, 1| you know, how wittily a Ladie made due~ ~observation of 29 6, 7| from the Auditorie: and the Ladie,~ ~not a little joyfull 30 7, 1| the name of our~ ~blessed Ladie, be not affraid, this is 31 7, 2| no, I thanke our blessed Ladie, and S. Friswid for it: 32 7, 7| he went to bed, and his Ladie~ ~likewise with him, leaving 33 7, 9| as now thou doest to his Ladie? Thou wert a verie foole 34 7, 9| repent thy folly. And if my Ladie die through thy~ ~disdaine, 35 7, 9| mee to misdoubt, least my Ladie (by his counsell and~ ~advice) 36 7, 9| seemed to Lesca, and her Ladie~ ~likewise, almost beyond 37 7, 9| are performed, assure~ ~my Ladie. that I am truelie hers.~ ~ 38 7, 9| businesse, saide to himselfe. My Ladie hath begun well, and proceeding~ ~ 39 7, 9| Notwithstanding, like a Ladie~ ~of unconquerable spirit, 40 7, 9| and feeble~ ~condition my Ladie is, being shaken with so 41 7, 9| jot, neither do you, or my Ladie: but if~ ~this Tree could 42 7, 9| you, as to thinke, that my Ladie (who hath alwayes bene~ ~ 43 8, Ind| GOVERNMENT, OF THE HONOURABLE LADIE LAURETTA~ ~ ~ ~ Earely on 44 8, 4| foule, deformed Slut.~ ~ ~ ~ Ladie Eliza having concluded her 45 8, 7| Scholler, fell in love with a Ladie, named~ ~Helena, she being 46 8, 7| regard that I have another~ ~Ladie and Mistresse, of higher 47 8, 7| conjured me by mine endeered Ladie and~ ~Mistresse, that I 48 8, 7| Tarras.~ ~Beholding her Ladie in so strange a condition, 49 8, 7| pittifull manner, as if her Ladie had beene quite dead. Which 50 8, 7| anguish and affliction to the Ladie (by reason of her~ ~fleshes 51 8, 9| armes of so Majestick~ ~a Ladie, quite forgetting hir of 52 8, 9| contented to enjoy the Ladie; and, within some few dayes 53 10, 10| them all, as their Liege Ladie and~ ~Soveraigne. Afterward,