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It is a line from William Shakespeares Hamlet. Most of William Shakespeares plays are still famous now as he is regarded as the greatest writer in the English Language.
polonius says this quote in the Shakespeares play "HAMLET"
The play is Shakespeares "Hamlet." I believe you can find it in Act III, Scene I. In case you need to know. That whole part where Hamlet is speaking to himself is called a Soliloqy, or Monologue.
Captain Beatty in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 quotes from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar: "There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats: For I am arm'd so strong in honesty that they pass me by as the idle wind, which I respect not"
The actual quote is I should have been a pair of ragged claws Scuttling across the floors of silent seas T.S Elliot wrote it in lines 73 and 74 of "The love song of J. Alfred Prufrock"
It is a line from William Shakespeares Hamlet. Most of William Shakespeares plays are still famous now as he is regarded as the greatest writer in the English Language.
Remember the Titans
If you are talking about Shakespeares quote then its one fell swoop.
"Cartoon Network cancelled Teen Titans because they're more interested in focusing on their own studio's shows (Teen Titans is made by WB Animation, not Cartoon Network)." quote from a crew member of Teen Titans.
polonius says this quote in the Shakespeares play "HAMLET"
game
This is only used when you miss part of a quote out. So, if you quote the first part of a quote, miss out the middle, and then quote the end part, you should use the three or four periods to represent the missing text.
33 years old, Not that long ago. When she was with Justin Long
Bawbag
The play is Shakespeares "Hamlet." I believe you can find it in Act III, Scene I. In case you need to know. That whole part where Hamlet is speaking to himself is called a Soliloqy, or Monologue.
No, you should maintain the original tense of the quote in a block quote. It is important to present the quote exactly as it appears while still integrating it smoothly into your essay.
Captain Beatty in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 quotes from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar: "There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats: For I am arm'd so strong in honesty that they pass me by as the idle wind, which I respect not"