Nerissa
The title character is usually understood to be the Loan-Shark Shylock, who is obviously a Jewish businessman. However, it actually refers to Antonio who borrows money from him. The "Merchant of Venice" is a play written by William Shakespeare in sometime in the 1590s. The story involves a merchant in Venice named Antonio, who borrows money from a Jewish money-lender named Shylock. Shylock wants revenge against Antonio because Antonio had insulted Shylock and spat on him for being Jewish, so he gets Antonio to agree that if the money was not repaid in time, Shylock would be allowed to take a pound of Antonio's flesh. Antonio needed the money badly enough that he agreed to the condition, which he did not believe would be a problem. When Antonio could not repay the money as agreed, Shylock insisted on taking his pound of flesh. A woman lawyer, Portia, defended Antonio before the ruler of Venice, who after hearing both sides ruled that.......(If you want to know the outcome, you'll have to read the play. Believe me, it is worth it.)
Portia's impersonation of a man and a lawyer when she was neither springs to mind. Likewise Nerissa's impersonation of a lawyer's clerk. Jessica deceives her father so she can elope with Lorenzo.
The Doctor tells the waiting-woman to stay by her and keep sharp objects out of her way. The Doctor himself tells her and later Macbeth that what she needs is a priest or a psychologist and not a Doctor. Accordingly there is nothing he can do to help her. As for the waiting-woman, despite the Doctor's orders, Lady M apparently finds means to kill herself anyway. The waiting-woman wasn't much help either.
Othello, the Moor of Venice, is the tragic hero of Shakespeare's play of the same name. In the twentieth century, some theaters refused to stage the play because it showed a Black man married to a White woman.
One of William Shakespeare's plays is called The Merchant of Venice. This is probably the one you are thinking of. It has two intertwined plots: in one of them a rich woman called Portia is obliged to marry any man who can guess in which of three caskets her picture is hid. A couple of guys guess wrong but along comes the fellow she wants and Hooray! he guesses right and they get married. It would be a dull show if it weren't for the subplot, in which the aforesaid wooer has his creditworthy friend borrow money for this wooing project from a Jewish moneylender called Shylock. The security for this loan is a pound of the borrower's flesh; he defaults and Shylock tries to foreclose. They are in court over it when in comes Portia disguised as a lawyer, who points out a loophole or two which foils Shylock's plan.
The title character is usually understood to be the Loan-Shark Shylock, who is obviously a Jewish businessman. However, it actually refers to Antonio who borrows money from him. The "Merchant of Venice" is a play written by William Shakespeare in sometime in the 1590s. The story involves a merchant in Venice named Antonio, who borrows money from a Jewish money-lender named Shylock. Shylock wants revenge against Antonio because Antonio had insulted Shylock and spat on him for being Jewish, so he gets Antonio to agree that if the money was not repaid in time, Shylock would be allowed to take a pound of Antonio's flesh. Antonio needed the money badly enough that he agreed to the condition, which he did not believe would be a problem. When Antonio could not repay the money as agreed, Shylock insisted on taking his pound of flesh. A woman lawyer, Portia, defended Antonio before the ruler of Venice, who after hearing both sides ruled that.......(If you want to know the outcome, you'll have to read the play. Believe me, it is worth it.)
Portia is the main character of William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. She was described here as an attractive, kind, smart, strong-willed, stubborn, persistent and quick-witted woman.
A female waiter or attendant; a waiting maid or waiting woman.
Portia's impersonation of a man and a lawyer when she was neither springs to mind. Likewise Nerissa's impersonation of a lawyer's clerk. Jessica deceives her father so she can elope with Lorenzo.
The cast of Woman Waiting - 2010 includes: Carmen Casanova as Jane Hana Du Temple as Gym receptionist Karen Lahay as Woman in waiting room Carrie Osborn as Housing advisor
the woman name was shara
She was the wife of a rich Florentine merchant.
brad paisley
Do you know the woman in the red dress? Two men and a woman are in the waiting room.
The cast of Being Venice - 2012 includes: Celia Ireland as Australian Woman Alice McConnell as Venice Garry McDonald as Arthur Henry Nixon as Marcus Simon Stone as Lenny Katie Wall as Irene
Yes. Her name was Lisa Gherardini, wife of a Florentine merchant.
"Estoy esperando a la mujer" in Spanish means "I am waiting for the woman" in English.