Some of Shakespeare's most famous characters include Romeo, Juliet, Macbeth, Puck, and Othello.
Many thousands of people have taken part in Shakespeare's plays.
Plants and flowers ;)
the most important part was the defeat of the Spanish armada
The actors who needed to learn their lines. And even they didn't have to read the whole play, just the part they were in. More recently, schoolchildren have to read the plays as part of their English Language courses.
eyeball
Geoffrey Chaucer was not a contemporary of Shakespeare.
No one place has a majority. England is the setting of 13 plays. Italy is the setting of 11. They are the most common. Of course, many plays are set in a number of different places. Henry V is part in England and part in France as is Henry VI Part 1. Antony and Cleopatra is set in Egypt but partly takes place in Rome.
Titus Andronicus, Henry VI Part II, Henry VI Part III, Love's Labour's Lost, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Comedy of Errors. Take your pick.
Eleanor, the wife of Duke Humphrey and Margery Jourdain in Henry VI Part II and Joan of Arc in Part I were punished for witchcraft; Joan and Margery were burned. Witches (although they are never described as such in the play) are significant in Macbeth.
Yes. He is still part of the season 8 cast of characters
The correct capitalization and punctuation for the sentence is: Can you tell what part dramatic irony plays in any of Shakespeare's sonnets? Dramatic irony in Shakespeare's sonnets refers to situations where the audience knows something that the speaker does not, creating tension or understanding for the reader.
Nobody knows what kinds of jobs Shakespeare might have held between the time he left Stratford and the time he becomes recognized as a playwright. That is why this part of his life is called "the lost years".