| 1H6 II.iii.15 | [Countess to Talbot] Is this the Talbot so much feared abroad | 
		| 3H6 II.i.95 | [Warwick to Richard and Edward] What news abroad? | 
		| 3H6 V.vi.86 | [Richard alone] I will buzz abroad such prophecies | 
		| Cym I.iii.4 | [First Lord to Cloten, of the air] there's none abroad so wholesome as that you vent | 
		| Cym III.iv.179 | [Pisanio to Innogen] Your means abroad | 
		| KL II.i.7 | [Curan to Edmund] You have heard of the news abroad | 
		| LC.137 | [] Like fools that in th'imagination set / The goodly objects which abroad they find | 
		| LC.183 | [the woman to the reverend man] my offences that abroad you see / Are errors of the blood none of the mind | 
		| Oth IV.i.25 | [Iago to Othello] as knaves be such abroad | 
		| Tem III.i.52 | [Miranda to Ferdinand] How features are abroad / I am skill-less of | 
		| Tem V.i.167 | [Prospero to Alonso] Here have I few attendants, / And subjects none abroad | 
		| TNK II.i.152 | [Palamon to Arcite] What a misery / It is to live abroad, and everywhere! | 
		| WT IV.iv.252 | [Autolycus to Clown] there are cozeners abroad |