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Honorificabilitudinitatibus, Love's Labours Lost, Scene 5.
Shakespeare's longest tragedy and longest play is Hamlet.
He used it a lot, but it was already a well-established word before he used it.
Yes. Shakespeare invented the word academe. Do a littlie research when it was first used. Good luck, nugget x
No, he never used that word.
Honorificabilitudinitatibus, Love's Labours Lost, Scene 5.
Shakespeare's longest tragedy and longest play is Hamlet.
The word "honorificabilitudinitatibus" is the dative singular conjugation of a real medieval Latin word. Dante actually used it more than once, as did other writers of the period. A translation of it would be "the state of being able to achieve honors."
Shakespeare wrote in English. "The" means exactly the same when he used it as it does when you use it.
Coriolanus
Othello
He used it a lot, but it was already a well-established word before he used it.
marc antony
No. Christopher Marlowe did, although Shakespeare used it three times in his early plays and poems. Marlowe was very fond of this word and used it 17 times.
No, he never used that word.
Yes. Shakespeare invented the word academe. Do a littlie research when it was first used. Good luck, nugget x
Waxen means made of wax. Its meaning has not changed since Shakespeare used it.