It is not entirely clear that he ever graduated from anywhere. Many scholars think that he was able to attend school because he had a scholarship due to his father being on the Town Council. When John Shakespeare ran into a difficult financial period, he could no longer afford to be on the council and so Will lost his scholarship and could not afford to finish school.
Shakespeare is believed to have been born in April 1564 and it is thought that he did not attend university. Therefore, he did not graduate from a university.
No, he was the equivalent of a high-school graduate.
As there was no such thing as "high school" back in Shakespeare's time, it is certain that he did not "graduate". However, Shakespeare did attend Stratford grammar school from the time when he was 6 or 7 until 13. His father pulled him out of school at age 13. Yet that isn't to say that Shakespeare was later self taught and learned by other means.
No. They probably never met, and there would have been no point in collaboration. Shakespeare was basically a high-school graduate working as a commercial writer in the world of theatre. Bacon was a lawyer and philosopher and wrote about those things. They had nothing in common.
No, he did not even attend university. In fact some people think that due to a financial crisis in the family, he could not even afford to finish grammar school.
Greene in his Groatsworth of Wit attacked Shakespeare, then a very young but up-and-coming playwright, for a number of reasons: Greene was an embittered and dyspeptic man nearing his death, but he was a university man and Shakespeare was a high school graduate which was the main ground of his complaint. He was actually fairly complimentary to Shakespeare: he warned the other university-trained playwrights that this "upstart crow" could "bombast out the blank verse with the best of you."
No, all of the Bible, even the Christian parts, were written over a thousand years before Shakespeare was born. If you are thinking that Shakespeare contributed to the King James Translation of the Bible which came out in Shakespeare's lifetime, again the answer is no. We know the names of the scholars who worked on the project and Shakespeare was not one of them. Nor is it likely that a high school graduate (maybe, he may not have even finished) with "small Latin and less Greek" would have been invited to participate in the translation of ancient texts from Hebrew, Greek and Latin sources. It is as laughable as suggesting that Elvis Presley wrote the Merriam-Webster dictionary.
You graduate at a place and you graduate in a date
its a graduate, you graduate after your bachelors degree
Yes! Shakespeare's name was really Shakespeare. His whole name was William Shakespeare.
If someone graduated with you, they might be a co-graduate. If you didn't graduate, you might be a non-graduate.
cylindrical graduate
John Shakespeare (father) Mary (Arden) Shakespeare (mother) Anne (Hathaway) Shakespeare (wife) Susanna (Shakespeare) Hall (daughter) Hamnet Shakespeare (son - twin) Judith (Shakespeare) Quiney (daughter - twin) Joan (Shakespeare) Hart (sister) Gilbert Shakespeare, Richard Shakespeare, Edmund Shakespeare (brothers)