It meant leopard (which is really the same word with "leo", the Latin word for "lion", added at the beginning). Leopards were believed to have beards, which is why Jaques in As You Like It says that the soldier is "bearded like the pard."
It meant "Leopard". Leopards were believed to have beards, hence "Bearded like the pard" from As You Like It.
Pard in Shakespearen language means lepoard or panther
Pard means 'leopard' or 'panther'.
It means Leopard or Panther.
A Pard is a panther or a Leopard.
leopard or panther
In England, the only sightings are unconfirmed and are of "panthers" or "pumas" or "black cats", and yet a panther has no beard. It is impossible for Shakespeare to have seen a bearded leopard, because there are no records of him leaving England. On the other hand, I've come across claims of pard being the mythical parent of a Leo(lion)pard, and the pard has a beardless uncannily human chin. on that basis, I believe that Shakespeare was referring to the shaved chin that soldiers had, not to the beard of the leopard.
"creeping like snail", "sighing like furnace", and "bearded like the pard".
"seeking the bubble reputation" comes from Jaques' monologue "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, a play by William Shakespeare, which goes like this in part: Then a soldier, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel, seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. It means fame, which is notoriously transitory. Everybody may be talking about you one day, and the next it disappears like a burst bubble. The soldier is prepared to risk death for just such a reputation, and Jaques is suggesting that he's pretty stupid to do so.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
It's a simile.
In England, the only sightings are unconfirmed and are of "panthers" or "pumas" or "black cats", and yet a panther has no beard. It is impossible for Shakespeare to have seen a bearded leopard, because there are no records of him leaving England. On the other hand, I've come across claims of pard being the mythical parent of a Leo(lion)pard, and the pard has a beardless uncannily human chin. on that basis, I believe that Shakespeare was referring to the shaved chin that soldiers had, not to the beard of the leopard.
"creeping like snail", "sighing like furnace", and "bearded like the pard".
"creeping like snail", "sighing like furnace", and "bearded like the pard".
Pard is the shortened form of partner. More common in the western United States and with cowboys or ranchers.
"Mewling and puking" comes to mind.
Pard Pearce was born on 1896-10-23.
Pard Pearce died on 1974-05-24.
"seeking the bubble reputation" comes from Jaques' monologue "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, a play by William Shakespeare, which goes like this in part: Then a soldier, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel, seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. It means fame, which is notoriously transitory. Everybody may be talking about you one day, and the next it disappears like a burst bubble. The soldier is prepared to risk death for just such a reputation, and Jaques is suggesting that he's pretty stupid to do so.
Pard
The name Leopard is derived from the Greek and Latin term Leo and pard which mean lion and panther.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.