Using "roughest", Shakesphere means "worst".
"Time and the hour runs through the roughest day" = "what will happen will happen and even the worst of days will come to an end".
Lost in his own thoughts. See "look how our partner's rapt" in Macbeth.
The word Gordon does not appear in Macbeth or any of Shakespeare's works.
that the word Macbeth is cursed because an actor died in his play
He means "in". Shakespeare's English is still English and "in" means "in". "In fair Verona" (Romeo and Juliet) means just what it says: in the city of Verona. When Lady Macbeth says, "What? In our house?" it means exactly what you think it does.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Lost in his own thoughts. See "look how our partner's rapt" in Macbeth.
The word Gordon does not appear in Macbeth or any of Shakespeare's works.
that the word Macbeth is cursed because an actor died in his play
That was the roughest material i ever felt in my life?
The world's roughest person went to court.
The word roughest is the superlative form for the adjective rough (rougher, roughest). The noun form for the adjective rough is roughness.
In Macbeth, the word "masculine" refers to qualities traditionally associated with men, such as strength, assertiveness, and aggressiveness. Shakespeare uses this term to highlight the idea of masculinity as a source of power and influence in the play, particularly in relation to themes of ambition and violence.
He means "in". Shakespeare's English is still English and "in" means "in". "In fair Verona" (Romeo and Juliet) means just what it says: in the city of Verona. When Lady Macbeth says, "What? In our house?" it means exactly what you think it does.
roughest
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare only uses this word in one play, Macbeth, and then almost always in the phrase "weird sisters", although there is one "weird women". The reason is that "weird" was not a word used in Shakespeare's time at all, except in the phrase "weird sisters", which referred to the characters in mythology, the Fates. "Weird Sisters" were women who could tell or determine the Fate of others, as indeed the witches do in Macbeth. In Middle English a weard was a prophecy or prophet. The word "weird" used in anything but this specialized sense has arisen since entirely and exclusively because of Shakespeare's use of it.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.