Shakespeare wrote plays as a part of his job, being a partner in a playing company, for the purpose of having something for the playing company to perform. They were not intended for publication. He also wrote long poems for the purpose of publishing them and making money. He wrote sonnets as little gifts to friends, which were not intended for publication either, but were published without his consent. Finally, he probably wrote things which were not of a literary character: laundry lists, notes to his wife, letters to friends, business letters and so on, but not a single item of this kind survives. Nobody thought they were important at the time.
Different places had different kinds of government of course, but in England they had a monarchy.
Mainly he wrote tragedies, but he also wrote comedies.
Except to the extent that Shakespeare knew that he couldn't write anything which might criticize the monarch, since people who wrote those kinds of things went to jail, the king and queen had no influence on Shakespeare's writing.
The correct syntax would be "different kinds of fuel".
poems have a different structure
kinds of technical writing
he would normally eat bread, fwuit, cheez and stuff like dat yallll no, food, hopefully.....
Tragedies - The obvious one...Romeo & JulietComedies - Much Ado About NothingHistories - Henry VI
Shakespeare did not write subjects, he wrote plays and poetry. Those plays and poems address all kinds of different subjects, far more than you could list exhaustively.
He used several kinds, but primarily the English or Shakespearean sonnet and a kind of epic verse in six-line stanzas rhyming ababcc.
Curiously, this is a question which is almost impossible to answer. What people say in plays tells us about the characters, not about the authors. Shakespeare did not write the kinds of works in which he bared his soul. What is more, it was very dangerous in Shakespeare's time to hold opinions which did not coincide with the official line, so if he held any such opinions he would not dare to express them.
Shakespeare is a Proper Noun. It's a person's name.Nouns are people, places, or things. There are also different kinds of nouns: Proper and Common Nouns. A Proper Noun is a specific person, place, or thing.