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As always, Shakespeare makes use of a good deal of blank verse, which is to say unrhymed iambic pentameter. The verses in the caskets and the comments of Morocco and Aragon thereon are in trochaic tetrameter, without the weak beat of the last trochee, as Dum-da Dum-da Dum-da Dum. The rhythm of "Tell me where is fancy bred" is similar: it may be scanned as iambic tetrameter as well as trochaic.

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Q: What meter does shakespeare use in The Merchant of Venice?
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What play did a boiling idiot come from Shakespeare?

Shakespeare did not use the phrase "a boiling idiot". You are probably thinking of "a blinking idiot", which comes from The Merchant of Venice.


What play is 'all that glisters is not gold' from?

"All that glisters is not gold" is from Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (II, vii).Some people use the word "glitters" rather than "glisters" but the latter is the correct word.


Why did Shakespeare set his plays in Italy?

History suggests that the Merchant of Venice was set in Venice probably because Venice was a very popular city at the time the play was made. It could also do with the fact that the words Merchant and Venice sound good together. When looking at Shakespeare's motives for setting the play in Venice, it may help to look at why 'Othello' was also set in Venice... You may notice in Merchant of Venice how Shakespeare shows Venice as a state divided against itself - for example Christians resent the practice of usury, despite the fact that it is essential to their booming economy. Antonio spits on Shylock one minute, yet is asking for his help the next - Christian society at the time is shown to be ignorant of it's foundations, to the point of resenting them, and is therefore shown to be unstable. Going back to the question - one reason the play could be set in Venice is so that Shakespeare could present his critical view of the Christian/Monarch situation in England at the time, without attracting censorship of his work by the English government. Venice may also have been used as it has an element of mystery about it - bear in mind that few had been to exotic places such as Venice at the time, so it would've added an additional layer of mystery to the play.


What genres did shakespeare use in his plays?

History, comedy and tragedy, of course. As You Like It contains elements of pastoral. Some scholars have identified other genres: romance, in the fairytale plots of Cymbeline or A Winter's Tale; fantasy, in the tales of magic The Tempest and A Midsummer Night's Dream; tragicomedy, in the dark comedies like Measure for Measure and The Merchant of Venice. And then there is Troilus and Cressida, which is almost nihilistic.


What money do they use it Venice?

The Euro

Related questions

What play did a boiling idiot come from Shakespeare?

Shakespeare did not use the phrase "a boiling idiot". You are probably thinking of "a blinking idiot", which comes from The Merchant of Venice.


How do you use Shakespeare in a sentence?

Is your name Shakespeare? Is there a William Shakespeare in the house? Shakespeare was a famous playwright. Shakespeare wrote many plays, including Julius Caesar, Anthony and Cleopatra and The Merchant of Venice. Hey, Shakespeare, your taxi's here. If you're William Shakespeare I'm a monkey's uncle.


What is the source of Waiting with bated breath?

The phrase "waiting with bated breath" originated from William Shakespeare's play "The Merchant of Venice" written in the late 16th century. The term "bated" is a shortened form of "abated," which means to lessen or reduce, suggesting that one is holding their breath in anticipation or suspense.


Who Has Coined the Most English Words?

William Shakespeare - he coined many words and phrases - with bated breath (merchant of Venice) - - a foregone conclusion (Othello) -. His use of language also shaped today's language.


What play is 'all that glisters is not gold' from?

"All that glisters is not gold" is from Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (II, vii).Some people use the word "glitters" rather than "glisters" but the latter is the correct word.


What can you use for the address of a letter writing as Bassanio to Antonio in The Merchant of Venice?

The business district of Venice was the Rialto, so the letter could be sent to Antonio's business address: Antonio, the Rialto, Venice.


Why did Shakespeare set his plays in Italy?

History suggests that the Merchant of Venice was set in Venice probably because Venice was a very popular city at the time the play was made. It could also do with the fact that the words Merchant and Venice sound good together. When looking at Shakespeare's motives for setting the play in Venice, it may help to look at why 'Othello' was also set in Venice... You may notice in Merchant of Venice how Shakespeare shows Venice as a state divided against itself - for example Christians resent the practice of usury, despite the fact that it is essential to their booming economy. Antonio spits on Shylock one minute, yet is asking for his help the next - Christian society at the time is shown to be ignorant of it's foundations, to the point of resenting them, and is therefore shown to be unstable. Going back to the question - one reason the play could be set in Venice is so that Shakespeare could present his critical view of the Christian/Monarch situation in England at the time, without attracting censorship of his work by the English government. Venice may also have been used as it has an element of mystery about it - bear in mind that few had been to exotic places such as Venice at the time, so it would've added an additional layer of mystery to the play.


What kind of meter does romeo and juliet use?

Shakespeare was fond of using blank verse, which is unrhymed iambic pentameter. That's the meter he used mostly.


What are some examples of allusion in Act 2 of The Merchant of Venice?

1. "Jason and the Golden Fleece" - (Act 1, Scene 1, Line 170-172) Bassanio is camparing Jason's adventure of bringing golden fleece from a dragon to many suitors questing Portia. 2. Laban and Jacob (from the Bible) - (Act 1, Scene 3, Line 73-86) Shylock is justifying his usury by comparing himself to Jacob, one of the holy ancestors of Christian, taking lmany lambs away from his uncle Laban for his work.


Where did the phrase 'bated breath' originate?

The phrase "bated breath" meaning holding or restricting one's breath, was used in Shakespeare, in the Merchant of Venice, in 1596, but was also used in other ways at that time. The word bate meaning to reduce or lessen is now archaic and its use is now only in this phrase and in its derivative form "to abate" meaning to reduce or lessen.


What was William Shakespeares impact on Europe politically?

Shakespeare was a writer of drama. They are great dramas but they do not have a political effect. They did not have a political effect on England, never mind the continent. This is not to say that politicians have never tried to co-opt Shakespeare. In Shakespeare's lifetime the Earl of Essex tried to use Shakespeare's Richard II to get people to support his coup. The Nazis used The Merchant of Venice to advance their anti-Semitic agenda. And generally speaking each generation has found ways to make Shakespeare say what they want to hear and to support their social vision. Such attempts never have a lasting effect, because a new generation always comes along and interprets the plays differently.


What play did Shakespeare use the word courtship?

Shakespeare used the word "courtship" in several of his plays, including "The Taming of the Shrew," "A Midsummer Night's Dream," and "Love's Labour's Lost." In these plays, courtship often refers to the romantic pursuit and wooing of another character.