391 to 400 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... id, the seventh book, the book in which Shakespeare was so well read: ‘ . ...
... 69, pp. 47-8): <p. 47> “In Shakespeare's day, . . . <i>windlace, < ...
... #8216;or mistress,' as it was called in Shakespeare's time) directly, but in a c ...
... lonius, whose talk is of that kind; but Shakespeare seriously uses it for indire ...
... e bias [. . .]”; Norwegians are Shakespeare's bait: “by such page ...
... ior (cp. G. H. Cowling, <i>Music on the Shakespearean Stage </i>[1915]). ” ...
... ard</sc> (ed. 1987): "work hard at. In Shakespeare's day a gentleman was expect ...
... form to the Ground-work of his Plot, <i>Shakespeare</i> makes the young Prince f ...
... es us: 'tis another fine instance of <i>Shakespear</i>'s excellence in the <i>Hy ...
... red with the overcoat or outer garment. Shakespeare makes his characters (e.g. J ...
... ened, distracted and puzzled girl, that Shakespeare decided we should not witnes ...
... aylor </sc> (ed. 2006): “jacket. Shakespeare here as elsewhere imagines h ...
... ort of explaining; a perpetual usage of Shakespeare's when he has brought in a w ...
... no Quarto earlier than that of 1637 (<i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, p. 70), and it ...
... hat</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "Shakespeare and his contemporaries, livi ...
... stantive into their Tongues: so that <i>Shakespeare </i>could not be at a Loss f ...
... stantive into their Tongues: so that <i>Shakespeare </i>could not be at a Loss f ...
... wn so as to resemble gives (fetters). A Shakespearean coinage ” </para>< ...
... ankles like fetters – a typically Shakespearian compound coinage."</para>< ...
... (ed. 2006): “down-gyvèd (a Shakespearean coinage)”</para></c ...
... hat he was mad; I cannot but think that Shakespeare meant something more than th ...
... ou do, of course is make a sign--a sign Shakespeare required to give an idea of ...