Only once, in this line from Much Ado About Nothing:
"She doth indeed; my daughter says so: and the
ecstasy hath so much overborne her that my daughter
is sometime afeared she will do a desperate outrage
to herself"
He uses "afraid" 42 times.
Afeared is the same word as 'afraid', just spelled differently.
Shakespeare used the word 'afraid' 42 times and 'afeared' just once.
No, Shakespeare used they word afeared instead of afraid although he only used the word 'afeared' once.
i don't know :D
frightened
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
In a forward direction.
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
In a forward direction.
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
Waxen means made of wax. Its meaning has not changed since Shakespeare used it.
There is no word "meration" in Shakespeare.
Used to express distaste or disapproval.
Tuu;6r0 dn7fcijnb-n0ce
It's short for "or the other", as in "one or the other".
Shakespeare wrote in English, the same language I am using now. There is no such language as "Shakespearean language" or "Shakespeare language". It's English. A word like "then" is a building block of the English language and always means "then" when Shakespeare or any other English speaker uses it.