Among the many words that Shakespeare coined, amazement was used in numerous plays. One of the earliest was in the Tempest, Act I, Scene 2, when Prospero tells Miranda, "Be collected; No more amazement; tell your piteous heart that there is no harm done."
After the show I had inexpressible amazement.
Stare means "Look at with fixed eyes" Example sentences are: The students stared at the teacher with amazement. Do not stare at me.
One term for the use of a similar but incorrect word is malapropism.The word malaprop comes from the character Mrs. Malaprop in Richard Sheridan's play The Rivals (1775). Shakespeare previously used this comic form for the character Constable Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing.A separate term is heterophemism, a propensity to use the wrong words.
I am the caitiff that do hold him to't;" Shakespeare. All's well that ends well.
bohemia or what is today the Czech republic Scotland was the first country to use the word dollar. The word is described in the Scottish play Macbeth by Shakespeare. In 1567 a silver sword dollar was minted in Scotland. Scotland also has a town named dollar. This word is uniquely Scottish, not English, Norwegian or German.
After the show I had inexpressible amazement.
The museum's display left me in a state of amazement.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
He has the characters in the play say them. That is how you use words in a play.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
The man who was always once in this once in this once in that was frolicked by the amazement of the opocolips
Shakespeare did not use the word "indecent" although he did use "decent". The word "lewd" might be the word he would choose to express this idea.
Shakespeare used more than one myth for more than one play.
The play Macbeth is written entirely in English.
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
What an odd question. Japan is not mentioned anywhere in Shakespeare. The word assassin is of Arabic provenance (it derives from hashish) although Shakespeare was the first to use the word "assassination" in English. There are assassins in Shakespeare's plays, and they might be staged in such a way as to be Japanese (as Ken Branagh did in his film As You Like It), but there is no reason for them to be Japanese, unless that is where you are putting on the play
he look here and there with amzement