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Boom Shaka Laka, Your BUM smells like caca, What dat smell?! Bloody Hell! Meh.. ask another website xP Sucka!

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Q: What does the word tush mean in Shakespearean language?
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What does apt mean in shakespearean Language?

Shakespearean language was the language of early stage dramas for many years. Some of the words are still around while others are not. In this language there was no word apt.


What did Shakespeare mean by the word 'then'?

Shakespeare wrote in English, the same language I am using now. There is no such language as "Shakespearean language" or "Shakespeare language". It's English. A word like "then" is a building block of the English language and always means "then" when Shakespeare or any other English speaker uses it.


How do you say that in shakespearean language?

Shakespearean Language is in fact English, basically the same as you speak, so the word "that" is in fact "that" in Shakespeare. e.g. "No more THAT Thane of Cawdor shall deceive our bosom interest." or "To be, or not to be, THAT is the question."


How do you say trustworthy in shakespearean language?

Shakespeare did not use the word "trustworthy" but he did use the word "trusty" a lot which means the same.


What does the word devil monk mean in Shakespearean?

It means a mischievous person


How do you say yesterday in Shakespearean language?

Shakespearean language is English. "Yesterday" in English is "yesterday". Shakespeare uses it twenty-six times.E.g. "But yesterday the word of Caesar mightHave stood against the world; now lies he there." (Julius Caesar)


What does joithead mean?

The Shakespearean word is 'jolthead', with an L - it means dunce or blockhead.


What is an older slang word for butt?

tush/tushy


What is fancy-monger in Shakespearean language?

"Fancy-monger" is used by Rosalind in As You Like It. It is an invented word to replace "fishmonger".


What is another word for fanny or bottom that starts with a t?

tush


How do you use the word Shakespearean?

Describing a noun, e.g. a Shakespearean play


What is 'the' in shakespearean?

There is no such language as "Shakespearean". Shakespeare wrote and spoke English. When he said "the" he meant "the" and that was the only word he ever used for the definite article. One can take any passage from Shakespeare and it is bound to crop up fairly quickly.