And thanne loke that ye enquere what mony he hath reseyvid of the seid maner in my tyme, wherof the ferme is vjli.
Also, the obligacion of the Bisshop of Norwychys oblygacion, I never sye it that I remembre; wherfor I wolde and prey my modre toloke it up.
And loke ye be mery and take no thought, For thys ryme is cunnyngly wrought.
Calle and Elys owen, wher of he is alowid; and thanne see that the seid John Russe be content of the remnaunt of his parcellis that is dew by me, but loke ye pay non other mennes dewtes.
Wherffo[r] loke that ye on my behalve reffuce all admynestracion, entresse or besynesse, that I myght have there by.
Worceter to loke therfore he sayd he wyst well he wold lete you have knowlych yf any such thyng may be founde, and also he sayd that he wold send to the seyd Wyll.
Thjasse promised to release Loke if he would bring to him Idun and her golden apples.
Fjalar's identity with Utgard-Loke is proved by Harbardsljod, str.
Loke is slain in Ragnarok, to which he, freed from his cave of torture in the kingdom of death, proceeds at the head of the hosts of "the sons of destruction.
Loke entices Idun from the secure grounds of Asgard, and treacherously delivers her to the powers of frost; Gulveig, as we shall see, plays Freyja into the hands of the giants.
Thus Loke is, according to the Icelandic mythic fragments, the cause of epidemics.
The myth concerning the banishment of the famous vala to the Ironwood, and of the Loke progeny which she there fosters, has been turned into history by Jordanes in his De Goth.
Loke became the possessor of the evil woman (kvidugr af konu illri), and became the father of the children from which the trolls (flagd) are come which are found in the world.
Loke plans enmity between the gods and the forces of nature, which hitherto had been friendly, and which have their personal representatives in Ivalde's sons; Gulveig causes the war between the Asas and Vans.
When the treasures were finished, Lokecunningly gets the gods to assemble for the purpose of deciding whether or not he has forfeited his head.
Gospell, with an admonytion to the Rulers, that they loke better upon the hospitals.
The Loke of the Giants,--called Utgard, because he dwelt in the uttermost parts of the world, Jotunheim.
Loke in haste my gere be grayd,[530] My self shalle to that gadlyng go.
Loke on this ground, horson, thinks thou the neele is here?
Cokkis soule, lokehowe he approcheth nere Unto my wyfe: this abateth my chere.
Loke how the kokold chafyth the wax that is hard, 505 And for his lyfe, daryth not loke hetherward.
Tib, stoope & loke downe to the ground to it, and take some paine.
Loke of Jhan Jhan, which maketh hard shyft 515 To chafe the wax, to stop therwith the clyft.
Loke how the pyld preest crammyth in; That wold to God he myght therwith choke.
For loke how myche more I have made her to myche, And so farre, at lest, she hath made me to lyttell.
Loke you on your owne fist,[531] and I will looke on this.
Be of good chere man for I sawe ryght nowe a rodde made of wythye for the, garnysshed with knottes, it wolde do a boy good to loke vpon it.
And al so loke on shrewes þat ben þe contrarie p{ar}tye of goode men.
Loke up on thi left half, And lo where he stondeth!
Dominus pars hereditatis meae, Is a murye verset, That hath take fro Tybourne Twenty stronge theves; Ther lewed theves ben lolled up, Loke how thei be saved.
For-thi loke thow lovye, As longe as thow durest; For is no science under sonne So sovereyn for the soule.
Loke thow werche it in werk, That thi word sheweth, Swich as thow semest in sighte Be in assay y-founde.
Now have I told thee what truthe is, That no tresor is bettre; I may no lenger lenge thee with, Now loke thee oure Lorde.
Who kan teche thee bettre, 750 Lokethow suffre hym to seye, And sithen lere it after; For truthe telleth that love Is triacle of hevene.
The Senate depeached Ambassadours to the king commaunding them to saye nothing of Timochares, but to giue the kinge warning circumspectly to loke wel about him, to preuent such treason, as by those that were nerest him might be attempted.
But who can loke for worse at the handes of his mortall and cruell enemie?
I warrant you Cyrus (sayd Araspas:) for if I do continually loke vpon them, I wil not so be drowned in loue, as the same shall prouoke me to do any thing that doth not become mee.
You saye well, sayd Cyrus, Therfore keepe this woman as I bid you, and loke wel vnto her: For peraduenture she is taken in good time.
Loke out of londe thou be not fare; 2710 And if such cause thou have, that thee Bihoveth to gon out of contree, Leve hool thyn herte in hostage, Til thou ageyn make thy passage.
But many oon with hir loke she herte, And that sat hir ful lyte at herte, For she knew no-thing of hir thoght; 885 But whether she knew, or knew hit noght Algate she ne roghte of hem a stree!
Anoon-right I gan finde a tale To him, to loke wher I might ought Have more knowing of his thought.
Loke ye my servise take at gree, 2105 By thilke feith ye owe to me.
And loke alwey that they be shape, What garnement that thou shalt make, 2260 Of him that can [hem] beste do, With al that perteyneth therto.
Loke that no man for scarce thee holde, For that may greve thee manyfolde.
And, for that no man shal thee see Bifore the hous, ne in the way, Loke thou be goon ageyn er day.
Than shalt thou goon, ful foule aferd; 2655 Loke if the gate be unsperd, And waite without in wo and peyn, Ful yvel a-cold in winde and reyn.
Belyue loke [th]at my gere be grathed, Miselffe schall to [th]at gedlyng goo.
Loke now were theese lolleres And lewede eremytes, Yf thei breke thys obedience That ben so fro churche, Wher see we hem on Sonedays The servise to huyre?
Loke now, leve man, Beth nought thise y-lyke Fully to the Pharisens, In fele of these poyntes.
Thei usen russet also Some of this freres, That bitokeneth travaile And treuth upon erthe, But loke whou this lorels Laboren the erthe.
Leride it in hevene, | and as the lovelokest | to loke on, aftir oure Lord.
Loke hough this loresmen Lordes betrayen, Seyn that they folwen Fully Fraunceyses rewle, 580 That in cotinge of his cope Is more cloth y-folden Than was in Fraunceis froc Whan he hem first made.
If thow wolt be wroken, Wend into Unitee, And hold thee there evere, Til I sende for thee; And loke thow konne som craft, Er thow come thennes.
Harkne at Herdforthe How that they werchen, And loke when that they lyven And leeve as thou fyndest.
Reson, 'Ich rede the, Rewele thi tonge evere; And er thow lacke eny lyf, Loke ho is to preise.
If lewed men knewe this Latyn, Thei wolde loke whom thei yeve, And avisen hem bifore A fyve dayes or sixe, Er thei amortisede to monkes Or chanons hir rente.
And let weomen nether touche the yonge gourdes nor loke upon them, for the only touchinge and sighte of weomen kille the yonge gourdes.
Loke wyscely on golde erly at morwe [morning] Yat day fro feueres it schall ye borwe: Ye odour of ye golde is good to smelle.
If any person use saffron measurably it maketh in them a good colour, but if thei use it out of mesure it maketh hym loke pale, and maketh the hede ache and hurteth the appetite.
And loke your bagges be of boltell clothe, and the mouthes opyn, and let it ren in v or vi bagges on a perche, and under every bagge a clene basen.
Take Almaundes blaunched and drawe hem up with water and alye it with flour of Rys and do þerto powdour of gyngur sugur and salt, and loke it be not stondyng [2], messe it and serue it forth.
Loke ye have feyre pewter basens to kepe in your pouders and your ypocrasse to ren ynne.
Thjalfe answered, that he would run a race with any one that Utgard Loke would appoint.
Utgard Loke then said, 'that to empty that horn at one pull was well done; some drained it at twice; but that he was a wretched drinker who could not finish it at the third draught.
It was now drawing towards night; Utgard Lokeshowed Thor and his companions their lodging, where they were well accommodated.
Utgard Loke accompanied them out of the castle, but at parting he asked Thor how the journey had gone off, whether he had found any man more mighty than himself?
Utgard Loke answered: 'Young men think it mere play to lift my cat from the ground; and I would never have proposed this to Aesir Thor, if I did not perceive that thou art a much less man than I had thought thee.
On this there entered the hall an old woman, and Utgard Loke said she would wrestle with Thor.
Then Utgard Loke stepped forward, bade them cease the struggle, and said that Thor should attempt nothing more at his court.
Then asked Utgard Loke of Thor, what were the feats that he would attempt corresponding to the fame that went abroad of him?
Utgard Loke called a young man named Huge, and bade him run with Thjalfe.
Then asked Utgard Loke what art the young man (Thor's attendant) understood?
Utgard Loke said, 'Very good,' and bade his cup-bearer bring out the horn from which his courtiers were accustomed to drink.
When Thor heard this discourse he grasped his hammer and lifted it into the air, but as he was about to strike he saw Utgard Loke nowhere.
That oon of hem the cut brought in his fest, fist And bad hem drawe and loke wher it wil falle, look And it fel on the yongest of hem alle, And forth toward the toun he went anoon.
Loke how thou ridest for the same entent To wynne good, thou rekkist never how, Right so fare I, for ryde I wolde now Unto the worldes ende for a praye.
Frey is felled by Surt, andLoke and Heimdal kill each other.
The greatest sorrow which Loke caused the whole world was that by deceit he caused the death of the lovely god, Balder.
The ship Naglfar carries the army of the Yotuns across the sea under the leadership of the Yotun Rym, andLoke advances at the head of the hosts from the abode of Hel.
The gods knew that this offspring of Loke would cause trouble; therefore they tied the Fenris-Wolf, threw the serpent into the sea, and hurled Hel down into Niflheim, where she became the ruler of the dead.
The Fenris-Wolf andLoke get loose, and the Midgard-Serpent leaves the ocean.
I beseche yow of yowre gode masterchep that ye wold not do wreythe this letter, for and my mastres knew that I sent yow suyche a letter I were never abyll to loke up on her, nor to abyde in her heysyte.
I come to Redham, that I wend he shuld never a askapid it, nor not is leke to do but if he have redy help; and therfore he shal into Suffolk this next weke to myn aunt, for there is a good fesician, and he shal loke to hym.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loke" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.