usually it means "in"... for example, in A midsummer night's dream, the character named starveling says "i the man i' the moon" meaning "i'm the man in the moon"
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
It means potbellied.
Waxen means made of wax. Its meaning has not changed since Shakespeare used it.
Used to express distaste or disapproval.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
E've was used in Shakespeare's plays to be a shorten form of the word we've. We've is already a contraction but e've was a more popular use in his time.
When you say "Shakespeare's Globe" you mean the theatre built in 1997. It is not used for musical performance. The Globe Playhouse (which should not be referred to as "Shakespeare's Globe" since this is the name of the modern theatre) which was built in 1599 was not, as far as we know, used for musical performance either.
The now-archaic term was used by Shakespeare, among others, to mean forsaken by one's mistress, or girlfriend (from lass, and forlorn).
Shakespeare was born in 1564, if that's what you mean. That was the year he started being Shakespeare.
When people say Shakespeare they mean William Shakespeare the playwright. There was only ever one of him.
in