Treason!!
I am sure, 99 percent of people would say no Greeks are 100 percent european and they hated middle easterners .i would say , the Greeks are near eastern. In the ancient times the Greeks colonized Western Anatolia. The Greek had cultural contacts with , Persia , Phoenicia and Egypt.I believe the Greeks are Mediterranean race.
This is very debatable. Some people would say Adolf Hitler. Others would say George Washington. Still More would say Jesus. And at least one person would take it as a joke and say 'Chuck Norris".
No one knows when sir Galahad was born, but if you have to write a specific and year i would say 1342 (medieval times)
I would have to say preservation.
Thou, thy and you at a beginning of a sentence
In Elizabethan times, people would have greeted each other with "God save you" or "Good morrow."
"Class" can mean a number of different things. How you would say it depends on which meaning you wish to use. The word "class" itself does not appear to have been used for any purpose in Elizabethan writings.
I would say no, because you arent suppose to swallow it and dogs would swallow the listerine...
Elizabethan English is still modern english. "Business" means "business". They used the word a lot, too. Shakespeare uses it 231 times. It was not used to mean "business establishment" but more in the sense of "business enterprise". So, if an Elizabethan said "I have a business in the High Street" that would have meant that he had something to do in the High Street, not that he had a shop there. An Elizabethan might say, "My business is selling shoes" but not "My business is a shoe store." The business establishment meaning came later.
whilst
In Elizabethan English, if someone were inclined to say "happy birthday", it would probably be said "happy birthday". People didn't celebrate birthdays much in those days, so there are no examples that leap to mind.
i would have to say onnoj and schult77 they can only get a kill with a singleshot weapon if they arent playing
Elizabethan English word for taste is the same as modern English. It hasn't changed.
In Elizabethan English, homework would be referred to as "taskwork" or "lesson work".
Sincerely. Shakespeare uses it three times. It's used in the King James Bible (actually Jacobean, not Elizabethan, but then so is Shakespeare part of the time, so we'll let that go) three times. Ben Jonson used it too, in Every Man Out of His Humour.
"These" in Elizabethan English is exactly the same as it is in all other forms of Modern English: "these" e.g. "Where are these lads? Where are these hearts?" (Midsummer Night's Dream)