"All the world's a stage," is modern English.
Shakespeare wrote As You Like It, from which those words are quoted, around 1600.
Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.
Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English. He also had two very specific other writing styles: 1. For commoners, or non-significant characters, he writes their lines in prose. 2. For the wealthy and main characters, he writes their lines in iambic pentameter (verse) - This consisted of rhymed verse and blank verse.
Chaucer wrote in Middle English (although of course he didn't think of it that way; he would have said he was writing in Englisshe). Chaucer wrote in what is now called Middle English. Middle English has many words and spellings that are still the same in English today, though it was pronounced very differently, and a modern English reader can make some sense of it. Old English was used about 200 years earlier and is a mixture of early German and Scandinavian. It used letters which are not in the modern alphabet and has almost nothing in common with modern English in spelling or meaning.
it was considered unusual for Chaucer to write in English, as the main language being spoken in England by the royalty was French. English was considered the language of the poor
Modern English
The number 35000 written in English is: thirty-five thousand (35,000).
twelve thousand five hundred only
Shakespeare wrote As You Like It, from which those words are quoted, around 1600.
early Modern English
Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.
He taught people how to talk in English and write in Hebrew.
As far as i know, it was shakespear who started modern English in terms of language. As for books i have no idea, sorry =)
The drafting stage is when you would write a rough draft. At this stage you do not worry about grammar, but focus on the creating the paper.
No.
two point zero four
Geoffrey Chaucer wrote "The Canterbury Tales" in Middle English, which was the common spoken and written language in England during the late 14th century. Middle English is distinct from older forms of the language like Old English and from the modern form of English that we use today.