previous next
Advantage, subst. any favourable condition or circumstance; 1) profit, gain: “that sin by him a. should achieve,” Sonn. 67, 3. “for his a.” Meas. II, 4, 120. IV, 1, 24. Merch. II, 7, 19. Alls I, 1, 17. John II, 206. John II, 206 IV, 2, 60. R2 I, 4, 41. H4A I, 1, 27. III, 1, 109. H5 IV, 1, 190. H6A IV, 6, 44. H6B III, 1, 25. H8 I, 1, 193. Troil. II, 2, 204. Lr. III, 5, 13. to make a. of == to profit by: Gent. II, 4, 68. to take a. of, in the same sense: Ven. Ded. Gent. II, 4, 68 Wiv. III, 3, 116. John I, 102. II, 297. R2 II, 3, 79. R3 IV, 1, 49. Cor. II, 3, 206. Per. I, 4, 66. “to take a. on:” Ven. 405.
2) condition favourable to success: “refer yourself to this a., first that your stay with him may not be long,” Meas. III, 1, 255. “for a.” Alls I, 1, 215. “she herself, without other a., may lawfully make title,” I, 3, 106. “the plots of best --s,” John II, 40. “I'll use the a. of my power,” R2 III, 3, 42. H4A IV, 3, 2. IV, 4, 28. IV, 4, 28 V, 1, 55. H5 I, 2, 139. H6A I, 4, 12. IV, 4, 19. Troil. V, 2, 130. Cor. IV, 1, 43. Caes. IV, 3, 210. Hml. I, 2, 21. Lr. II, 1, 24. Oth. III, 1, 55. IV, 2, 179. Ant. IV, 11, 4. Cymb. I, 4, 140. IV, 1, 12. V, 2, 11. V, 3, 15.
3) favourable opportunity: “make use of time, let not a. slip,” Ven. 129. “a maid of Dian's this a. found,” Sonn. 153, 2. “all kind of arguments for his a still did wake and sleep,” Compl. 123 (according as he wanted); cf. “I can change shapes with Proteus for --s,” H6C III, 2, 192 (according as it serves my turn). “the next a. will we take throughly,” Tp. III, 3, 13. Wiv. III, 2, 36. Mids. III, 2, 16. Alls I, 1, 215. John III, 4, 151. V, 7, 62. H4A II, 4, 594. H5 III, 6, 127. H6A II, 5, 129. H6B I, 1, 242. R3 III, 5, 74. V, 3, 92. Troil. III, 3, 2. Mcb. V, 4, 11. Oth. I, 3, 298. II, 1, 248. III, 3, 312.
4) superiority: “I have seen the hungry ocean gain a. on the kingdom of the shore,” Sonn. 64, 6. “a. feeds him fat, while men delay,” H4A III, 2, 180. “having some a. on Octavius,” Caes. V, 3, 6. Ant. IV, 7, 11.
5) interest upon money: “neither lend nor borrow upon a.” Merch. I, 3, 71. “paid back with a.” H4A II, 4, 599. Metaphorically: “with a. means to pay thy love,” John III, 3, 22. “he'll remember with --s what feats he did that day,” H5 IV, 3, 50.
hide Dictionary Entry Lookup
Use this tool to search for dictionary entries in all lexica.
Search for in
hide References (17 total)
  • Cross-references in text-specific dictionaries from this page (17):
    • William Shakespeare, Coriolanus, 2.3
    • William Shakespeare, King Lear, 3.5
    • William Shakespeare, Pericles, Prince of Tyre, 1.4
    • William Shakespeare, Two Gentlemen of Verona, 2.4
    • William Shakespeare, King John, 1.1
    • William Shakespeare, King John, 2.1
    • William Shakespeare, King John, 4.2
    • William Shakespeare, The First Part of Henry IV, 1.1
    • William Shakespeare, The First Part of Henry IV, 3.1
    • William Shakespeare, Henry V, 4.1
    • William Shakespeare, The First Part of Henry VI, 4.6
    • William Shakespeare, The Second Part of Henry VI, 3.1
    • William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, 2.7
    • William Shakespeare, Richard II, 1.4
    • William Shakespeare, Richard II, 2.3
    • William Shakespeare, Venus and Adonis, ven
    • William Shakespeare, Sonnets, lxvii
hide Display Preferences
Greek Display:
Arabic Display:
View by Default:
Browse Bar: