That speech by the character Jacques is from As You Like It and is thought to have been written around 1599 or so.
"All the world's a stage," is modern English.
He trying to say all the worlds a stage its on big place and its quite frighten.
all the worlds a stage has a variety of alliteration such as : shrunk shank quick in quarrel and satchel and shining
Shakespear.
All The Worlds a Stage.
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He trying to say all the worlds a stage its on big place and its quite frighten.
'All the world's a stage' is indeed a Shakespearean quotation, but what are you asking by saying 'because you could not'?
Shakespeare wrote As You Like It, from which those words are quoted, around 1600.
Shakespeare's "As You Like it", Act II, scene vii.
Almighty allah is the sole Creator and Ruler of all the creatures and all the worlds.
The short answer is Jaques, the melancholy friend of the elder Duke, in William Shakespeare's play 'As You Like It.'
It is OK for a 10 year old as is all the other antrix games
It's a speech. If you present it, you use the words Shakespeare wrote. You do not add any topics to what is contained in the piece.
as the 14 year old is in the pubescent stage of life a 14 year olds size with vary duirng that season so its all about skill and speed at that stage
God is, simultaneously, above all worlds and throughout all worlds.
It's not a poem. It's a speech from the play As You Like It. And "foregrounding" is not a helpful term when discussing speeches or poetry, because all it means is emphasis, and of course there is emphasis in all speeches and poetry.