He might have studied knitting for all we know, but not cycling. It would be a couple of hundred years before bicycles were invented.
No he did not. In fact aeronautics, word processing and cycling did not exist in his day so he couldn't possibly have studied them. (Knitting DID exist; that's where their stockings came from)
Not that we know of. But as a man with a somewhat 'rural' background he may have been able to repair his own socks.
No he did not
At school, primarily Latin Grammar and translation.
Latin and a little Greek.
No he did not. In fact aeronautics, word processing and cycling did not exist in his day so he couldn't possibly have studied them. (Knitting DID exist; that's where their stockings came from)
Not that we know of. But as a man with a somewhat 'rural' background he may have been able to repair his own socks.
No he did not
At school, primarily Latin Grammar and translation.
Latin and a little Greek.
In school Shakespeare would have spent a lot of time translating Latin authors such as Tacitus, Virgil and Ovid.
Kings New School in Stratford-upon-Avon
The languages that William Shakespeare studied at New Kings School are believed to be classics and Latin grammar. These languages shaped his literature a great deal.
Yes, see related links for the Sparknotes on the Merchant of Venice.
He went to school in the King's New School (now King Edward VI School) in Stratford. He did not study after he was finished with the equivalent of high school.
Shakespeare is known because of the continuous performance of his plays and the continuous republication of his works which are read continuously by schoolchildren (to whom they are continuously assigned for study) and adults.
William Wordsworth studied at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he focused on classics and the poetry of Milton and Shakespeare. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1791.