Pistol stole his girl, Mistress Quickly.
Shakespeare's most famous characters were the ones he used again and again in a number of plays. This would be Sir John Falstaff and his companions at the Boar's Head Tavern: Bardolph, Pistol, Nym and Mistress Quickly. This cast of characters appears in four plays: Henry IV Part 1, Henry IV Part 2, The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Henry V, where most of them die.
Shakespeare wrote his plays with his acting company in mind. Since at least one member of the company was a comedian at all times, he wrote at least one part suitable for him in every play. I mean every play. Some of the better known ones might be the Gravedigger in Hamlet, the Porter in Macbeth, Feste in Twelfth Night, The Fool in King Lear, Autolycus in The Winter's Tale, Thersites in Troilus and Cressida, Touchstone in As You Like It, Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream and of course Falstaff and his sleazy comrades Bardolph, Nym, and Pistol. There were two famous members of the company who played these roles. First was Will Kempe, who left the company just before the Globe Theatre was built. It was Kempe who developed the role of Falstaff. He was reckoned the greatest clown in England after the retirement of Richard Tarleton, who played with Queen Elizabeth's company in the 1580s Kempe's replacement was Richard Armin. Armin's style is best revealed in characters like the Fool in King Lear or Feste in Twelfth Night. Tarleton chose Armin as the man he would have liked to succeed him. His clowns (as realized with the assistance of Shakespeare) were a totally new concept in clowning and he was justly famous.
The cast of The Merry Wives of Windsor - 2011 includes: Nathan Amzi as Peter Simple Gareth Armstrong as Evans William Belchambers as Master Slender Christopher Benjamin as Sir John Falstaff Philip Bird as Dr. Caius Barnaby Edwards as John Rugby Serena Evans as Mistress Page Peter Gale as Justice Shallow Gregory Gudgeon as Nym Andrew Havill as Master Ford Edward Holtom as Robin Richard Linnell as Robin Gerard McCarthy as Master Fenton Jonty Stephens as Host Sue Wallace as Mistress Quickly Sarah Woodward as Mistress Ford
The song that is sung in hollow Crown henry V, the scene with pistol Nym and Bardolph is Non nobis.
Pistol is Nell Quickly's husband in Henry V. There is shown in act 2, scene 1, when Bardolph, speaking to the jilted Nym about Pistol, says: "It is certain, corporal, that he is married to Nell Quickly: and certainly she did you wrong; for you were troth-pligt to her." Upon Pistol and Nell Quickly's entrance, Bardolph says: "Here comes Ancient Pistol and his wife..."
Some words ending with "nym" include synonym, antonym, and acronym.
nym = mean or name
-nym or -onym comes from Ancient Greek text and essentially means "name"
Elizabethan English was still Modern English and "he" in English was and is "he". Examples in Shakespeare are too numerous to mention. However, there was a slang way of saying "he" which was written 'a. It is rare but shows up several times in the scene in Henry V where Pistol, Nym, Bardolph and Mistress Quickly are talking about Falstaff's death. " 'A called out for drink." "Ay, that 'a did."
Together
Nym Hughes has written: 'Stepping out of line' -- subject(s): Lesbianism, Congresses, Handbooks, manuals, Feminism
Sulphurous acid
He could not stomach their cowardice, thievery, and rascality. His sense of manhood has rebelled against their insistence that he pick men's pockets, and he resolves to desert them and seek "some better service."
Some words that end with the suffix "nym" include acronym, antonym, synonym, and pseudonym.
the answer is "NYMPH"