Pride,

meaning ostentation, finery, or that which persons are proud of. Spenser talks of “lofty trees yclad in summer’s pride” (verdure). Pope, of a “sword whose ivory sheath [was] inwrought with envious pride” (ornamentation); and in this sense the word is used by Jacques in that celebrated passage—

“Why, who cries out on pride [dress]

That can therein tax any private party?

What woman in the city do I name

When that I say ‘the city woman bears

The cost of princes on unworthy shouldersʹ?

… What is he of baser function

That says his bravery [finery] is not of my cost?”


Shakespeare: As You Like It, ii. 7.

Fly pride, says the peacock, proverbial for pride. (Shakespeare: Comedy of Errors, iv. 3.) The pot calling the kettleblack face.”

Sir Pride. First a drayman, then a colonel in the Parliamentary army. (Butler: Hudibras.).

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Pretext
Prettyman (Prince)
Prevarication
Prevent
Previous Question
Priam
Priamond
Priapus
Prick-eared
Prick the Garter
Pride
Pride of the Morning
Pride’s Purge
Pridwen
Pridwin
Priest … Knight
Priest of the Blue-bag
Prig
Prima Donna (Italian)
Prima Facie (Latin)
Primary Colours