Enough to fill a small book. A couple of people called Wayne F. Hill and Cynthia J. Ottchen compiled a bunch of them into a book called "Shakespeare's Insults: Educating your Wit" which Random House printed in 1995. It runs to 308 pages.
Ovid. Many of Shakespeare's plays were adaptations of other works of literature, particularly those of Ovid.
Yes he did.
Shakespeare and his contemporaries often used blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter) for the dialogue in their plays.
His plays were based on stories he had read or plays he had seen. Shakespeare rarely created an original plot--he just made pre-existing plots so much better.
Edgar Allan Poe transcribed many lines from Shakespeare's plays (and possibly his sonnets) for apparent self-use between the (estimated) years 1829 and 1830. It is also evident that Poe alluded to many Shakespearean plays in his poems and stories - especially Hamlet.
Ovid. Many of Shakespeare's plays were adaptations of other works of literature, particularly those of Ovid.
No, women were not on his plays.
Is your name Shakespeare? Is there a William Shakespeare in the house? Shakespeare was a famous playwright. Shakespeare wrote many plays, including Julius Caesar, Anthony and Cleopatra and The Merchant of Venice. Hey, Shakespeare, your taxi's here. If you're William Shakespeare I'm a monkey's uncle.
Shakespeare's plays are probably the best plays ever written. They continue to be extremely popular among audiences and actors. Many actors will make incredible sacrifices just to say those amazing lines Shakespeare wrote. Asking this question is like asking "Why is gold and diamond jewellery still in use when we can make jewellery out of plastic?"
Yes he did.
I use Sparknotes.com
blank verse
No, simply.
I'd use the word entertaining.
Shakespeare and his contemporaries often used blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter) for the dialogue in their plays.
Storms appear most prominently in the plays The Tempest and King Lear.
he used samalayuca books