aspect (n.)
[of a human face] look, appearance, expression
1H6 II.iii.19[Countess to Talbot, of how she had expected Talbot to look] his grim aspect / And large proportion of his strong-knit limbs
CE II.ii.120[Adriana to Antipholus of Syracuse] Some other mistress hath thy sweet aspects
Cor V.iii.32[Coriolanus to Aufidius] my young boy / Hath an aspect of intercession
H8 V.i.88[Cranmer to himself, of King Henry] wherefore frowns he thus? / 'Tis his aspect of terror [i.e. his angry look]
Ham II.ii.552[Hamlet alone, of the First Player] distraction in his aspect
KJ IV.ii.224[King John to Hubert] taking note of thy abhorred aspect
KJ IV.ii.72[Pembroke to Salisbury, of Hubert] that close aspect of his / Doth show the mood of a much troubled breast
LLL IV.iii.258[Berowne to King, of Rosaline's dark colouring] It mourns that painting and usurping hair / Should ravish doters with a false aspect
Luc.452[of Lucrece woken by Tarquin] Whose grim aspect sets every joint a-shaking
MV I.i.54[Solanio to Antonio, of certain people] of such vinegar aspect / That they'll not show their teeth in way of smile
MV II.i.8[Morocco to Portia] this aspect of mine / Hath feared the valiant
R2 I.iii.209[King Richard to John of Gaunt] Thy sad aspect
R3 I.ii.154[Richard to Anne] Those eyes of thine from mine have drawn salt tears, / Shamed their aspects with store of childish drops [F; Q aspect]
R3 I.ii.23[Anne to dead Henry VI, of Richard's possible child] Whose ugly and unnatural aspect / May fright the hopeful mother
Tim II.i.28[Senator to Caphis] Put on a most importunate aspect
TN I.iv.28[Orsino to Viola as Cesario, of his message to Olivia] She will attend it better in thy youth / Than in a nuncio's of more grave aspect
TNK V.iii.45[Emilia to herself] Palamon / Has a most menacing aspect
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