yes
Acting
Two things: electric lighting and actresses, both of which we now have, neither of which the Elizabethans had.
Greek theatre did not have woman, modern theatre does have women.
on a big man ting man is a likle boom boom
The Tudor time theatre had electric lights and the modern time theatre has electric lights
Acting
Two things: electric lighting and actresses, both of which we now have, neither of which the Elizabethans had.
Greek theatre did not have woman, modern theatre does have women.
on a big man ting man is a likle boom boom
Elizabethan language, used during the time of Queen Elizabeth I's reign in the late 16th century, differ from Modern English in terms of vocabulary, grammar, and spelling. Elizabethan language may feature archaic words and expressions, different verb conjugations, and alternate spellings. This can make Elizabethan English challenging for modern readers to understand without translation or context.
Elizabethan English is Modern English, just an early form of it.
The Tudor time theatre had electric lights and the modern time theatre has electric lights
washing machines
size
The theatres in Tudor times were open, in the sense that they had no roof.
The biggest differences are actresses and electricity. In Shakespeare's day women could not legally appear on stage. Electric lighting has radically changed the way we approach production. In Shakespeare's time, they used either natural daylight or candlelight.
"These" in Elizabethan English is exactly the same as it is in all other forms of Modern English: "these" e.g. "Where are these lads? Where are these hearts?" (Midsummer Night's Dream)