| 1H4 II.iii.17 | [Hotspur alone, to the writer of a letter he is reading] you are a shallow cowardly hind | 
	
		| 2H6 III.ii.271 | [Suffolk to Salisbury] the commons, rude unpolished hinds | 
	
		| 2H6 IV.ii.114 | [Stafford to rebels] Rebellious hinds | 
	
		| 2H6 IV.iv.33 | [First Messenger to King, of Cade] His army is a ragged multitude / Of hinds and peasants | 
	
		| CE III.i.77 | [Dromio of Syracuse to Dromio of Ephesus] Out upon thee, hind! | 
	
		| Cym V.iii.77 | [Posthumus alone, of death] I will ... yield me to the veriest hind that shall / Once touch my shoulder | 
	
		| LLL I.ii.113 | [Armado to Mote, of Jaquenetta] that I took in the park with the rational hind Costard | 
	
		| RJ I.i.65 | [Tybalt to Benvolio] art thou drawn among these heartless hinds? [also: sense 3] |