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child_n word_n worth_a write_v 13 3 4.8096 4 false
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A86431 A special help to orthographie: or, The true-vvriting of English. Consisting of such words as are alike in sound, and unlike both in their signification and writing: As also, of such words vvhich are so neer alike in sound, that they are sometimes taken one for another. Whereunto are added diverse orthographical observations, very needfull to be known. / Publisht by Richard Hodges, a school-master, dwelling in Southwark, at the Midle-gate within Mountague-close, for the benefit of all such as do affect true-writing. Hodges, Richard, School-Master. 1644 (1644) Wing H2313; Thomason E35_9; ESTC R11996 23,032 30

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them to the Leassees M. The day before Marie did marry shee appointed the bones that were ful of marrow to bee boyl'd on the morrow They that wrought in the mines made knowne their mindes To mince the meat The Mints where money is coined I did mis the fight of him by reason of the mists misse To mowe down the corn A mough of corn The maids went to gather rushes in the meads The one mower did mowe more than the other Moles that cast up the earth Moulds wherein metals are cast When hee had the myrrhe and aloes hee was ful of mirth A rat and a mouse Barley moughs To rise betimes in the morning in a day of mourning The hawks mues A muse Her mistres did reveal many mysteries mistresse N. It is neither you nor I that can lift the nether milstone The nones of a moonth It was done for the nonce moneth Some of the needles which shee used were needles needlesse His neece did neese very much I was never a whit the neer for al the labour which I bestowed O. Hee thought it inough to do it once but every ones minde is not alike Hee that was the owner of it gained much honour by it You ought to have done it very oft Hee did owne one of them on the first day but not on the second P. Pare the aple but not the peare The woman that went upon her patens had very good paterns Such as are Patients have much need of patience The feathers of the pullen were ready for pulling The way is passable and the thing is possible Hee had more pens to write withal than hee had pence in his purse In taking away the beans and pease hee disturbed the peace Hee layd a plot how to take away his plat of ground The principal man of al others taught the first principle Forget not to powre out thy drink to the thirsty and to relieve the poore A Prince is to bee honoured The prints may easily bee seen Kings and Princes A Princes the daughter of a King Princesse Hee removed out of his place that the plaise might bee drest for supper The time was past before the paste could bee made Before hee came into his presence hee sent him many presents Hee sold that for a good price which hee had taken before as a prise Hee had many puls at the bel-rope Let mee feel your pulse Writen both in verse and prose A man ful of prowes prowesse To pearce it with a sword The Peers of the Realm Pontius Pilate A skilful Pilot to guide a ship They laid a plot for his life A pleasant plat of ground A parasite is not altogether so bad as a paricide The leaves of a poplar A popular applause In al his promises hee had no respect to the premises Some folks are hard to please Plays are out of request The heads upon the Bridge are set upon poles Pauls steeple Some when they have playd al day wil plead for themselves R. To trust in a broken reed To reade and write Hee wrought hard when hee wrote his copie but hee learned his lesson by rote To rase the wals To raise the siege A barbers rasour A raiser of sedition A mouse and a rat The sheep die of the rot A man that is real in his word It is worth a ryal The bloud royal A child reverent to his Parents A reverend or grave man Hee was wroth because shee was ful of wrath so rathe S. When they had fill'd their sives with onions and cives They whetted their sithes and beeing ful of grief they fetcht many sighes It belonged to his science to have knowledg in grafs and scions I lent him my signet when I gave him the cygnet Cypres-trees Cypresse Cipers hatbands To stand for ciphers Go to sirra Sir John wil talk with you when you come into Surrey When you sowe your seed drive out the sow and her pigs When the sower went to sowe his seed I gave him a bunch of sowre grapes When the sows had pigs al the sowse was eaten Their sores were al healed A sourse Hee put eight sleaves of silk into his wide sleeves Shee seeth that the pot is ready to seethe To say wel and do wel The Sea is never quiet A woman is the weaker sex There are several sects When the steed is stoln he wil stand you in no stead At his work hee is very slowe Hee is faln into a slough I gave unto the spies great store of spice They sawed them with saws The Cook made good sause The sense of the words must bee understood Sweet sents The Seas are dangerous When wil you cease talking Seizing upon his goods Ceasing from strife Why do you wear out your shoos to see the shewes Have no society with him The satietie of the rich hurteth them When they gathered sloes they fel into the sloughs Sir John sent for the Surgeon Chirurgion His daughter Cicelie went into the Countrey of Sicilie and afterwards she journeyed from Cilicia into Silesia Al the sheep were caried into the ship Hee hath bin very sory for his sins ever since T. Counted by tens Mood and tense To dwel in tents To pay the tenths The fire-shovel and the tongs Wee do often offend with our tongues A trough for cattel to drink in A trophie as a token of victory The first tome of a book An epitaph upon a tombe To bee tost up and down Make a toast for the ale When thy thigh is out of joynt send for the Surgeon The scholar had more skil in a trope than in a troop troup Thou desirest to do it though it bee to thy hinderance U. The volley of shot which they gave in the valley was of litle value When shee was in the vale shee put a vail over her face In al the long vacation hee followed his vocation The verges or brims of things The verjuice and the vineger His vitals began to fail for want of victuals W. The wilde-man was able to wield a great sword The dog was weary when hee did wory the sheep Whether of these two wil yee have Whither wil yee go By their subtil wiles they drew them into the wildes They took away the fisher-mens weels against their wils The wines were al cast away by reason of the windes The wick of a candle The days in a week Thou wast unwise to make so much waste Hee did a wicked deed in opening the wicket Hee did wrest his wrist The man that was in the wood was almost woode I wist not that he was there but I wisht that he might bee there Examples of some words wherein one sound is exprest diverse ways in writing Sea-ted con cei-ted cea-sing sei-zing se-rious Sce-va ce-dar Manas seh Phari see Wool 〈◊〉 sche-dule See-ded suc cee-ded sie-sings over se-ers pur sey or fat men mer cie or mer cy Si-nister sy-nagogue Sci-pio Scy-thian Cy-prian ci-vil Ce-cil Se-vern pur sui-vant Si-lence ci-ted quick sigh-ted
was almost woode A wad of straw to lie upon Woad to die withall Y. A bowe made of yew You and I are good friends V and I are vowels Yews or yew-trees Vse thy friends courteously Your friends are wel Put this in ure A bason and ewre Neither ours nor yours Basons and ewres Hee in ureth himself to it Yee that are wise use yea and nay in your communication Such words which are so neer alike in sound as that they are sometimes taken one for another are also exprest by different Letters in these examples following A. ASk the carpenter for his ax whereby he hath done such strange ac●… Abel was not able to do it It will amase you to see him cary a mace It is al-one whether it be in company or alone His actions were not answerable to his axioms Bowes and arrows Cloth of arras Give your advice and advise mee for the best The valley of Achor An acre of ground The ant is a wise creature An uncle and an aunt Since I learned my Accidence there have bin strange accidents Some are in their behaviour as a wilde as asse B. To play at bowls To drinke in boles An Earl and a Baron A barren wombe A wheel barrow To lend and borrow The Borough of Southwark Hee spent so much upon barley that he went but barely Boyse a mans sirname Boys and girls A bath to bathe in The voluntary Bands were unwilling to come in bonds A threed bare garment To bear a burden The childe did begin to pul of his biggin off Our breath is the cause why we breathe If he loose his bauble in going to Babel hee wil bable babble His bile brake when the pot did boyl John Bruce did bruise his leg when hee ate the brewis in the brewhouse The litle childe began to batle when his father went to the battel I did bore a hole thorow the nose of the wilde boar Who will send an arrant knave to do an errand Bowes and arrows Boughs and branches The sause for the bittern was made very bitter Proud boasters may sometimes want pillows and bolsters for their beds They both went into a boothe You think that you have taken the best but another beast may be as good Your book is not so wel bost that you should have cause to boast They put on their boots when they went into their boats C. Write your copies and get you to play in the copise If you cannot leave coughing you will soon bee put into a coffin When hee cough't I caught him by his coat To tithe mint and cummin To bee long in coming Before I played at ches I unlockt the chests chesse His chaps were ful of chops It was a good chare to set him in a chair and give him good cheer A capital or great offence The Capitol a place in Rome Currants to cary away the water Raisins and corrants By a necessary consequence they may prove dangerous consequents Spare no cost to travel into every coast What were the causes that the causeys were no better lookt unto D. The dun colour was wel done Hee was but a dunse that knew not the duns from the other colours Comely and decent Of a noble descent To dissent or disagree Concerning the word descension there hath bin much dissension When you discomfite your enemies it is no discomfort to mee Bucks and does Let him take but one dose It was such a fine device as none could devise a better Before his decease hee was sick of a dangerous disease Thou art but dust and ashes why dost thou lift up thy self In the time of a dearth not long before his death hee was so deaf that hee could not hear It was not without desert that hee was robb'd in the Desart E. In looking toward the East shee spilt her yeest Shee doth earn her living by spinning of yarn You must either take out of the hedge the ether or the stake His ears were deaf for many yeers together If you had not measured so many els you should else have wronged your self The most eminent man was in the most imminent danger When I was with him but even now he gave mee good words inow but money little inough The two sons of Eli. The I le of Ely Isle F. It was a false report that you had so many fals by the way The Cook hath more skil in a froise than a phrase The watermen had many fares to cary to the fairs His house in the fens was without a fence When I fought with him I committed a fault The hounds do follow the fallow deer A gown lined with fur A fir-tree furre firre To farm or make clean A form of words A fourm to sit upon Pharez a mans name Fairies and hobgoblins The Farmer sold his former yeers crop A smal flie may flee into a narrow place The fishes had fins and scales The fiends of hel G. The Gallants did drink many gallons of wine The child went into the garden and there hee found his Guardian A glas to drink in To set a fair glos upon any thing glasse glosse It was but a foolish gesture that was used by the jester The carman that did wear a jerking never left jerking his horse H. John Howel did howl when he was thrown into the hole Whose hose and shoos are these He was but a homely man which read the Homilie To hallow or make holy A hollow place in the ground I do gues that I shal have ghests guesse The beadle that whipt the whores beeing very hoarse when he went away he rode upon a horse Shee tooke away all that was his The serpents and the snakes did his hisse Let them drive away the hens from hence Holly and Ivie Holy men and women are despised in this world Hepher a mans name A young heifer I. His man James did break the jambs of the wal wall A man that is ingenious and witty ought also to bee ingenuous and Gentleman-like The way is not impassable nor the thing is not impossible It doth imply asmuch as that hee ought to imploy himself wel Why is it not yet done An idol is not to bee worshipt An idle person ought not to eat As you have work inough to do so you have men inow to do it His eyes cannot see the ice Joice a womans Christen-name The joys of heaven K. I know that the dog can gnaw a bone It is wel known that the bone was wel gnawn The knots are fast tied The gnats are very busy in hote weather L. The lines are fairly written His loyns are girded about A man of a lowe stature The Ox did low A man of lower stature Why do you lowre upon me When the lead was layd hee led mee by the hand The leas were added to his lease Hee that told many lies his cloaths were ful of lice I was very loth to do it yea I did loathe to do it When the leases are made give