All's Well That Ends Well
Widow Capilet appears in the play "The Taming of the Shrew." She is a minor character in the play, known for her brief appearance in Act 5, Scene 2.
Shakespeare spoke English, so you will not be surprised to find that "contest" means "contest" even on the rare occasions when Shakespeare uses it. Which is, exactly twice. In Coriolanus, Aufidius says, "here I clip/ The anvil of my sword, and do contest/ As hotly and as nobly with thy love/ As ever in ambitious strength I did/ Contend against thy valour." Also it sometimes appears in Midsummer Night's Dream as a misprint or malapropism for "content"
None. The word "Armida" appears nowhere in Shakespeare's works.
because in this play appears a ghost
Much Ado to Nothing
A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare.
Not that we know of. He appears to have totally retired in 1613.
From the fact that two quarto editions were printed in Shakespeare's lifetime, it appears to have been reasonably successful, so he was likely satisfied with it as a moneymaker.
As far as we know, Shakespeare was not quoting this expression because he created it. It appears in the plays Henry IV Part 1 and Henry V.
Beatrice is a main character in Much Ado About Nothing.
He died. Although he had retired two or three years earlier.
Recorders are mentioned in Hamlet. A lute is mentioned in Taming of the Shrew. Oboes (called hautboys) were common instruments in the theatre as were trombones (sackbuts) and both appear in stage directions along with trumpets and drums. Viols are mentioned in Comedy of Errors. There is a reference in Love's Labour's Lost to a cittern (sort of a bass guitar). Organ-pipes are referred to in King John and The Tempest, and keyboard instruments of the clavichord or harpsichord type did exist. All instruments were of course acoustic.
James I appears to have been quite fond of them. We have records of the Master of the Revels, Edward Tilney, which show that James requested Shakespeare plays on a number of occasions.