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Elizabethan Insults - Letter D

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Elizabethan Insults beginning with the Letter D

The following Elizabethan Insults dictionary contains words and phrases from the plays of William Shakespeare.

Damn her, lewd minx (Othello)
Deep, hollow, treacherous, and full of guile (Richard III)

Degenerate and base art thou (The Two Gentlemen of Verona)
Despised substance of divinest show (Romeo and Juliet)
Destroy your sight with a new Gorgon (Macbeth)
Die a beggar (Antony & Cleopatra)
Die and be damned (Henry V)
Dissembling harlot, thou are false in all (Comedy of Errors)
Drunkenness is his best virtue, for he will be swine drunk, and in his sleep he does little harm, save to his bedclothes about him (All's well that ends well)

Elizabethan Language Guide - An Elizabethan Online Dictionary
Click the following links to access more information about the old English Elizabethan Language and the Elizabethan Online Dictionary for an easy to follow Elizabethan language guide.

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