Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • Absolutely genuine, quite authentic, as in That laboratory test was simon pure; none of the specimens was adulterated. This expression comes from the name of a character in a play, Susannah Centilivre's A Bold Stroke for a Wife (1717), who is the victim of an impersonation but turns up in the end and proves that he is “the real Simon Pure.”
  1. People also ask

  2. Sep 15, 2017 · Simon Pure is the name of a character in A Bold Stroke for a Wife (London, 1718), a comedy by the English poet, playwright and actress Susanna Centlivre (circa 1667-1723). In order to marry Mrs. Lovely, Colonel Fainwell must convince her four guardians that he will make the ideal husband.

  3. the real Simon Pure. old-fashioned The genuine or authentic person or thing; the most pure or untainted example of a type of person or thing. A reference to a character in Susannah Centlivre's 1717 play A Bold Stroke for a Wife.

  4. This expression comes from the name of a character in a play, Susannah Centilivre's A Bold Stroke for a Wife (1717), who is the victim of an impersonation but turns up in the end and proves that he is “the real Simon Pure.”

  5. Oct 30, 2022 · simon-pure (adj.)"genuine, pure, authentic, true," 1815, colloquial, from the true Simon Pure "the genuine person or thing" (1795), from the name of a Quaker character who is impersonated by another character (Colonel Feignwell) as part of the comedy "A Bold Stroke for a Wife" (1717) by English dramatist and actress Susannah Centlivre. In the ...

  6. The fire-and-brimstone Quaker character impersonated by Fainwell is Simon Pure, and one point of the plot is to discover the "real" Simon Pure. Fainwell gets the guardians' permission to wed Lovely but before the marriage can take place, the real Simon Pure shows up at the end to prove his identity.

    • Susanna Centlivre, Thalia Stathas
    • 1968
  7. Aug 31, 2023 · From the phrase "the real Simon Pure" (the true person or article), from the character Simon Pure (who is impersonated by another, and obliged to prove his identity) in Susanna Centlivre's 1717 play A Bold Stroke for a Wife.

  8. Simon-pure is a term used to describe something that is genuine, authentic, or unadulterated. It is often used to emphasize the purity or integrity of a substance or object, particularly in contrast to something that has been mixed with other substances or is of questionable origin.