621 to 630 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... uce Ii, 264 [see n. above] remarks that Shakespeare may have used through the fr ...
... 's table.—Nach Douce II, 264 soll Shakespeare diesen Gedanken von einem al ...
... 's table.' According to Douce, II, 264, Shakespeare should have introduced these ...
... an earlier version of <i>Hamlet</i> by Shakespeare in which this passage alread ...
... Dowden </sc>(ed. 1899): “Perhaps Shakespeare thought of Alexander's beaut ...
... quartos read <i> imperious</i> ; which Shakespeare (see [<i>Cym.</i> 4.3.35 (2 ...
... o. The Qq read <i> imperious</i>, which Shakespeare sometimes indeed uses [for] ...
... for the moment passes through his mind. Shakespeare has made this a marked chact ...
... 71>“A fine effect intended by Shakespeare is similarly marred in the s ...
... ings. <sc>Dover Wilson</sc> argues that Shakespeare had in mind a Protestant  ...
... . Not that it matters much which church Shakespeare had in mind, since he clearl ...
... cation, begun to be in general use. But Shakespeare must have used the tentative ...
... “In [<i>Ant. </i>3.2.20 (1561)], Shakespeare uses ‘shards' for the ...
... is a question in which of these senses Shakespeare understood <i>shard</i> ([<i ...
... is certainly Icelandic.</small> But how Shakespeare came to introduce a word so ...
... x201D; [is] a scarcely allowable word; Shakespeare wrote perhaps first and subm ...
... or, und es ist noch unerklärt, wie Shakespeare zu diesem deutschen Worte ge ...
... where else, and it is still unclear how Shakespeare arrived at these German word ...
... and it has been suggested that probably Shakespeare originally met with the word ...
... om the discourse of the priest; perhaps Shakespeare knew even the etymology of R ...
... been found of this word in English but Shakespeare would scarcely have used it ...
... crants</b>] <sc>Furnivall</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i ...
... ome in Norway)). It is conceivable that Shakespeare sought to suggest a Danish c ...
... (ed. 1899): “Several passages of Shakespeare refer to strewing the corpse ...
... dopt. (In Mr. Collier's one-volume <i> Shakespeare </i>, I find the ‘sage ...
... r (1) that </p. 11> <p. 12> Shakespeare himself had somehow a finger ...