FLING. 'If I fling half a crown to a beggar with intention to break his head,' &c., i. 398.
FLOUNDERS. 'He flounders well,' v. 93, n. 1; 'Till he is at the bottom he flounders,' v. 243.
FLY. 'A fly, Sir, may sting a stately horse and make him wince, but one is but an insect, and the other is a horse still,' i. 263, n. 3.
FOLLY. 'There are in these verses too much folly for madness, and too much madness for folly,' iii. 258, n. 2.
FOOL. 'I should never hear music, if it made me such a fool,' iii.
197;
'There's danger in a fool' (Churchill), v. 217, n. 1.
FOOLISH. 'I would almost be content to be as foolish,' iii. 21, n, 2;
'It is a foolish thing well done,' ii. 210.
FOOLS. 'I never desire to meet fools anywhere,' iii. 299, n. 2.
FOOTMAN. 'A well-behaved fellow citizen, your footman,' i. 447.
FOREIGNERS. 'For anything I see foreigners are fools'
('Old' Meynell), iv. 15.
FORTUNE. 'It is gone into the city to look for a fortune,' ii. 126.