You can not talk in Shakespeare; it is not a language. The language Shakespeare wrote in was English.
It is possible to imitate Shakespeare's style. Just read or watch a play and you should pick it up. Iambic pentameter, poetic devices, rhetorical devices, classical allusions, an extensive vocabulary, use of contractions different from those we are used to, and use (occasionally) of the archaic forms for the second person singular are some of the characteristics of his style.
You mean, "Did Shakespeare talk in poetry all the time?" Of course not. Nobody does.
When we talk about Shakespeare writing in verse, we usually mean blank verse, which is unrhymed iambic pentameter. Shakespeare also wrote poetry in rhyme, both in his plays and in his poems.
No, he was mostly a free verse poet.
Shakespeare wrote at least 38 first scenes. Which would you like to talk about?
The "virtual tour" offered by the website of Shakespeare's Globe does not talk about there being sections of the theatre.
Theater Talk - 1996 Contested Will Who Wrote Shakespeare was released on: USA: 12 July 2010
You mean, "Did Shakespeare talk in poetry all the time?" Of course not. Nobody does.
When we talk about Shakespeare writing in verse, we usually mean blank verse, which is unrhymed iambic pentameter. Shakespeare also wrote poetry in rhyme, both in his plays and in his poems.
That's a Shakespeare quote from Romeo and Juliet by Tybalt.
No, he was mostly a free verse poet.
it means ever, the apostrophy is used as a replacement for the v
In order to make a good grade, tell your teacher why s/he loves Shakespeare so much, but say that is why everyone loves Shakespeare. It wouldn't do to talk about all the people who love Shakespeare for the swordfights, the bloody murders and the dirty jokes.
Shakespeare wrote at least 38 first scenes. Which would you like to talk about?
There isn't one. Oh, people talk about the first Globe as being Shakespeare's Theatre (although he only owned a minor part of it) but that was not its nickname at the time it actually existed. People at the time associated the Globe with the Burbages (who really did own it) not Shakespeare.
The balcony scene, copy it word for word... that's basically all they talk about.
Shakespeare was a real person who wrote plays and poetry. Rosaline is a shadowy character in one of the plays he wrote. Real people cannot converse with fictional people: President Obama cannot talk to Batman.
I think you are labouring under the misapprehension that William Shakespeare wrote one thing. He didn't. He wrote many things, some of which are not based on anything, and others are based on classical stories, history, myth, other plays, and even current events. Although people sometimes use the word "Shakespeare" to describe all or some of Shakespeare's works, its use in this context is incorrect. Shakespeare is the man's name; if you want to talk about his works, use their names.