Look. It's English, remember. Look is look. "I'll look to love if looking liking move." (Romeo and Juliet) "Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look; such men are dangerous" (Julius Caesar) "He was a man, take him for all in all. I shall not look upon his like again." (Hamlet)
Shakespearean isn't a language...
Hath is how you say has in Shakespearean times.
Shakespearean language is English. "I will kill you" is perfectly straightforward English and means "I will kill you".
i' in shakespearean language mean I've
The rhyme pattern of a Shakespearean sonnet is abab cdcd efef gg.
In Shakespearean language, you can say unpleasant as "unlovely" or "displeasing."
Shakespearean isn't a language...
In Shakespearean language, "him" would likely be expressed as "he," "himself," or "his."
In Shakespearean language, you can say "Halt!" or "Cease!" to mean stop.
Shakespearean English is considered modern English, so the answer is "our"
In Shakespearean language, parents would be referred to as "father" and "mother" or as "sire" and "dame."
"Let us away" or "Onward, good friend" would be a Shakespearean way to say "let's go." Shakespearean language often used more formal or poetic expressions for simple statements like this.
shakespearean comedy
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."
In Shakespearean language, the word "friend" can be expressed as "comrade," "confidant," or "ally."
Hath is how you say has in Shakespearean times.
Shakespearean language is English. "I will kill you" is perfectly straightforward English and means "I will kill you".