Henry IV
Sorry, there isn't one.
Shakespeare did not use the phrase "a boiling idiot". You are probably thinking of "a blinking idiot", which comes from The Merchant of Venice.
That phrase means "lots of fuss about nothing"
It's from Romeo and Juliet, Act II Scene ii.
The Tempest dated 1610
Henry IV
Sorry, there isn't one.
Shakespeare did not use the phrase "a boiling idiot". You are probably thinking of "a blinking idiot", which comes from The Merchant of Venice.
The phrase "all that glisters is not gold" is found in The Merchant of Venice.
That phrase means "lots of fuss about nothing"
The quote "To be or not to be, that is the question" is found in Act 3, Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play Hamlet.
It's from Romeo and Juliet, Act II Scene ii.
Actually, there is no play by Shakespeare called "A Pound of Flesh". The phrase is an important phrase in Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice. Originally the main characters in this play were Bassanio and Portia, but as time went on, more and more big name actors wanted to play the main character in the subplot, Shylock, to the extent that Shylock is now considered to be the main character (along with Portia). The "Merchant of Venice" himself, a character called Antonio, is not the main character of the play.
The phrase "to rise against" was used in the play Hamletby William Shakespeare. It is in the soliloquy "to be or not to be..." It was probably used as a phrase on occasion before that, but this use made it very well known.
Online, at least some of them. Others in Video Stores and Libraries. You should know that "film adaptation of Shakespeare" includes a broad variety of things, including: 1. A filmed performance of a Shakespeare play 2. A film based on a stage production of a Shakespeare play. 3. A film whose screenplay is essentially the same as a Shakespeare play. 4. A film whose plot is very similar to a Shakesepare play 5. A film which has one or two similarities to a Shakespeare play. 6. A film which has character names similar to those in a Shakespeare play. 7. A film influenced by a phrase from a Shakespeare play. 8. A film of a ballet based on the plot of a Shakespeare play. 9. A film of an opera based on the plot of a Shakespeare play. See the related link for the thousand-plus films which fall into one or other of these categories.
Merry Wives of Windsor. It's the same play that gave us "the world's my oyster".