Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
They didn't. It wasn't said. This is modern slang and really not a word with a meaning the way it is used today.
Shakespeare did not use the word "indecent" although he did use "decent". The word "lewd" might be the word he would choose to express this idea.
There is no tangible evidence to say what Shakespeare's favorite character was.
Shakespeare did not use the word "frequently". However he often used the perfectly modern and somewhat more straightforward "often".
Shakespeare did not use the word "trustworthy" but he did use the word "trusty" a lot which means the same.
E'er is not a word; it's a different spelling of the word "ever" showing that you don't say the letter "v"
The phrase never occurs in any Shakespeare sonnet: it could not. The word 'court' was not used in this sense in Shakespearean English (Shakespeare would have used the word 'woo' in this sense). It's a dumb thing to say: Shakespeare never said dumb stuff.
The balcony scene, copy it word for word... that's basically all they talk about.
Shakespeare would say "Wherefore art though?"
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
shakespeare
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
Shakespeare You Say - 2011 was released on: USA: 2011
Shakespeare = Shakespeare(names are usually the same in all languages)
Shakespeare's language was English. "And" in English is "and".