Shakespeare sometimes used 'tis in place of "it is". In Act 1 Scene 2 of Hamlet, before Hamlet's soliloquy, Claudius uses 'tis three times, Gertrude once and Hamlet once. But Hamlet also says "it is" twice.
Shakespeare used the word "ope" as a short form of "open." It is not clear whether this was a colloquialism or a poetic coinage.
It is shortened for give.
Shakespeare does not use the word "e'ev". Ever. It doesn't exist. It's a typographical error in your course materials.
'Ope' as used by Shakespeare, and other poets and writers of both ancient and modern times, means "open". Refer to the Language and Linguistics' website's "Shakespeare Glossary" link, below, for this and other Shakespearean word definitions, as well as "The Complete Concordance to Shakespeare" by Mary Cowden link for Shakespeare's titles use of that word (n.b., this online book is huge, so don't use the middle scrollbar or the page number entry box; instead, hold down your mouse's left button and "pull" the current page (549) "up" until you see the word "ope", which should be highlighted due to the URL).A shortened down version of "open", as in Hamlet 1, 4 "why the sepulcher in which we saw thee quietly interred hath oped its ponderous and marble jaws to cast thee up again".
i' in shakespearean language mean I've
Shakespeare used the word "ope" as a short form of "open." It is not clear whether this was a colloquialism or a poetic coinage.
It is shortened for give.
hope woop woop i awnsered my own question ope' means hope in shakespeare language x?
Shakespeare does not use the word "e'ev". Ever. It doesn't exist. It's a typographical error in your course materials.
it means never
'Ope' as used by Shakespeare, and other poets and writers of both ancient and modern times, means "open". Refer to the Language and Linguistics' website's "Shakespeare Glossary" link, below, for this and other Shakespearean word definitions, as well as "The Complete Concordance to Shakespeare" by Mary Cowden link for Shakespeare's titles use of that word (n.b., this online book is huge, so don't use the middle scrollbar or the page number entry box; instead, hold down your mouse's left button and "pull" the current page (549) "up" until you see the word "ope", which should be highlighted due to the URL).A shortened down version of "open", as in Hamlet 1, 4 "why the sepulcher in which we saw thee quietly interred hath oped its ponderous and marble jaws to cast thee up again".
i' in shakespearean language mean I've
'tis, ope, o'er, gi, ne'er, i', e'er, oft, a', e'ev are some abbreviations made be shakespeare
This phrase does not appear anywhere in Shakespeare. "God den" was a shortened form of "good evening" in the same way that "good bye" was and is a shortened form of "God be with ye".
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.
Ope IF was created in 1922.
Ope's population is 453.