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101 to 110 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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101) Commentary Note for line 187:
187 Th'imperiall ioyntresse {to} <of> this warlike state

    ... t in a proper legal sense. See Clarkson and Warren, <i>The Law of Property in Shakespeare</i>, 1942, pp. 81-4."</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1987<tab> </tab><sc>oxf ...
102) Commentary Note for line 189:
189 With {an} <one> auspitious, and {a} <one> dropping eye,

    ... sense required, the distinction made between &#8216;drop' and &#8216;droop' in Shakespeare's day as in our own, and remembering how common an error is the dupl ...

    ... pronunciation of which is at variance with analogy, to which the best usage of Shakespeare's day seems to have conformed. Its modern pronunciation is a unique ...

    ... studied in school: &#x201C;Such doublings and amplifications were drilled into Shakespeare in the classroom so thoroughly that they became second nature in his ...
103) Commentary Note for line 193:
193 Your better wisdomes, which haue freely gone

    ... <i>ethos</i>, says Patricia Ward. She also refers to Sister Miriam Joseph, <i>Shakespeare's Use of the Arts of Language</i>. New York: Hafner, 1966: 274. <i>E ...
104) Commentary Note for line 195:
195 Now followes that you knowe young Fortinbrasse,

    ... with the matter that 'now follows'. But I agree with Sisson (<i>New Readings in Shakespeare,</i> 1956) that the sense is not 'follows what you already know, nam ...

    ... ortinbrasse</i>] <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C;Cf. 'young Hamlet' [169]. Shakespeare evidently intends a parallel between the two princes.&#x201D; </par ...
105) Commentary Note for line 196:
196 Holding a weake supposall of our worth

    ... >Clark &amp; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;<small>notion</small>. Not used by Shakespeare elsewhere.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1878<tab> </tab><sc>rlf</s ...
106) Commentary Note for line 198:
198 Our state to be disioynt, and out of frame

    ... "let the frame of things disjoint.' "</para></cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...

    ... para></cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para> 198<tab> < ...

    ... ylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;The underlying metaphors are from carpentry, but Shakespeare applies them to social and political disruption elsewhere; see 'But ...
107) Commentary Note for line 199:
199 Coleagued with {this} <the> dreame of his aduantage

    ... t least, as a Conjecture; if not as a Correction. Suppose therefore that <i><sc>Shakespeare</sc></i><sc> </sc>might write it thus; . . . &#8216;<i>collogued</ ...

    ... #8212;<i>collogued</i>, and perhaps rightly, as this word is frequently used by Shakespeare's contemporaries. So<i> </i>in<i> </i>Marston's <i>Malcontent</i>, 1 ...
108) Commentary Note for line 206:
206 Thus much the busines is, we haue heere writ

    ... tab> </tab><b>writ</b>] <sc>Clark &amp; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;Used by Shakespeare both as a preterite and participle.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...
109) Commentary Note for line 210:
210 His further gate heerein, in that the leuies,

    ... : &#x201C;proceeding. The word is here used metaphorically. <small>Elsewhere in Shakespeare it means &#8216;walk' or &#8216;mode of walking.</small>'&#x201D;</p ...
110) Commentary Note for line 216:
216 To busines with the King, more then the scope

    ... of this rule, even where the verb immediately follows the nominative case, and Shakespeare, as his ear guided, giving occasionally into a practise into which h ...

    ... the verbs immediately follow the nominative cases; or where, as is frequent in Shakespeare, and is found in the Bible and our best writers of that day, only ot ...

    ... </i> 4.3.342 (1696)] Biron.) that it <i>should</i> be otherwise, and that it is Shakespeare that is in <i>error</i>; although he has there pointed out an instan ...

    ... s I.15.), where there is no clashing of consonants. And this is also the use of Shakespeare, where another branch of a sentence is interposed between the geniti ...

    ... the verbs immediately follow the nominative cases; or where, as is frequent in Shakespeare, and is found in the Bible and our best writers of that day, only ot ...

    ... </i> 4.3.342 (1696)] Biron.) that it <i>should</i> be otherwise, and that it is Shakespeare that is in <i>error</i>; although he has there pointed out an instan ...

    ... her <i>garments</i> <i>were</i> of lawn.' </small>And this is also the use of Shakespeare, where another branch of a sentence is interposed between the geniti ...

    ... ape even their ear, though their eye might detect it. <small>&#8216;It was upon Shakespere (says H. Tooke, <i>Diversions of Purley</i> [2: 52]) that the charge ...

    ... &amp; <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): &#x201C;&#8216;To transact business.' One of Shakespeare's forcible verbs framed from a noun.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla ...

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