[108] [Literally, an inferior kind of hawk, but here used to signify a coward, a poor creature.]
[109] [This term, borrowed from the old romance so called, is frequently employed in the sense of an adventurer or knight-errant.]
[110] [This word seems here to signify an infinitessimal quantity, a cypher, a nonentity, in which sense it is apparently unglossed.]
[111] [Figgaries.]
[112] [Query, a page who walks behind a lady in the street. Compare Halliwell in v.]
[113] [Sheldrake, or shieldrake.]
[114] [A play on the similarity of sound between meddler and medlar.]
[115] [Tobacco. Old copy, mundungo's.]
[116] [Old copy, her.]
[117] [Old copy, him.]