101 to 110 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... and Warren, <i>The Law of Property in Shakespeare</i>, 1942, pp. 81-4."</para> ...
... tween ‘drop' and ‘droop' in Shakespeare's day as in our own, and rem ...
... ith analogy, to which the best usage of Shakespeare's day seems to have conforme ...
... gs and amplifications were drilled into Shakespeare in the classroom so thorough ...
... also refers to Sister Miriam Joseph, <i>Shakespeare's Use of the Arts of Languag ...
... I agree with Sisson (<i>New Readings in Shakespeare,</i> 1956) that the sense is ...
... 982): “Cf. 'young Hamlet' [169]. Shakespeare evidently intends a parallel ...
... 201C;<small>notion</small>. Not used by Shakespeare elsewhere.”</para></c ...
... para></cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... lying metaphors are from carpentry, but Shakespeare applies them to social and p ...
... rrection. Suppose therefore that <i><sc>Shakespeare</sc></i><sc> </sc>might writ ...
... tly, as this word is frequently used by Shakespeare's contemporaries. So<i> </i> ...
... Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “Used by Shakespeare both as a preterite and part ...
... sed metaphorically. <small>Elsewhere in Shakespeare it means ‘walk' or  ...
... iately follows the nominative case, and Shakespeare, as his ear guided, giving o ...
... tive cases; or where, as is frequent in Shakespeare, and is found in the Bible a ...
... should</i> be otherwise, and that it is Shakespeare that is in <i>error</i>; alt ...
... consonants. And this is also the use of Shakespeare, where another branch of a s ...
... tive cases; or where, as is frequent in Shakespeare, and is found in the Bible a ...
... should</i> be otherwise, and that it is Shakespeare that is in <i>error</i>; alt ...
... .' </small>And this is also the use of Shakespeare, where another branch of a s ...
... ht detect it. <small>‘It was upon Shakespere (says H. Tooke, <i>Diversions ...
... 1C;‘To transact business.' One of Shakespeare's forcible verbs framed from ...