Italian, English, Petrarchan, Spenserian, and Shakespearian. To name a few.
The two main types of sonnets from the Elizabethan age are the Petrarchan (or Italian) Sonnet, which consists of an octave followed by a sestet, and the Shakespearean (or English) sonnet, which is comprised of three quatrains followed by a final couplet.
There are two main types of sonnets: Petrarchan (or Italian) sonnets and Shakespearean (or English) sonnets. Petrarchan sonnets consist of an octave followed by a sestet, while Shakespearean sonnets consist of three quatrains and a final rhyming couplet.
Plays and Sonnets.
There are two main types of sonnets: the Italian/Petrarchan sonnet and the English/Shakespearean sonnet. The Italian sonnet consists of an octave followed by a sestet, while the English sonnet consists of three quatrains and a final couplet.
No or it wouldn't be called "Elizabethan" it would have been called the middle ages. Two different time periods.
protestants and catholics
The Elizabethan age - until the death of Queen Eliazabeth in 1603 The Stuart age - from the accession of King James in 1603
Shakespeare lived in the reigns of two English monarchs, Elizabeth I and James I, whose reigns are known as the Elizabethan Age and the Jacobean Age respectively.
I and U are missing from the Elizabethan alphabet.
Types are too extraordinary to be basic. Types are more doable
The two types of age that the law of superposition gives you are relative and absolute. These findings are always based on observations of the natural history of the rocks.
The two main types of sonnets are the Petrarchan (or Italian) sonnet, which consists of an octave followed by a sestet, and the Shakespearean (or English) sonnet, which consists of three quatrains and a couplet. The Petrarchan sonnet typically has an ABBAABBA CDCDCD rhyme scheme, while the Shakespearean sonnet follows an ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme.
Francesco Petrarch, 1304-1374, was famous for his sonnets two hundred years before Shakespeare was born.