it is the nothingness
Julius Caesar
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
hieroglyphics
Hieroglyphics is a form of writing that uses signs and symbols and was used by ancient Egyptians.
We don't know because we do not have any account by Shakespeare of how he got started in the business. But assuming he got started as an actor he must have seen that they were playing new plays all the time and someone was writing them. Who knows who said to him, "Will, you write a pretty good sonnet. Why not try writing a play"?
Hierolgypics is a primitive form of writing that uses pictures as words.
Plays are written with the same kind of punctuation that any other kind of writing uses.
The word "props" is an abbreviation of "properties". Shakespeare uses "properties" in exactly this sense in A Midsummer Night's Dream when Peter Quince says, "In the meantime I will draw a bill of properties, such as our play wants." Shakespeare also uses "props" in its meaning as "things which hold something up." He uses this more proper meaning of prop quite often, and the plural twice. For example, Shylock says "You take my house when you do take the prop That doth sustain my house; you take my life When you do take the means whereby I live." Another word for this would be "support" but Shakespeare only uses the noun form of support once.
Cuneiform script
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
Just like most of his writing, Shakespeare uses both conflict and humor to develop his themes, and "Much Ado About Nothing" isn't any different. Infidelity itself is filled with conflict, and Shakespeare uses the verbal back and forth to highlight the storyline.
Script form writing is used when someone is writing a play, movie, or radio show. It uses the names of the people to specify which line is theirs to speak.