171 to 180 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... en mentioned in the sagas: but of these Shakespeare knew nothing; he is simply r ...
... 0. Peter Milward, <i>The Catholocism of Shakespeare's Plays </i>(Cambridge: Sain ...
... ables] Holland (2008, paper at Columbia Shakespeare Seminar): Since Shakespeare' ...
... at Columbia Shakespeare Seminar): Since Shakespeare's audience would have been a ...
... ry.' And should it not be thus spelt in Shakespeare? But instances of our poet's ...
... #x201C;It seems to be used sometimes in Shakespeare for <i>deer</i> sad; hateful ...
... 3 (490); “<i>Dear</i> is used by Shakespeare in a double sense, for <i>be ...
... friend our <i>dearest</i> friend, so <i>Shakespeare</i> takes the liberty to app ...
... 5.1.228 (2474): “<i>Dear</i>, in Shakespeare's language, is <i>dire, drea ...
... ott </sc>(ed. 1819): “Throughout Shakespeare and all the poets of his and ...
... 943] K. Hen. </small>“Throughout Shakespeare . . . signify the extreme of ...
... hnson and Horne Tooke,) that throughout Shakespeare, and all the writers of his ...
... 6): “Caldecott has shown that in Shakespeare's time <i>dearest </i>was ap ...
... 8212;a common use of ‘dearest' in Shakespeare's day.”</para></cn> < ...
... pointed out as included in this word by Shakespeare's employment of it.” ...
... <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1872): “In Shakespeare's time <i>dearest </i>was ap ...
... y, grievous; fell, dire.” Before Shakespeare, this sense was used by Spen ...
... in his <i>Enquiry into the Learning of Shakespear</i>) will perhaps be thought ...
... #x201C;The figure Aposiopesis occurs in Shakespeare, as in all poets, ancient an ...
... 5): <p. 364>“In the German Shakespeare-Jahrbuch [4:385], Mr. Fredin ...
... lish phraseology can doubt for a moment Shakespeare's meaning, which is simply t ...
... s considered', 'on the whole'. But when Shakespeare uses <i>all in all</i> adve ...
... his seems to me more the true spirit of Shakespeare than <i>I</i>.' Mr. <sc>Holt ...
... “Eye is certainly more worthy of Shakespeare.”</para> <para><b>Ed. ...
... urally is the general characteristic of Shakespear, and if he is occasionally in ...
... s sort in the play, and perhaps in all Shakespeare. A four-voiced exchange: Hor ...
... ropriety; but it may be doubted whether Shakespeare did not write it, as it has ...
... . 1872): “‘Who' is used by Shakespeare for the accusative case very ...
... , restored 'Saw?- Who?' (see Winter, <i>Shakespeare on the Stage</i>, 1911, p. 3 ...
... o?] <sc>Powers</sc> (2000, pp. 20, 15): Shakespeare often turned “at the ...
... It only occurs in one other passage of Shakespeare. [<i>Per</i>. 3. 11 (Gower)] ...
... he only other appearance of the word in Shakespeare</small>."</para></cn> <cn> < ...
... y </sc>(1723-): “I doubt not but Shakespear wrote so [Gods], at least at ...
... eems to have been common in the time of Shakespeare. By <i>waist</i> is meant no ...
... person, is to impute mere tautology to Shakespeare, instead of the fine meaning ...
... een used substantively in this sense by Shakespeare, if not by his contemporarie ...
... two words, but it is not probably that Shakespeare meant to make one in this pl ...
... >wast</i>, the spelling of Q2 and F, in Shakespeare, and invariably so in <i>Rom ...
... para></cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... ent speech affords a signal instance of Shakespeare's mode of alternately using ...