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Alphabetical [« »] disdainfully 1 disdaining 1 disdains 1 disease 30 diseased 1 diseases 1 disfigured 1 | Frequency [« »] 30 crosse 30 dearely 30 devotion 30 disease 30 eliza 30 etc 30 hapned | Giovanni Boccaccio Decameron Concordances disease |
Day, Novell
1 Ind | was~ ~the quality of the disease, to shew it selfe by blacke 2 Ind | either the~ ~nature of the disease would not endure it, or 3 Ind | seemed to~ ~transferre the disease from the sicke to the sound, 4 Ind | wherein one died of that disease,~ ~being toucht, or lyen 5 Ind | wretched body dead of that disease,~ ~and hurled in the open 6 Ind | physicke more certaine, for a disease so desperate, then to~ ~ 7 Ind | by~ ~any violence of the disease in themselves. So that of 8 1, 6| singular remedie against~ ~the Disease Pestilentiall in covetous 9 2, 3| might be easily done, and no disease~ ~offered to the Abbot, 10 2, 8| reaching to the cause~ ~of the disease, made a doubtfull question 11 2, 8| that some part of the~ ~disease had now discovered it selfe 12 2, 8| prevent thy dying of this disease, a dreame this night~ ~hath 13 2, 9| but sicke of~ ~all womens disease; returning from Paris to 14 3, 1| sicke of the other Nunnes~ ~disease. Having awaked him, she 15 3, 8| him perfectly cured, of disease so dangerous~ ~and offensive, 16 3, 9| journey to Paris,~ ~but if the disease were no more then she imagined; 17 4, 2| sicke of womens naturall disease, thinking every minute a~ ~ 18 4, 7| conversing with her: his disease was~ ~every way answerable 19 4, 8| very loath any~ ~way to disease him, but sweetly to let 20 5, 9| or by extreamity of his disease, chanced to dye, leaving~ ~ 21 7, 3| charme, of a~ ~dangerous disease which he had by Wormes.~ ~ ~ ~ 22 7, 10| also fell sicke of the same disease,~ ~because shee seemed Fleasing 23 8, 7| him quickely of that Idle disease. And~ ~being more and more 24 9, 3| ministred to~ ~him for the disease: they got both good fatte 25 9, 3| friend; thou hast no other disease, but only~ ~thou art great 26 9, 4| circumstance, to cure the strange disease, which he~ ~imagined (by 27 9, 9| cure~ ~of such a dangerous disease, in any woman so fouly infected. 28 10, 2| cured him of a grievous disease, which he had in his stomacke, 29 10, 2| ever learne, against any disease in the stomacke,~ ~was this 30 10, 2| have cured your stomacks disease) deale~ ~with you as I doe