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"Jesting" is often used as a the word for joking in Shakespearean texts. For example, "Surely you do jest!"
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".
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)
Shakespearean isn't a language...
Shakespearean English is considered modern English, so the answer is "our"
thy is single :)
"Jesting" is often used as a the word for joking in Shakespearean texts. For example, "Surely you do jest!"
Hath is how you say has in Shakespearean times.
i' - in
Shakespearean language is English. "I will kill you" is perfectly straightforward English and means "I will kill you".
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)
It's the same as in 21st Century English, however it was written as 2 words ("in deed") until about 1600.
Shakespearean isn't a 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."
Shakespearean English is English. Modern English. Almost all of the key structural words in modern English are exactly the same as they were in Shakespeare's day. Want an example? Claudio's line in act 1 scene 1 of Much ado about Nothing "In mine eye she is the sweetest lady that ever I looked on."
In Shakespearean English as written, the letter "I" with an apostrophe is a contraction and can mean "in" or "if" depending on the context.