911 to 920 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... e</i>, French] 4. Place; class; rank <i>Shakespeare</i>”</para></cn> <cn> ...
... igla>1892<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><i>New Shakespeare Society</i></sigla><hanging> ...
... 12 <b>youth</b>] <sc>Anon</sc>. (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i ...
... ion. There is no good reason for modern Shakespeare edns to perpetuate artificia ...
... to their elders.' Cf. [4.5.172 (2925)]. Shakespeare is fond of metaphors from cl ...
... rather implies sickness than <i>health Shakespear </i>wrote, ‘<i>Importin ...
... ction is a very common one, not only in Shakespeare but in later writers, notabl ...
... 1890): “Ff. misprint <i>ran</i>. Shakespeare used the word <i>can</i> in ...
... teemed accomplishment with gentlemen of Shakespeare's time.”</para> <para ...
... and <i> corpse</i>] To incorporate. <i>Shakespeare</i>.”</para></cn> <cn ...
... ] <sc>Hibbard</sc>(ed.1987):“((a Shakespearian coinage)).”</para> ...
... ibbard</sc>(ed.1987): “((another Shakespearian coinage)).”</para>< ...
... : ‘to <i>top</i> Macbeth.'<small> Shakespeare seems to have been fond of m ...
... f these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of ...
... that these valuable <i>Notes </i> on <i>Shakespeare's Names</i> reached me too l ...
... a bitt of a horse.</small>' Several of Shakespeare's names for minor characters ...
... e toothpick, which we wear not now.' <i>Shakespeare</i>.</para> <para>“&# ...
... he toothpick, which we wear not now. <i>Shakespeare</i>.</para> <para>‘I k ...
... C;It was out of fashion in some part of Shakespeare's time: ‘Virginity, li ...
... u</i>.' The objective, as it is called. Shakespeare often has both the objective ...
... ever much we may deplore this attitude, Shakespeare's age did not find it unwort ...