No, he used various literary sources available to him - Holinshed, Froissart et al.
He didnt own it but the famous Shakespeare playhouse is the globe theatre
Easy. Always be honest, always be humble. Enjoy everyone's stories, create your own to tell. Everyone is in the same boat, be friendly to everyone and some of them will be good friends back. The others have issues, give them time to work them out. Always forgive. People are social animals. Get involved with your friends lives and envoy your own.
They got married. So did he. They were human beings. So was he. That's about it. As you can see, Shakespeare did not draw any of his plots or stories from his own life. That's why it doesn't really matter that we know so little about his life.
No, his company owned them. They were not Shakespeare's personal property.
It can personalize the speech and it make it more interesting when using your own stories.
I guess it may be from his own life. He might have had a girlfriend of someone he loved to make the romances.
Choose which steps a character will take next ~ Apex
Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare's play Macbeth says, 'You know your own degrees'
Shakespeare did not own half of any theatre. He owned one-eighth of two theatres, the Globe and the Blackfriars.
This book consists of short stories, in order to get a summary of this book specify which soty or read the enitre book and make your own summary of the different stories.
We don't know, because Shakespeare left no record of what he liked and what he didn't like. We can talk about what books and plays he used, but it doesn't mean he liked them. He used earlier versions of Hamlet and King Lear, a poetic version of the Romeo and Juliet story, Holinshed's Chronicles, Plutarch's lives, stories from Ovid, stories from Bocaccio and many other books and plays as sources for his own plays.
"scorn her own image" was said by Hamlet written by William Shakespeare. Act III SC II "scorn her own image" was said by Hamlet written by William Shakespeare. Act III SC II "scorn her own image" was said by Hamlet written by William Shakespeare. Act III SC II "scorn her own image" was said by Hamlet written by William Shakespeare. Act III SC II "scorn her own image" was said by Hamlet written by William Shakespeare. Act III SC II