181 to 190 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... ibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "majestically. Shakespeare's only use of <i>stately</i> ...
... c>Warburton</sc> (ed. 1747): “<i>Shakespear</i> could never write so impr ...
... 60, BL Ms 0.12.575): “Warb. says Shakespeare could never write so imprope ...
... ning trifles, it might be replied, that Shakespeare would write more erroneously ...
... <i>cool'd </i>To hear a night-shriek.' Shakespeare probably knew that ‘je ...
... it has been ‘bechill'd.' Besides, Shakespeare himself never uses ‘di ...
... Therefore, we feel morally certain that Shakespeare's word here was ‘bechi ...
... e of so much improvement in the text of Shakespeare.” </para></cn> <cn>< ...
... sh, and are not to be found anywhere in Shakespeare.</para> <para>“The fi ...
... s Collier from his <i>Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton</i>, Preface, p. ...
... the blood which is usually described by Shakespeare as the seat of the refrigera ...
... echill'd</i>; for it is observable that Shakespeare in several other places desc ...
... /para> <para><n45> “* That Shakespeare was acquainted with the vari ...
... strongly corroborated by the very words Shakespeare put into the mouth of Horati ...
... re instances when ‘its' occurs in Shakespeare's writing. See [<i>WT </i>1. ...
... seem to think), but the older form. In Shakespeare's time use had not yet decid ...
... and is said to have been rarely used in Shakespeare's time. It is, however, very ...
... olios read ‘it,' and so doubtless Shakespeare wrote. In the Cambridge and ...
... he usual form of the possessive case in Shakespeare's time. ‘Its' was howe ...
... ained, by a very close inspection, that Shakespeare has <i>its</i> ten times, bu ...
... e <i>his</i> is by far the commonest in Shakespeare. Cf. [5.1.222 (3410)]." </pa ...
... [127]) but 'it' is occasionally used by Shakespeare, and less frequently 'its'." ...
... ves would have been 'its' or 'his', but Shakespeare sometimes uses the older, un ...
... hat <i>motiom.</i>in the language of <i>Shakespeare</i>'s days, </p. Hh7v> ...
... . . .] <i>Its</i>, however, is found in Shakespeare. There is one instance [and ...
... ppears to be (though it is not) used by Shakespeare for <i>as if </i>. . . . th ...
... emphasis being laid on ‘now.' In Shakespeare the emphasis is often to be ...
... </ehline> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... , as verse [i.e. staggering lines]; for Shakespeare clearly makes no sustained a ...
... unclear. </p. 122><p. 123> Shakespeare's haste could have caused in ...
... h-headings shows no systematic purpose. Shakespeare presumably intended a full c ...
... r. Malone had also before remarked that Shakespeare confounded the <i>beaver </i ...
... however, is clearly not the meaning of Shakespeare here.” </para></cn> < ...
... 216;he wore his bever <i>down</i>;' but Shakespeare has the authority of one who ...
... s in design over the years mean that in Shakespeare's plays, a beaver can be  ...
... <small>very much in point, </small>from Shakespeare's [Son. 12]: — ‘ ...