Rough, crude, unfinished, unsophisticated. This is still one of the meanings of "rude", but not the main one, which is now "impolite". You hear this meaning when you hear about a castaway fashioning a rude shelter out of palm leaves.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
In a forward direction.
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
Rude as in being mean or so.EX: He was so rude, by talking very loudly at the wedding.
I think you spelled it wrong...do you mean another word for "rude"?
aggrivating, rude, mean
I think you spelled it wrong...do you mean another word for "rude"?
In a forward direction.
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
Staring wide-eyed and rude and stupidly.
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
It is a cognate for the English word "sympathetic". It generally means someone who is kind.