261 to 270 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... on</i>. Titles of honour were called in Shakespear's time, very commonly, <i> Ad ...
... rtainly [in <i>Oth. </i>2.3.76 (1188)], Shakespeare is rebuking this vice in his ...
... (ed. 1939): "Used (as almost always in Shakespeare) in the strong sense of 'in ...
... e had become in the 16th century before Shakespeare adopted it here and gave it ...
... 0, p. 5): “Now it is a fact that Shakespeare, in general, kept close to h ...
... oser relation in the expression between Shakespeare and the tale; and this one s ...
... ons: They clepe us drunkards etc.' This Shakespearean reflexion is to be found i ...
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... n of this sentiment, at least so far as Shakespeare's expression of it is concer ...
... ech, asks, “Is it not clear that Shakespeare <i>meant</i> for Hamlet to s ...
... what he is saying? Furthermore, did not Shakespeare intend for the audience to l ...
... host? The sentence, I believe, shows us Shakespeare, the conscious artist, seeki ...
... y man.' What Nashe says of drunkenness, Shakespeare extends from drunkenness to ...
... n argued, especially by those who think Shakespeare intended to delete these lin ...
... evised draft, illustrating perhaps that Shakespeare wrote in phrases and metre f ...
... heobald] would have it <i>mould</i>. <i>Shakespeare restored</i>, p. 33.” ...
... estify of his good qualities. . . . For Shakespeare's age . . . the reputation o ...
... "dominant element in a man's make-up. Shakespeare alludes to the old idea, sti ...
... this as one of only three instances in Shakespeare in which habit has its ordin ...
... where the sense (though unknown outside Shakespeare) is usually and reasonably t ...
... nstance of the usage, so frequent in <i>Shakespeare</i>, of the active form with ...
... c>Joseph</sc> (1953, p. 15): “In Shakespeare's day, as in the eighteenth ...
... y means 'dress' rather than 'custom' in Shakespeare)”</para> <br/> <han ...
... >&c. Not but it is frequent with <i>Shakespeare<sc>, </sc></i>whether thro' ...
... 16;His' of the quartos, which after all Shakespeare may have inadvertently writt ...
... 1899): “<i>His </i>of Q may be Shakespeare's word, though grammatically ...
... r. He is thinking of himself, or rather Shakespeare is asking us to think of him ...
... ly the shift from plural to singular is Shakespeare's; but some editors emend to ...
... ‘the stamp of <i>one</i> defect', Shakespeare seems to have forgotten that ...
... cture of a critick, to be fathered upon Shakespear. I should rather suspect the ...
... ld English as should not be father'd on Shakespeare by meer conjecture; and then ...
... uns <i>ad libitum</i>, were frequent in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. We h ...
... rto, is according to the orthography of Shakespeare's time: <i>Of a doubt To, </ ...
... uns <i>ad libitum</i>, were frequent in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. We h ...
... 201C;<i>Dull </i>is a favourite word of Shakespeare's; and surely it makes at le ...
... itor of the last ed. of the <i>Variorum Shakespeare</i> [v1821] allowed this pas ...
... of turn, pervert, corrupt, or the like. Shakespeare's meaning evidently is, that ...
... character.'—Mr. Singer (in his <i>Shakespeare</i>, 1826) gives, ‘<i> ...
... ich is not mentioned in the <i>Variorum Shakespeare</i>) was unknown to the Rev. ...
... h</i>: it may be asked, then,—did Shakespeare (who occasionally has provin ...
... it works in, like the dyer's hand.' <i>Shakespeare's Sonnets</i>. ‘Her in ...
... 216;<i>Tale of a Tub.</i>' Now, I think Shakespeare's meaning is made clear enou ...
... itor of the last ed. of the <i>Variorum Shakespeare</i> allowed this passage to ...
... of turn, pervert, corrupt, or the like. Shakespeare's meaning evidently is, that ...
... small> The Rev. W. H. Arrowsmith (in <i>Shakespeare's Editors and Commentators, ...
... i>— </small>Mr. Singer (in his <i>Shakespeare</i>, 1826) gives, ‘<i> ...
... ich is not mentioned in the <i>Variorum Shakespeare</i>) was unknown to the Rev. ...
... h</i>: it may be asked, then,—did Shakespeare (who occasionally has provin ...
... o reproach. It might have been heard by Shakespeare in his country strollings, b ...
... #8212;[quotes].</para> <para>“If Shakespeare wrote ‘oft debase' it ...
... n that case we may perhaps imagine that Shakespeare wrote the next line—&# ...
... otes 753-4]. </para> <para>“Thus Shakespeare would mean to say here, R ...
... used by the Elizabethan writers, and by Shakespare himself, as a monosyllable, a ...
... nt as that made by Maplett, a writer of Shakespearian age, whose assertion evide ...
... The ‘Edinburgh Review” and Shakespeare” <i>N&Q </i> 4 se ...
... the writers of the Elizabethan period. Shakespeare, who so rarely repeats himse ...
... ‘of' and ‘to,' see Abbott's Shakespearean Grammar, rev. and enl. ed. ...
... verb, as an active verb. * See Abbott's Shakespearean Grammar.”</small>&l ...
... o instance of such a use of the word in Shakespeare. There is no need of any cha ...
... whole lump.' As to drown, it is used by Shakespeare in the sense of ‘o'erw ...
... hence reasonably be questioned whether Shakespeare ever wrote <i>doubts</i> in ...
... rs. These are the only four passages in Shakespeare where the word ‘douts ...
... </i>was ever used for <i>leaven </i>in Shakespeare's time: certainly he does no ...
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... of the Scottish ‘deil' for devil. Shakespeare was writing English; and the ...
... t the operation of acids on mild was in Shakespeare's mind at the time is shown ...
... more licentious writing, but thoroughly Shakespearean in style. <sc>H. K. St. J. ...
... a most improbable form of ‘e'il.' Shakespeare, writing for Londoners, woul ...
... bethan time, and it would be exactly in Shakespeare's fashion to annex a bit of ...
... hioned way of cheese-making in vogue in Shakespeare's time, and the simile would ...
... he most famous of its kind in the whole Shakespearian canon.” </p. 25& ...
... his is the most disputed passage in all Shakespeare. Though the text is corrupt ...
... ly, is probably the most famous crux in Shakespeare. Q2 <i>eale</i> is usually ...
... Thomas More</i> in what we take to be Shakespeare's own hand (Malone Society R ...
... e are difficulties about attributing to Shakespeare in this context a hypothetic ...
... e distinction between life and fiction. Shakespeare does not deliberately write ...
... ct to <i>often</i> on the grounds that Shakespeare is referring to something th ...
... le' and 'of a doubt' as the language of Shakespeare. I would begin by arguing th ...