"Shrunk shank" is the best.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
Shakespeare was born in 1564, if that's what you mean. That was the year he started being Shakespeare.
A shank in a pointe shoe is basically the backbone of the shoe. The puropse for a shank is to support the arch of your foot while on pointe.
To shank is to stab.
"Shrunk shank" is the best.
to stab and kill some one
To Shank someone means to stab them, anywere you want to.!
Hermoine's cat
shank
Shank (v) to knife somebody in a looser term not necessarily with a knife and also quick and an unanticipated knifing Shank (n) something you use to shank (see above) somebody with Shank (n) means a leg. King Edward I of England was called Longshanks because he was tall. A shank is a cut of meat from the leg of a cow or calf.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! The shank is on the leg, so it's near the end of an animal. The shank of the evening means the late afternoon, near the end of the day.
It essentially means that if you over shoot or miss the goal entirely (shank), you have to be the one to go retrieve the ball (shag)
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
It is from Shakespeare's As You Like It in a speech about how we play our parts from when we are young to when we are old. This particular part is when we are growing old, and it is basically saying that the person who has gotten old and somewhat shrunken is unable to deal with the world as he once did.
The beef shank is the shank (or leg) portion of a steer or heifer