The Shakespearean word for "your" is "your".
e.g. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy" from Hamlet
The Nurse's line "Where is your mother?" from Romeo and Juliet
"On the ground, sleep sound. I'll apply to your eye, gentle lover, remedy" from Midsummer Night's Dream.
And innumerable other examples.
The word "thy" also meant "your", but only in the singular, and only in specific cases.
Describing a noun, e.g. a Shakespearean play
In Shakespearean language, the word "friend" can be expressed as "comrade," "confidant," or "ally."
What is the Shakespearean word for goodbye
shakespear
Aquilon
another word used for shakespearean Sonnet
"Jesting" is often used as a the word for joking in Shakespearean texts. For example, "Surely you do jest!"
It is a Shakespearean word, first noted in a Midsummer Nights Dream, dated 1590
The Shakespearean word is 'jolthead', with an L - it means dunce or blockhead.
astronaut.
The Shakespearean word for "invited" is "bidden." In the context of Shakespeare's works, "bidden" often conveys the sense of being summoned or requested to come. This term reflects the poetic and ornate language characteristic of Shakespeare's time.
Shakespeare did not use the word "trustworthy" but he did use the word "trusty" a lot which means the same.