Thesaurus
This is a thesaurus of all the glosses to the words in the Glossary, linked to the lines in the texts where these words are found.

The Thesaurus is the opposite of the Glossary. When consulting the Glossary, you know the word and you want to find out what it means. When consulting the Thesaurus, you know the meaning and you want to find out which Shakespearean words express it. How would he say 'arrogant' or 'companion'? The options are listed when you search for these words.

Disclaimer: our Thesaurus is a guide only to the words in the Glossary, and not an account of the way these words might be used elsewhere in the canon, or in Early Modern English as a whole. For example, we include Shakespeare’s use of mother to mean 'womanish qualities', but not in its ordinary sense of 'parent'. You can read more background about the thesaurus here.

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Search phrase love 40 items found
love, approach offering
assail (v.)
love, book about
love-book (n.)
love, declare
protest (v.)
love, displaying openly declared
professed (adj.)
love, exploit prompted by
love-feat (n.)
love, expressing
amorous (adj.)
love, expression of
love (n.)
love, faithful in
true (adj.)
love, game of
game (n.)
love, possess in
enjoy (v.)
love, totally in
affected (adj.)
love, trader in
fancy-monger (n.)
love, young shoots of
love-springs (n.)
love potion
medicine (n.)
love with oneself, in
self-endeared (adj.)
love's sake, for
loves, of all
love-causing arrow
loveshaft (n.)
loved ones, deprived of
prived (adj.)
love-chatter
love-prate (n.)
loveliness
fairness (n.)
love-making, of allowed
chaste (adj.)
love-play, engage in
dally (v.)
love-poem
elegy (n.)
lover, provided with a
lovered (adj.)
lover, young
squire (n.)
lovers than, have more
outparamour (v.)
love-song
love-lay (n.)
love-vow
love (n.)
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