791 to 800 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... (ed. 1904): “the regular word in Shakespeare's time for the state-journey ...
... tab> </tab> Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 ...
... es that in the journe voyage to England Shakespeare merely followed the novel as ...
... f Hamblet</i>.'” </n.> but Shakespeare never adhered to followed a ...
... e it is used merely as an incident, but Shakespeare saw how it could be applied ...
... s becoming unintelligible and vulgar in Shakespeare's time, and he generally use ...
... /sc>ed. 1877): “For instances of Shakespeare's use of ‘at' instead ...
... ll> <small>Acts xiii. 36). See Abbott's Shakespearean Grammar, §143. ‘ ...
... a>“It can hardly be doubted that Shakespeare was familiar with this tradi ...
... Orders were quite familiar to people in Shakespeare's time.” </p. 290& ...
... s whether this was done deliberately by Shakespeare or is due to the compositor. ...
... nd F1, so that it probably derives from Shakespeare. It occurs in <i>. </i>[4.3. ...
... para><n><2:225> “2<i>Shakespearian</i> <i>Punctuation</i>, pp ...
... s becoming unintelligible and vulgar in Shakespeare's time, and he generally use ...
... lanning soliloquy', see <i>Kommentar zu Shakespeare's 'Richard III' </i>(Gö ...
... MS. in Mr. J. Payne Collier's annotated Shakespeare</i>, pp. 34-85.”</par ...
... process? <i>Ant</i>. [1.1.28 (39)]. <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i>.”</para>< ...
... t;p.543>“Mr. Theobald, in his Shakespear restored, p.109— </p ...
... ónjure</i>. Instances are found in Shakespeare both ways: and Hall has <i>c ...
... 243;njure</i> is the usual emphasis for Shakespeare; <i>conjúre</i> is foun ...
... There are many examples to be found in Shakespeare's plays, by which it may be ...
... (ed. 1872): cónjuring,] “In Shakespeare's time the two senses of <i> ...
... he word does not occur anywhere else in Shakespeare, except in the pirated and s ...
... s in his edition of the play, formed by Shakespeare by analogy with agree.ȁ ...
... improbable that <i>congrue</i> is what Shakespeare wrote in each place, and tha ...
... Q2. ‘congrue' is a word unique to Shakespeare, occurring only here and in ...
... is the only passage where it occurs in Shakespeare either as substantive or adj ...
... uer.' The word is not used elsewhere by Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...