In means "since". "I do not know why I live to say this thing's to do sith I have cause and will and strength and means to do it." (Hamlet)
i think it is an old word for "sex object" used in Shakespeare's time.....not fully sure though.
Zany
The word "puke", in the sense of "to spit up in a single instance of regurgitation" was coined by Shakespeare in 1600 in the play As You Like It.
Even or sometimes evening. (This is a contraction that reflects a different pronunciation.) The apostrophe tells you that one or more letters have been omitted from the word. In this case the letter is "v", as it is with the word "e'er". "E'en" does not mean "even"--"e'en" IS the word "even.
Unless this is a trick question, there are none.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
In a forward direction.
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
From my findings, the word "sith" (with an accent mark above the "i") is the Scots Gaelic word for "peace" (or, at least, its closest rendering). Ironic when you take into consideration what "Sith" means in the Star Wars Universe. ;)
Waxen means made of wax. Its meaning has not changed since Shakespeare used it.
Darth is the tittle past down the chain of the sole two sith lords at the time: master and apprentice.
There is no word "meration" in Shakespeare.
Used to express distaste or disapproval.
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