Oh, honey, Shakespeare was just being fancy and shortening "even" to "e'en" because he thought it made him sound all poetic and stuff. Basically, it's just a way to sound all old-timey and dramatic without wasting precious ink on unnecessary letters. So, next time you see "e'ev" in a Shakespeare play, just remember he's just being extra with his words.
(br-eev)
happening quickly
You mean Mercutio. He is a character in William Shakespeare's play Romeo & Juliet. He was a close friend of Romeo's.
i think it is an old word for "sex object" used in Shakespeare's time.....not fully sure though.
Basically, he meant that Shakespeare had something which would be relevant at any time, not just in the time he wrote it. Shakespeare was not "topical" most of the time. Jonson, on the other hand, filled his plays with references to people and ideas which were well-known when he was alive but nobody knows about now, which makes Jonson's plays quite dated and hard to follow compared with Shakespeare's.
Pronounced phonetically (the way it sounds) is 'eev'
(br-eev)
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.
You use your EEV
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
to it
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
evening
gggghhhh