It provided entertainment at an affordable price and therefore caused theatregoing to be a regular pastime.
Shakespearean English is considered modern English, so the answer is "our"
i' - in
Shakespearean language is English. "I will kill you" is perfectly straightforward English and means "I will kill you".
In Shakespearean English, "can't" would be expressed as "can not" or "cannot".
In Shakespearean English as written, the letter "I" with an apostrophe is a contraction and can mean "in" or "if" depending on the context.
Early Modern English. Sometimes called Shakespearean English. If you read any Shakespearean play you will read English as it was then said in the Elizabethan era.
the English sonnet
Shakespearean English
Think Shakespearean English.
thy is single :)
"Jesting" is often used as a the word for joking in Shakespearean texts. For example, "Surely you do jest!"
Any kind of rhyming couplet ends Shakespearean, doesn't have to be heroic The Shakespearean (or "English" or "Elizabethan") sonnet ends with a heroic couplet.