31 to 40 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... i>The Pre-Shakespeaian Ghost </i>and <i>Shakespeare's Ghosts</i>, M.L.R. vol. 1. ...
... sentinels; all the other characters in Shakespeare's plays who are associated w ...
... ,' or, as it would have been written in Shakespeare's time, ‘sturdie.' F. ...
... 444): “I have consulted a dozen Shakespeares and can find no emendation ...
... as this emendation struck any editor of Shakespeare? Has the passage come before ...
... and <i>parley</i> are elsewhere used by Shakespeare only of a friendly conferenc ...
... arallel for such a use of <i>parle, </i>Shakespeare more than once uses the verb ...
... verse he wrote for the 1640 edition of Shakespeare's poems. He tells of how the ...
... i>Poll-axe: </i>Many pretend to know <i>Shakespear</i>'s Meaning better than him ...
... the corrupted word shews, I think, that Shakespeare wrote —<i>Polacks.</i> ...
... as the name by which they were known in Shakespeare's time.”</para> </cn> ...
... i>, or as it would have been written in Shakespare's time—<i>sleaded. stur ...
... x201D;</para> <para>“Assume that Shakespear made Hamlet talk like a Dane ...
... erm of abuse or dislike. It was rife in Shakespears time: and I believe it may b ...
... ening we drink.' Of course, if I were a Shakespearian commentator I should sugge ...
... eading—not because I thought that Shakespear wrote it (for the preliminary ...
... however, as twice elsewhere in the play Shakespeare employs ‘Polack,' in t ...
... s with the Norwegians (see Schmidt's <i>Shakespeare-Lexicon: Sledded</i>) than w ...
... the corrupted word shows, I think, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks.</i>' </par ...
... Why does the corrupted words show, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks? </i>Why do ...
... i>, or as it would have been written in Shakespeare's time—<i>sleaded. stu ...
... s there be added to them a passage from Shakespeare or from one of his contempor ...
... that it “gives the sense of what Shakespeare intended, i.e. that the dead ...
... </i>There is, however, one instance in Shakespeare's [<i>Luc. </i>176], which r ...
... In <i>Hamlet, </i>II. ii [1088, 1100], Shakespeare twice uses ‘Polack' in ...
... salynde.</i></para> <para>“Might Shakespeare have written ‘studded ...
... dt; studded? —D. Haley in the <i> Shakespeare Quarterly</i> 29 [1978], pp. ...
... 8-9). The 'Greekish lad' is Pyrrhus and Shakespeare drew on this scene for the P ...
... sc>(1747-): “yet the old one was Shakespear's.” </para></cn> <cn> ...
... just</i> were synonymous in the time of Shakespeare. Ben Jonson speaks of verses ...
... e more modern word, <i>just:</i> but in Shakespeare's day, ‘jump' <small>w ...
... o be shaken; so is its ominousness' (<i>Shakespeare's Early Tragedies</i> (Londo ...
... ould have been of greater importance to Shakespeare's audience than it may be to ...
... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... e only use as intransitive were used in Shakespeare's time also as transitive, e ...
... unds an issue of enormous importance in Shakespearean times: England's participa ...
... tutes,</i> p. 300, having observed that Shakespeare gives English manners to eve ...
... x201C;Such confidence has there been in Shakespeare's accuracy, that this passag ...
... in the only two other passages in which Shakespeare uses the word <i>impress, </ ...
... 7, Jenkins says: “The play shows Shakespeare in two minds about [Hor.].&# ...
... viii; G. F. Bradby, <i>Short Studies in Shakespeare, </i>pp. 145 ff. Jenkins als ...